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Indianapolis Star

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The legal means of watching or listening to NBA games are NBA League Pass Broadband (for US, or for International; both cost money) and NBA Audio League Pass (which is free). Look for them on NBA.com.

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Colts vs Pats AFC Title Game (and Deflategate discussion)

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  • Re: Colts vs Pats AFC Title Game (and Deflategate discussion)

    If this had been a sting operation wouldn't McNally be wearing a wire?
    You know how hippos are made out to be sweet and silly, like big cows, but are actually extremely dangerous and can kill you with stunning brutality? The Pacers are the NBA's hippos....Matt Moore CBS Sports....

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    • Re: Colts vs Pats AFC Title Game (and Deflategate discussion)

      Originally posted by Slick Pinkham View Post
      If the answer is #2, then it means that you don't really care if an illegal football is used or not in a game. It means that you think that it is well worth it to compromise the integrity of the game in order to catch someone in the act.
      This is just silly. The NFL officials made sure that the balls were properly inflated before the game. They did their job. For you to suggest that the NFL didn't care about illegal balls is absurd. The fact that someone was able to monkey with the balls after they were certified does not mean that the NFL didn't care. The NFL was just naive to the lengths the Patriots would go to.

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      • Re: Colts vs Pats AFC Title Game (and Deflategate discussion)

        Originally posted by Since86 View Post
        You object to the word "manipulate" so I use the EXACT word you used "misinterpreted" and now you object to it too?
        I object not even one little bit.

        Asking whether the number 1.13 is bigger or smaller than 1.01 is simply not open to misinterpretation. Is that clear?

        Asking someone to guess whether
        1) two particular text messages were both jokes,
        2) both were dead serious,
        3) the first was a joke and the second was dead serious, or
        4)the second was a joke and the first was dead serious

        seems to be open to misinterpretation. Is that not clear?
        The poster "pacertom" since this forum began (and before!). I changed my name here to "Slick Pinkham" in honor of the imaginary player That Bobby "Slick" Leonard picked late in the 1971 ABA draft (true story!).

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        • Re: Colts vs Pats AFC Title Game (and Deflategate discussion)

          I'm ignoring your 1.13 > 1.01 because that's not what I'm asking.

          Let me try again. Why is your interpretation of the data the correct one?
          Last edited by Since86; 05-12-2015, 04:35 PM.
          Just because you're offended, doesn't mean you're right.” ― Ricky Gervais.

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          • Re: Colts vs Pats AFC Title Game (and Deflategate discussion)

            Originally posted by ilive4sports View Post
            This is gonna surpass the Lance Stephenson thread isn't it?
            Best thread I've ever started. I'm just enjoying reading everything, it's free entertainment.
            Don't ask Marvin Harrison what he did during the bye week. "Batman never told where the Bat Cave is," he explained.

            Comment


            • Re: Colts vs Pats AFC Title Game (and Deflategate discussion)

              Originally posted by Strummer View Post
              The NFL was just naive to the lengths the Patriots would go to.
              Or the NFL was just naive to the properties of gases in our universe.

              It really depends on which way the coin lands, which set of data you CHOOSE to throw out,

              data set A that says "they took out up to 0.26 psi of air, on average" or
              data set B that says "they could not possibly have taken out anything".

              The ref told Wells that he thought data set B matches what he did. Wells said "No, you are wrong, my good man, I am throwing it out and I'm picking A"

              --------
              By the way, if Wells had chosen to not throw out either set of data, then the conclusion would have been "their footballs lost 1.20 psi on average instead of 1.13 psi on average, measured with gauges accurate to 0.4 psi. Oops... we got nothin'
              The poster "pacertom" since this forum began (and before!). I changed my name here to "Slick Pinkham" in honor of the imaginary player That Bobby "Slick" Leonard picked late in the 1971 ABA draft (true story!).

              Comment


              • Re: Colts vs Pats AFC Title Game (and Deflategate discussion)

                it's really weird how much the NFL media is rallying around the "outside pressure" narrative. I think the whole thing's CRAZY overblown, but it is what it is, the guys that run your league issued their punishments. when the punishment comes down from the league it's anything but external pressure. seriously, what's the "outside pressure" they keep talking about it? I dunno, shows the NFL echo chamber I guess.

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                • Re: Colts vs Pats AFC Title Game (and Deflategate discussion)

                  Originally posted by Slick Pinkham View Post
                  Look at the report.

                  What specifically did they ask the Former Physics Dept. head of Princeton to certify?

                  Answer: ONLY that the difference in two sets of numbers, average deflation values for Colts footballs and Patriots footballs, was statistically significant.

                  Of course they were! He did not offer an opinion as to the reason why they were different. That would not have been a good question to ask him, since the answer wouldn't fit the story.

                  Wells made one up: That the Colts footballs lost 0.37-0.56 psi on average
                  (not realizing that this means they were out of compliance with the ideal gas law)

                  and the Patriots footballs lost 1.01-1.39 psi on average
                  (not realizing that this means they were IN compliance with the ideal gas law)

                  so this means that the Patriots took some air out!

                  No, the ideal gas law is all about temperature and pressure. The Colts footballs were out of compliance because they had time to warm up during halftime in the heated room before they were ever checked.

                  This isn't a guess. It is described (& its significance ignored) by Wells, whose scientists had earlier measured how long it takes a football to come to equilibrium (reach room temperature) in their "leather rubdown" test. 20-25 minutes.

                  Give a football 10 minutes to warm up, it gets about halfway to room temperature. They even showed a curve of this, in the leather rub-down ball-prep test. The 1.13 psi drop required to comply with the ideal gas law becomes half that, 0.56 psi, when the ACTUAL TEMPERATURE is considered. The order of analysis of the two sets of footballs at halftime was very important. Both sets of footballs behaved exactly like they should have behaved, if each was legally inflated and subjected to the temperature changes that they are known to have experienced.

                  When you bring cold objects into a warm room, they start heating up. Who-dah-thunk-it?
                  No one is arguing that balls don't warm up. They gave you the curves and rates at which that would happen with dry and wet balls. To me you are not accounting for the 2 minutes for them to even get started with the measurements affecting both data sets.

                  They ran the experiment again in similar temps accounting for wet and dry balls and in both circumstances they came up with the same result. ITs highly unlikely the discrepancy in the Pats balls could be accounted for and they make mention of that when you account for the additional 2-4 minutes in preparation of the measurements. To me you are using the extremes to apply to one data set while ignoring the other. Using 45 degrees while ignoring the 2-4 minute prep time and the 4-5 minutes it took the measure the balls. Then measuring the Colts balls took took 1 minutes. You got 13 minutes in total for all of this to occur not to mention to inflate the Pats balls to the proper psi. You are acting like the Colts balls had a 30 minute separation time and they didn't. You also can't account for the outliers in the pats balls which to me is more indicative of guy putting a needle in the Pats balls for different times than some gauge discrepancy. This to me is why you are so focused on the average because it helps you try to make a case. Explain to me how you got a ball measured at 10.5 psi? Explain to us all how this measurement reflects the proper ideal gas laws of physics. IF they did it in order then this is ball 10. Shouldn't that ball measure out to be higher than balls 1-9?

                  To me its a tad bit obvious how you are attacking this and its more fan than scientist.

                  Based on extensive testing and analysis, however, Exponent concluded that, within the range of game conditions and circumstances most likely to have occurred on game day, they could identify no set of credible physical or environmental factors that completely accounts for the magnitude of the reduction in air pressure of the Patriots footballs or the additional drop in air pressure exhibited by the Patriots game balls, as compared to the drop in air pressure exhibited by the Colts game balls. Dr. Marlow agreed with this conclusion

                  Last edited by Gamble1; 05-12-2015, 04:50 PM.

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                  • Re: Colts vs Pats AFC Title Game (and Deflategate discussion)

                    Originally posted by Heisenberg View Post
                    seriously, what's the "outside pressure" they keep talking about it? I dunno, shows the NFL echo chamber I guess.
                    This story isn't just stuck to the sports pages. When CNN, FOX, and MSNBC is selling this to viewership as a scandal then there is most certainly pressure.
                    You know how hippos are made out to be sweet and silly, like big cows, but are actually extremely dangerous and can kill you with stunning brutality? The Pacers are the NBA's hippos....Matt Moore CBS Sports....

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                    • Re: Colts vs Pats AFC Title Game (and Deflategate discussion)

                      Originally posted by RWB View Post
                      This story isn't just stuck to the sports pages. When CNN, FOX, and MSNBC is selling this to viewership as a scandal then there is most certainly pressure.
                      why? because the news networks report on it? they're selling it because it's the Pats and it's a "scandal." this is seriously stupid. Falcons played with the ball pressure and the Pats pumped in crowd noise guess what the scandal'd be. this entire thing is just stupidly overblown. the whole thing's well beyond the "scandal" now, it's all about the stands and proving your morality about something pretty innocent in comparison to guys bashing their heads into one another and literally retarding themselves.

                      none of these people legitimately care about it, and in a year or two I guarantee most of you won't either, you wouldn't right now if it weren't the Pats. this whole thing is monumentally stupid.

                      Comment


                      • Re: Colts vs Pats AFC Title Game (and Deflategate discussion)

                        Originally posted by Gamble1 View Post
                        Lowest ball was 10.5 according to the refs during halftime.
                        Only if you don't believe the referee's memory on the gauge he had used in the pregame check.

                        Using the gauge that HE REMEMBERS having used for pregame measurements, the Patriots footballs measured (page 12, Wells report)

                        11.80 (should be 11.32-11.50, 0.3 psi too high!, they put in some air!)
                        11.20 (should be 11.32-11.50, a tiny bit too low! close though)
                        11.50 (should be 11.32-11.50, by golly, it is!)
                        11.00 (should be 11.32-11.50, 0.3 psi too low!, , they took out some air!)
                        11.45 (should be 11.32-11.50, by golly, it is!)
                        11.95 (should be 11.32-11.50, 0.45 psi too high! they put in some air!))
                        12.30 (should be 11.32-11.50, by golly, it is!)
                        11.55 (should be 11.32-11.50, a tiny bit too high!, close though)
                        11.35 (should be 11.32-11.50, by golly, it is!)
                        10.90 (should be 11.32-11.50, 0.4 too low, they took out some air!)
                        11.35 (should be 11.32-11.50, by golly, it is!)

                        You have two footballs seemingly over inflated 0.3-0.45 psi, two footballs seemingly over underinflated 0.3-0.4 psi, and seven footballs about where they ought to be.

                        Do you make a definitive call?

                        Wells did. "Let's throw out that crappy data. The ref must have been WRONG in his memory of which gauge he used before the game."
                        Last edited by Slick Pinkham; 05-12-2015, 05:01 PM.
                        The poster "pacertom" since this forum began (and before!). I changed my name here to "Slick Pinkham" in honor of the imaginary player That Bobby "Slick" Leonard picked late in the 1971 ABA draft (true story!).

                        Comment


                        • Re: Colts vs Pats AFC Title Game (and Deflategate discussion)

                          Good Lord, Slick, read the freaking text messages. It's an admission of guilt. Game over.

                          The case you're trying to make is completely irrelevant.

                          Comment


                          • Re: Colts vs Pats AFC Title Game (and Deflategate discussion)

                            Originally posted by Heisenberg View Post
                            why? because the news networks report on it? they're selling it because it's the Pats and it's a "scandal." this is seriously stupid. Falcons played with the ball pressure and the Pats pumped in crowd noise guess what the scandal'd be. this entire thing is just stupidly overblown. the whole thing's well beyond the "scandal" now, it's all about the stands and proving your morality about something pretty innocent in comparison to guys bashing their heads into one another and literally retarding themselves.

                            none of these people legitimately care about it, and in a year or two I guarantee most of you won't either, you wouldn't right now if it weren't the Pats. this whole thing is monumentally stupid.
                            It's being "blown up" because the Pats* have a history of being a shady, disrespectful organization:

                            - The tuck rule
                            - Constantly mugging receivers knowing the refs won't call a PI every time
                            - Faking injuries to get free timeouts
                            - Constantly and needlessly running up the score on opponents
                            - Spygate
                            - The eligible/ineligible receiver fiasco
                            - Deflategate

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                            • Re: Colts vs Pats AFC Title Game (and Deflategate discussion)

                              Originally posted by Shade View Post
                              It's being "blown up" because the Pats* have a history of being a shady, disrespectful organization:

                              - The tuck rule
                              - Constantly mugging receivers knowing the refs won't call a PI every time
                              - Faking injuries to get free timeouts
                              - Constantly and needlessly running up the score on opponents
                              - Spygate
                              - The eligible/ineligible receiver fiasco
                              - Deflategate
                              ****ing Willie McGinest
                              Don't ask Marvin Harrison what he did during the bye week. "Batman never told where the Bat Cave is," he explained.

                              Comment


                              • Re: Colts vs Pats AFC Title Game (and Deflategate discussion)

                                Originally posted by Gamble1 View Post
                                To me you are using the extremes to apply to one data set while ignoring the other. Using 45 degrees while ignoring the 2-4 minute prep time and the 4-5 minutes it took the measure the balls...

                                To me its a tad bit obvious how you are attacking this and its more fan than scientist.
                                The Patriots football did warm up during the course of their analysis. That is why they dropped in pressure ONLY 1.01 psi, on average, when the ideal gas law says they should have dropped 1.13 psi. This explains the 11% difference, prediction vs. measured.

                                The Colts football did warm up by the time of their analysis and during the course of their analysis. That is why they dropped in pressure ONLY 0.56 psi, on average, when the ideal gas law says they should have dropped 1.13 psi. This explains the 50% difference, prediction vs. measured.

                                The data aligns with the conclusion that no tampering could even POSSIBLY have occurred, if you keep all of the data.
                                The data aligns with the conclusion that no tampering could even POSSIBLY have occurred, if you keep the data that fits the memory of the referee about which gauge he used.
                                The data aligns with the conclusion that tampering could POSSIBLY have occurred, ONLY if you completely discard the data that fits the memory of the referee about which gauge he used.

                                Mike Florio and Peter King each summed up the data-based part of the Wells report very well, by calling it trash.

                                I am evaluating the science as a scientist. That is the part I am most well-equipped to evaluate, because I evaluate scientific arguments every single day of my life (well, not so much on vacation, if the wife has her way )
                                The poster "pacertom" since this forum began (and before!). I changed my name here to "Slick Pinkham" in honor of the imaginary player That Bobby "Slick" Leonard picked late in the 1971 ABA draft (true story!).

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