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An Examination of Olympic Sport Climbing Competition Format and Scoring System
Volume 20, Issue 2 (2022), pp. 156–167
Quang Nguyen   Hannah Butler   Gregory J. Matthews  

Authors

 
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https://doi.org/10.6339/22-JDS1042
Pub. online: 19 April 2022      Type: Data Science In Action      Open accessOpen Access

Received
12 January 2022
Accepted
28 March 2022
Published
19 April 2022

Abstract

Sport climbing, which made its Olympic debut at the 2020 Summer Games, generally consists of three separate disciplines: speed climbing, bouldering, and lead climbing. However, the International Olympic Committee (IOC) only allowed one set of medals each for men and women in sport climbing. As a result, the governing body of sport climbing, rather than choosing only one of the three disciplines to include in the Olympics, decided to create a competition combining all three disciplines. In order to determine a winner, a combined scoring system was created using the product of the ranks across the three disciplines to determine an overall score for each climber. In this work, the rank-product scoring system of sport climbing is evaluated through simulation to investigate its general features, specifically, the advancement probabilities and scores for climbers given certain placements. Additionally, analyses of historical climbing contest results are presented and real examples of violations of the independence of irrelevant alternatives are illustrated. Finally, this work finds evidence that the current competition format is putting speed climbers at a disadvantage.

Supplementary material

 Supplementary Material
All data and code for reproducing the analyses presented in this manuscript are publicly available on GitHub at https://github.com/qntkhvn/climbing.

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2022 The Author(s). Published by the School of Statistics and the Center for Applied Statistics, Renmin University of China.
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Open access article under the CC BY license.

Keywords
rankings social choice theory sports statistics

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