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How to Win Your Office NCAA Pool: Use Game Theory, Pick Duke

Let’s be honest: You’ve got no chance of picking a perfect NCAA bracket.

How to Win Your Office NCAA Pool: Use Game Theory, Pick Duke
Children play basketball at the Silver Dollar Fairgrounds evacuation center in Chico, California, U.S. (Photographer: Michael Short/Bloomberg)

(Bloomberg) -- Let’s be honest: You’ve got no chance of picking a perfect NCAA bracket.

The odds against perfection are 1 in 9.2 quintillion. With just 7 quintillion grains of sand on Earth, you’ve got a better shot at finding the one painted Carolina Blue than picking the winner of all 63 tournament games typically included on a bracket.

With perfection out the window, what’s the best strategy for winning your office pool? Use game theory, which measures the strategic interaction between rational players -- or how we make decisions.

How to Win Your Office NCAA Pool: Use Game Theory, Pick Duke

“The majority of casual participants are reasonably predictable, but even one game theory picker -- whether someone who has thought about the formal mathematics or someone who has intuited the principles from experience -- can make a big difference,” said Aaron Brown, an investor who writes for Bloomberg Opinion and who has written about the optimal ways to pick an NCAA bracket.

The problem, according to Brown, isn’t only that your selections have to be well-informed. They also have to be different from what other armchair prognosticators -- intelligent or otherwise -- put down on their bracket.

Sharing your picks with your toughest competitors can be an effective, counter-intuitive strategy.

“Other smart pickers will naturally avoid your upset picks,” Brown said. “Although you are in competition with them for the prize, you’re actually cooperating with them in order to get picks that are not similar to each other.”

Just be discerning with who you share with. Remember, you’re sharing to differentiate yourself from other informed contestants, not to help the clueless.

“In college, we often found the least informed sports fan in the dorm would win,” said Presh Talwalkar, author of ‘The Joy Of Game Theory.’ “Why? Everyone felt pity and helped the uninformed novice; so the novice’s picks were great by a wisdom-of-crowds effect.”

Talwalkar also advises against being a contrarian.

“My sense is people overthink the favorites and go for too many sleeper picks, so the favorites still end up being good choices,” he said. Duke, Virginia, North Carolina and Gonzaga are the No. 1 seeds in the tournament.

That sentiment is echoed by Ran Shorrer, an economics professor at Penn State.

When choosing games outside of the first round, Shorrer suggests picking in terms of probabilities. Think of your Final Four choices not as the most probable winners of the match-ups you’ve created, but as the teams that you believe are most likely to win the region.

That might result in your having the tritest championship pick of all -- picking Duke to go all the way -- if you didn’t go to school in Durham with Christian Laettner or Steve Wojciechowski.

“If I think Duke is going to beat most teams, I should be taking them overall,” said Shorrer.

To contact the reporter on this story: Brandon Kochkodin in New York at bkochkodin@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Matthew G. Miller at mmiller144@bloomberg.net, James Ludden

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