The inverse of a logical statement is not always true. If you use your brain, you'd know that.Use your brain. The post is saying that since it was Purdue, 10 points is a blowout. If we define a loss as a blowout based on how bad the team is then beating a terrible team by 21 is not a blowout and beating a great team by any amount of points is a blowout. This is why it's so stupid. The quality of the opponent is not relevant in whether the win/loss was a blowout.How do you reach that conclusion???How terrible the opponent is and how many points they scored have nothing whatsoever to do with the definition of a blowout. By your idiotic definition, we blew MSU out. They're a playoff team so beating them by 1 point would be a blowout if we follow this idiocy.Letting the worst team in the B1G score 55 on you is not a blowout only if it fits your agenda.a 10 point loss is a blowout only if it fits your agenda
And I'm not going to argue for the other poster, but my impression is that he sees allowing 55 points to a team that had previously mustered 42 combined was a blowout, even if NU tacked on some meaningless points at the end to make the game appear closer than it was.
Again, NU was down 42-16 at the end of 3 and never got within a score of Purdue again.
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