Yesterday was an exciting first week of the playoffs!
Looking forward to the real playoff games starting next week.
Personally, I’m hoping for the longshot of a Denver/Dallas Superbowl. But, with the way all the teams are playing, I think it will be an entertaining Superbowl regardless of who’s in it.
(Another Pittsburgh/Arizona matchup is not entirely out of the question) :eek:
Brag about your team, give predictions, rag on someone else’s team…
Bell is walking without a limp and saying that he feels fine.
But, even if he doesn’t go, I’m not worried at all. The last time they played the Rats Ben went for over 300 yards and 6 touchdowns, with only 55 yards rushing on the day. They could go all-pass against that secondary.
The only hope the Rats have is Suggs and Dumervil laying the wood to Ben. Don’t count on that happening. If Ben gets any time at all he’ll pick them apart, even if it’s Bad Ben instead of Good Ben that shows up.
From what I’ve seen across the Internet, the Patriots are the team most pundits seem confident in, with their opponents generally either the Seahawks, Packers, or Cowboys.
So, like, would a Cardinals/Ravens Super Bowl be the most amusing?
As boring as it is to pick the Seahawks, I picked them to repeat before the season even began, and I have no reason to stop now.
That said, I am endlessly amused by these “odds” charts that don’t add up. The one linked to by the OP (not the OP’s fault, I must stress, that the math doesn’t add up) says, in the best possible interpretation, that there is about a 115% chance that someone will win the Super Bowl. Er, okay. I think maybe that’s high. By 15% or so.
But those are betting odds, not probability-based simulations. Betting odds are set to try to spread the total bets placed over all the teams in the playoffs. As such they represent bettors’ confidence in the teams rather than the actual probability that any given team wins the game.
For the kind of mathematically consistent odds you’re talking about, check out 538’s Elo rankings or Football Outsiders’ DVOA-based odds.
“Despite the league standardizing the Super Bowl logos beginning with Super Bowl XLV so that all would follow the same template, the graphic designers determined that using the template with only the letter “L” would not have been aesthetically pleasing enough.”
I’ll have to go with Patriots vs. Packers in the SB.
Dallas can beat the Lions, however that game is in Dallas and the Cowboys’ road record is better than their home record. They won’t beat the Packers again. Who CAN beat the Packers? Seattle? Maybe…
Same with Patriots. Steelers have a shot, hell, so do the Bengals. But the Patriots are healthy. Best time to BE healthy.