As a finance major in the 80's, a big debate was always the efficient-market hypothesis.
"the efficient-market hypothesis (EMH) asserts that financial markets are "informationally efficient". That is, one cannot consistently achieve returns in excess of average market returns on a risk-adjusted basis, given the information publicly available at the time the investment is made."
Sure, the theory went, some people do win - but those who believed the markets could not be beat said they won randomly - i.e., if millions of people flipped coins, some would get 23 straight heads.
But, the great Warren Buffett blew that theory out of the water, saying that if a high percentage of those who won had something important in common, then it was not randomly, but rather that shared trait was what lead to the winning.
Buffett wrote a famous article titled "The Superinvestors of Graham-and-Doddsville" explaining his theory (click for article)
Sure, if you considered every sports bettor in the world, more than one could randomly have a greater than million to 1 streak in the same 12 months - but for the same website of 20 handicappers to do it twice in such a short period of time PROVES that our handicappers are special winners.
It feels like the culmination of many years of work that you can read the Warren Buffet article above, and replace Pregame.com with "Graham-and-Doodsville".
And what's even better, is it's just the beginning!