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Why Mediocrity Is the Worst

24

Comments

  • Tequilla
    Tequilla Member Posts: 20,270

    Tequilla said:

    Tequilla said:

    And 2 of those 15 years are tied to Petersen.

    1st year was primarily a change in culture and 2nd a change in roster.

    I get the frustration of the last 15 years but at maximum only 2-3 of those 15 years have any bearing on the 2016 season.

    If the Huskies go 7-6 next year, you will start the year by saying "10 wins or its time for a change", and at season's end you'll be equivocating like crazy. That's the script. It's what you like to do.
    That's a complete BS statement and you know it.

    You always need to look back at a year in retrospect and understand what happened and how what happened differed from the underlying assumptions you had in your forecast. Sometimes what happens is very explainable. Sometimes it is just a flat out miss in the underlying assumptions.

    Last year I was about as spot on on my season predictions as you could get calling 7-6. The only area that I missed was being optimistic with a 5-4 conference record and a bowl loss while stating that I thought that 4-5 and a minor bowl win was probably more realistic. I also stated that the high end of what I thought was possible was in the 8-9 range.

    Unlike a lot of people around here, I don't back down from my predictions. Pointing out what was different about what happened and my underlying assumptions isn't dooging it up or whatever other BS others say. Failure to adhere to my assumptions isn't necessarily grounds for an automatic firing like others would have. I very well understand that I am aggressive in my goal setting and by making stretch goals make it far more difficult to achieve them than not.
    You're a bit delusional. With one or two exceptions, I have never seen a poster equivocate as much as you do.
    Find the delusion in what I stated for my season prediction for 2015: http://hardcorehusky.com/forums/#/discussion/21619/time-to-embarrass-yourself-again-predict-uws-2015-team-record/p1

    2-1 OOC

    Win: Oregon St, and Wazzu
    Win: 2 of 3 of Cal, Arizona, and Utah at home
    Win: 1 road conference game not named Oregon St

    I'm being optimistic that we finish 5-4 in conference and lose a bowl game. Would not be surprised if it was 4-5 in conference with bowl win.

    Either way it will be interesting


    As for equivocating, tells me that you either a) read into my comments what you want to, b) aren't paying attention to what I'm saying, and/or c) aren't realizing that very few things in this world are absolutes where it is either black or white.

    Moreover, you should probably realize that being measured and understanding circumstances doesn't make you equivocating.

    Take TCU's season this year for instance at 11-2 with an Alamo Bowl victory. You put that out there before the season for a preseason #2 team as what they'd end up with and many here would fire Gary Patterson on the 50 yard line. If you paid attention to what went on during the season and read most accounts, many are saying that this is his best coaching job. What's the truth?

    But then again, I must be equivocating again.
  • Tequilla
    Tequilla Member Posts: 20,270
    EwaDawg said:

    Tequilla said:

    Tequilla said:

    And 2 of those 15 years are tied to Petersen.

    1st year was primarily a change in culture and 2nd a change in roster.

    I get the frustration of the last 15 years but at maximum only 2-3 of those 15 years have any bearing on the 2016 season.

    If the Huskies go 7-6 next year, you will start the year by saying "10 wins or its time for a change", and at season's end you'll be equivocating like crazy. That's the script. It's what you like to do.
    That's a complete BS statement and you know it.

    You always need to look back at a year in retrospect and understand what happened and how what happened differed from the underlying assumptions you had in your forecast. Sometimes what happens is very explainable. Sometimes it is just a flat out miss in the underlying assumptions.

    Last year I was about as spot on on my season predictions as you could get calling 7-6. The only area that I missed was being optimistic with a 5-4 conference record and a bowl loss while stating that I thought that 4-5 and a minor bowl win was probably more realistic. I also stated that the high end of what I thought was possible was in the 8-9 range.

    Unlike a lot of people around here, I don't back down from my predictions. Pointing out what was different about what happened and my underlying assumptions isn't dooging it up or whatever other BS others say. Failure to adhere to my assumptions isn't necessarily grounds for an automatic firing like others would have. I very well understand that I am aggressive in my goal setting and by making stretch goals make it far more difficult to achieve them than not.
    So you predicted 7-6, 8-5 and 9-4? AND you were spot on? Congrats. Orange slices for the special Olympian.

    Guessing from this comment that you don't forecast for a living
  • GrundleStiltzkin
    GrundleStiltzkin Member Posts: 61,516 Standard Supporter
    Tequilla said:

    EwaDawg said:

    Tequilla said:

    Tequilla said:

    And 2 of those 15 years are tied to Petersen.

    1st year was primarily a change in culture and 2nd a change in roster.

    I get the frustration of the last 15 years but at maximum only 2-3 of those 15 years have any bearing on the 2016 season.

    If the Huskies go 7-6 next year, you will start the year by saying "10 wins or its time for a change", and at season's end you'll be equivocating like crazy. That's the script. It's what you like to do.
    That's a complete BS statement and you know it.

    You always need to look back at a year in retrospect and understand what happened and how what happened differed from the underlying assumptions you had in your forecast. Sometimes what happens is very explainable. Sometimes it is just a flat out miss in the underlying assumptions.

    Last year I was about as spot on on my season predictions as you could get calling 7-6. The only area that I missed was being optimistic with a 5-4 conference record and a bowl loss while stating that I thought that 4-5 and a minor bowl win was probably more realistic. I also stated that the high end of what I thought was possible was in the 8-9 range.

    Unlike a lot of people around here, I don't back down from my predictions. Pointing out what was different about what happened and my underlying assumptions isn't dooging it up or whatever other BS others say. Failure to adhere to my assumptions isn't necessarily grounds for an automatic firing like others would have. I very well understand that I am aggressive in my goal setting and by making stretch goals make it far more difficult to achieve them than not.
    So you predicted 7-6, 8-5 and 9-4? AND you were spot on? Congrats. Orange slices for the special Olympian.

    Guessing from this comment that you don't forecast for a living
    Huh?
    image
  • Southerndawg
    Southerndawg Member, Swaye's Wigwam Posts: 8,363 Founders Club
    PurpleJ said:

    What does equivocate mean?

    It depends on what the meaning of "is" is.