![]() ![]() ![]() Michigan as a hotbed for high school marching band isn’t always talked about loudly, on a National scope. But this data is, if nothing else, interesting. If I had my educated guess, top scores will gradually normalize over the next few weeks, as they often do, with more permutations of more competitors at more venues. There’s no argument to be had or point to be made off of this information you could reasonably pin it to a wide variety of different factors, or simply argue there’s no correlation, which is likely true. The same experiment in 2022, featuring eight events, yields an output of about 77.200. It’s not a gigantic difference, but it’s a difference.ĭigging a little further, the average score of a top-three ensemble in seven September 2021 events - so, 21 total data points - was about 78.800. The same weekend in 2022 featured an average winning mark of about 81.500. ![]() But, yeah, in a very basic sense, scores are a little lower out of the gates than they were in September 2021.Īt events in 2021’s final weekend events, four winning scores averaged out to just shy of 83.000. With that in mind, this will be one to keep an eye on as more data points develop into the month of October - especially as Super Regionals roll around and data grows exponentially. ![]() Let’s make on thing clear it’s way too early to make sweeping statistical declarations about the BOA season. So, before we dive head-first into the gauntlet of BOA contests that is October, here are three interesting storylines you may have missed during two September weekends of competition: 1. My head’s still spinning a little bit and if you follow along with the BOA season, your head, too, will start spinning even faster, as the calendar’s 10th month will feature the vast majority of 2022 BOA events, including a pair of Super Regional events. That data is used to forecast the direction and intensity of storms and issue watches and warnings back on the ground.Yeah, I know, October got here in about 12 seconds. “We’re launching data collecting instruments all throughout the storm, that are gathering temperature, pressure, humidity, wind speed and wind direction data,” he said. He has made 76 flights into 22 hurricanes in his career, collecting data that the national hurricane center uses for forecasting. “There was a lot of lightning which was something that I’d never really seen before in a storm of that size.”īorn and raised in West Virginia, Underwood is an aerospace engineer and hurricane hunter with NOAA. “So we were getting the usual up and down motion, but we were also getting a lot of side to side, which is really unsettling when you’re in an aircraft,” Underwood said. He said it was the most intense storm he has ever flown into. One of those hunters, Nick Underwood, flew into the strongest part of Hurricane Ian on Wednesday. WASHINGTON (Nexstar) - As part of the efforts to collect scientific data on hurricanes, and accurately forecast the path and strength of the storms, hurricane hunters from NOAA fly directly into storms. ![]()
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