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Non sequitur
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Keep fishing!Non sequitur
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So your explanation of how it is a loaded question is to pick out one attribute (not a sufficient definition) from wikipedia that could be applied to any question ever asked in a disagreement. Seriously just stop. This is getting silly. I didn't ask you a loaded question. I asked you to assign a probability based on what you think is going to happen. When you think something is the best course of action you are innately assigning a probability to it. I am asking you for that number.
You have stated that you think giving the ball back to Manning at midfield down 17 with 8 minutes to go is more risky than giving it to him on the 20 yard line.
I am simply asking you, in a very standard way to attempt to quantify how much more risky you think it is.
I didn't ask for a definitive number, or past data points, or specific examples. I asked for what % of the time YOUT THINK those 20 yards are the difference between winning and losing, and what % of the time YOU THINK Manning wins the game from the 20 yard line in that situation.
If you can't or won't do this you have no business making or criticizing decisions of other because that is how decisions are made.
You are being what now seems like deliberately evasive and obtuse in answering this question because I think you know that your assertion that the smart move is to "always" try to pin him back isn't based on any coherent logic. It's staggering just how much some people struggle with this.
So you just decided to throw in completely superfluous pieces of 8th grade information to make it seem like you have a grasp on statistics? What other possible reason is there for this little blurb. "yeah well, have you ever heard of regression to the mean?!?!? pshaww boom in yo face!" Big time lol @ you here.
So here we go to demonstrate that you still have no clue what's going on and are just arguing from ignorance....
This is so mindbogglingly dumb I don't even know where to begin. For starters, as explained above you didn't even understand the question.
What else are you using to formulate your opinion on the likelihood of manning winning the game fromt he 20? And you ignored the most significant numbers in determining this; the base rate.
Instead what you've written here is basically "never happened before derp de derp."
The fact that in your mind the presumed probability is limited to a universe of these numbers is just insanely idiotic,
and all it really shows is that instead of going and actually thinking about this you are just arguing for the sake of arguing.
What is this even supposed to mean? facepalm.jpg
NO. Your logic was that the fumble occurred only because of the decision to go for it. That's what you said. I showed you how that is completely idiotic.
My example was in a game where the field goal was obviously the correct choice
but according to your previous results-oriented argument, it must have been incorrect because he missed.
You also go on later in the post and your previous one to make the same asinine argument that because Brady fumbled Belichick must have not considered the possibility that he would (this somehow makes sense in your mind).
You've proven totally myopic to this point thoug so I don't expect you to do anything other than continue to shift the goalposts wrt this point.
jfc. First of all, nice sample size. Second of all, this is laughable cherry-picking by a results-oriented mind at work.
The 2009 decision was correct because even though we failed to convert (a 25% event can occur you know),
the chances of us converting were greater than the chances of us punting and keeping Manning from scoring. The fact that people can't think aboutthings in this way without saying "hurr durr stats aren't everything" just shows how stupid they are.
You want to compare it to one time we punted and manning threw an INT. The fact that you think this is meaningful says everything really but I'll walk you through it anyway.
How many times have we punted and Manning has not thrown an INT?
What do you think the chances are that Manning throws an INT if we punt?
You are talking about a situation where Manning is down 3 scores with 8 minutes left.
What do you think the chances are that Manning being pinned behind the 20 or on the 47 are the difference between him throwing an INT or not in that situation?
I know you can't answer questions that cause you to re-evaluate your terrible logic so I'll just go ahead and write in your next response here: "zommggg dats a lowdud questionsssszzz"
Do you have ADHD or something? You said originally that "53% isn't that much greater." I asked you "than what?" You then said "47%" I then asked you what your point was and your answer is now that I didn't have a point?
Why don't you take a deep breath befre your next response and make sure you actually understand what you are typing. And 47% isn't the risk. The risk is the % that they lose in game equity, 47% is the chance that they don't convert the first down. Something your next response shows you are lost about as well....
WAT. You said it yourself that it's 1-3 plays for Manning. Your entire argument hinges on punting being a smart decision for the Pats in trying to win the game and therefore the correct choice to increase their chances of winning by an amount greater than going for it would. So if 1-3 plays only negligibly increases their chances of winning, and increases it less than going for it does your whole argument is moot. Please read this a few times and at least try to understand it before writing more to show that you didn't.
This is really the crux of where you aren't thinking correctly or even trying to. 47% is not the risk. That's the chance that we don't convert.
The risk is the % that we lose the game based on the decision. This is extremely basic stuff. We are taking a 53% of converting for a near 100% of winning the game.
It's the correct decision because even the extremely low percentage play that occurred; Brady fumbling, only reduced our chances of winning to 89%. It's a no brainer decision and it's laughable how ignorant so many people are about this.
so let me get this straight: event X occurs. You say that BB must not have weighed the chance that X occurred because it did. And your evidence for this is that x occurred. You then have the audacity to start talking about logical fallacies. And you cap it off with well if he did incorporate it then that's even worse? So coaches should only make decisions that have a 100% success rate?
Just stop.
No, you weren't talking about Arizona. It was from here:
You make no argument as to why it was "boneheaded" other than because punting it was right. You've offered no statistics or even reasoning. The best you have is "because it make sense". Its the very definition of a circular argument.
Explain it to me one more time. Why does the risk of giving it to Manning at near mid field when up by 17 minutes with 8:17 left on the clock exceed the potential benefit of keeping the ball and running down more clock or even scoring?
You may want to go back and re-read everything that I've wrote in this thread, because...
1. That quote was directly in response to the horrible Arizona field goal example.
2. I've made plenty of arguments using statistics for why going for it was not only boneheaded, but completely unnecessary.
3. Why waste my time when you intentionally won't get it out of some misplaced sense of loyalty toward Belichick? Go back to my posts toward Tyrone and you'll see my explanation.
And, just like in 2009 if you are planning to go for it on fourth down why throw the ball on third down? Dumb.
True but that's what the decision boils down to is do you count on your defense to make something of that extra 20-30 yards or do you count on the GOAT QB to convert 5 yards. I go with my GOAT QB in that situation
You said, "You punt it every time in this situation because it's the decision that isn't completely boneheaded."
Punt...not kick. Stop spinning it. its a circular argument.
No. You haven't. If you think have then it should be easy for you to just answer the question.
Why does the risk of giving it to Manning at near mid field when up by 17 minutes with 8:17 left on the clock exceed the potential benefit of keeping the ball and running down more clock or even scoring?
This is nonsense. You think that I have some misplaced sense of loyalty towards Belichick because I think he is right and a good coach? Why don't you stop being so snarky and blatantly obtuse and just answer the question?
And that was in response to the terrible example of the Arizona field goal. Please stop making yourself look like a fool and, for the love of God, go back and read the post.
1. Reward: Keep the ball when already up 17.
2. Risk: Fail to convert, give the Broncos the ball back at midfield, give the Broncos the ball back with momentum, give Manning the ball back with those two things and enough time to put up 17 points.
You've said yourself Manning can ring up points on anyone in a hurry right? So now I'll ask you the questions since Tyrone is apparently taking the weekend off. Why take a 47% risk of not converting and then giving the Broncos all that on a silver spoon? Further, we had a 17 point lead with 8 minutes to go. Why the need to have such a sudden sense of urgency instead of putting it on your defense (which ended up stopping the scoring outburst that came after the momentum shift anyway)?
Nah it's not nonsense. It's completely obvious that you're arguing from the loyal homer point of view.
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