Maybe the point I'm trying to make is, you can go to any of a hundred websites that track or provide stats for most of the major sports. There, you can find out who had the most passing yards in a conference championship game, played in the snow, in odd years, and the QB had 3 eggs and 2.5 waffles within 4 hours of kickoff.
Why can't pregame keep a better and more accessible record of how the pro's have fared. If I post a play it goes into the My Picks database and it's there for everyone to see and it's virtually childs-play to scroll through the pages of picks.
One of my main concerns is one day, probably sooner than later, betting on sports will become legal in many states. Tens of millions of dollars will be spent to lure the public into subscribing to "We Never Lose" betting system, and Oh, bye the way, did I forget to say all of our handicappers hit over 70%!
You get the gist.
I applaud Pregame for leading the way, but here's the rub. Imagine Pregame was a publicly traded company. Do you think these so-so recounts of past wins and loses will be tolerated?
Better to get it right, right now than to see your investment go down the toilet when the highly capitalized hucksters flood the marketplace.
Just my two cents… actually let's make it my 3-cent GOY rant