Once again, Professor, it has nothing to do with your conclusion. It has to do with how you came about your conclusion and this arrogance that you somehow had all of these facts you were using while the rest of us were just making assumptions. And if you are going to give somebody a definition of a word from a dictionary - it actually helps to provide the actual definition:
Merriam-Webster
- a: an assuming that something is true
- b: a fact or statement taken for granted
Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary
- a belief or feeling that something is true or that something will happen, although there is no proof
Neither of these definitions (one directly from your source - your definition was in relation to when premise is used as a synonym for assumption) are stating you are required to use something as a starting point when considering an assumption but rather a belief that something is true without fact. When this started, you specifically said, "I'm not making any assumptions. I am reading what has played out right in front of our eyes." and when asked for your facts you said, "As I said earlier the facts are the words used and the demeanor shown by Counsell and Woodruff in their comments to the press." Also notice, you did not use Woodruff's previous injury as part of your facts until later.
You took some facts (Woodruff is injured and will miss at least the WC round), added in your interpretation of Woodruff/Counsell's comments and demeanor (not facts) and came to a conclusion. You made an assumption and it is fine to admit that.