And I also can't stand when someone says we beat a team by "this" much, that means jack **** in NCAAB, a win is a win, it aint college football.
In the interests of fairness, HEY DUKE....
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Both arguments are incorrect because Illini is the best team in the league this year.. :nuts:
P.S. I think Louisville has a chance to make a run past the Sweet 16 (depending on the matchups of course)Last edited by wsox08; 03-08-2007, 11:19 PM.Overall Records
Each play is to win the # of units posted unless it's a dog then I'm betting that amount.Comment
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I don't look at that as the ACC has better depth and talent. I look at it as the ACC teams choked on a national stage versus inferior opponents, while the Big East teams did not.
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Hahaha, honestly though. I think I made good points and I think I'm right. Taking emotion and bias out of it, no one knows which conference is better because they are almost exactly the same.
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Yes, in all honesty i agree.... but secretly, you and I both know which conference is more fun to watch.Comment
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Wake beating GTech with 9:20 left...Who would have expected the 9,10,11,12 ACC seeds to win today? If Wake holds on, the unthinkable happens...WOWNCAAF: 50-39-5 (+6.35 units)
NFL: 36-35-6 (-2.00 units)
NHL: 4-8-0 (-2.80 units)
NCAAB: 7-4 (+1.75 units)Comment
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I like the Big 12 for my bracket this year.
Don't steal my teams, Texas A&M and Kansas.
Both teams go far, unless KU has to play Bradley 1st round, haha.
Big 10 is hard to decipher
ACC is down this year, but really watch out next year they will be back on top easily.Comment
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One Last Note
for the 2006-2007 season, this:
The ACC, for the umpteenth time, once again leads all conferences in producing NBA players. This season the ACC has 54 former players in the NBA, an average of 4.5 NBA players for each team in the conference, compared to last year's 4.1. The ACC also has every school represented in the NBA, with the remainder of the BCS conferences (Big 12, Big East, Big Ten, SEC, and Pac-10) each missing only a single institution with current NBA representation. Eight conferences have just one team represented in the NBA (including Independents), and five conferences have no NBA players on 2006-07 NBA opening-day rosters. There are 54 foreign players on NBA opening-day rosters, or 12.2% of the NBA total, 35 players that went straight from high school to the NBA (7.9%), and 4 players that attended non-Division I colleges (0.9%). Division I colleges provide the balance of 349 NBA players (79.0%). Foreign players that played in college are counted under the appropriate school listing.Red ink is thicker than blood.Comment
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