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Real-Life Math

You are a talent scout for the Henry Bears, an unsuccessful hockey club. At this year's draft, you've been instructed to focus on offense. You're supposed to consider only those young players with goal-scoring ability.

The team owner has you in his office for a meeting. "Now look here," he rumbles from behind his steel desk, "I want a full report on this Dalton Wiggs kid. I'm sending you to tonight's game. It's the last game of the year, so I expect all the numbers on this kid."

That night, you cover the game. Wiggs was brilliant as usual, scoring 4 goals, assisting on 3 more and taking 15 shots. Before the match, he had 70 goals, 103 assists and 297 shots taken. You must figure out his final goal, assist and shot total for the season, as well as his shooting percentage.

The following table shows what Wiggs had before the game and what he did in his final game of the season. What did he end up with in goals, assists and points and what was his final shooting percentage? For the latter, you should divide his final goals total into his final shot total.

WHEN?GOALSASSISTSPOINTSSHOTSSHOOTING%
Before game7010317329723.6
Last game4371526.7

"If you're talking about math, it should be said that sports is full of it," says sports scout Bryan Shumock. "Statistics play a huge role in sports on virtually every level. A scout will often use a young player's numbers to gauge how he's coming along and even what he's capable of at a higher playing level."

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