Picks/Daytona 500/Sun.Afternoon
#63
Shut-up man..... J/K Brent, but 10+ beers tonight and you aint getting me to change now...........
#66
I deleted the last 4 posts. We need to get this thread back on track and keep it that way. What drivers do in their personal life and who they date are their own business. We WILL keep this thread gossip free. Unless it has to do with the race directly, it will be deleted. This is a car forum, not a gossip forum. Got it?
Last edited by RocknSS04; 02-26-2012 at 07:27 AM.
#67
Looks like rain is going to be a thing today. They may struggle the whole day just to get the race off. Tommorows forcast in Daytona is no better. I hate it when these half-assed races get off with them half run under caution. Nothing anybody can do about it...
#69
Three hours to go. Chris, I'd like you for you to pick one of those sets. I'm taking it you really want he first set and then put the next set up since you're a Harvick fan and wanted to show some support somehow. Any time I get multiple sets of picks from someone (which happened somewhere one year, someone picked twice), I either take the first set that is posted in the post (which is what i did with Space when he posted his "Who I think will win" and his "Who I want to win" sets), or I take the most recent picks made before the race started. For instance, in the COPD300 yesterday, I would have taken the picks Brent made before the race started and ignored what he posted after the race.
As far as the new rule, you could call the easier scoring a "positive externality." That bit "externality" is an economics term for an unexpected or sometime unwatned side effect of an action. For instance, if you buy a home and decide that you want a very pretty yard and clean looking house, and regularly pressure wash it, trim the hedges, plant trees, and keep your lawn looking like a golf course, you may inadvertently raise the value of your home. You really just wanted a pretty house, but as a positive externality, your property became more valuable.
A negative externaltiy would be something like bringing in a new factory that brings jobs to the community, but as a result, rbings about a lot of pollution and the trucks coming in and out of town tear up the highway gonig to it.
Now aren't you glad you woke up this morning so you could be educated like that?
But anyway,s the rule was really made to give you guys more freedom to strategize and make picks, not less freedom or to make scoring easier. Once again ,the easier scoring is just a positive externality. It allows you to decide if you want to chose three drivers who you think will all finish well, double down on one driver, or go all in with who you think will win. It's a high risk, high reward situation that you ahve to decide for yourself if you want to be a part of.
As far as the new rule, you could call the easier scoring a "positive externality." That bit "externality" is an economics term for an unexpected or sometime unwatned side effect of an action. For instance, if you buy a home and decide that you want a very pretty yard and clean looking house, and regularly pressure wash it, trim the hedges, plant trees, and keep your lawn looking like a golf course, you may inadvertently raise the value of your home. You really just wanted a pretty house, but as a positive externality, your property became more valuable.
A negative externaltiy would be something like bringing in a new factory that brings jobs to the community, but as a result, rbings about a lot of pollution and the trucks coming in and out of town tear up the highway gonig to it.
Now aren't you glad you woke up this morning so you could be educated like that?
But anyway,s the rule was really made to give you guys more freedom to strategize and make picks, not less freedom or to make scoring easier. Once again ,the easier scoring is just a positive externality. It allows you to decide if you want to chose three drivers who you think will all finish well, double down on one driver, or go all in with who you think will win. It's a high risk, high reward situation that you ahve to decide for yourself if you want to be a part of.
#70
As far as the new rule, you could call the easier scoring a "positive externality." That bit "externality" is an economics term for an unexpected or sometime unwatned side effect of an action. For instance, if you buy a home and decide that you want a very pretty yard and clean looking house, and regularly pressure wash it, trim the hedges, plant trees, and keep your lawn looking like a golf course, you may inadvertently raise the value of your home. You really just wanted a pretty house, but as a positive externality, your property became more valuable.
A negative externaltiy would be something like bringing in a new factory that brings jobs to the community, but as a result, rbings about a lot of pollution and the trucks coming in and out of town tear up the highway gonig to it.
Now aren't you glad you woke up this morning so you could be educated like that?