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- Mar 19, 2006
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We're all resorting to various modern forms of divination in searching for patterns in stats that will be relevant to the Super Bowl. There are a finite number of plays coming our way this Sunday (and a seemingly infinite number of commercials, but that's off topic).
Coaches will have studied each other's teams, players will have prepped, game plans will have been prepared, coaches will have run their "if/then" trees as often as receivers will have run their regular trees.
If a player "makes that play 90 percent of the time" he might not this time. One guy out of position, one guy reading zone when it's man or vice versa, one guy picking his hand out of the dirt for no reason at the wrong time, and the game changes. I am not putting down the outcome to luck, perish the thought. I am only stating the obvious - that we only know probabilities right now (and can argue about those probabilities for fun.)
We're applying stats and predicting scores for fun, and I get that... but we're yearning for a determinative universe (that comes out right), and the reality is that there's no accurate model that we can apply. I've seen the cogent argument of the superior predictive power of statistics in baseball because of the length of the season. Well yeah, but you either hit the ball or you don't every time. Sometimes it's realllllly important which one happens.
In fact, paradoxically, one can make the argument that it is the team that is most conscious of this fact that can play mistake-free football, never be out of position, etc.
Conversely one can argue that if their heroes "fly around" and "have fun," that means they'll win (putatively one frees oneself to perform better by ignoring such structured thinking - although this might be a much more valuable skill for a field goal kicker or an archer than for a MIKE linebacker or a quarterback).
"Way to kill the board" I guess. But we just can't argue our way to precognition. Sunday can't get here fast enough.
By the way we're gonna win.
/coredump
Coaches will have studied each other's teams, players will have prepped, game plans will have been prepared, coaches will have run their "if/then" trees as often as receivers will have run their regular trees.
If a player "makes that play 90 percent of the time" he might not this time. One guy out of position, one guy reading zone when it's man or vice versa, one guy picking his hand out of the dirt for no reason at the wrong time, and the game changes. I am not putting down the outcome to luck, perish the thought. I am only stating the obvious - that we only know probabilities right now (and can argue about those probabilities for fun.)
We're applying stats and predicting scores for fun, and I get that... but we're yearning for a determinative universe (that comes out right), and the reality is that there's no accurate model that we can apply. I've seen the cogent argument of the superior predictive power of statistics in baseball because of the length of the season. Well yeah, but you either hit the ball or you don't every time. Sometimes it's realllllly important which one happens.
In fact, paradoxically, one can make the argument that it is the team that is most conscious of this fact that can play mistake-free football, never be out of position, etc.
Conversely one can argue that if their heroes "fly around" and "have fun," that means they'll win (putatively one frees oneself to perform better by ignoring such structured thinking - although this might be a much more valuable skill for a field goal kicker or an archer than for a MIKE linebacker or a quarterback).
"Way to kill the board" I guess. But we just can't argue our way to precognition. Sunday can't get here fast enough.
By the way we're gonna win.
/coredump












