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Thread: McCarthy and "Close Games"

  1. #341
    Quote Originally Posted by Fritz View Post
    This thread should be taken out back and shot.
    But you only get 4 bullets, to increase the degree of difficulty.
    Bud Adams told me the franchise he admired the most was the Kansas City Chiefs. Then he asked for more hookers and blow.

  2. #342
    Obscure Rat HOFer Lurker64's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by pbmax View Post
    But you only get 4 bullets, to increase the degree of difficulty.
    I could easily fatally wound this thread in four bullets or less... unlike Mike McCarthy.
    </delurk>

  3. #343
    Drowned Rat HOFer denverYooper's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Lurker64 View Post
    I could easily fatally wound this thread in four bullets or less... unlike Mike McCarthy.
    He'd probably try some ridiculous headshot from between the legs from 80 yards off instead of methodically pumping them in at close range.

  4. #344
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    Bump.

    MM still can't win close games. Stop the other team on the last play of the game from the 1 and IT'S NOT A CLOSE GAME!!!!

    So if NO scores the TD but doesn't make the 2 pointer its close but because we stop them on the TD attempt it isn't.
    But Rodgers leads the league in frumpy expressions and negative body language on the sideline, which makes him, like Josh Allen, a unique double threat.

    -Tim Harmston

  5. #345
    Quote Originally Posted by rbaloha View Post
    Do you have the soccer channel yet?
    Nope.
    Bud Adams told me the franchise he admired the most was the Kansas City Chiefs. Then he asked for more hookers and blow.

  6. #346
    Quote Originally Posted by SnakeLH2006 View Post
    3) His Offensive staff is turned over yearly and there is little consistency with the O.
    Always got the feeling that Snake was never really paying attention. Might have been his girlfriend distracting him.
    Last edited by pbmax; 09-09-2011 at 11:23 AM.
    Bud Adams told me the franchise he admired the most was the Kansas City Chiefs. Then he asked for more hookers and blow.

  7. #347
    Quote Originally Posted by pbmax View Post
    Harv answered about Tomlin so I will take Caldwell. He took over a Super Bowl caliber team (including Super Bowl caliber offensive assistants Moore and Howard Mudd) and took it to the Super Bowl. He went 14-2 (impressive under any condition) while playing in a bad AFC South Division. In three years, this might indicate that Caldwell is under-appreciated currently and is indeed a top ten coach. But right now, to me, he seems closer to Barry Switzer or Brian Billick.

    Judging the Colts this year is tough as like the Packers they have had extensive injuries. However, unlike Tomlin, Caldwell had the clout to remake his defensive staffand hired Larry Coyer to replace Ron Meeks. Meeks' last two years with Dungy produced points allowed rankings of 1st and 7th. Coyer has notched 8th and 23rd. As I said, injuries make conclusions about this year tough. But Caldwell is a cipher compared to McCarthy. M3 has done more with less for longer.

    But let's face facts: McCarthy's credentials can be argued back and forth for eternity. There is material for each side of the debate. If he makes another deep playoff run or wins a Super Bowl, then all questions will fade and his near-genius will be proclaimed far and wide. But until that point, no one will have the guts to comment that this guy is good and that its a good bet that when replaced, the next guy will be worse.

    All coaches have holes and weaknesses. No one thought Holmgren could win in Green Bay with a passing attack that couldn't run until he did it (I always thought it odd that the Dickey years didn't provide more confidence about a passing attack in Green Bay-must have been Infante; or Gregg's overall record). But when he made the championship game and then won a Super Bowl, all questions were left in the dust. He didn't transform into a genius and he had the same weaknesses, people just couldn't claim those weaknesses were fatal.

    McCarthy has the tools and the smarts. The outstanding questions (special teams, O line inconsistency, penalties, being overly fond of 50 FG attempts(ie. passive late game strategy)) will stay the same. But if he can hold two of those together for a string of six games (ST and penalties) late in the season, then I think he wins one very soon.
    Finally a bump that makes me look prescient, not hopeless.
    Bud Adams told me the franchise he admired the most was the Kansas City Chiefs. Then he asked for more hookers and blow.

  8. #348
    Obscure Rat HOFer Lurker64's Avatar
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    It's worth noting that the game last night was not "close" by the media's strictly defined metric, so McCarthy still can't win close games in the regular season.
    Last edited by Lurker64; 09-09-2011 at 11:42 AM.
    </delurk>

  9. #349
    Quote Originally Posted by Lurker64 View Post
    It's worth noting that the game last night was not "close" by the media's strictly defined Network, so McCarthy still can't win close games in the regular season.
    Well, they wouldn't bother to mention it unless it was a rock solid conclusion.
    Bud Adams told me the franchise he admired the most was the Kansas City Chiefs. Then he asked for more hookers and blow.

  10. #350
    Quote Originally Posted by Joemailman View Post
    So he's 10-2 in games decided by 5-7 points. Awesome!
    This was a good one.
    "There's a lot of interest in the draft. It's great. But quite frankly, most of the people that are commenting on it don't know anything about what they are talking about."--Ted Thompson

  11. #351
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    Bump.

    We have now won our last 10 games in a row and still haven't won a close game. We have outscored the other team by 131 points in that stretch. Blowouts of Denver, ATL and NYG included.
    But Rodgers leads the league in frumpy expressions and negative body language on the sideline, which makes him, like Josh Allen, a unique double threat.

    -Tim Harmston

  12. #352
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    IMO this thread is moot -- score aside the packers won a close super bowl.

  13. #353
    Red Devil Rat HOFer gbgary's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by rbaloha1 View Post
    IMO this thread is moot -- score aside the packers won a close super bowl.
    yep...i'd call the sb a close game too.

  14. #354
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    Originally Posted by rbaloha
    Rant as you want. At the end of the day, MM's record in close and meaningful games is horrible -- zero disputing. MM is good at developing (i.e. Brooks and Rodgers) or enhancing careers (i.e. Gannon, Delhomme and Favre) qbs. MM has proven HE CAN NOT WIN CHAMPIONSHIP(S) IN TITLETOWN, USA.

    Keep up the truthiness and see where it leads you.


    Says the guy who posted this!
    But Rodgers leads the league in frumpy expressions and negative body language on the sideline, which makes him, like Josh Allen, a unique double threat.

    -Tim Harmston

  15. #355
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    Quote Originally Posted by rbaloha1 View Post
    IMO this thread is moot -- score aside the packers won a close super bowl.
    See above.
    But Rodgers leads the league in frumpy expressions and negative body language on the sideline, which makes him, like Josh Allen, a unique double threat.

    -Tim Harmston

  16. #356
    Green & Gold Shades Rat HOFer channtheman's Avatar
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    I don't understand why a "close" game isn't defined as 8 points or less (i.e. one possession). Makes the most sense to me.

  17. #357
    Indenial Rat HOFer bobblehead's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by channtheman View Post
    I don't understand why a "close" game isn't defined as 8 points or less (i.e. one possession). Makes the most sense to me.
    Because they couldn't make the point that MM is a choke artist shitty coach with that metric so they found one that worked with the predefined conclusion. If you study statistics you will find that kind of logic often.
    I don't hold Grudges. It's counterproductive.

  18. #358
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    Quote Originally Posted by bobblehead View Post
    Because they couldn't make the point that MM is a choke artist shitty coach with that metric so they found one that worked with the predefined conclusion. If you study statistics you will find that kind of logic often.
    After the Loins debacle last season, thought MM fit in this category (Peter King reported MM was slightly in trouble if he failed to make the playoffs.) Also placed MM in the Sherman category (btw anyone notice MS choking 2 weeks in a row at TAMU?) As my friend ThunderDan points-out I was completely wrong.

    Winning a superbowl should cancel this type of thought. The packers have issues but losing close game is not one of them.

  19. #359
    Quote Originally Posted by bobblehead View Post
    Because they couldn't make the point that MM is a choke artist shitty coach with that metric so they found one that worked with the predefined conclusion. If you study statistics you will find that kind of logic often.
    It NFL geekdom (elsewhere in geekdom as well) this is known as multiple endpoints.

    From Advanced NFL Stats in their dissent about the Curse of 370 Carries:
    Statistical Trickery

    Why did Football Outsiders pick 370 as the cutoff? I'll show you why in a moment, but for now I'm going to illustrate a common statistical trick sometimes known as multiple endpoints by proving a statistically significant relationship between two completely unrelated things. I picked an NFL stat as obscure and random as I could think of--% of punts out of bounds (%OOB).

    Let's say I want to show how alphabetical order is directly related to this stat. I'll call my theory the "Curse of A through C" because punters whose first names start with an A, B, or C tend to kick the ball out of bounds far more often than other punters. In 2007 the A - C punters averaged 15% of their kicks out of bounds compared to only 10% for D - Z punters. In fact, the relationship is statistically significant (at p=0.02) despite the small sample size. So alphabetical order is clearly related to punting out of bounds!

    Actually, what I did was sort the list of punters in alphabetical order, and then scanned down the column of %OOB. I picked the spot on the list that was most favorable to my argument, then divided the sample there. This trick is called multiple endpoints because there are any number of places where I could draw the dividing line (endpoints), but chose the most favorable one after looking at the data. Football Outsiders used this very same trick, and I'll show exactly how and why.
    As many posters noticed, if Silverstein had chosen any other scoring gap, it would have defeated his premise. He saw a blip in the data and made a guess as to its cause, without having any evidence to back it up.
    Bud Adams told me the franchise he admired the most was the Kansas City Chiefs. Then he asked for more hookers and blow.

  20. #360
    Stout Rat HOFer Guiness's Avatar
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    Lies, damn lies and statistics. 4 out of 5 dentists recommend...not spreading shit on your toothbrush!
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