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Week 17: Bills at Bengals on MNF


Beck Water

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21 minutes ago, Marcus Aurelius said:

The Bills are going to win the Super Bowl and forever end this Red Helmet obsession. 

 

 

I think we are only 5-10 years away from the NFL playing some games where teams wear their rivals colors for a game.........and young Bills fans happily wearing the Bills logo around town in teal and orange.........much to the disdain of the generation now that loves the terrible color rush uni's. :lol:

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6 hours ago, CincyBillsFan said:

I agree.  This game was much bigger then the Monday night game against the Bengal's.  If the Bills had lost that game they would likely have lost the division.

 

 


Except I don’t think anyone thought there was a snowball’s chance in hell of us losing that 2nd Pats game last year. 

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22 minutes ago, Chicken Boo said:

2 of the top 3 QBs in football currently.

 

I expect a high scoring affair with a lot of it coming in the 2nd half.  

 

This should be a fantastic game.

I think it goes right down to the end. The QB with the ball last will bring his team down the field for the winning FG.

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On 12/28/2022 at 12:43 AM, arcane said:

That doesn't mean each team is equally likely to win lol 

 

I presented a perfectly legitimate binary operating under the same rules you outlined

I'll try another one. The poster is correct in saying that the odds of a team winning a given game aren't 50/50. If the Eagles played the Texans 100 times over the next two years, they would win substantially more than 50 of the games. That is what he's saying

 

Saying that the odds are 50/50 because only winning and losing are possible options is like saying that the odds of me passing a Harvard admissions test are 50/50, because it's a pass/fail test. Clearly my odds can vary based on how smart I am. If I am >150 IQ, my odds are probably significantly higher than 50%. If I am <100 IQ, my odds are significantly lower than 50%, even though it's "Pass or Fail" with no other options

 

I was clearly talking about pure mathematical possibility here, with only two possible results. Any kind of handicapping based on analysis is predictive, and therefore subjective. 

 

You're not wrong either, but what you're working with is not just mathematical probabilities.

17 hours ago, newcam2012 said:

So it's 50/50 this week between the Broncos vs KC? If so, I'll take KC and bet you a huge amount. I mean it's a coin flip as you say. 

Man, everyone is misinterpreting what I was saying. Of course we can predict that one team is more likely to win a given game, but that doesn't change the mathematical probability because we don't actually know what will transpire on game day other than one of the two teams will win, (in the playoffs, at least).

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4 minutes ago, Richard Noggin said:

 

I was clearly talking about pure mathematical possibility here, with only two possible results. Any kind of handicapping based on analysis is predictive, and therefore subjective. 

 

You're not wrong either, but what you're working with is not just mathematical probabilities.

There is no meaningful mathematical sense in which we would want to describe the outcome of a football game as "50/50 because you either win or lose"

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7 minutes ago, arcane said:

There is no meaningful mathematical sense in which we would want to describe the outcome of a football game as "50/50 because you either win or lose"

I know that recent progress in analytics has dramatically changed the way most fans, and especially gamblers, view probabilities. But the fact remains that a hypothetical look at probabilities of surviving a 3-game AFC playoff tournament as a non-1 seed versus a 2-game tournament as a 1-seed is not something we can preemptively permutate beyond the 50/50 maths. 

 

Once we know specific matchups there are myriad ways to handicap and predict outcomes based on data and calculations well beyond my understanding. So I'm not being obtuse here. I'm basing this stance on the post that originated this line of discussion, and the somewhat simple rules governing probabilities and permutations.  

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9 minutes ago, Chandler#81 said:

There’s plays that make a highlight reel. There’s plays that make a season. Then there’s plays that make history!

https://fb.watch/hIWNk1-XIt/

 

So many of those felt great to re-live. The Gabe Davis 4-TD example still hurt, turns out. I've never re-watched that game. SUCH a traumatic letdown. (And coming from a Bills fan of a certain age, we know the use of the term "traumatic" is not frivolous.) 

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10 hours ago, Big Turk said:

 

They have a very good chance of beating Bridgewater and the Fins this week to set up a potential playoff berth for themselves as crazy as it sounds. If they beat the Fins then it's win and in for them against us.

I remember 2 years ago when we played Miami in the last game and it was a “win and in” scenario for them too. Then we crushed them 56-26. One of my fav Bills games of all time. I hope New England beats the Fins just so we can do it again. Would be a high note to end the season on 😁

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4 hours ago, Richard Noggin said:

 

I was clearly talking about pure mathematical possibility here, with only two possible results. Any kind of handicapping based on analysis is predictive, and therefore subjective. 

 

You're not wrong either, but what you're working with is not just mathematical probabilities.

Man, everyone is misinterpreting what I was saying. Of course we can predict that one team is more likely to win a given game, but that doesn't change the mathematical probability because we don't actually know what will transpire on game day other than one of the two teams will win, (in the playoffs, at least).

To be clear and I understand your point let me ask you this. If I have a 200 yard race against a cheetah it is a 50/50 result because there are only 2 possible outcomes mathmatically. Am I correct? 

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