gsdgsd wrote:girlfriend put money down on the Giants in an attempt to get into this whole "football" thing, so I'm glad to see her win (and presumably, embrace the sport).
I would absolutely like to see what would happen if Dayna and I picked games for next season. I bet she would completely punish me and be thirty games up on me by mid-season.
Twice I've tried to pick games for a season - once in a Yahoo on-line league with Mike Sousa that quickly turned into a debacle (on my part) because I wouldn't wake up in time to pick all the games.
The second was a simple win/lose thing, not against any spread, at "Woody's," a bar in Fort Collins that was within walking distance of our place. I was routinely getting 6 out of 15 games correct (this was before the Texans and Browns entered the league). Just straight-up, I couldn't pick them.
The number of common sense upsets were ASTOUNDING this year, in the playoffs. I mean:
- Seahawks beating Redskins. Yeah, I could see that.
- Giants beating Bucs. I could see that, although that site "FootballOutsiders.com" should be shut down for how badly they bashed NY. But from there:
- Chargers beating Colts? Nobody expected that.
- Giants beating the Cowboys, Packers and Pats?
- Jags beating Steelers?
There is NO WAY TO WIN betting against the NFL. I'll tell you what - the Saints dominated the Seahawks in the regular season. I guarantee you the Hawks would have been up by 40 if they met in the playoffs. Nothing seems to matter, week from week.
With that in mind, I am very curious to see how the 2008 season goes. I want to know what happens to a team that ran up the score, when they are no longer completely dominant. It may not happen in 2008, and that's fine. But I will be completely disappointed if, when the Patriots ARE on the decline, other teams don't completely mash them. I think one of the reasons the Cowboys went 1-15 when Jimmy Johnson first took over was because the rest of the NFC was extracting revenge for getting their heads caved in for twenty years.
Of course, what probably will happen instead is that the AFC will be filled with new coaches who weren't around during the beatdowns (already the case with the Dolphins and Ravens and the season hadn't ended yet) and therefore not give a shit.
[quote="gsdgsd"]girlfriend put money down on the Giants in an attempt to get into this whole "football" thing, so I'm glad to see her win (and presumably, embrace the sport).
[/quote]
I would absolutely like to see what would happen if Dayna and I picked games for next season. I bet she would completely punish me and be thirty games up on me by mid-season.
Twice I've tried to pick games for a season - once in a Yahoo on-line league with Mike Sousa that quickly turned into a debacle (on my part) because I wouldn't wake up in time to pick all the games.
The second was a simple win/lose thing, not against any spread, at "Woody's," a bar in Fort Collins that was within walking distance of our place. I was routinely getting 6 out of 15 games correct (this was before the Texans and Browns entered the league). Just straight-up, I couldn't pick them.
The number of common sense upsets were ASTOUNDING this year, in the playoffs. I mean:
- Seahawks beating Redskins. Yeah, I could see that.
- Giants beating Bucs. I could see that, although that site "FootballOutsiders.com" should be shut down for how badly they bashed NY. But from there:
- Chargers beating Colts? Nobody expected that.
- Giants beating the Cowboys, Packers and Pats?
- Jags beating Steelers?
There is NO WAY TO WIN betting against the NFL. I'll tell you what - the Saints dominated the Seahawks in the regular season. I guarantee you the Hawks would have been up by 40 if they met in the playoffs. Nothing seems to matter, week from week.
With that in mind, I am very curious to see how the 2008 season goes. I want to know what happens to a team that ran up the score, when they are no longer completely dominant. It may not happen in 2008, and that's fine. But I will be completely disappointed if, when the Patriots ARE on the decline, other teams don't completely mash them. I think one of the reasons the Cowboys went 1-15 when Jimmy Johnson first took over was because the rest of the NFC was extracting revenge for getting their heads caved in for twenty years.
Of course, what probably will happen instead is that the AFC will be filled with new coaches who weren't around during the beatdowns (already the case with the Dolphins and Ravens and the season hadn't ended yet) and therefore not give a shit.