To be fair Goliath did win several times and years before he lost... :biggrin:
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Based on Sagarin's RATING numbers (3.47 home field) and a 2.61 pt kicker for coming off a bye week, here's the outlook for the remainder of the regular season:
Western Illinois 96.7% (+0.2% from last week)
Southern Illinois 90.3% (-0.7%)
Indiana State 96.3% (-1.0%)
South Dakota 90.2% (-0.4%)
South Dakota State 76.4% (-2.9%)
Northern Iowa 65.1% (-1.4%)
Missouri State 77.9% (+0.4%)
Youngstown State 91.5% (-1.1%)
12-0 26.9% (-2.4% from last week)
11-1 40.6% (-0.5%)
10-2 24.0% (+1.6%)
9-3 7.2% (+1.0%)
8-4 1.2% (+0.2%)
7-5 0.1% (=0.0%)
6-6 0.006%
5-7 0.0002%
4-8 0.000002%
Assumes a normal distribution of outcomes w/ Sagarin's projected spread as the mean and a standard deviation of 13.86. In round numbers this means that if the spread is 14 the model predicts that roughly 2/3 of the outcomes will be between a tie and a 28 point victory. Half of the remaining outcomes or about 1/6 of all the outcomes would be a victory by more than 28 and there would be roughly a 1 in 6 chance that the team favored by 14 would lose.[/QUOTE]
That story is told once in the bible (right?), so yes, goliath loses only one time. We are modern day Davids that travel around and tell similar versions of that story over and over. Each goliath we play may have never lost to a david, or shouldn't either in theory, until we show up. David used a weapon, but thats ok. We do too, several in fact. One: our coaches. Second weapon: players guts, intelligence and heart. Lastly, and maybe the most important: his name is Mr. Kramer!!!
Bison more than 21 pt favorites over WIU
Actually 22.34 point favorites. It's right there in my first table. It's the prediction column and it has the current home field advantage built in.
+22.34 vs. WIU
+17.63 vs. SIU
+24.28 vs. ISUb
+17.56 vs. USD
+9.72 vs. SDSU
+5.23 vs. UNI
+10.37 vs. MSU
+18.60 vs. YSU
Just thought it was worth reiterating. 3 TDs+ is pretty steep
That story is just one episode (granted its probably the central one) in the larger struggle between Saul and David for who was going to be the head of state. Saul eventually fell on his own sword after suffering a terrible military defeat and David ascended to the throne. Thankfully, NDSU football's last leadership transition wasn't quite so dramatic.