Like who for example?I liked him ... the "analysts" I don't like are the ones talking about anything but the play on the court. You know the ones who go on and on and completely ignore who scored, who committed the file etc
Like who for example?I liked him ... the "analysts" I don't like are the ones talking about anything but the play on the court. You know the ones who go on and on and completely ignore who scored, who committed the file etc
Different strokes for different folks.I liked him ... the "analysts" I don't like are the ones talking about anything but the play on the court. You know the ones who go on and on and completely ignore who scored, who committed the file etc
We've had analysts that some folks like, while others detested them. Kind of a "glass half full type situation. A reason why there are different types of music.....something for everyone because one size DOES NOT fit all.
He like to display his command of the English language and his extensive vocabulary, like when he told Muhammad Ali (right after one of his fights) that he was "extremely truculent" (that sent me scurrying to my dictionary). Ali responded "I don't know what that is, but if it's good, them I'm it."Commentators that have "walked a mile in their shoes" make the best color commentators. They see the game from a totally different perspective than we ever will. I listen to Colon Cowherd's program everyday. He had former Cincinnati Bengals receiver T.J. Houshmandzadeh on his show. TJ was talking about some of the receivers in the league, and who the best route runners were (in his opinion). He also touched on the deficiencies of some others (lacking the ability to separate, poor route running, etc.)I like commentators that can also offer insights as to what I am seeing and highlight something I may not have seen or known.
Jim Kaat (retired) and Ron Darling doing baseball games come to mind.
There are others.

As a fan, I don't know about the different coverages or the different routes ran by receivers. He does. So we can look at the same game, and see it differently. How many times has a quarterback thrown an interception, and the color commentator said that it was the receiver's fault. He wasn't were he was suppose to be, or her broke off the route too soon? Because I never played pro football, I wouldn't know that. To me, it just looked like your everyday poorly thrown "pick".![]()
Why not the fourth number one seed?If UConn beats Villanova by more than 10-15 points they should get the overall 6 seed or even the 5 seed.
| Massey | Actual | Excess | |
| MOV | MOV | ||
| Marquette | 14 | 14 | 0 |
| Xavier | 31 | 54 | +23 |
| Georgetown | 38 | 51 | +13 |
| Marquette | 20 | 31 | +11 |
| St. John's | 23 | 55 | +32 |
| Providence | 29 | 57 | +28 |
| Georgetown | 35 | 46 | +11 |
| Marquette | 17 | 20 | +3 |
| Villanova | 16.5 | ?? | |
121 |
No way. This is exceptional, and a reflection how much better women's BB has become. What Miami did was mind blowing (beating Louisville and then the Irish). What Kentucky did was not believable. They had lost several straight games before the tourney even started. Michigan and OSU both got knocked out. And Utah was game for three periods v Stanford, despite two of their best players severely hampered by injury. In 10 days how much better might they be? And why does no one ever talk about Baylor? This Big Dance is going to be wild.I may be mistaken, but I believe that 11 out of the top 25 ranked teams have lost within the past 2+ days. Eight of those losses are to unranked teams.
Have tournaments in past years featured this many ranked teams getting knocked off at this rate?
Nice to see your post. I was thinking of you the other day and how much I valued your input on these sorts of discussions.Why not the fourth number one seed?
NCAA NET has UConn as number four, and that metric doesn’t adjust for injuries, so the adjustment should be upward. UConn rotation players missed 32 games this season (plus 29 for Griffin’s but she’s not coming back so I won’t count them).
Another committee doesn’t look at Massey but they know it exists. Massey has UConn as the number four overall team and that metric doesn’t make any adjustment for injuries. Adjuster injuries and the question is are they the number two overall or number three overall team?.
Another way to look at it is to see how UConn is done since they got everybody back.
Here are the results for the past few games.
Massey Actual Excess MOV MOV Marquette 14 14 0Xavier 31 54+23 Georgetown 38 51+13 Marquette 20 31+11 St. John's 23 55+32 Providence 29 57+28 Georgetown 35 46+11 Marquette 17 20+3 Villanova 16.5?? 121
If the Massey rating were correct the actual margin of victory versus the predicted margin of victory should be a random walk around zero. Instead in every single game it’s equal or above (and note we didn’t have everybody back in those early games). Instead, we scored 121 points, over and above what one would expect for the fourth-ranked team in the nation. That means we are better than fourth. We really should be the second or third overall seed. I don’t honestly think this is going to happen, but that’s the starting point for the discussion.
Note that all three are playing in non-power 5 conferences. I think UConn belongs in the conversation for the last number one seed but beefing up your stats by feasting on the weak is not the best argument for that, IMHO.Not that the committee cares, I'm sure, but Connecticut's recent surge pushed their scoring margin up to 20.3, into third place (ahead of S.Carolina among others), only trailing BYU and Florida Gulf Coast. They're also leading the country with a field goal percentage margin of +13.43%.
I think you missed what CajunHusky’s main point was. Call the game, who got called for a foul, who scored, etc, and stop preaching about coaches and teams you like and follow the play on the court, and get off the podium, so to speak. This does occur all the time in the womens game and everyone knows who the guilty game callers are, and Harry Peretta is definitely not one of them.Different strokes for different folks.We've had analysts that some folks like, while others detested them. Kind of a "glass half full type situation. A reason why there are different types of music.....something for everyone because one size DOES NOT fit all.
I don't have an issue with anyone that didn't like Peretta. I DID!!! It just means that we perceived his style of color commentating differently. I would never tell someone they were wrong for disliking him. But by the same token, don't tell me I'm wrong because I do.
Take Howard Cosell. You either loved him, or you hated him. I loved Howard. He had a very unique style and grace that I was able to appreciate. He always though HE was the smartest guy in the room, and wouldn't mind telling you so.He like to display his command of the English language and his extensive vocabulary, like when he told Muhammad Ali (right after one of his fights) that he was "extremely truculent" (that sent me scurrying to my dictionary). Ali responded "I don't know what that is, but if it's good, them I'm it."
??If NC State moves ahead of SC in seeds (they did in the AP Poll) then they would go to Greensboro and SC would go to Bridgeport.
I'd have to agree--Perretta's analysis definitely indicated that he knows the game of basketball. But like you said, he questioned almost every move, every strategic decision that both of the coaches made--it got to the point that his questioning and second-guessing overwhelmed the broadcast of the game... it was insufferable.I couldn't disagree with you any more . All he did was criticize every move/decision of both HCs.. That is not the role of a color commentator. Their proper role is to explain what is (or has ) happened NOT to interject his personal opinion of what each coach should be doing! If I was either the SH or Creighton HC and I watched this game the next day, I would be furious. As I stated in another post, even his partner on the telecast had to constantly ignore Perretta's comments and continue announcing the game, especially in the 4th qtr.
Perretta's comments were not "educational" if they were wrong, which many of them were during this game!
I'd have to agree--Perretta's analysis definitely indicated that he knows the game of basketball. But like you said, he questioned almost every move, every strategic decision that both of the coaches made--it got to the point that his questioning and second-guessing overwhelmed the broadcast of the game... it was insufferable
some of your comments sounds like the boneyard in the chat roomI'd have to agree--Perretta's analysis definitely indicated that he knows the game of basketball. But like you said, he questioned almost every move, every strategic decision that both of the coaches made--it got to the point that his questioning and second-guessing overwhelmed the broadcast of the game... it was insufferable.
I don’t think so. He explained himself well. Again, He wants different things from people calling the game than I do. I understood his comments. He likes what he likes. I like what I like. Let's leave it there.I think you missed what CajunHusky’s main point was. Call the game, who got called for a foul, who scored, etc, and stop preaching about coaches and teams you like and follow the play on the court, and get off the podium, so to speak. This does occur all the time in the womens game and everyone knows who the guilty game callers are, and Harry Peretta is definitely not one of them.