Strat-O-Matic Ices Simulation of Stanley Cup with Seven Straight Correct Outcomes on NHL Network
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Simulations Provided to 'NHL Tonight' Before Each Contest Nail Results; Six of Seven within one Goal Differential

GLEN HEAD, N.Y. - iSportsWire -- When Sam Reinhart's wrister slipped past Stuart Skinner in Monday's Game 7, proving to be the game winner in an all-time great Stanley Cup series, astute NHL Network viewers may not have been too surprised. That's because those who prepared for each game by watching the network's "NHL Tonight" program had seen as Strat-O-Matic (@strat-o-matic), the market leader in sports simulation games, simulated each game, correctly predicting the outcome of all seven contests, including six within one of the actual goal differential. And the Game 7 simulation even tabbed Reinhart as the scorer of the winning marker.

Strat-O-Matic provided NHL Network with the simulations based on the latest version of its popular hockey game, updated with proprietary statistical data to best simulate current player use, abilities and tendencies. Hockey fans can utilize Strat-O-Matic's game to replay hockey seasons dating back to 1945-46, including several newly-added WHA campaigns.

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Strat-O-Matic 2024 Stanley Cup Finals Simulations with Game Results

Simulation     Result

Florida, 3-1   Game 1   Florida, 3-0

Florida, 5-2   Game 2   Florida, 4-1

Florida, 3-2   Game 3   Florida, 4-3

Edmonton, 3-2   Game 4   Edmonton, 8-1

Edmonton, 4-3   Game 5   Edmonton, 5-3

Edmonton, 5-2   Game 6   Edmonton, 5-1

Florida, 4-3   Game 7   Florida, 2-1

The success of the Stanley Cup simulation comes on the heels of an extremely accurate basketball championship prediction, which saw Strat-O-Matic's model tabbing Boston as the champion in its preseason simulation and had the squad winning the title in five games over Dallas in its pre-finals work.

About Strat-O-Matic

Strat-O-Matic was invented by 11-year-old Hal Richman in his bedroom in Great Neck, N.Y. in 1948 as a result of his frustration with the statistical randomness of other baseball board games. He discovered that the statistical predictability of dice would give his game the realism he craved. Over the next decade, he perfected the game at summer camp and then as a student at Bucknell University. After producing All-Star sets in 1961 and '62, he parlayed a $5,000 loan from his father (and made a deal that if it didn't work out he would work for his father's insurance company) into the original 1962 Strat-O-Matic Baseball season game. Needless to say, Hal never had to take a job with his father.

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http://www.strat-o-matic.com

Media Contact
Jerry Milani
jerry@jerrymilani.com
917-797-5663


Source: Strat-O-Matic
Filed Under: Sports

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