The toy picked Jonesboro to lose to Union Hill by 28 pts. Jonesboro 45'd them according to the score on here. The only time I look at the toy is for picks for all the private/TAAPs divisions pick 'ems. And I like to beat the toy in my pick ems, one last chance to fight and win against the computers before they take over the world.
Actually, The Toy is usually much better at picking UIL games than non-UIL games.
In 2023 The Toy guessed right on 81.97% of all UIL vs UIL games, 79.72% of non-UIL vs non-UIL games, and 78.97% of non-UIL vs non-UIL games.
Last year The Toy guessed right on 81.17% of UIL vs UIL games, 79.28% of all non-UIL vs non-UIL games, and 77.14% of all UIL vs non-UIL games.
Last week The Toy guessed right on 85.96% of UIL vs UIL games, 70% of non-UIL vs non-UIL games, and 73.49% of UIL vs non-UIL games.
Another interesting stat for those of you who are interested in this kind of thing. Last week The Toy picked games to within a margin of error of 40.87 points per game. That's how many points the predicted spread is away from the actual spread for each game. Now, before y'all start screaming about how terrible that is, consider this. If a team is picked to "win" by 100 points, and they "only" win by 50, the system still calculates that margin of error at 50. I'd originally planned on making the system so that if a team is picked to win by 45, and they do it, the error would always be 0, but I thought it was a lot more interesting to see how close it was to picking the exact spread, rather than just TeamA will 45 TeamB.
Of course it's not a perfect system, but that doesn't exist. It's still one of the best systems, if not the best system, in place for picking six-man football games. Also worth noting, because it was brought up, is the fact that the pick 'em games that are picked each week are 30 of the games that The Toy expects to be the toughest to pick a winner on. No game with a predicted spread over 40 is added to the pick 'em pool.