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RU Deficit

I understand this and agree. That’s kind of the point and why this treating Rutgers like a business that should pay players beyond its core mission is stupid. I was just correcting you including non operating income inclusion in the formula.
I was merely parroting what Rutgers shows on their financials. Profitability may have been used incorrectly. What Rutgers says on its Financials is increase in Net Position.

OT: Cold and Potentially Snowy Pattern Likely for Most of January

The "pattern" was accurate for the cold but way off in snow and in general precipitation. I still don't understand the late addition the morning of the last storm at the same time it was 39 degrees when the new map was released. Right now Philly and the general area will be the lowest total ever in Philadelphia if we don't get anymore rain/snow before Saturday.
Since it was accurate about the cold the extra snow comes off the table. Hello suppression my old friend…😎

Poor NIL is the biggest reason for our disappointing season

The NIL race isnt being won or lost by how much your fan collective raises but rather how many whales you can get committed to your program to stroke 7-figure checks
I hate this argument as to why money cannot get raised. The $100 donors are just as important. They grow into bigger donors in the future.

Basketball Rutgers Women's Basketball stuns Penn State in final minutes with wild fourth-quarter comeback

Congrats Ladies! What did we do different in the 4th quarter? Did we unleash a relentless press the whole quarter?
Not exactly, Penn State was extremely loose with the ball in the open floor (similarly to the rest of the game) but the ball seemed to bounce Rutgers’ way in the fourth quarter and they finally converted on their opportunities.

OT: Cold and Potentially Snowy Pattern Likely for Most of January

Summary: So, the likely colder than normal and potentially snowier than normal period from 1/4 through 1/25 for our area, which I posted about on 12/28, has now come and gone and it was quite cold (4.7F below normal in New Brunswick), but was only slightly above average in snowfall (5.2" in NB vs. 5.0" for 22 days in Jan on average), due to simple lack of precipitation; I use NB as a decent, but imperfect representative for the Philly-NJ-NYC area. Given the way I "score" these pattern threads, colder than normal is being in the bottom 1/3 of January's and 4.7F places this period in 22nd out of 132 years of NB records, so colder than normal verified. Snowier than normal, however, did not verify for NB, as the snowiest 1/3 of January's would've had 5.6" or more of snow vs. the 5.2" that fell.

However, the "pattern" certainly provided well above normal to record snowfalls for most of the eastern US south of 40N, but not for most areas north of 40N, so it was a very near miss for our area, although most winter weather nuts were still pretty happy with 4-7" of snow during this period (we got 5.7" in Metuchen) and especially the 1/20 snow and cold that followed, providing a beautiful snowscape all this past week. It certainly made for lots of fun at our weekly soccer match today. Peeking ahead, there could be some wintry weather 2/1-2/2, but right now it's looking more wet than white (except well NW of 95), but we're far enough out for that to change. Lots of good discussion about the entire month of January with regard to the pattern, snow/precip, temps, and this weekend's storm in the thread below from AmericanWx.

https://www.americanwx.com/bb/topic/61402-january-2025/

Details: Specifically, with regard to temperature for our area, 1/4-1/25 was about 4.7F colder than normal in New Brunswick (the location I use for these pattern discussions as I simply don't have time to evaluate many locations and NB is a good indicator for at least CNJ if not the 95 corridor from Philly to NYC and a bit beyond), which puts this period firmly into the bottom 1/3 of Januarys, which is what I would call "colder than normal" with the other two outcomes, obviously, being normal (middle 1/3 of outcomes) and above normal (top 1/3). 4.7F colder than normal is 26.1F vs. a mean Ja"pattern" n temp of 30.8F, which puts this period at about the 22nd coldest in the 132 year recorded weather history for NB (bottom third would be 1st thru 44th coldest). Only 5 days during this period were above normal and the last 5 days of the period averaged 15F below normal, which is seriously cold.

With regard to snowfall for our area, again using NB as the measuring stick, NB got 5.2" of snow from 1/4-1/25 (1.2" on 1/6, 0.5" on 1/11, 0.3" on 1/16, and 3.2" on 1/20) and on average NB gets 7.1" of snow in January, so for 22 of 31 days, one would expect 5.0" of snow in NB, placing this year just slightly above average, but certainly not in the top 1/3 of January's (required for me to call the period snowier than normal), as the top 1/3 had snowfalls >5.6" (pro-rated for 22 of 31 days in Jan). Most locations in our area (Philly-NJ-NYC) got close to average snowfall for the period, with the exception being far SNJ, which got 6"+ just from the 1/6 storm. The table linked below summarizes the 132 year weather record for NB, including temps and snowfall.

https://climate.rutgers.edu/stateclim_v1/monthlydata/index.php?stn=286055&elem=snow

Looking back at this period, it was obviously cold enough for there to be substantial snow, not only in NB and our area, but across most of the eastern half of the US, as temps were also generally below normal to well below normal for the eastern U for this period. But unfortunately for snow lovers, the Philly-NJ-NYC area (apart from far SNJ), just didn't get enough precip to provide above normal snowfall. Same was generally true for all of the NE US, but clearly was not true roughly south of the 40N parallel, as much of the eastern US south of that line was impacted by two snowstorms during this period.

The first was a major storm that hit much of VA/MD/DE/SENJ/NC/TN/KY (and even northern AL/MS/GA) with 4-12" on 1/6 and the second was the historic storm last week that set snowfall records all across the Deep South from TX to NC, including all-time snowfall records in places like New Orleans, Mobile, and Pensacola (and the biggest snowfall ever in Florida, 9.8" in Miton). So the "pattern" certainly delivered above to way above average snowfall south of 40N, but not for areas N of 40N, in general. Note that the graphic below is snowfall for the entire winter through 1/25, but that all of the snow that fell for areas south of 40N fell during the 1/4-1/25 period, whereas some of the snow for our area and the NEUS fell in December (especially well NW of 95 where major snows fell).

Looking more closely at the precipitation our area received during this period, this January overall is likely to end up being the driest January on record for many, including NYC, Newark, New Brunswick and Philly, all of whom have had <0.5" of precip this month, so far, with little to none expected through the end of the month unless this weekend's storm arrives late Friday and puts down >0.1" of precip before 2/1, as each location only needs about another ~0.1" of precip to not be the driest January ever. We might get a few rain/snow showers on 1/29 and that's about it, as the next storm likely doesn't make it here until 2/1, although some models are showing a late Friday arrival with rain on all of the models into 2/1, but some showing some snow possible later on 2/1 into 2/2. Note that the very dry January extended well into New England, also. As an aside, the lack of precip in January means that most of our area's drought situation has worsened again after a fairly wet December.

Looking Ahead: This coming week looks seasonable with most days having high temps anywhere from the mid-30s to mid-40s and the following week looks fairly similar temp-wise, while forecasts are calling for fairly normal to maybe a bit above normal precip, but no torch or deep freeze patterns look likely for at least the next 2-3 weeks. With regard to snow threats, there could be a dusting S of 80 on Wednesday with up to 1" N of 80 from a weak clipper system and then all eyes turn to this weekend, when a more substantial storm takes aim at our area with the potential for 1-2" of precip from late 1/31 through the weekend. Currently all but one of the global models shows that being almost all rain (with some snow N of 80 and more substantial snow N of 84), but the GFS is showing decent snowfall down to 276/195 after 1"+ rain, so there are scenarios where this system could turn out a bit more snowy. Way too early for a thread, plus I'll be in Florida from 1/29-2/4, so for this one, I'll be rooting for rain, lol, as I hate missing snowstorms while I'm away.


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The "pattern" was accurate for the cold but way off in snow and in general precipitation. I still don't understand the late addition the morning of the last storm at the same time it was 39 degrees when the new map was released. Right now Philly and the general area will be the lowest total ever in Philadelphia if we don't get anymore rain/snow before Saturday.

OT: NFL 2025 Playoff Games Thread

Credit to the Eagles and Barkley has been awesome but I do get irked thinking about all the hypocritical Eagles fans bad mouthing Barkley saying he sucked and he always hurt over the years when he was with the Giants. Same jackasses are now claiming him as if he was a native son. I still think the winner of the other game wins the Super Bowl.
Not sure who you’re talking about. I was more upset that he flipped from us way back when.
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