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FoolRegnant t1_j98e8x5 wrote

As a layman who doesn't give a shit about college basketball, I thought it was interesting. Certainly I had never heard of NIT. Honestly, it just seems strange that someone would get annoyed enough with that statement to comment and defend a college basketball team in the 50s. Like, who cares?

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Alex15can t1_j98fi6w wrote

I mean he clearly cared enough to make up what was basically a lie?

Why can’t I be upset about that? Why do you care so much about me proving him wrong?

Notice he didn’t even have the balls to respond when called out.

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FoolRegnant t1_j98hh0o wrote

You didn't say anything in your original comment other than Kentucky is good, get bent. That's why I'm calling you out - to me, either of you could be right or lying. And, newsflash, you haven't proved him wrong. He used a couple sentences to mention names that an interested viewer could use to look up and do their own research. You just said "Kentucky is the best," which is not an argument or proving anything.

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Alex15can t1_j98ilvx wrote

>You didn't say anything in your original comment other than Kentucky is good, get bent.

Yeah. And the comment I responded to say nothing other Kentucky bad.

>That's why I'm calling you out - to me, either of you could be right or lying.

It’s called look it up. See who is right. Hint it’s me.

>And, newsflash, you haven't proved him wrong. He used a couple sentences to mention names that an interested viewer could use to look up and do their own research. You just said "Kentucky is the best," which is not an argument or proving anything.

Are you this dudes alt or something.

https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/National_Invitation_Tournament

> The champions of both the NCAA and NIT tournaments played each other for three seasons during World War II. From 1943 to 1945, the American Red Cross sponsored a postseason charity game between each year's tournament champions to raise money for the war effort.[23] The series was described by Ray Meyer as not just benefit games, but as "really the games for the national championship".[24] The NCAA champion prevailed in all three games.[25]

>The Helms Athletic Foundation retrospectively selected the NIT champion as its national champion for 1938 (Temple) and chose the NIT champion over the NCAA champion once, in 1939 (Long Island).[26] More recently, the mathematically based Premo-Porretta Power Poll published in the ESPN College Basketball Encyclopedia retrospectively ranked teams for each season prior to 1949, the year in which the Associated Press poll was implemented. For the period when the tournaments overlapped between 1939 and 1948, Premo-Porretta ranked the NIT champion ahead of the NCAA champion twice (1939 and 1941) and the NCAA champion ahead of the NIT champion eight times.[27]

No where did I say Kentucky was the best.

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