The Rocky Mountain Athletic Conference is a Division II National Collegiate Athletic Association conference that offers, inter alia, women's softball. Within the conference, four-game series are played against every other conference team according to a temporally constrained schedule. Manually generated schedules result in imbalances, such as breaks of multiple home or away series and away-series season openers and closers for the same team, and fail to mitigate weather-related series disruptions. Our integer-programming–based schedules eliminate these problems while ensuring that all requisite series are played. In this paper, we present a 40-game schedule; we do not present 36- and 44-game schedules, which are nearly equivalent. For its 2011 softball season, the Rocky Mountain Athletic Conference adopted the 40-game schedule from these three schedules.
The National Basketball Association (NBA) is divided into two conferences, each of which comprises 15 teams. At the end of the regular season, the top eight teams from each conference, based on winning percentage, compete in the playoffs. Mixed-integer-programming (MIP) models determine when a team has guaranteed its position in the playoffs (clinched) or, conversely, when it has been eliminated before the completion of the regular season. Our models incorporate a series of complex two-way tiebreaking criteria used by the NBA to determine how many more games are needed either to clinch or to avoid elimination. We compare the time at which a given team has clinched or been eliminated, in terms of the number of games played in the season to date, as posted in the NBA official standings, against results from our mixed-integer program. For the 2017–2018 season, when our models outperform those of the NBA, they do so by an average of 4.1 games. We also describe a scenario in which the NBA erroneously reported that the Boston Celtics had clinched a playoff spot and, conversely, show that the Golden State Warriors had clinched a playoff spot before the official announcement by the NBA.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.