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From Grok:It's because the odds of beating a top 10 team 3 times in a season aren't very good.
I had heard on the radio that the idea you posted was not actually true, so I dug a little deeper.Studies of NCAA conference tournaments suggest that sweeping a season series (going 3-0 against an opponent) happens in roughly 60-70% of cases when a team has won the first two regular-season games, though this varies by competitiveness of the teams. If the teams are closely matched (e.g., similar rankings or seedings), the odds drop closer to 50-50 as the underdog adapts.
Without specific team data—like their records, margins of victory, or venue for the third game—I’d estimate the odds generally favor the 2-0 team at around 65-75%. This accounts for their proven edge while leaving room for the losing team to pull off an upset with better preparation or luck.
Grok not being especially good at math, I'd go elsewhere for guidance here.From Grok:
I had heard on the radio that the idea you posted was not actually true, so I dug a little deeper.
Yes, opponent strength definitely comes into play, as you said. If you assume Tennessee and Kentucky are equally good, then it essentially becomes a stats and probability solution, like flipping a coin and it landing on heads 3 straight times. Those odds are 1 in 8, or as you said, 12.5%.Grok not being especially good at math, I'd go elsewhere for guidance here.
If you just take raw numbers, most teams that have the same opponent 3 times have a large quality difference with that opponent. If you have a 95% chance to beat a weaker conference foe, you're going to sweep them 85% of the time. If it's a 50-50 matchup, the likelihood of a 3 game sweep is 12.5%. We're probably at least at 50-50 with Kentucky, so the likelihood that they get a 3 game sweep is pretty low! But that doesn't have any bearing on what's going to actually happen on Friday. It'll just be an illustration of how rare it is if we falter and they get a 3 game sweep against a team that is in the least an even match.
Pop quiz:Yes, opponent strength definitely comes into play, as you said. If you assume Tennessee and Kentucky are equally good, then it essentially becomes a stats and probability solution, like flipping a coin and it landing on heads 3 straight times. Those odds are 1 in 8, or as you said, 12.5%.
Teams with edges of at least 3 but less than 6 points in adjusted efficiency won about 63.3 percent of third meetings when they came off two wins against the same opponent, 66.3 percent when they came off a split and a whopping 74.3 percent (109 out of 190) when they lost both previous meetings.
With an edge of at least 6 but less than 9 points in Pomeroy’s ratings, the better teams won 72.5 percent of the time overall, 79.6 percent after a split and 84.8 percent after two losses.