As the esteemed Secretary of Defense under two presidents has said:
Reports that say something hasn’t happened are always interesting to me, because as we know, there are known knowns; there are things we know we know. We also know there are known unknowns; that is to say we know there are some things we don’t know. But there are also unknown unknowns – the ones we don’t know we don’t know.
I don’t know what category to put DFS in. Maybe we know that it’s a game of skill. Maybe we know that we don’t know that it’s a game of skill. And maybe we don’t know that we don’t know it’s a game of skill. While Donald Rumsfeld has made it clear as mud how we can consider this known/unknown conundrum, two industrial engineers sought out to know just what we know and don’t know, and as a result, now we know, in case it was previously unknown, that DFS is a game of skill.
This conclusion is in a study recently published in the Journal of Sports Analytics on April 24, 2018. For those of us without the intellectual ability or the patience to read the study, the simple bottom line is that the authors entered 35 DFS contests using randomly-generated picks and lost everyone. Unless the skill in losing every game, these results seem to support the theory that pure luck doesn’t cut it in DFS.
Over the years, we have written about the skill v. chance history of DFS here, here, here, here, here, here, and here. (Ok, we thought it was an interesting topic.)
Now we have proof – real analytical, data-driven, published proof – that DFS is indeed a game of skill. This study states that it’s backed by “arguments and logic used in basic statistics and probability theory.” It uses terms like “null hypothesis” and “probability tolerance” and “test statistic” and says things like “If pone rejects the strong assumption (null hypothesis) and is at least 1-a confident in this rejection. Here a=0.001 and thus the conclusion is drawn with at least 99.9% accuracy. As with all statistical methods, there is a probability, 0.001 in this case, that the conclusion is incorrect.” And, I swear to god, there is even the formula: μi=∑w−1j=1fpij/(w−1)μi=∑j=1w-1fpij/(w-1).
WOW! In the words of Renée Zellweger, “You had me at p.”
After reading through all of the statistical analysis and the methodologies employed, the report concludes “DFS contests with salary caps are games of skill” and recommends that “states should no longer legally consider DFS salary cap contests as gambling and encourage the use of this research to inform the public and lawmakers of these new developments in this controversial topic.”
It’s too early to tell whether the voided states (AL, AZ, HI, ID, IO, LA, MT, NV, WA and TX) will take notice of this study, but legislators like something to hang their hat on. And since many of the voided states have pending legislation in favor of DFS, this study may be just the thing to get them in the game.