All the guys who've been in it for years don't make **** either, as one can see in this thread. All hindsight bs and waving away past predictions if they didn't end up right.
Interesting stuff from the Dodgers championship... we'll start with former Dodger Jackie Robinson wearing #42: Dodgers won the series 4-2 on the anniversary of Jackie Robinson's funeral which was held on October 27, 1972, and the win made the Dodgers 6-6 all time in world series games (we know how "they" love their 6s). BUT even better to tie into storylines like gematria always does... The year after the Dodgers won their championship in the 80s (so 1989) a movie called Do The Right Thing came out. What's the main characters name in the movie and what does he wear practically the whole time? His name is Mookie and he wears a #42 Jackie Robinson jersey. Who was the best player on the Dodgers when they won in 2020? MOOKIE Betts who of course had 4 at bats and 2 hits in the deciding game. The film came out 31 years before the Dodgers' 2020 championship and they won the deciding game 3 to 1 (to win the series 4-2). I mean you can't make that stuff up, but people will see that and say "coincidence!". So people who have money don't use the internet? How would we find out about crypto before they launch to exchanges? Freaking Ron Artest came to Clutchfans, several wealthy folks write blogs or are on social media, Ghislaine Maxwell was a damn reddit moderator, etc. See you can't think narrow minded like this. It's all relative and not everyone has money to throw at gambling on sports or if they do maybe it's a smaller amount. Betting $400 on the Braves before the season would have given you $2000 when they won. That's definitely not life changing money... But if you put that $400 in say Starlink (the crypto version) in July then you'd have $60,000 today. I never really bet on the gematria stuff for this reason because crypto has been way more lucrative. But the knowledge is priceless. I never said they all matched though just that you see it in city names too as one example. What do you mean deciding gematria instead? The whole point of the video was this guy chose the Braves who were at 20-1 odds before the start of the season (btw the owner of the Braves is Liberty Media which equals 201, like Event 201). How the numbers connect in the end will be figured out as the games are played (like Soler hitting the 42nd pitch), but the result is the same. The reason why he chose ATL was literally based off just the numbers associated with Hank Aaron's death and those same numbers were all over the world series. If you want an early line some in the gematria community are saying the Angels will win it all next year and it has to do with them sitting Trout pretty much all season. He's probably going to reach some milestones next season so they sat him because the dates have to match up. If they do win in 2022 though it'll come 20 years after their last championship
Quickest take on this is that Mookie Betts wears number 50, so doesn't that invalidate the Mookie stuff? ETA But we do now know the real reason Cash removed Snell. The powers that be told him to.
Trout has no historic milestones he will reach in 2022 with the exception of scoring his 1000th run, 900th RBI and his 1500th hit. He would be around the 345th person to score 1000 runs, around the 385th to get to 900 RBI and around the 646th to reach 1500 hits, so if you want to call this milestones, I am fairly certain most every player will reach a particular "milestone" in any given year. Also, you wrote IF they win. Shouldn't you have written WHEN? You wrote SOME in the gematria community. Why is it SOME?
So him wearing #50 invalidates all the other connections I wrote? I'm sure he wears 50 for a reason though but I haven't figured it out. Not like he could wear 42. Now maybe he could have wore 44 since that's what Mookie equals in the most basic cypher. Yeah those are some pretty nice milestones don't you think when you figure 19,000+ people have played in the MLB and all the time he's spent on the DL. And then you can't just look at the milestone number but also various dates when they happen and how they associate with Trout. Like as a hypothetical he could hit his 1000th run 345 days after being declared out for the 2021 season. Why should I write "when" they win? You're thinking that what some average person guesses is going to be 100% correct all the time. You realize these people who created the calendars we live by and the gematria system based off that have much more world knowledge than all of us? People will disagree on exact teams but in the end it'll come down to just 3-4 teams people will pick to win the world series as usual and those picks often won't be the teams you'll hear promoted on sports talk shows. Who said the Braves would win it all this year, especially before the trade deadline? Gematria never wavered. The only surprise team was the Astros but being it was the 117th WS, and Jim Crane was born on 1/17 it was something overlooked. The gematria community did pretty much agree before the 2019 playoffs started that the Astros would lose in Game 7 against the Nationals based on the numbers (it was related to Trump). They also predicted the Astros to win in 2017 due to the floods and Harvey. Also funny how the Rockets scored 70 in the first half against the Lakers right as the Astros lost 0-7. Something similar happened in 2019 because the Rockets were playing the Wizards in DC that night. Originally supposed to be out two months at most and then was out four months. Look yall don't have to believe any of it and can keep calling everything a coincidence. The world is exactly like you thought it was as a kid. It doesn't matter to me because I've seen way to many connections and predictions play out correctly, and the way a lot of these numbers match up is just too strange. Gematria has been more correct than any sports talk show I've watched or sports forum post I've ever read. Kobe's death was the one where I really started researching because that had some of the most obvious gematria connections of them all. Of course youtube deleted all those videos even though it's literally just connecting dots via numbers. And since I keep talking about the system the Jesuits instituted let me make another local example with it... Strake Jesuit is named after patron saint Stainlaus Kostka which equals 41. Strake Jesuit also equals 41. Another coincidence!
You used Mookie and him wearing number 42 as the impetus for all of the Mookie stuff. You used the fact DTRT came out 1 year after. Why not the same year? You used him going 2-4 in the decisive game as more jersey proof. As well as the series being won 4-2. Why did you write that he wore number 42? That is an incredible mistake considering no player had been able to start wearing that number since 1997. You can use Google to see in his own words why he wears #50.
Nah see you're misunderstanding here because you don't want to believe gematria is a real system the elites use. First I'll just say I NEVER said Mookie wore #42. Reread my quote in your post, so that's actually a mistake on your part. As far as the Dodger/Jackie Robinson/Mookie connections they are: Mookie in the movie is wearing a Dodgers jersey. Mookie then plays for the Dodgers so there's one jersey connection. The Dodger jersey was Jackie Robinson's who wore number 42. The Dodgers on the series 4-2, and 31 years after the movie came out. They won the deciding game to win the series 4-2 by a score of 3-1 (like 31 years after "Mookie" was first seen wearing a Dodger jersey). Plus how can you pass over that they won it on the anniversary of #42's funeral? You really going to look at all this and just say coincidence instead of doing some of your own research on it? Here I'll help you start since like I said earlier, gematria started when jewish people converted to become jesuits in the 16th century: https://www.myjewishlearning.com/article/gematria/
Ahhh...I see now. You were talking about Spike. My apologies. Anyway, to address my If vs. When the Angels win point... Are you saying different people use the same gematria and come up with different results?
This thread seems like a good place for me to plug my various MLMs. Will be back with my scanned and uploaded pamphlets shortly.
See post number 162. I'm doing just fine One person can get to an answer of four by multiplying 2x2. Another can by subtracting 5-1. There are different ways people see things playing out. It's up to their knowledge of the code, sports, and world events in order to connect them. How about folks who don't believe in numerology just google it? The info is out there in multiple places. Here's what Yale says: https://web.library.yale.edu/cataloging/hebraica/about-gematria Here's the Times of Israel, one of the largest publications there which actually tries to discredit cyphers but gives good background on gematria: https://blogs.timesofisrael.com/what-is-a-pseudo-cipher/
As you pointed out, Braves were 20-1 odds to win the World Series. Meaning that about 1 in a bit over every 20 people were picking the Braves to win it all this year. So if 1 million people placed bets on teams to win the World Series, about 50,000 of them were picking the Braves.
Right, but why wouldn't all users who accurately use gematria (i.e no math mistakes) come to the same conclusion as the folks who say the Angels will win the 2022 World Series?
Along with the Braves and Astros, Red Sox were also picked as World Series winners according to Gematria: I'm sure if you looked hard enough, you could find the Dodgers, Yankees, and others. That way, all your bases are covered regardless of who wins.
Again there are different ways people see things playing out. It's up to their knowledge of the code, sports, dates, and world events in order to connect them. That's why there are variations. You're saying just 5% of people (and likely less) were picking the braves. None of the sports media were picking them to go all the way. Yet even as they faltered towards the trade deadline being below .500, people who actually study gematria had them as the winner simply because of the Hank Aaron ritual/numbers.
Yeah I've never seen this amateur before and like I started out saying pages ago it won't always be 100% accurate because at the end of the day we're human and didn't design this (calendars + numbers based off it), but it is far more accurate than any sports or news pundit because it's based on logic/numbers, not emotion.
As you pointed out, *some* gematria people did. Others had the Astros. Or the Red Sox. Or likely many other teams. I'd also point out that the Braves had way better preseason odds than the Astros - your numbers were unsurprisingly off. Preseason, the Braves were 10-1, making them the 5th most popular pick to win the WS. https://dknation.draftkings.com/202...-yankees-padres-white-sox-cardinals-blue-jays