I.Q.
Moderators: UAdevil, JMarkJohns
- Longhorned
- Posts: 14758
- Joined: Tue Jun 03, 2014 1:04 pm
- Reputation: 975
- Location: In a guayabera at The Sands Club, Arizona Stadium
I.Q.
Need to have one in the final minute of the Superbowl.
Wow, Seahawks.
Wow, Seahawks.
- scumdevils86
- Posts: 11663
- Joined: Tue Jun 03, 2014 12:34 pm
- Reputation: 232
- Location: t-town
Re: I.Q.
Such an awful call good lord
- PieceOfMeat
- Posts: 14080
- Joined: Thu Jun 05, 2014 9:14 pm
- Reputation: 337
Re: I.Q.
posted this in the other thread, will post it here too.
morons. that's what the seahawks were.
pete carrol wtf were you doing. 2nd and goal from the 1..plenty of time, timeouts, and you don't give it to lynch?
morons deserve to lose.
morons. that's what the seahawks were.
pete carrol wtf were you doing. 2nd and goal from the 1..plenty of time, timeouts, and you don't give it to lynch?
morons deserve to lose.
It's long past time to bring this back to the court, let's do it with a small update:
- FreeSpiritCat
- Posts: 4572
- Joined: Tue Jun 03, 2014 2:22 pm
- Reputation: 468
- Location: Lebanon, New Hampshire
Re: I.Q.
Seattle really Couged it something fierce.
- Daryl Zero
- Posts: 2447
- Joined: Tue Jun 03, 2014 5:00 pm
- Reputation: 0
Re: I.Q.
Emmitt Smith just trying to be Bill Walton.84Cat wrote:
Erlich Bachmann: Richard wrote the code, yes, but the inspiration was clear. Let me ask you something. How fast do you think you could jack off every guy in this room? Cause I know how long it would take me. And I could prove it.
- EastCoastCat
- Posts: 6531
- Joined: Fri Jun 06, 2014 11:25 am
- Reputation: 1949
Re: I.Q.
After Lynch's first down run to the one, I was wondering why the Pats did not call a timeout as it was almost certain Seattle was going to score. Then the announcers were mentioning the Pats might let them score so they could get the ball back with some time left on the clock. Then the ill-fated pass.
That last minute was totally surreal.
That last minute was totally surreal.
- Chicat
- Posts: 46634
- Joined: Tue Jun 03, 2014 12:19 pm
- Reputation: 3978
- Location: Your mother's basement
Re: I.Q.
When after Lynch's 4 yard run the Seahawks made no urgent move to get the next snap off or to take a timeout, I knew they were going to throw the ball. I just couldn't imagine a scenario where they run the ball on 2nd down and then if they don't make it they're forced to take their last timeout with 20 seconds left. Because then the question of what to do at that point as far as run vs. pass looms.
I could tell Seattle was thinking, "let's throw it here and see if we can catch them off guard. Then if it's incomplete, the clock stops and we still have two more shots with Marshawn and our timeout."
Makes me wonder if New England was thinking the same thing.
I could tell Seattle was thinking, "let's throw it here and see if we can catch them off guard. Then if it's incomplete, the clock stops and we still have two more shots with Marshawn and our timeout."
Makes me wonder if New England was thinking the same thing.
Of the 12 coaches, Rush picked the one whose fans have the deepest passion, the longest memories, the greatest lung capacity and … did I mention deep passion?
- CatzManiac
- Posts: 32
- Joined: Wed Jun 04, 2014 1:25 pm
- Reputation: 0
Re: I.Q.
http://www.washingtonpost.com/news/spor ... e-carroll/Chicat wrote:When after Lynch's 4 yard run the Seahawks made no urgent move to get the next snap off or to take a timeout, I knew they were going to throw the ball. I just couldn't imagine a scenario where they run the ball on 2nd down and then if they don't make it they're forced to take their last timeout with 20 seconds left. Because then the question of what to do at that point as far as run vs. pass looms.
I could tell Seattle was thinking, "let's throw it here and see if we can catch them off guard. Then if it's incomplete, the clock stops and we still have two more shots with Marshawn and our timeout."
Makes me wonder if New England was thinking the same thing.
- Chicat
- Posts: 46634
- Joined: Tue Jun 03, 2014 12:19 pm
- Reputation: 3978
- Location: Your mother's basement
Re: I.Q.
Aha! See? I'm smarter than I look...CatzManiac wrote:http://www.washingtonpost.com/news/spor ... e-carroll/Chicat wrote:When after Lynch's 4 yard run the Seahawks made no urgent move to get the next snap off or to take a timeout, I knew they were going to throw the ball. I just couldn't imagine a scenario where they run the ball on 2nd down and then if they don't make it they're forced to take their last timeout with 20 seconds left. Because then the question of what to do at that point as far as run vs. pass looms.
I could tell Seattle was thinking, "let's throw it here and see if we can catch them off guard. Then if it's incomplete, the clock stops and we still have two more shots with Marshawn and our timeout."
Makes me wonder if New England was thinking the same thing.
Of the 12 coaches, Rush picked the one whose fans have the deepest passion, the longest memories, the greatest lung capacity and … did I mention deep passion?
- Longhorned
- Posts: 14758
- Joined: Tue Jun 03, 2014 1:04 pm
- Reputation: 975
- Location: In a guayabera at The Sands Club, Arizona Stadium
Re: I.Q.
Or you're a plagiarist, which is usually the issue with you "smart ones."Chicat wrote:Aha! See? I'm smarter than I look...CatzManiac wrote:http://www.washingtonpost.com/news/spor ... e-carroll/Chicat wrote:When after Lynch's 4 yard run the Seahawks made no urgent move to get the next snap off or to take a timeout, I knew they were going to throw the ball. I just couldn't imagine a scenario where they run the ball on 2nd down and then if they don't make it they're forced to take their last timeout with 20 seconds left. Because then the question of what to do at that point as far as run vs. pass looms.
I could tell Seattle was thinking, "let's throw it here and see if we can catch them off guard. Then if it's incomplete, the clock stops and we still have two more shots with Marshawn and our timeout."
Makes me wonder if New England was thinking the same thing.
- Chicat
- Posts: 46634
- Joined: Tue Jun 03, 2014 12:19 pm
- Reputation: 3978
- Location: Your mother's basement
Re: I.Q.
I do read WaPo online, but honestly I had zero idea they covered sports. I learned something new while schooling you less intellectual types with my brain and stuff.Longhorned wrote:Or you're a plagiarist, which is usually the issue with you "smart ones."Chicat wrote:Aha! See? I'm smarter than I look...CatzManiac wrote:http://www.washingtonpost.com/news/spor ... e-carroll/Chicat wrote:When after Lynch's 4 yard run the Seahawks made no urgent move to get the next snap off or to take a timeout, I knew they were going to throw the ball. I just couldn't imagine a scenario where they run the ball on 2nd down and then if they don't make it they're forced to take their last timeout with 20 seconds left. Because then the question of what to do at that point as far as run vs. pass looms.
I could tell Seattle was thinking, "let's throw it here and see if we can catch them off guard. Then if it's incomplete, the clock stops and we still have two more shots with Marshawn and our timeout."
Makes me wonder if New England was thinking the same thing.
Of the 12 coaches, Rush picked the one whose fans have the deepest passion, the longest memories, the greatest lung capacity and … did I mention deep passion?
- Merkin
- Posts: 43386
- Joined: Tue Jun 03, 2014 10:31 am
- Reputation: 1581
- Location: UA basketball smells like....victory
538 weighs in
http://fivethirtyeight.com/features/a-h ... e-carroll/
That’s right. On the 1-yard line, QBs threw 66 touchdowns with no interceptions prior to Wilson’s errant toss.3 Not mentioned: They also scored four touchdowns on scrambles (which Wilson is pretty good at last I checked). That’s a 60.9 percent success rate.
Just for comparison’s sake, here’s how more than 200 runs fared this year in the same situation:
125 led to touchdowns.
94 failed to score.
Of those, 23 were for loss of yardage.
Two resulted in lost fumbles.
So overall, runs do a bit worse than passes (57.1 percent vs. 60.9 percent).
That’s right. On the 1-yard line, QBs threw 66 touchdowns with no interceptions prior to Wilson’s errant toss.3 Not mentioned: They also scored four touchdowns on scrambles (which Wilson is pretty good at last I checked). That’s a 60.9 percent success rate.
Just for comparison’s sake, here’s how more than 200 runs fared this year in the same situation:
125 led to touchdowns.
94 failed to score.
Of those, 23 were for loss of yardage.
Two resulted in lost fumbles.
So overall, runs do a bit worse than passes (57.1 percent vs. 60.9 percent).