I cannot wrap.my head around that fact.
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NFL 2022 - Indianapolis .500
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Originally posted by ursus arctos View PostI cannot wrap.my head around that fact.
In hockey, the post expansion era is more than twice as old as the misnamed “original six” era. The Original Six era lasted about as long as the pre-O6 era of the NHL. 25 years.
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Stupid question here, but the NFC South is a really weak division. Will the winner still make the play-offs, even if their win percentage is far lower than other play-off contenders? Are divisions shaken up if all the teams are really weak, or is the expectation that they'll get stronger in time?
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steveeeeeeeee will suggest relegation next*
It is the ebb and flow of things - the NFC South had the team that won the whole thing two years ago. The NFC South has been considered the long standing weak one and the NFC East was dreadful a couple of years ago, as Ursus notes above.
The way they like to work around this is by building out the Wildcards to reduce the annoyance about the conferences. Plus that can mean a team gets an easier run at the playoffs with a weak conference winner.
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Originally posted by caja-dglh View Poststeveeeeeeeee will suggest relegation next*
It is the ebb and flow of things - the NFC South had the team that won the whole thing two years ago. The NFC South has been considered the long standing weak one and the NFC East was dreadful a couple of years ago, as Ursus notes above.
The way they like to work around this is by building out the Wildcards to reduce the annoyance about the conferences. Plus that can mean a team gets an easier run at the playoffs with a weak conference winner.
The purpose of the divisions is primarily to create and/or maintain traditional regional rivalries. But, just as in baseball, the NFL still maintains some, but not all, of the structure it had when it was two completely separate leagues.
Because of that, a few of the obvious rivalries like Jets-Giants, WTF-Ravens, Rams-Chargers, Steelers-Eagles, don't happen very often year, let alone twice a year. Meanwhile, the Cowboys are still in the NFC East because they always have been. And, of course, any set-up where each division has the same number of teams is going to make it impossible to link up every regional rivalry that you might want to see simply because NFL cities are not evenly distributed.
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Originally posted by steveeeeeeeee View PostStupid question here, but the NFC South is a really weak division. Will the winner still make the play-offs, even if their win percentage is far lower than other play-off contenders? Are divisions shaken up if all the teams are really weak, or is the expectation that they'll get stronger in time?
That's when an earthquake was registered with seismographs near the stadium.
Screen Shot 2022-11-30 at 8.03.54 PM.png
Aforementioned Riverboat Ron actually was coach of 66.6% of all teams that won their division with a losing record.
I'm okay with the division winner hosting a playoff. As I said with the European expansion, each team each year has an automatic 25% chance of making the playoffs. It keeps all fans engaged for the most part until near the end of the season, and sets up a game like in 2010 with the Seahawks and Rams, where Seattle was 6-9 and the Rams were 7-8 going into the game. With the Seahawks win, they won on tiebreakers.
Like caja said, it goes in cycles. This is by design with the draft. The NFC West barely made an NFC Championship from 2000-2010 (making only 2,) then from 2011-2020 they made 9.
From 2000-2010 the NFC East made 7, then from 2011-2020 they made 2.
From 2000-2010 the NFC South made 6, 2011-2020 they made 5.
From 2000-2010 the NFC North made 6, 2011-2020 they made 5.
So in the end, it all works out. For a few years a bunch of hack journalists call the NFC East the NFC Least, then for a few years it's NFC Beast.
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I'm being easily distracted at work today, so have run the numbers since the 2002 season, which is when the current divisions were established:So the AFC East is dominant, but if you consider that all the Superbowl appearances and twelve of the championship game appearances are the Patriots, we might consider that most of the disparity has been caused by Darth Belichick.Division SB Wins SB Apps Champ Games AFC East 5 8 15 AFC North 3 5 9 AFC South 1 2 7 AFC West 2 5 9 NFC East 3 4 7 NFC North 1 2 10 NFC South 3 6 11 NFC West 2 8 12
In terms of Superbowl appearances, the outliers are the AFC South and NFC North with just two apiece. The thing that I didn't expect from running this analysis, is that the two West divisions have accounted for just under half (9/20) of Superbowl losses!
Team wise, there is only one division which has failed to have at least three teams reach the championship game – the NFC East where Dallas and Washington have both fallen short despite their combined 80s/90s dominance. The other teams to have fallen short? Miami, Cleveland, Houston and Detroit. So three each from the conferences.
Seven teams have four or more championship game appearances, and pleasingly they are from seven different divisions. The NFC South is missing from that group, but has three of the six teams that have made three appearances.
In terms of cross-divisional matchups, in the twenty Superbowls analysed, nine of the possible sixteen match-ups have happened. Most often is an all-east matchup and AFC North v NFC West with four. The six not occurring were AE v NN, AN v NE, AN v NS, AS v NE, AS v NW, AW v NE, and AW v NN.
There are fewer gaps in the possible Championship match-ups. In the NFC we are only lacking an East-East and South-South match. In the AFC there has not been an East-East, East-West or North-West match. I think you would get reasonable odds that one of those AFC match-ups will happen this year.
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He's a stud, but nowhere near the NAME of...
not many former nfl'ers who have discs for bid on discogs - https://www.discogs.com/artist/1535099-Bake-Turner
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- Mar 2008
- 3386
- at the edge of the sea
- Plymouth Argyle, Plymouth Gladiators, Seattle Mariners
- cream crackers spread with nutella
Two questions...
How do you not score with first down at the one yard line. Is that a Jets thing?
And, regarding the Cowboys score do you not got an extra point attempt if scoring from an interception?
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1) Not scoring a touchdown happens 15 percent of the time. Not just a Jets thing.
http://phdfootball.blogspot.com/2013...20any%20points.
2) You always get a chance for a PAT. Dallas missed one last night.
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Originally posted by Greenlander View PostTwo questions...
How do you not score with first down at the one yard line. Is that a Jets thing?
And, regarding the Cowboys score do you not got an extra point attempt if scoring from an interception?
After you are handing a team its ass, it is optional to kick the extra point.
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