selvhaver
selvhaver
selvhaver

God damn it... that needs to be adopted as the official name

Bill Belichick has long had a way of melting other coaches’ brains, but McVay’s utter inability to adjust as the game wore on was bracing. The Rams rarely went up-tempo, and they could have used an extra tight end or more spread formations, or thrown more screens to counter the way the Pats stacked the line and used

Also known as The Tug Rule.

We don’t need to watch every tape” - Robert Kraft

“Timeout. You’re saying I can use overeating as an excuse?

That’s why Eli can’t be defeated by Belichick’s traditional methods. You can’t confuse the perpetually confused.

“Just switch to paste, like I did” - Eli Manning.

no, the only way you get 9 is if you simplify the expression properly. Order of operations means that 6/2(2+1) = (6/2)(2+1)

Well, I guess we found his weakness, the sole point of vulnerability for a historically good player, almost mythically good in some respects, and so I suppose we should call that weakness something that represents said singular area of anatomical imperfection: This is Durant’s Lebron’s Dick.

I mean...Widow’s arc ended with her explicitly denying Clint the opportunity to ease his manpain by sacrificing himself for the world to atone for his 5 years of Terms of Enrampagement.

Those give the exact same answer...9.

it is what the problem says.

That’s literally what the problem says.  If you write it as 6 as the numerator and 2(1+2) as the denominator, that’d be written as 6/(2(1+2)).  That is not the question.

Uh, it’s 9. 6/2(1+2) -> 6/2(3)-> 6/2*3-> 3*3=9.

P

Actually yes it is, but ok.

What’s it like to be so wrong but think you’re correct with your incorrect answer?

6/2 x (1+2) = 9 (what the problem says)

Using the standard order of operations of PEMDAS you get... “The Warriors blew a 3-1 lead.”

I continue to detest the bit where he tosses around Thor’s hammer like it’s nothing, thus invalidating the whole cool buildup where nobody else is worthy to handle the thing.