In the last blog we build models for The Chase game show to estimate a team’s chances of winning at various points during an episode. We did that using data from this Google document from James Spencer, which covers the entire history of Andrew O’Keefe’s reign as host from late 2015 to mid-2021.
Those models suggested that there was something special about Seat 1 in that the fate of the contestant in that Seat seemed to have particular significance for the team’s eventual fortune. Put succinctly, teams that included the contestant from Seat 1 in the final won money more often than otherwise equivalent teams without the contestant from Seat 1.
After analysing the performance data for Seat 1 contestants and finding little evidence that they were, on average, notably stronger contestants in terms of Cash Builder, Contribution, and FInal Target statistics, I hypothesised that, perhaps
The presence of Seat 1 in the Final Chase is enough to slightly put off the Chaser (or is a signal that he or she is not quite on his or her game in that episode)
Contestants in Seat 1 are, on average, better at taking advantage of pushback opportunities
Today we’ll use the Pushback data to explore these hypotheses.
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