![]() |
I can understand why people like Cassel and put there hope in him much like they did with Huard. He won games for New England so why can't he do it here. But Cmon he is stinking up the place like Huard did his final games its that obvious. Maybe Cassel can turn it around when D Bowe comes back and maybe I am being too hard on him since his line let him down most of the season and his recievers drop balls but Cmon he hasn't shown me anything that he can take this team as bad as it is to a new level and make this team better. That's what a leader does, that's what the QB is suppose to do.
I'm not blaming Cassel for all the losses but I am blaming him for 3rd down conversons that falls strait on his lap. I am also blaming him for lack of total offensive production for the most part any other QB comming here would be blamed too. I think we can do better for QB like through the Draft or see what Brodie can do with the same team. Not sold on Cassel. |
Quote:
|
Quote:
:D |
Quote:
I'd love see one. |
Quote:
|
Quote:
If you just stick to the goddamn equation the league fins important, there's not reason to try to distinguish the difference between an 8-8 team and a 9-7 team. .516 > .480 |
Quote:
|
Hey ... is there a site that shows the opponents winning % by team each year or are you going through and adding this up on your own? I'm not debating your numbers, was thinking of something else and wanted to ask.
|
Quote:
If I did the math correctly, Patriots opponents only have to win 37.5% of their remaining games to keep the 2009 overall winning percentage over last season's .480. 24 wins out of 64 games. .375 1.5 wins per team. Hell, the Colts and Saints could lose out, and the rest would still only have to go .428 the last 4 weeks. Throw Tampa in there too. If any three teams were to lose out, the remaining 13 teams would have to go .500. |
Quote:
Pretty easy to do when you only have 2 seasons to deal with. Ask away. If I have time, I'll do the research. |
Quote:
|
Quote:
I'm assuming you're thinking somewhere along the lines of an 0-16 team weakening your SOS. Obviously, they are going to, as they should. You played the weakest team in the league. Here's what it does to SOS: There are 256 games in a NFL season. The difference between playing an 0-16 team and others, assuming all other opponents were .500 for convenience sake: 0-16: SOS = .468 Replace that 0-16 team with a 2-14 team: 2-14: SOS = .476 4-12: SOS = .484 Not the significant difference you might expect. |
Quote:
|
Quote:
The whole thing is utterly ridiculous and makes no sense. They trade a 2nd round pick for a win now QB and a win now, broke-dick LB, do nothing to protect the win now QB, throw darts at a board until ONE player shows up to help the QB by catching his noodle-armed passes, and scrap a defensive foundation for a new scheme which they promptly turn over to a graduate from the ****her School of Uselessness. How do these guys NOT get a D- or a straight-up F? |
Quote:
I don't know how valid your numbers are considering you account for all other teams being .500 in that scenario. Granted, I suck at math and maybe your rationale makes sense. But, yeah ... since you were saying that the two 12-0 teams have no real bearing on NE's SOS in 2009 vs 2008... I was looking at the opposite end of that spectrum. But, it's interesting, you said it's obvious that an 0-16 team would weaken their SOS... yet, you're saying the 12-0 teams won't inflate. Oh well.. we'll touch base in a month. |
All times are GMT -6. The time now is 02:03 PM. |
Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.8
Copyright ©2000 - 2025, vBulletin Solutions, Inc.