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Need a thread......
He is.Tua looking sharp
Wow time fly's when your celebrating a win.Need a thread......
Agreed in a tight defensive game why not take the 9 point lead. If anything why run it twice up the gut when they are sitting there. Learning experience for MM. Fins will be better next week Tua needs the practice time.What a terrible decision to go for it. Just go up 2 scores and play defense (against a bad offense).
What a terrible decision to go for it. Just go up 2 scores and play defense (against a bad offense).
Unreal, especially in such a low-scoring game... and then throwing (incomplete) on 3rd & long on their last meaningful possession, giving the Steelers an extra 30 seconds. I had no rooting interest, but I so wanted the Steelers to score on that last drive and shove it in the face of SF's "boy genius".
Unreal, especially in such a low-scoring game... and then throwing (incomplete) on 3rd & long on their last meaningful possession, giving the Steelers an extra 30 seconds. I had no rooting interest, but I so wanted the Steelers to score on that last drive and shove it in the face of SF's "boy genius".
It is funny to listen to announcers and see the coaches try things like that because of the "analytics". What people don't realize is that the analytics dont take into account ANYTHING about the opposing team or your team. It is just a general rule of thumb for any random NFL game.
Which means when it says you should go for it and try to put up more points rather than just take the 3 points is that it doesn't care if you are facing a bad offense like the Steelers or a great offense like KC's. It also doesn't take into account your defense and whether it is solid or awful. If you feed factors like that into an analytical formula, it would be RADICALLY different numbers than the numbers they are using to make the decision.
I'm not saying analytics are useless. But without realizing things like the above, they will lead you to the wrong analytical decision way more often than not because there is no such thing as a generic up 6 at the end of the 3rd quarter. If you aren't factoring in such things as your offense, their offense, your defense, their defense, your ability to successfully convert a 4th and 2 and a whole host of other factors, you really aren't using an analytical approach.
I think it was Collinsworth who said it a couple of weeks ago and it is completely true: Analytics in the modern NFL are really just used as an excuse that a coach can point to as to why he went with his gut instinct and went for it on 4th. Because most of the decisions they are making aren't really using analytics correctly.