5 not selected, 3 pending second draw......oh well, I'll give them some more money next year.
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Originally posted by Army of Dad View PostOk, so what’s your draw odds with one point and 10,000 other draw positions and then with 8 points?
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Originally posted by jkelbe View PostFor those getting drawn how many points did you have? I am just curious if 5 points is alot for Spring Turkey or 7pts of Archery Deer? I have only been drawn by mistake. They e-mailed me later apologized and gave me back my few points.
Originally posted by jlp04c View PostI do find it odd I won 2 hunts my verrrryyyy first time applying.. .and have spent the last two years (2 years after my first) not winning anything.. lol.Last edited by bossbowman; 10-16-2019, 11:38 PM.
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Originally posted by bossbowman View PostNot many really, I don't put in for turkey but I have 10 years of points for archery now.
I'm starting to think its heavily weighted to first time applicants as well to get you hooked on the crack...
Also, preference points are basically useless. If 1,000 people get in a drawing and you have 10 points and everyone else has 1 you go from a .1% to a 1% chance. It's a better chance but still very low. Considering in reality a lot of the other people will have more than 1 preference point it makes the chance even lower.Last edited by thisisbeer; 10-17-2019, 07:36 AM.
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Originally posted by thisisbeer View PostI don't think it's weighted towards new applicants. From what it sounds like when people get 5+ preference points they tend to only put in for the well known and sought after hunts. These have very low odds of drawing. New people put in for everything. This is my second year. I put in for literally everything each year. I drew 6 hunts this year, but the draws were mostly high percentage draws.
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Originally posted by thisisbeer View PostI don't think it's weighted towards new applicants. From what it sounds like when people get 5+ preference points they tend to only put in for the well known and sought after hunts. These have very low odds of drawing. New people put in for everything. This is my second year. I put in for literally everything each year. I drew 6 hunts this year, but the draws were mostly high percentage draws.
That's honestly the most reasonable explanation I've seen, makes perfect sense.
I've been putting in going on 5 years and I've drawn something each time. I haven't drawn any of the high demand extremely low odds hunts that I really want but I've drawn something.
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What the state needs to do is publish the total points going into the draw. Wyoming does this and breaks it down by number with points. Yes, Wyoming is a preference point/random hybrid but I do think Texas could provide more information on their draws odds and on success.
The reason it appears the draw is weighted to first time applicants can be explained by the following example:
Let's say there are 10,000 points in a draw and 4,000 applicants. Of these 4,000 applicants 3,000 are first time, 500 are 2 pointers, and the rest are multiple point applicants. It's not the individual odds that determine if a newbie gets drawn it is the ratio of newbies to pointers. 1 and two pointers have 4,000 points. Pointers have the remaining 6,000 points. Therefore, there is a 40% chance a newbie will get drawn. I don't know the actual point breakdown but I bet low point applicants are a significant number. I think the system should pick 50% based on points being a preference and the remaining 50% based on points as is. This way, if you have 28 points for pronghorn in Texas (what I would compare to drawing Bighorn in wyoming) and that is the top point draw, you have a 50% chance times the number of top point holders. So, if there are 30 top point holders and there are 4 slots, of which 2 go to preference, your odds are 6.67% in the preference draw and (for 10,000 total points from above) 28/9,160 or .31% in the regular draw (I'll let the statisticions figure the overall odds, statistics ws 40 years ago for me).
It is very likely, based on the current system, that a newbie will get drawn because the number of 1 or 2 point holders are significant.
Test on Friday.
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Originally posted by drogers6771 View PostOk well next season you guys with heavy LP's in certain categories can go ahead and ust put me in on a group app with yall since LP's dont matter, no harm no foul
From a point perspective it won’t change much, but an additional applicant might hurt more based on number of positions available. That’s a deeper statistics dive than I can do, but if for instance I added you to an app with my hunting partner there could be instances where our app is drawn and rejected because we have more hunters than open slots.
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Originally posted by Army of Dad View PostFrom a point perspective it won’t change much, but an additional applicant might hurt more based on number of positions available. That’s a deeper statistics dive than I can do, but if for instance I added you to an app with my hunting partner there could be instances where our app is drawn and rejected because we have more hunters than open slots.
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If there are only 4 spots available then someone in your group would need to be the first one picked. In that scenario your odds are just a little less than everyone else.
You have 4 times the chance of getting picked, but your only going after one specific (the specific part is the only reason the odds are less) spot where everyone else is going for 1 of four spots.
If there are 6 spots available your odds are better than a single applicant. You have 3 specific spots you can draw at a higher rate of drawing than a single applicant.
Basically, a group always has better odds as long as there are more spots available than whats on the group.
This was super quick math so I coudl be wrong.
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Originally posted by jnd1959 View PostWhat the state needs to do is publish the total points going into the draw. Wyoming does this and breaks it down by number with points. Yes, Wyoming is a preference point/random hybrid but I do think Texas could provide more information on their draws odds and on success.
The reason it appears the draw is weighted to first time applicants can be explained by the following example:
Let's say there are 10,000 points in a draw and 4,000 applicants. Of these 4,000 applicants 3,000 are first time, 500 are 2 pointers, and the rest are multiple point applicants. It's not the individual odds that determine if a newbie gets drawn it is the ratio of newbies to pointers. 1 and two pointers have 4,000 points. Pointers have the remaining 6,000 points. Therefore, there is a 40% chance a newbie will get drawn. I don't know the actual point breakdown but I bet low point applicants are a significant number. I think the system should pick 50% based on points being a preference and the remaining 50% based on points as is. This way, if you have 28 points for pronghorn in Texas (what I would compare to drawing Bighorn in wyoming) and that is the top point draw, you have a 50% chance times the number of top point holders. So, if there are 30 top point holders and there are 4 slots, of which 2 go to preference, your odds are 6.67% in the preference draw and (for 10,000 total points from above) 28/9,160 or .31% in the regular draw (I'll let the statisticions figure the overall odds, statistics ws 40 years ago for me).
It is very likely, based on the current system, that a newbie will get drawn because the number of 1 or 2 point holders are significant.
Test on Friday.
What you said is basically what was stated above, if those numbers are accurate then it would make it more likely that the winner would be a first timer but not increase the chances that any individual first timer would draw. There's just a lot more noobs in the pool as they/we apply for as many hunts as possible.
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