Pokerbrat2000
Opinions are like A-holes, we all have one.
That is exactly what it is... Doesn't matter if Green bay didn't score the whole game. OR scored 1000 points. You are trying to say the data from 1 game should over-rule the average. And that is not the way it works. Regression to the mean is the most likely scenario.
Go back to my post #218 and answer what your decision would be given both scenarios.
I'm not throwing out math and probability, but remember, those probabilities are an average over many instances, not one. In the case of the Packers, they have one shot, not 100 to make the right decision. A decision revolving around a 50/50 probability but also revolving around many other factors having nothing to do with math.
Which funny enough is exactly what happened. Arizona's #1 ranked offense took 3 or 4 plays to score on young and sometimes undisciplined defense middle of the road defense that throughout the game over-acheived. All the shoulda coulda wouda doesn't matter. What happened is exactly what should be predicted to happen. That was the most likely scenario if Arizona got the ball if you look at the season as a whole when comparing Arizona offense vs Green Bay defense.
"Human element" isn't an actual thing... It is just used to describe what you can't understand.
So by probability and statistics, AZ wins the game before it even begins, why play the game? Math theories tell us that AZ should have been up by 2-3 touchdowns at the end of the game, but they weren't that day. So yes, you do have to take into account the situation and what led to it. Rodgers gets tackled on the touchdown pass to Janis and is shaken up and its unknown if he can continue, do you still go for 2 with Tolzien?