09-20-2023, 05:18 PM
(This post was last modified: 09-22-2023, 10:44 AM by lemonoppy. Edited 1 time in total.)
Link to all the data can be found here (interact with the scorigami chart!) Scorigami Chart
*I brute forced a lot of the calculations and used a NFL scorigami excel template so it isn’t as clean or efficient as you may expect but it gets the job done![Smile Smile](https://forums.sim-football.com/images/smilies/smile.png)
Scorigami. If you’ve watched football you’ve probably heard the term before. Coined by the legendary Jon Bois Scorigami is simply the first time a score has ever happened. It is unique to football because of the different Lego blocks that construct scores. Scoring a touchdown awards 6 points while an extra point is 1 point. A safety is 2 points and an extra point is 3. There are other peculiar cases but you get the idea. These building blocks allow for strange scores and I am about to take you on an adventure into the art of Scorigami.
Which teams dominate the scorigami market? Which quarterbacks are clutch in scorigami games and which ones fall apart? Welcome to the world of DSFL Scorigami
![[Image: image.png]](https://cdn.discordapp.com/attachments/942508405543805041/1154158925827031040/image.png)
This graph is a lot to take in but it shows every individual scorigami that has occurred from the beginning of the DSFL up to the most recent games in season 43. The first ever scorigami occurred at the hands of a shocking culprit the Norfolk Seawolves. They were able to dominate the Chicago Blues in a 30-13 victory. I say shocking in describing Norfolk and will explain later as to why but just know they are a major factor in the art of scorigami.
We now go all the way to week 14 of the most recent season where the Portland Pythons put the Seawolves in their place with a 55-23 beatdown.
I think now is a good time to mention the big 4 which consist of the Portland Pythons, Tijuana Luchadores, Kansas City Coyotes, and Norfolk Seawolves. They have been in the DSFL from the beginning and thus have a great advantage in achieving a scorigami. Now is also a good time to mention when we get deeper into the stats I separate teams by name. Most notable is the Myrtle Beach Buccaneers vs the Bondi Beach Buccaneers. Their stats have been separated and are deemed separate entities for the purposes of this analysis.
Before I get too far from the scorigami chart itself I’d like to mention a couple more things regarding some facts and figures. There have been 572 instances of scorigami spanning over 40 seasons. Wow does this compare to the NFL? There have been approximately 16,000 regular season games played and the 1076th scorigami just occurred on September 10th between the Ravens and Texans in a 25-9 score. This means there is a 6.725% chance a scorigami occurs in any given game. Pretty low odds. On the other hand, there have been 2,044 DSFL games over 43 seasons which brings us to a shocking 27.98% chance of a scorigami occurring. Why is there such a higher chance than in the NFL? Well part of the reason is the frequency of a scorigami will diminish as scorigami’s occur. Take a look at this graph with me for a second.
![[Image: image.png]](https://cdn.discordapp.com/attachments/942508405543805041/1154171282695401603/image.png)
As you can see 2019 had a remarkable 40 scorigami’s meaning only two games occurred that were not a scorigami. But then even just 1 year later that number goes down to 31 and continues to go down until it averages out at around 12-14. So what is happening? Well, the more likely scores are being taken off the board and are no longer scorigami. Take for example a score of 21-7 a completely mundane score that is likely to happen. As time goes on you have to find more and more unique score lines in order for it to be counted as a scorigami. The most recent season saw an uptick in scorigamis with an impressive 12 on the season, the highest since the 2050 season.
So what’s the play? How do you get a scorigami these days when almost 600 different variations have already been taken? The easiest, and I say “easiest” lightly, is scoring a lot. All of the scorigami’s bar two in the 2058 season had the winning team score more than 30 points. One of those that didn’t reach the 30 mark is another great way to get a scorigami and that would be to tie. There are only 11 total ties in the DSFL and is a great way to earn your spot on the Scorigami history books. And that final one? Well that would be a Week 11 Seawolves Coyotes battle that would end in a 17-5 score. This highlights just how creative you have to be at this day and age in order to get a scorigami. But things weren’t always like this.
I’ve wandered off a bit so let me wrangle myself back in. Going back to the original chart you can see the vast majority of green dots that indicate a scorigami are in what I like to refer to as “the death zone” this is the area where if you have a game end with a score in this zone there is a small likelihood of recording a scorigami. It stretches from the winning team scoring 7-42 and the losing team from 6-30. It’s a wide range and there are exceptions but that is the reality we are dealing with in this day and age.
I mentioned exceptions so let me highlight those real quick. No team winning or losing has ever scored 1 point. Another combination that has never before been seen is scoring 4 points. The only way to score 4 points is through 2 safeties or a field goal and that near impossible 1 point play. These two are the only numbers that is true for until we get to the extremely high numbers. With that being said the 1-2 trench continues with the number 2. Only one game has ended with a team scoring 2. The Bondi Beach Buccaneers defeated the Luchadores 31-2 to officially record the only such occurrence in DSFL scorigami. The next trench that must be mentioned is 8. No team has won while scoring 8 points and only 3 teams have lost with such a score.
The final trench that must be mentioned is the surprisingly elusive 18 score gap. Only 4 winning teams and 5 losing teams have had the honor of ending with a score of 18. There are other trenches like the 25 gap or 32 and 39 gaps but those are higher up and are outside of hte realm of what I deem the death zone.
Where do we go from here? What is the next step in the art that is scorigami? I think it is time to reveal some of our heavy hitters and overall team records when it comes to scorigami.
![[Image: image.png]](https://cdn.discordapp.com/attachments/942508405543805041/1154171814176636988/image.png)
Here we have every win, loss, and tie from every DSFL team to ever exist. Way down at the bottom we have the Chicago Blues who left us after just two seasons. But in that time they racked up 26 instances of scorigami good for a 14-12 record. This means in their two seasons in the DSFL they recorded a scorigami in 26 of their 28 possible regular season games an impressive and unmatchable feat. Next on the list are the Myrtle Beach Buccaneers who could have been included with Bondi Beach but I decided against it. Either way, they have a slightly better record in scorigami games with a record of 16-12 in 8 seasons. After them is a large jump up to the Myrtle Beach predecessors, the god awful Palm Beach Solar Bears. With a record of 21-57-2 in scorigami games it is no wonder they wanted to change their name into something different to shake off that terrible record they held onto for so long. Unfortunately for them, it still didn’t go to plan.
![[Image: image.png]](https://cdn.discordapp.com/attachments/942508405543805041/1154172312527061032/image.png)
Taking a look at the previous chart in a different way we can see that “Team Beach” is in an interesting place and they take up the three possible sides of the spectrum. On one end is the Palm Beach Solar Bears with a miserable 27.5% win rate. Then in the middle is the current Bondi Buccaneers team who are sitting close to 500. And finally we have the in between era of the Myrtle Beach Buccaneers who set a historic pace of a 61.5% win rate better than any other team. Combining all three “Team Beach would be sitting at a 40.2% win rate which reaches the lows of the Dallas Birddogs and London Royals.
While the Birddogs and Royals have not been good in scorigami games no one has been worse than NorfoLk. I promised I would get back to them from earlier in the article and it is now their time to shine. They have been here since day 1 and have had the longest to figure it out. They just simply haven’t. Some teams like the Blues and Myrtle Beach have had a much smaller sample size which could have swayed their win percentage significantly in the red but it didn’t. Norfolk is in a world of their own losing an incredible 107 of their 173 scorigami games.
The next question Norfolk fans may be asking is “well we are bad in scorigami games but that doesn’t mean we were bad in all games right? And I have that answer as well for you.
![[Image: image.png]](https://cdn.discordapp.com/attachments/942508405543805041/1154172680510132244/image.png)
As this graph demonstrates scorigami has a near perfect correlation with all games. These win loss records seem to have been last updated over 10 seasons ago but I have a feeling this trend would have continued. And if you take a look at Norfolk we see that their scorigami win % slightly overperforms their all time game win % so if I were Norfolk I’d be aiming for those scorigami games.
On the other side we have the Birddogs and Royals who severely underperform in scorigami games with both pulling in at nearly a full 10% worse in scorigami games.
I’ve avoided this team for long enough but it is finally time to talk about them. That is of course the Portland Pythons. One of the big four, the Pythons dominate every statistical category there is to offer (except for one of course). But that aside, as shown by the graphs above they know how to win in the regular season. A 63% win record in all games vs a 61% win record in scorigami games. And this is no small sample size. You could say they are the opposite of NorfoLk as they have managed to, and are the only team, to have over 100 scorigami wins coming in at a total of 103.
I could talk about the win-loss ratio of these teams for ages but instead, I want to shift gears to the most important position in football (not kicker, I know that’s what everyone’s mind went to first) the position of quarterback.
![[Image: image.png]](https://cdn.discordapp.com/attachments/942508405543805041/1154178459342483476/image.png)
![[Image: image.png]](https://cdn.discordapp.com/attachments/942508405543805041/1154178544625258608/image.png)
![[Image: image.png]](https://cdn.discordapp.com/attachments/942508405543805041/1154178608953315429/image.png)
![[Image: image.png]](https://cdn.discordapp.com/attachments/942508405543805041/1154178657695301682/image.png)
What you see laid out before you is the majority of quarterbacks that have scored a scorigami. 138 quarterbacks have had the honor of participating in at least one scorigami game. With scorigami games participated in ranging from 1-46 there are the goats of scorigami and the quarterbacks that have better things to do than go for a scorigami. But no one is more experienced in the art of scorigami than a man by the name of Mark Strike.
Mark Strike is a fascinating player and someone that could have a 20 page article written about him alone so I will try to refrain from going too deep. But most of you have probably never heard this name before. He won a season 2 Ultimus you know? He is also littered throughout the record books if you dig through them long enough. He would record a scorigami in seasons 1, 2, 4, and 5 playing for the Chicago Blues and Kansas City Coyotes over that span and when it was all said and done, didn’t do too bad either with a 25-21 record by the end of it. But he was able to put on this feat for two reasons. First, he was in the DSFL for 4 years which allowed him to accumulate potential games for a significant period of time. But more importantly, and the second reason he has played in so many scorigami games is that he played at the very beginning of the DSFL when scorigami’s were free for the taking. The vast majority of QB’s with the most scorigami games participated in are from the early era of the DSFL for that very reason.
Of all the QBs, who fails to show up in scorigami games? I had a problem singling out one person. There are multiple QB’s with a 0% win rate but none of them I feel had enough games under their belts to have a fair sample size. Instead, I look to Kaguya Shinomya who won 1 of his 11 games. Shinomya has since converted to a free safety for the Chicago Butchers but before that had a decently long career in the DSFL from season 32-35 but was unfortunate enough to be on a terrible London Royals team that got blown out game after game. His lone win would come in his very last scorigami game, a week 7 2050 game against the Dallas Birddogs that they would win 38-23 with his running back carrying them to victory which would explain the eventual switch to free safety.
On the flip side of terrible quarterbacks we are going to talk about legendary quarterbacks and who better to talk about than Cooter Bigsby. Posting a perfect 7-0 in scorigami games he is the clear winner of best quarterback in such games. He played for the high powered San Antonio Marshals who I failed to talk about earlier but were a team that did quite well in scorigami games and a lot of that had to do with Cooter Bigsby and an offense that scored over 30 points on 5 of their 7 scorigami games with Bigsby. Bigsby would go on to have a long career with the Wraiths and it is clear to see why.
I want to conclude by highlighting some of the other interesting scorigami games that I failed to mention earlier
![[Image: image.png]](https://cdn.discordapp.com/attachments/942508405543805041/1154158925827031040/image.png)
The lowest scorigami was a 6-0 slugfest between the Grey Ducks and Lucahdores while the highest scoring game was between the Birddogs and Grey Ducks in a game that had 103 points scored between the both of them.
I also want to bring up the 51-0 miserable and torturous game that was the Marshals murdering the Palm Beach Solar Bears. However, this game was not the game with the highest point differential. That honor goes to the Bondi Beach Buccaneers who defeated…you guessed it the Norfolk Seawolves by a score of 57-3. Daytona would throw for 2 touchdowns and only 280 yards allowing for his running backs to combine for 4 touchdowns and 250 yards. Besides that their kicker also knocked through 3 field goals including a Bondi Beach record (at the time) 55 yard field goal. That record now of course belongs to Zenzeroni Xystarch II. Norfolk's sole 3 points came in the 4th quarter when they couldn’t even manage a touchdown despite Bondi Beach not even trying. Emi Rune had a miserable 55 yards through the air for the Norfolk passing game that couldn’t get anything going.
I mentioned earlier there have been 11 ties so I thought I’d list them off in numerical order: 7,9, 14, 16, 17, 20, 23, 24, 27, 28, and a very peculiar 37. The 37 point tie was between the Coyotes and who else but the Norfolk Seawolves. The Seawolves were trailing for much of the game but took the lead with 5 minutes to go in the game by a score of 37-34. Jaroppolo Jr. marched down the field and set Izuku Campbell up for a chip shot 28 yard field goal that would tie the game with 26 seconds remaining.
Finally, before I sign off, I want to mention some interesting scorigami’s that have no occurred yet. For instance 7-0 and 24-0 are all very possible numbers that have yet to be recorded. Or going down the list we can see that when a winning team scores 30 almost every combination of losing team in the 20’s has occurred except for 21. I would also love to see a team score 4 points as impossible as it may sound. But if you take a closer look you will find that there are plenty of options and scores that allow you to commit scorigami. So go out there and get to work! That’s all I have for you today Hopefully I didn’t bore you and if I did I hope the graphs made up for that.
The art of Scorigami will forever live on. Here’s one last chart I didn’t know where to put but wanted to include ?
![[Image: image.png]](https://cdn.discordapp.com/attachments/942508405543805041/1154174265977995284/image.png)
Lock180 signing off for now.
*I brute forced a lot of the calculations and used a NFL scorigami excel template so it isn’t as clean or efficient as you may expect but it gets the job done
![Smile Smile](https://forums.sim-football.com/images/smilies/smile.png)
Scorigami. If you’ve watched football you’ve probably heard the term before. Coined by the legendary Jon Bois Scorigami is simply the first time a score has ever happened. It is unique to football because of the different Lego blocks that construct scores. Scoring a touchdown awards 6 points while an extra point is 1 point. A safety is 2 points and an extra point is 3. There are other peculiar cases but you get the idea. These building blocks allow for strange scores and I am about to take you on an adventure into the art of Scorigami.
Which teams dominate the scorigami market? Which quarterbacks are clutch in scorigami games and which ones fall apart? Welcome to the world of DSFL Scorigami
![[Image: image.png]](https://cdn.discordapp.com/attachments/942508405543805041/1154158925827031040/image.png)
This graph is a lot to take in but it shows every individual scorigami that has occurred from the beginning of the DSFL up to the most recent games in season 43. The first ever scorigami occurred at the hands of a shocking culprit the Norfolk Seawolves. They were able to dominate the Chicago Blues in a 30-13 victory. I say shocking in describing Norfolk and will explain later as to why but just know they are a major factor in the art of scorigami.
We now go all the way to week 14 of the most recent season where the Portland Pythons put the Seawolves in their place with a 55-23 beatdown.
I think now is a good time to mention the big 4 which consist of the Portland Pythons, Tijuana Luchadores, Kansas City Coyotes, and Norfolk Seawolves. They have been in the DSFL from the beginning and thus have a great advantage in achieving a scorigami. Now is also a good time to mention when we get deeper into the stats I separate teams by name. Most notable is the Myrtle Beach Buccaneers vs the Bondi Beach Buccaneers. Their stats have been separated and are deemed separate entities for the purposes of this analysis.
Before I get too far from the scorigami chart itself I’d like to mention a couple more things regarding some facts and figures. There have been 572 instances of scorigami spanning over 40 seasons. Wow does this compare to the NFL? There have been approximately 16,000 regular season games played and the 1076th scorigami just occurred on September 10th between the Ravens and Texans in a 25-9 score. This means there is a 6.725% chance a scorigami occurs in any given game. Pretty low odds. On the other hand, there have been 2,044 DSFL games over 43 seasons which brings us to a shocking 27.98% chance of a scorigami occurring. Why is there such a higher chance than in the NFL? Well part of the reason is the frequency of a scorigami will diminish as scorigami’s occur. Take a look at this graph with me for a second.
![[Image: image.png]](https://cdn.discordapp.com/attachments/942508405543805041/1154171282695401603/image.png)
As you can see 2019 had a remarkable 40 scorigami’s meaning only two games occurred that were not a scorigami. But then even just 1 year later that number goes down to 31 and continues to go down until it averages out at around 12-14. So what is happening? Well, the more likely scores are being taken off the board and are no longer scorigami. Take for example a score of 21-7 a completely mundane score that is likely to happen. As time goes on you have to find more and more unique score lines in order for it to be counted as a scorigami. The most recent season saw an uptick in scorigamis with an impressive 12 on the season, the highest since the 2050 season.
So what’s the play? How do you get a scorigami these days when almost 600 different variations have already been taken? The easiest, and I say “easiest” lightly, is scoring a lot. All of the scorigami’s bar two in the 2058 season had the winning team score more than 30 points. One of those that didn’t reach the 30 mark is another great way to get a scorigami and that would be to tie. There are only 11 total ties in the DSFL and is a great way to earn your spot on the Scorigami history books. And that final one? Well that would be a Week 11 Seawolves Coyotes battle that would end in a 17-5 score. This highlights just how creative you have to be at this day and age in order to get a scorigami. But things weren’t always like this.
I’ve wandered off a bit so let me wrangle myself back in. Going back to the original chart you can see the vast majority of green dots that indicate a scorigami are in what I like to refer to as “the death zone” this is the area where if you have a game end with a score in this zone there is a small likelihood of recording a scorigami. It stretches from the winning team scoring 7-42 and the losing team from 6-30. It’s a wide range and there are exceptions but that is the reality we are dealing with in this day and age.
I mentioned exceptions so let me highlight those real quick. No team winning or losing has ever scored 1 point. Another combination that has never before been seen is scoring 4 points. The only way to score 4 points is through 2 safeties or a field goal and that near impossible 1 point play. These two are the only numbers that is true for until we get to the extremely high numbers. With that being said the 1-2 trench continues with the number 2. Only one game has ended with a team scoring 2. The Bondi Beach Buccaneers defeated the Luchadores 31-2 to officially record the only such occurrence in DSFL scorigami. The next trench that must be mentioned is 8. No team has won while scoring 8 points and only 3 teams have lost with such a score.
The final trench that must be mentioned is the surprisingly elusive 18 score gap. Only 4 winning teams and 5 losing teams have had the honor of ending with a score of 18. There are other trenches like the 25 gap or 32 and 39 gaps but those are higher up and are outside of hte realm of what I deem the death zone.
Where do we go from here? What is the next step in the art that is scorigami? I think it is time to reveal some of our heavy hitters and overall team records when it comes to scorigami.
![[Image: image.png]](https://cdn.discordapp.com/attachments/942508405543805041/1154171814176636988/image.png)
Here we have every win, loss, and tie from every DSFL team to ever exist. Way down at the bottom we have the Chicago Blues who left us after just two seasons. But in that time they racked up 26 instances of scorigami good for a 14-12 record. This means in their two seasons in the DSFL they recorded a scorigami in 26 of their 28 possible regular season games an impressive and unmatchable feat. Next on the list are the Myrtle Beach Buccaneers who could have been included with Bondi Beach but I decided against it. Either way, they have a slightly better record in scorigami games with a record of 16-12 in 8 seasons. After them is a large jump up to the Myrtle Beach predecessors, the god awful Palm Beach Solar Bears. With a record of 21-57-2 in scorigami games it is no wonder they wanted to change their name into something different to shake off that terrible record they held onto for so long. Unfortunately for them, it still didn’t go to plan.
![[Image: image.png]](https://cdn.discordapp.com/attachments/942508405543805041/1154172312527061032/image.png)
Taking a look at the previous chart in a different way we can see that “Team Beach” is in an interesting place and they take up the three possible sides of the spectrum. On one end is the Palm Beach Solar Bears with a miserable 27.5% win rate. Then in the middle is the current Bondi Buccaneers team who are sitting close to 500. And finally we have the in between era of the Myrtle Beach Buccaneers who set a historic pace of a 61.5% win rate better than any other team. Combining all three “Team Beach would be sitting at a 40.2% win rate which reaches the lows of the Dallas Birddogs and London Royals.
While the Birddogs and Royals have not been good in scorigami games no one has been worse than NorfoLk. I promised I would get back to them from earlier in the article and it is now their time to shine. They have been here since day 1 and have had the longest to figure it out. They just simply haven’t. Some teams like the Blues and Myrtle Beach have had a much smaller sample size which could have swayed their win percentage significantly in the red but it didn’t. Norfolk is in a world of their own losing an incredible 107 of their 173 scorigami games.
The next question Norfolk fans may be asking is “well we are bad in scorigami games but that doesn’t mean we were bad in all games right? And I have that answer as well for you.
![[Image: image.png]](https://cdn.discordapp.com/attachments/942508405543805041/1154172680510132244/image.png)
As this graph demonstrates scorigami has a near perfect correlation with all games. These win loss records seem to have been last updated over 10 seasons ago but I have a feeling this trend would have continued. And if you take a look at Norfolk we see that their scorigami win % slightly overperforms their all time game win % so if I were Norfolk I’d be aiming for those scorigami games.
On the other side we have the Birddogs and Royals who severely underperform in scorigami games with both pulling in at nearly a full 10% worse in scorigami games.
I’ve avoided this team for long enough but it is finally time to talk about them. That is of course the Portland Pythons. One of the big four, the Pythons dominate every statistical category there is to offer (except for one of course). But that aside, as shown by the graphs above they know how to win in the regular season. A 63% win record in all games vs a 61% win record in scorigami games. And this is no small sample size. You could say they are the opposite of NorfoLk as they have managed to, and are the only team, to have over 100 scorigami wins coming in at a total of 103.
I could talk about the win-loss ratio of these teams for ages but instead, I want to shift gears to the most important position in football (not kicker, I know that’s what everyone’s mind went to first) the position of quarterback.
![[Image: image.png]](https://cdn.discordapp.com/attachments/942508405543805041/1154178459342483476/image.png)
![[Image: image.png]](https://cdn.discordapp.com/attachments/942508405543805041/1154178544625258608/image.png)
![[Image: image.png]](https://cdn.discordapp.com/attachments/942508405543805041/1154178608953315429/image.png)
![[Image: image.png]](https://cdn.discordapp.com/attachments/942508405543805041/1154178657695301682/image.png)
What you see laid out before you is the majority of quarterbacks that have scored a scorigami. 138 quarterbacks have had the honor of participating in at least one scorigami game. With scorigami games participated in ranging from 1-46 there are the goats of scorigami and the quarterbacks that have better things to do than go for a scorigami. But no one is more experienced in the art of scorigami than a man by the name of Mark Strike.
Mark Strike is a fascinating player and someone that could have a 20 page article written about him alone so I will try to refrain from going too deep. But most of you have probably never heard this name before. He won a season 2 Ultimus you know? He is also littered throughout the record books if you dig through them long enough. He would record a scorigami in seasons 1, 2, 4, and 5 playing for the Chicago Blues and Kansas City Coyotes over that span and when it was all said and done, didn’t do too bad either with a 25-21 record by the end of it. But he was able to put on this feat for two reasons. First, he was in the DSFL for 4 years which allowed him to accumulate potential games for a significant period of time. But more importantly, and the second reason he has played in so many scorigami games is that he played at the very beginning of the DSFL when scorigami’s were free for the taking. The vast majority of QB’s with the most scorigami games participated in are from the early era of the DSFL for that very reason.
Of all the QBs, who fails to show up in scorigami games? I had a problem singling out one person. There are multiple QB’s with a 0% win rate but none of them I feel had enough games under their belts to have a fair sample size. Instead, I look to Kaguya Shinomya who won 1 of his 11 games. Shinomya has since converted to a free safety for the Chicago Butchers but before that had a decently long career in the DSFL from season 32-35 but was unfortunate enough to be on a terrible London Royals team that got blown out game after game. His lone win would come in his very last scorigami game, a week 7 2050 game against the Dallas Birddogs that they would win 38-23 with his running back carrying them to victory which would explain the eventual switch to free safety.
On the flip side of terrible quarterbacks we are going to talk about legendary quarterbacks and who better to talk about than Cooter Bigsby. Posting a perfect 7-0 in scorigami games he is the clear winner of best quarterback in such games. He played for the high powered San Antonio Marshals who I failed to talk about earlier but were a team that did quite well in scorigami games and a lot of that had to do with Cooter Bigsby and an offense that scored over 30 points on 5 of their 7 scorigami games with Bigsby. Bigsby would go on to have a long career with the Wraiths and it is clear to see why.
I want to conclude by highlighting some of the other interesting scorigami games that I failed to mention earlier
![[Image: image.png]](https://cdn.discordapp.com/attachments/942508405543805041/1154158925827031040/image.png)
The lowest scorigami was a 6-0 slugfest between the Grey Ducks and Lucahdores while the highest scoring game was between the Birddogs and Grey Ducks in a game that had 103 points scored between the both of them.
I also want to bring up the 51-0 miserable and torturous game that was the Marshals murdering the Palm Beach Solar Bears. However, this game was not the game with the highest point differential. That honor goes to the Bondi Beach Buccaneers who defeated…you guessed it the Norfolk Seawolves by a score of 57-3. Daytona would throw for 2 touchdowns and only 280 yards allowing for his running backs to combine for 4 touchdowns and 250 yards. Besides that their kicker also knocked through 3 field goals including a Bondi Beach record (at the time) 55 yard field goal. That record now of course belongs to Zenzeroni Xystarch II. Norfolk's sole 3 points came in the 4th quarter when they couldn’t even manage a touchdown despite Bondi Beach not even trying. Emi Rune had a miserable 55 yards through the air for the Norfolk passing game that couldn’t get anything going.
I mentioned earlier there have been 11 ties so I thought I’d list them off in numerical order: 7,9, 14, 16, 17, 20, 23, 24, 27, 28, and a very peculiar 37. The 37 point tie was between the Coyotes and who else but the Norfolk Seawolves. The Seawolves were trailing for much of the game but took the lead with 5 minutes to go in the game by a score of 37-34. Jaroppolo Jr. marched down the field and set Izuku Campbell up for a chip shot 28 yard field goal that would tie the game with 26 seconds remaining.
Finally, before I sign off, I want to mention some interesting scorigami’s that have no occurred yet. For instance 7-0 and 24-0 are all very possible numbers that have yet to be recorded. Or going down the list we can see that when a winning team scores 30 almost every combination of losing team in the 20’s has occurred except for 21. I would also love to see a team score 4 points as impossible as it may sound. But if you take a closer look you will find that there are plenty of options and scores that allow you to commit scorigami. So go out there and get to work! That’s all I have for you today Hopefully I didn’t bore you and if I did I hope the graphs made up for that.
The art of Scorigami will forever live on. Here’s one last chart I didn’t know where to put but wanted to include ?
![[Image: image.png]](https://cdn.discordapp.com/attachments/942508405543805041/1154174265977995284/image.png)
Lock180 signing off for now.
![[Image: zentziegofiadjustedFILTER.png?ex=65eb758...a235473d3&]](https://cdn.discordapp.com/attachments/1203431741294121051/1210685248245866597/zentziegofiadjustedFILTER.png?ex=65eb7580&is=65d90080&hm=4299fab419411b48ff1e505d152ef9798d663b428b6ebad53c85f67a235473d3&)
![[Image: xystarch.png?ex=65e525ad&is=65d2b0ad&hm=...4a429a75b&]](https://cdn.discordapp.com/attachments/317388657994760194/1208950269317095434/xystarch.png?ex=65e525ad&is=65d2b0ad&hm=ce40e071438f17b3099c948920d6fab14f2c17ff6c635fca6bb20364a429a75b&)