Is this English?
Is this English?
What do you doubt? Here’s a source:
Did you know that some fans can applaud while others are throwing shit on the ice?
This was the first time the Capitals played in the playoffs in Philly after Capitals fans threw shit on the ice, hitting Flyers players. Selective memory, huh?
Did you know the last time the Flyers won a playoff game in Washington, Capitals fans threw shit on the ice, hitting Flyers players in the process? I doubt it.
1st and 2nd base both need to be occupied for the infield fly rule
I can’t think of any play where Jeter caught a similar ball. Nope.
But we can call them “Washington Football Team” instead! We will make a passive-aggressive point about...Andrew Jackson? Yes! And we totally won’t lose any readers who think the headline is about the Washington Huskies* instead of the Redskins.
Yeah buddy! Every person in LA didn’t exist in 1994.
...and he used 82 games as evidence
Not my job to find it; I didn’t claim 82 games was the definition of a “peak.”
I never said it was wrong, but it might be wrong. Perhaps McGrady’s “best” 82 games fell within a single season, while Kobe’s overlapped two seasons. I’m not sure why I need to keep explaining this to you, Mr. Vociferous Defender of Deadspin.
But Kobe’s peak might not have been a single season.
“He defined a SEASON as the peak.”
If you’re defining 82 games as a peak, then if Kobe had a better 82-game stretch, then he had a better peak.
It’s possible that McGrady’s peak occurred between the months of October and April of one season, while Kobe’s peak occured during an 82-game stretch spanning two seasons.
Why not use 48 minutes then?
Why use an 82-game stretch to define “peak”?
This is like telling people who criticize cops “prove that are you a better police officer!”