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crackgmat007
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how about:
9C3/11C3 ==> 9.8.7/11.10.9 ==> 28/55
1st substitution: P(not forward) = 9/11 (11 total players, 9 of them not forwards)crackgmat007 wrote:During the break of a football match the coach will make 3 substitutions. If the team consists of 11 players among which there are 2 forwards, what is the probability that none of the forwards will be substituted?
The OG does not offer the most efficient approach. Here's how you should solve the problem about Harry:gmatdriller wrote:Thanks GmatGuru for the detailed explanations.
My confusion stems from the OG12 PS #7:
A certain club has 10 members, including Harry. One of the 10 members is to
be chosen at random to be the president, one of the remaining 9 members is
to be chosen at random to be the Secretary, and one of the remaining 8
members is to be chosen at random to be the Treasurer. What is the
probability that Harry will be either the member chosen to be the secretary or
the member chosen to be the treasurer?
solution:
P(S or T) = (9/10)x(1/9)x(1) + (9/10)x(8/9)(1/8) = 1/10 + 1/10 = 1/5
I understand the explanations given, and i tried to follow the same concept
but failed.
I tried to distinguish the two questions (coupled with your analysis)...and
am getting clearer.
Mitch-1st substitution: P(not forward) = 9/11 (11 total players, 9 of them not forwards)
2nd substitution: P(not forward) = 8/10 (10 players left, 8 of them not forwards)
3rd substitution: P(not forward) = 7/9 (9 players left, 7 of them not forwards)
Since we need all of these events to happen together, we multiply the fractions:
9/11 * 8/10 * 7/9 = 28/55.
Good point. On the GMAT, the problem would make clear what I assumed in my solution: that a player can be substituted into the game only once.vijchid wrote:Mitch-1st substitution: P(not forward) = 9/11 (11 total players, 9 of them not forwards)
2nd substitution: P(not forward) = 8/10 (10 players left, 8 of them not forwards)
3rd substitution: P(not forward) = 7/9 (9 players left, 7 of them not forwards)
Since we need all of these events to happen together, we multiply the fractions:
9/11 * 8/10 * 7/9 = 28/55.
I understand the logic above, but why is the probability for the 2nd substitution 8/10. Where does the problem say that you cannot substitute a player that has come into the game for the first substitution? If you consider that then the probability for the second substitution will still remain 9/11.
The problem also doesn't state that there's an equal chance of any player being chosen, so the flaw you point out isn't the only problem. There also aren't answer choices, usually a sign that the question is either:vijchid wrote:Mitch-
I understand the logic above, but why is the probability for the 2nd substitution 8/10. Where does the problem say that you cannot substitute a player that has come into the game for the first substitution? If you consider that then the probability for the second substitution will still remain 9/11.
