diggerfoot
Humanity Hiker
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- Oct 1, 2011
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Digger
The lucidity and erudition of your learned prose escapes me. So sorry.
If what you meant to say was: that as Connecticut loses so few games and fewer less to St. Johns;
that to criticize Geno for such a failure is the worst type of monday-morning quarterbacking and therefore intellectually dishonest.
Then that was more or less the sentiment of the board at the time. Some went further and questioned my allegiance to the team and the suitability of my and like comments in such a fan-based forum.
What was undiscussed (or at least given short shrift) was the fact (as noted in my posting above), that matters seemingly leading to that loss had surfaced much earlier, had become a subject of much discussion and that the issues surrounding that regrettable blemish were not unforeseen.
I remember not actually predicting the loss but recall being concerned at a time when the sentiment was clearly one of unconcern.
Where does that fit into your various definitions?
I can't comment on St. John's in specific, even with the detail that you provide, because I did not experience/observe it myself. My experience of the Boneyard leads me to assume that a meltdown occurred, but I know not the details. I would be going on your hearsay, which could be 100% on the money, or could be flawed. Please don't take offense to that; that would be my position regarding anyone's report.
My "general" comment, void of all the dressing, would not be criticism of "monday morning quarterbacking" so much as the lack of humility in that pursuit. Something along the lines of "it seems to me," rather than "Auriemma's got to." I understand the role emotions play in leading one to overstate their case with certainty, but I can't sympathize with fans whose emotions get inflamed at the inadequate success rate of the most successful program in the country.
For what it's worth, I sometimes think people defend Auriemma with a little too much certainty as well. Sometimes I think people's self-esteem are too wrapped up in following what's only a game. Yet they usually are supported better by the results of the most successful program in the country. The benefit of the doubt still lies on their side, even if their certainty is a problem.
Basketball is more complicated than how it is often treated here. There always will be more than one plausible explanation. What strengthens the case for "it seems to me," what strengthen one's plausible explanation over another, is repetition. If something keeps occurring that fits the plausible explanation, then each instance strengthens that over competing explanations which do not fit as well for every instance. That's just hard to come by in terms of UConn losses for evidence. Other types of evidence can matter, but the compilation of that evidence still would have to be large to transcend "it seems to me" into the certainty with which fans often express their plausible explanations on here.