Does Losing Lead to Winning? An Empirical Analysis for Four Sports
检验了Berger和Pope(2011)发现的“略微落后增加获胜概率”现象,在澳大利亚足球、美式足球和橄榄球中未发现该效应,在篮球中也仅对特定时期的NBA比赛成立,元分析表明真实效应可能很小或不存在。
Berger and Pope (2011) show that being slightly behind increases the likelihood of winning in professional (National Basketball Association; NBA) and collegiate (National Collegiate Athletic Association; NCAA) basketball. We extend their analysis to large samples of Australian football, American football, and rugby matches, but find no evidence of such an effect for these three sports. When we revisit the phenomenon for basketball, we only find supportive evidence for NBA matches from the period analyzed in Berger and Pope (2011) . There is no significant effect for NBA matches from outside this sample period, for NCAA matches, or for matches from the Women’s National Basketball Association. High-powered meta-analyses across the different sports and competitions do not reject the null hypothesis of no effect of being slightly behind on winning. The confidence intervals suggest that the true effect, if existent at all, is likely relatively small. This paper was accepted by Manel Baucells, behavioral economics and decision analysis. Funding: The authors acknowledge support fromthe Dutch Research Council. Supplemental Material: The data files and online appendix are available at https://doi.org/10.1287/mnsc.2022.4372 .