I think he's got the only perfect "registered" bracket in the country.
I think he's got the only perfect "registered" bracket in the country.
That seems right, especially if he has asperger's syndrome.
I am not autistic, and I do not have any autistic family members, but I have a feeling we will discover that autistic kids are actually geniuses.
The kid has Purdue winning it all, he isn't a genius.
I believe that's where his bro went to school
haha, YO (super serial) wrote:
The kid has Purdue winning it all, he isn't a genius.
He also has Kansas losing before the Sweet 16... oh wait...
"a child with autism" is the pc way of speaking/writing about an autistic individual.
skinnie minnie wrote:
"a child with autism" is the pc way of speaking/writing about an autistic individual.
So, an autistic adult would also be "a child with autism" to be PC? Back to school with you, fool!
Aspergers is wild, my nephew has it. Kid has the social skills of a 7 year old but is doing college level Astronomy courses at 14.
He probably filled out 1000 brakets
Anybody have a link?
I had Purdue through to the Elite 8, but that may turn out to be my only good pick in the whole bracket.
No, he only filled out one Sheet of Integrity.
This story is amazing but I noticed this in the story as well.
From:
http://www.ksdk.com/sports/story.aspx?storyid=198642&catid=189"CBSSports.com can not confirm Alex's entry -- the company doesn't track entries to their Bracket Manager program. Unlike CBSSports' Bracket Challenge, which ranks players nationally and locks entries once the tournament begins, Bracket Challenge does allow changes after play starts.
The Hermanns insist, however, that they filled out their brackets as a family before the tournament started, and haven't touched the picks since. When asked whether the bracket was altered after the tourney began, Alex's mother said, simply, "no.""
I'm not saying it hasn't been changed but.....
I did not see that. Interesting. We may have a cheater on our hands!
you can call it PC, but its actually just that its grammatically correct. autism is something you have, not something you are. so you say "person with autism" not "autistic person"
skinnie minnie wrote:
"a child with autism" is the pc way of speaking/writing about an autistic individual.
Having a perfect bracket at this point means you know little about college basketball.
Wwll I read an article about this an the people with little knowledge will often beat the avid fan because the avid fan overanalyzes.
+1.
I'm just fired up to see that he has my school, Tennessee, in the final four! Hopefully this kid is infallible when it comes to brackets.