84HuskerLaw
All-Conference
So, has THE RHULER not found a place to live yet? I see he’s still cooking on a hot place and living in the lounge. Guy stays busy - probably sleeps about 30 minutes a day!
The two axes are the first two principle components from a principle component analysis (link). The principle components aren't usually something easily understood in terms of the subject (e.g. football) that's being analyzed. It's difficult to even say what this really means and you'd need to do a detailed analysis of the source data to understand whether this is meaningful in any way. It's mostly just interesting to look at in terms of the data compared to itself.What’s the two axis? Not sure what their definition of ‘unique’ is and why that means there is so much difference between Syracuse and teams like KSU/ISU.
I made the mistake of assuming it had something to do with football.Yeah, without more context this graph is completely unintelligible.
What’s the two axis? Not sure what their definition of ‘unique’ is and why that means there is so much difference between Syracuse and teams like KSU/ISU.
Too many years of what I call "Paralysis by analysis". Think too much and do too little. See ball, get ball. Good thing is listening to McGuire he says similar theme to the receivers. Hoping to see it and not just read about it.Full throttle guys! Full throttle!!! :hellloooo
Too many years of what I call "Paralysis by analysis". Think too much and do too little. See ball, get ball. Good thing is listening to McGuire he says similar theme to the receivers. Hoping to see it and not just read about it.
17 minutes ago, M.A. said:
Too much thinking! It's much like figuring out a program or how an operating system works. Someone is sitting there watching, there's reluctance due to concern for making an error. Inaction becomes a thing. Several times done though, the better one gets. We don't want a lot of errors of course, though near perfection comes in time.
Forgetting is a good thing. It's a necessary component to learning! The important thing is to take action and, with more and more repetition the mind-body connection does it's work. Then fluency takes place. New neural pathways caused by experiences. Aim and shot becoming one. Keep on throwing darts!
There's nothing wrong at all with analysis if your an analyst. The more one does, the more one improves with it. There's a time and a place for it. For players though, we don't need analysis. At least not during the play or game. We want execution.
Visualization and sleep helps, too.![]()