7 wins to 3 losses
5 and 2.
To calculate win-lose, add the wins and the losses and divide the sum into the wins to calculate percentage of wins or divide into the losses to calculate the percentage of losses: W + L = Total; W ÷ Total = W%; L ÷ Total = L%: example: 12 W + 8 L = 20; 12W ÷ 20 = .60 or 60% wins; 8L ÷ 20 = .40 or 40% losses
assuming there were no draws then the win to lose ratio is 3:4
6 wins is two thirds. 9 divided by 3=3 or one third of 9. 3+3=6.
2 to 3
7 wins to 3 losses
15:10
5 to 3
It is: 3 to 1
Wins and losses are not expressed in ratios in the United States. Instead, wins and losses are totaled in a "win-loss" record. For the 2013 season (which concluded in January 2014), Auburn was 12-2, with 12 wins and two losses.
angel pina<3 09-22-11
Any ratio where the wins are above the losses is good, 70:3 is very good and well above average.
3:8
.560 for 9 wins 5 losses and .500 for 8 wins 4 losses and 2 ties.
A team that plays 25 and wins 11 with no ties must have lost all the rest which would 25- 11. Ratio is another word for fraction, so answer would be 11/ (25-11)
Before the NHL lockout, there were four categories; Wins, Losses, Ties, and Overtime Losses. Since the lockout there are now only three categories; Wins, Losses, and Overtime losses (which include shootout losses)