- Banned
- #326
Originally posted by Dave
If you persist in this illogical line of reasoning you may recieve a visit from DanJihad (TM). Not a pretty thought.
DanJihad (TM). I love it

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Originally posted by Dave
If you persist in this illogical line of reasoning you may recieve a visit from DanJihad (TM). Not a pretty thought.

The same bunch. And the beatings are getting worse and worse.Originally posted by Dave
With the same bunch or a different bunch?
Originally posted by M29
The same bunch. And the beatings are getting worse and worse.
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Originally posted by Squeak
Can we back up 12 to 15 pages here for a sec.
When was it decided goals per game was the most relevant stat for this topic?
Originally posted by Dave
So what does claiming they are sleeping together imply Dan?
Originally posted by Dave
Such compelling argument.
Originally posted by Mr. Thought Police
Wrong, the implication is in your words. Whether you intended it or not it another matter.
Originally posted by Dave
See, there's a difference between implication and intention.
Originally posted by Dave
No Daniel it isn't.
Originally posted by Dave
No, the initial discussion was that the person who worked in their field was more likely to know what they were on about and that their opinion holds more weight than that of someone who does not work in the field. That was my point, and as usual you missed it.
Originally posted by Dave
I'll take the opinion of those who know their stuff over yours any day Dan.
Originally posted by Dan26
You are a child.
How old are you, 13?
dumbass.
What is this some sort of mission to prove that I really literally am of the belief tht Diego and Shinners are having sex.
Originally posted by moomba
they are one of many factors, other than the 3 points for a win rule change that have to be considered when assessing scoring patterns over a long period of time.
Originally posted by moomba
I have acknowledge that there are many factors behind scoring over a long period of time, you have not. I have also acknowledge that statistics alone can only provide an indicator of trends, not the full story. Surprisingly enough, you have not come up with one non-statistical argument in this thread.
Originally posted by moomba
Six (or seven) years after the rule change the number of teams in the league changed from 44, to 46 to 38. I don't see the point in doing any analysis of scoring figures during this period, without also doing a detailed analysis of the effects of changing numbers of teams in a league. That's why I didn't go beyond the 5 years either way.
Originally posted by moomba
You continue to quote the 0.08 however you have been unable/incapble/unwilling to acknowledge that the rule change was never intended to effect every match.
Originally posted by moomba
Scoring has increased, by over 30 goals per season from memory.
Originally posted by moomba
It's not meaningless, when the debate is whether or not scoring has been on a downward trend since the 50's. Once again, you were wrong on that one, yet you fail to acknowledge that.
Originally posted by moomba
Help me out here Dan, what exactly are you talking about.
Originally posted by moomba
- The scoring in 1992/93 was affected by two things, first the introduction of the backpass rule in Italy, second the presence of two teams, Ancona and Pescara being promoted to Serie A and having a combined 234 goals either scored for, or more likely scored against prior to immediate relegation. This compared to 169 goals involving the two bottom team the year before, a difference of 0.21 goals per game.
-
Originally posted by moomba
The impact of the back pass rule was lessened the following year and the two bottom teams Atalanta and Lecce were involved in a combined 200 goals only.
Originally posted by Dave
For someone who claims not to get into personal abuse you do a pretty good impression of someone who does.
Originally posted by Dan26
Bullsh*t pretty much summed it up, I'm afraid. That's simply what it was.
Wrong. The implication is only in the words if you believe it is.
I know what I impied and what I didn't.
You might as well claim whatever you want through implication, by your stupid logic.
Indeed there is.
Unfortunately I didn't imply what you were claiming
, and I am the only one that knows. You don't.
Wow, you're rebuttal skills have reached new heights.
What is this the 108th time a "No it isn't" or "Yes it is" has been used by you?
A person's job has no impact on their ability to apply already learned knowledge.
Well, that counts you out.
Originally posted by Dan26
Pfft. Personal abuse. Calling you a child (when we know you aren't) and saying you are 13 (when we know you aren't) should be water of a ducks back to someone your own massive intellect.
As I've said before, I never insult a persons look (if I know what they look like of course) their job, marital status, religion or any other personal details.
If me having little jibe insults at you (which is basically name calling) offends you so much, you need to once again, get some perspective. Subtle, cruel insults, where the offendee has no comeback, are the worst and I never resort to that.
Originally posted by M29
It's beyond that. It's a rape and pillage.
Originally posted by Dave
In your not so humble opinion. It's astonishing that no-one else believes that.
Originally posted by Dave
No, you know what you intended. What was implied is in the meaning of the words themselves.
Originally posted by Dave
No, as the meaning has to be there in the first place. You can't say "fish" and claim "donuts"was implied. Actually, you probably could.
Originally posted by Dave
You know what you intended the words to mean, not what was implied by the words danny boy.
Originally posted by Dave
Whilst we're on debating skills, it's interesting that you consider "bull****" such an admirable example of rebuttal. That appears to be a touch hypocritical danny boy. For someone who thinks himself the master of debate you're slipping.
Originally posted by Dave
When I look at whether my opinion is likely to be reasonable or not I consider what other people think of it.
Originally posted by Dan26
The problem is, you have no way of meansuring just how those other changes have impacted the game.
You can claim you can measure scoring differences since those ruels came in, but after doing that for the "3-point" rule and finding you were wrong you then claimed the stats don't mean anything. Therefore, you won't be able to measure them for the other changes either, because according to you they won't mean anything. Your logic, moomba.
I have acnowledged other factors, but we can't measure those factors. Sorry, but we can't. Deal with it. With the 3-point rule, it was widely believed scoring had increased in England. It hadn't. Sure, other factors may come into it over a period of time, but as soon as the rule was introduced there was no significant change. There was no chance for other variables to come into it so soon after the change, because there was was no time for trends to emerge.
This shouldn't have an effect. If the best two teams play each other 38 times in a 2 team league does that mean scoring will decrease to below 2.00 per game combined? Of course not. And I don't know where you get off claiming there were 44, 46 or 38 teams in the league. There is currently 20.
) period. I don't know about getting off on footballs statistics, I've always said I'd try anything once, but I think there are better options around. Is getting off to statisitics something you do often, let us know if you find it worthwhile, it could change our life forever.I tend to agree that 5 years is a relevant sample. The problem is no matter what sample size you or I use, someone will claim that we are only using that particular sample size for our own benefit so it is a lose-lose situation. If you're sticking to the 5-year sample for England the difference was not significant. You might claim that the way the game was played changed.
But how do you know when you'd have virtually no memory of following the league in 1980?
If teams were more attacking it should show up with more scoring opportuniteis hence goals.
Beause of the low scoring nature of the game, a huge percentage of matches would be "those type of matches." If we accept that around 25-30% of matches are draws, then that means 25-30% of matches are in the balance at the 90 minute mark.
If the rule really did promote and encourage more teams to attack and score in "those type of games," why hasn't scoring significantly increased, when those games account for such a large poercentage of the season? If one in every three matches
(and it should be more, because by your logic, any game with a margin of one goal will be affected)[/b]
will be affetced by the rule in terms of the way those teams approach the closing stages of the game, there must therefore be some actual evidence that those games have resulted in more chances (hence goals) being created. You have not provided anyone with any evidence whatsoever to back up this claim.
30 is virtually is nothing. There are individual seasons where the amount of goals vary by 60-70 from year to year! 0.08 is nothing. Random varation only.
I was staing it was not on a downward trend over the last 10 years and I was 100% right. You yourself said you only felt a 5 year sample was relevant because of other changes in the game. Yet, you cling to a 50 years sample!!! This is as hypocritical as you have ever been, moomba! Given that you like the 5 year samples and use them when it suits you, it might be an idea to ackowledge that 5 year sample in this particular case,
If you look at scoring since the 50's it decreased then levelled off. There is no eveidence to suggest we would have been stuck with 1 goals games (combined) if nothing was changed. This is unsubstantiated conjecture.
Can't you read? You stated that the frequency of draws decreased to 71% (from 75% between 1976-1980) in the first 5 years following the rule change. In the next 5 years (1986-1990) the figure was 71% again. I therefore asked you what your point was, because your stat meant nothing. There are alway fluctuations in numbers such as those and 4-5% is normal variation. In the 1988 season draws occured 31% of the time, which was a 5% increase on 1987. There was nearly 6% difference between 1974 and 1975. Fluctuations like that are perfectly normal.
I highly doubt whether the backpass rule accounted for such a difference. It is a good rule but it hasn't changed the game that much. Apart from Nash's error for ManCity, there aren't too many goals which can be directly attributable to the keeper not being allowed to pick up the ball. As fo the extra teams, does this mean the surplus teams in the 50's and 60's accounted for the higher scoring, rendering your claims of a trend meaningless (by your logic). I'm not disputing that scoring was higher back then, but by your logic you should therefore dismiss your own claim! Are you going to do that?
Your claims about Ancona and Pescara being the reason for affecting the scoring are laughable. Last time I checked, the Serie A in 1992-93 has 18 teams, the same numnber as it did in 1991-92. No increased number!! The amount of goals they conceded was only just marginally more than what the bottom two teams of 1993-94 (Atalanta and Lecce) conceded. At any rate there are always crap teams, but they don't account for scoring increasing for the whole league by more than 0.5! The number of teams was still identical!
The bottom two teams in 1992-93 conceded 148 goals. In 1993-94 the bottom two teams conceded 138. Not enough of a difference to account for the increase in scoring. Try again. Your argument was that it is easier to score against those bottom teams.
Originally posted by Dan26
LOL. Classic.
Lemming. I knew it.
Originally posted by X_box_X
However, a draw is the middle-point between a win and a loss.
Originally posted by Dan26
Good reply Moomba, but it's nothing that won't stop us going around in circles. The thread has run its course unless new figures, or ideas are presneted. I've responded to your questions, you've responded to mine and we keep going round and round in circles, because there is no conclusive evidence to prove anything either way. Do we use a 50 year sample or a 5 year sample, for instance? Which is more relevant? I'll initiate one idea, then you'll claim other factors which are lieky relevant, but there isn't any evidence for those factors, therefore we keep going round and round in circles. Your comments have been noted.
One thing I vehemently disgaree with, is that the rule is "fair." Whether the rule is good for Soccer or not is one thing. It probably is good. But I steadfastly stick by the fact that when a draw is not half a win, the ladder does not truly represent the quality of the results.
Originally posted by Slax
I still don't know why we give out 4 points instead of 2 in the AFL?

Originally posted by Diego Forlan
Moomba, I think Dan is subconciously conceeding defeat with this. Well done!
