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How Does It Work?

  1. The accuracy percentage on the leaderboard shows how close each player is to the actual standings.

    • 100% accuracy means they perfectly predicted the standings.
    • Below 50% accuracy means they would likely have been better off randomising their predictions.
    • 0% accuracy means their predictions couldn't have been further from the actual standings.
  2. The player with the most accurate prediction table at the end of the season wins.
  3. If players have equal accuracy percentages, how many entrants (teams/drivers/countries etc) they perfectly predicted will be used a tie break. Then how many predictions were 1 off, then how many predictions were 2 off etc.
  4. If players made identical predictions, they will be ordered by who made submitted their predictions first.

Example Prediction Table

2Man Citymci
3Arsenalars5
4Chelseache2

This is a part of an example Premier League prediction table where the entrants are football teams.

  1. They correctly predicted Manchester City would finish 2nd so the green tick denotes a perfect prediction.
  2. They predicted Arsenal would finish third, 5 positions above where they actually finished.
  3. They predicted Chelsea would finish fourth, 2 positions below where they actually finished.

Additional Info

  • The 'Average' prediction table is worked out by calculating the mean position of each driver/team across everyone' player prediction tables.
  • For Formula 1, stand-in drivers and new mid-season drivers will be ignored from the standings.
  • Other than that, the actual standings will be ordered as they are in real life (including factors like point deductions).