• Congratulations to the Class of 2024 on your results!
    Let us know how you went here
    Got a question about your uni preferences? Ask us here

binomial probability-tennis quest (1 Viewer)

mwseaeagles

New Member
Joined
Jul 4, 2008
Messages
20
Gender
Male
HSC
N/A
martina beats jelena in 2 games out of 3 at tennis. what is the probability that jelena wins a set of tennis 6 games to 4.

the answer is 0.0341 but yeh i cant get any progress at all

cheerz
 

lyounamu

Reborn
Joined
Oct 28, 2007
Messages
9,998
Gender
Male
HSC
N/A
mwseaeagles said:
martina beats jelena in 2 games out of 3 at tennis. what is the probability that jelena wins a set of tennis 6 games to 4.

the answer is 0.0341 but yeh i cant get any progress at all

cheerz
My interpretation: Let P(Jelena Losing) = P(X) = 2/3
Let Q(Jelena Winning) = P(Q) = 1/3

P(6 wins and 4 losses) = 10C4 . 1/3^6 . 2/3^4 = 0.05690189950...

I am not sure if your answer is right...

Is that the full question you posted up? I think there might be some problems with the wording. Please post the FULL QUESTION (with accurate wording). I interpreted that Jelena wins 6 times and 4 times in a set (not taking account of the number of games or anything).

2nd interpretation:

Let P(Jelena Losing) = 2/3
Let Q(Jelena Winning) = 1/3

Since the score is 2-1 to Martina way. So Jelena must win 5 games and lose two.

P(Winnig 5 games and lose two) = 7C2 . 1.3^5 . 2/3^2 = 0.0384097791...
 
Last edited:

bored of sc

Active Member
Joined
Nov 10, 2007
Messages
2,314
Gender
Male
HSC
2009
Haven't done this topic yet but here's the information I got out of the question.

martina beats jelena in 2 games out of 3 at tennis:
The score is 2-1 in the first set; Martina over Jelena.

what is the probability that jelena wins a set of tennis 6 games to 4:
The possible scores for the first set could be:
7-6 to Martina.
7-5 to Martina.
6-4 to Martina.
6-3 to Martina.
6-2 to Martina.
6-1 to Martina.
7-6 to Jelena.
7-5 to Jelena.
6-4 to Jelena.
6-3 to Jelena.
6-2 to Jelena.

That's all I know, if that even helped the slightest.
 

lyounamu

Reborn
Joined
Oct 28, 2007
Messages
9,998
Gender
Male
HSC
N/A
bored of sc said:
Haven't done this topic yet but here's the information I got out of the question.

martina beats jelena in 2 games out of 3 at tennis:
The score is 2-1 in the first set; Martina over Jelena.

what is the probability that jelena wins a set of tennis 6 games to 4:
The possible scores for the first set could be:
7-6 to Martina.
7-5 to Martina.
6-4 to Martina.
6-3 to Martina.
6-2 to Martina.
6-1 to Martina.
7-6 to Jelena.
7-5 to Jelena.
6-4 to Jelena.
6-3 to Jelena.
6-2 to Jelena.

That's all I know, if that even helped the slightest.
So you interpreted the question in a different way. Um...
 

bored of sc

Active Member
Joined
Nov 10, 2007
Messages
2,314
Gender
Male
HSC
2009
lyounamu said:
So you interpreted the question in a different way. Um...
:shy: I bet YOU got the right way though.

I would've said 1/11 = 0.0909090909090909090909090909...
 

jake2.0

. . .
Joined
Sep 17, 2005
Messages
616
Gender
Male
HSC
2005
But the question asks
what is the probability that jelena wins a set of tennis 6 games to 4.
rather than "whats the probability that jelena wins this set of tennis."

So I think lyounamu's way is correct
 

lyounamu

Reborn
Joined
Oct 28, 2007
Messages
9,998
Gender
Male
HSC
N/A
bored of sc said:
:shy: I bet YOU got the right way though.

I would've said 1/11 = 0.0909090909090909090909090909...
I wouldn't be surprised if you got it right because the wording was confusing. ;)
 

Aerath

Retired
Joined
May 10, 2007
Messages
10,169
Gender
Undisclosed
HSC
N/A
Why is it that the names are actual names of real tennis players? :p
Martina Hingis/Navratilova
Jelena Jankovic
 

eyetalian

Member
Joined
Aug 11, 2005
Messages
153
Gender
Male
HSC
N/A
LOL!

its Martina Hingis and Jelena Dokic, not Jankovic.

Dokic beat Hingis in the first round of wimbledon in 1999, Hingis only won 2 games in the match and was the number 1 seed at the event.
 

Aerath

Retired
Joined
May 10, 2007
Messages
10,169
Gender
Undisclosed
HSC
N/A
Meh, oh well. :p
I haven't heard about Jelena Dokic in ages. I think most people remember her father more than they remember her. :)
 

Trebla

Administrator
Administrator
Joined
Feb 16, 2005
Messages
8,402
Gender
Male
HSC
2006
The key thing you have to realise is that once one person hits the 6 games won, then the set is over. In other words say if Jelena is at 6 and Martina is at 3, there's no way Martina can get up to 4, it's already over. So Jelena must win the last game. You must account for that in the calculations.

So interpret this as the probability that Jelena get's 5 and Martina gets 4 games, because they can be in any order.
P(J = 5, M = 4) = 9C5(1/3)5(2/3)4
But Jelena MUST win the last game, so the probability we get 6 games for Jelena and 4 games for Martina (i.e. with Jelena winning) is:
(1/3) x P(J = 5, M = 4) = (1/3) x 9C5(1/3)5(2/3)4 ~ 0.0341
 

mwseaeagles

New Member
Joined
Jul 4, 2008
Messages
20
Gender
Male
HSC
N/A
Trebla said:
The key thing you have to realise is that once one person hits the 6 games won, then the set is over. In other words say if Jelena is at 6 and Martina is at 3, there's no way Martina can get up to 4, it's already over. So Jelena must win the last game. You must account for that in the calculations.

So interpret this as the probability that Jelena get's 5 and Martina gets 4 games, because they can be in any order.
P(J = 5, M = 4) = 9C5(1/3)5(2/3)4
But Jelena MUST win the last game, so the probability we get 6 games for Jelena and 4 games for Martina (i.e. with Jelena winning) is:
(1/3) x P(J = 5, M = 4) = (1/3) x 9C5(1/3)5(2/3)4 ~ 0.0341
man that was good. thanks so much
 

lyounamu

Reborn
Joined
Oct 28, 2007
Messages
9,998
Gender
Male
HSC
N/A
Trebla said:
The key thing you have to realise is that once one person hits the 6 games won, then the set is over. In other words say if Jelena is at 6 and Martina is at 3, there's no way Martina can get up to 4, it's already over. So Jelena must win the last game. You must account for that in the calculations.

So interpret this as the probability that Jelena get's 5 and Martina gets 4 games, because they can be in any order.
P(J = 5, M = 4) = 9C5(1/3)5(2/3)4
But Jelena MUST win the last game, so the probability we get 6 games for Jelena and 4 games for Martina (i.e. with Jelena winning) is:
(1/3) x P(J = 5, M = 4) = (1/3) x 9C5(1/3)5(2/3)4 ~ 0.0341
That's ridiculous. I mean, how were we supposed to take that thing into account. What if people don't know about tennis?

But good work. That's was a extremely well done.
 

Trebla

Administrator
Administrator
Joined
Feb 16, 2005
Messages
8,402
Gender
Male
HSC
2006
lyounamu said:
That's ridiculous. I mean, how were we supposed to take that thing into account. What if people don't know about tennis?
Well, how else would Jelena be declared the winner? lol. Though I do somewhat agree, it should say that the first person to take 6 games wins.
 

Users Who Are Viewing This Thread (Users: 0, Guests: 1)

Top