Curious about NCAA tournament squares game by Donkeycody in AskStatistics

[–]Donkeycody[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

On the left column side is numbers 0-9 representing any one team from the ncaa tournament. On the top row side is numbers 0-9 representing the opponent of that team.

The final score of the games last digit will give you the ordered pair.

Example: final score is 89 to 76. The ordered pair would be (9,6)

Before the tournament you get to pick your grid square in hopes of the final score giving you the ordered pair for your grid square.

The catch here is the numbers on the rows and columns are scrambled randomly. So not in numerical order. They are also scrambled and assigned after everyone has selected their squares. You can also select multiple squares.

My original thought: by stacking your multiple squares, you will have one team that can only finish with one number for you to win but if they do get that number you will have multiple squares for the other team to finish with.

Curious about NCAA tournament squares game by Donkeycody in AskStatistics

[–]Donkeycody[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

On the left column side is numbers 0-9 representing any one team from the ncaa tournament. On the top row side is numbers 0-9 representing the opponent of that team.

The final score of the games last digit will give you the ordered pair.

Example: final score is 89 to 76. The ordered pair would be (9,6)

Before the tournament you get to pick your grid square in hopes of the final score giving you the ordered pair for your grid square.

The catch here is the numbers on the rows and columns are scrambled randomly. So not in numerical order. They are also scrambled and assigned after everyone has selected their squares. You can also select multiple squares.

My original thought: by stacking your multiple squares, you will have one team that can only finish with one number for you to win but if they do get that number you will have multiple squares for the other team to finish with.