A break may help. Lowering wages too. Or try following just one conference in College football. You get to know those teams better as season goes by. Make it fun for yourself again.
You're not going to get a whole lot of help here I don't think. We're all a bunch of degenerates. Some like to take out their losing wages on other posters. I've been here quite awhile. Hang in there.
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A break may help. Lowering wages too. Or try following just one conference in College football. You get to know those teams better as season goes by. Make it fun for yourself again.
You're not going to get a whole lot of help here I don't think. We're all a bunch of degenerates. Some like to take out their losing wages on other posters. I've been here quite awhile. Hang in there.
But in all seriousness, experiment with different methods of handicapping. This week I tried divine intervention. I wrote to the Pope asking for his picks for this week but he never responded back. So I guess it's back to the same ol' grind.
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But in all seriousness, experiment with different methods of handicapping. This week I tried divine intervention. I wrote to the Pope asking for his picks for this week but he never responded back. So I guess it's back to the same ol' grind.
I just like the idea of reading other's opinions to see if my logic on a game is sound. For example, yesterday I was all ready to bet Syracuse catching points from Notre Dame - I felt the Cuse had the type of offense that might pose problems to the Irish who have had a ton of issues on defense but I wasn't 100% sold on my pick. Then yesterday morning, I read a post from a Syracuse fan who liked Notre Dame. He had a tremendous take on this game (which was much better than mine) and as a result, I decided to pass on the game. As a result, I avoided a losing pick (I did not feel compelled to go with the Irish because I still didn't trut their D). This is an example of how I use the site and the information to my advantage.
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I just like the idea of reading other's opinions to see if my logic on a game is sound. For example, yesterday I was all ready to bet Syracuse catching points from Notre Dame - I felt the Cuse had the type of offense that might pose problems to the Irish who have had a ton of issues on defense but I wasn't 100% sold on my pick. Then yesterday morning, I read a post from a Syracuse fan who liked Notre Dame. He had a tremendous take on this game (which was much better than mine) and as a result, I decided to pass on the game. As a result, I avoided a losing pick (I did not feel compelled to go with the Irish because I still didn't trut their D). This is an example of how I use the site and the information to my advantage.
Hey Lusen... I can help you. I know it says I'm a rookie, but trust me I'm not. I've been doing this a long time and I'm not looking for any monetary compensation either. Your post caught my attention. I do extremely well and all my friends wait for my picks every week.
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Hey Lusen... I can help you. I know it says I'm a rookie, but trust me I'm not. I've been doing this a long time and I'm not looking for any monetary compensation either. Your post caught my attention. I do extremely well and all my friends wait for my picks every week.
Many newbies make these critical mistakes when it comes to NFL.
Don't let last week's performance influence your decision. And all these "handicapping" stats really don't mean sh..it. Don't over analyze all these meaningless stats, books already factored them in. It's like buying stocks. Do you really think you're smarter than the Wall street, thinking certain stocks are over valued or under valued? It;s called efficient market theory. All relevant information/data already put the stock at equilibrium point of supply & demand at a certain price.
Pretty much same thing with football, especially NFL wagering. You just got to look at a spread & based on your intuition, you pick a team. And this intuition is based on many years of experience, heart breaks, seem em all, done em kind of experience. I don't ever look at stats or even personnels in a team because all that work was already done for me by the odds maker.
So for tonight's game; Minny looked awesome so far this season beating up Panthers & Packers.
NYG lost to average Redskins & couldn't score against sorry assss defense Saints, barely beating them.
All these past performances are already factored when odds maker put out the line. And wise guys already slammed them so now what you have is a fair market price of -3.5 or -4 on Minny.
I think based on this line, NYG will bounce back & beat Vikes because it mostly is like that in NFL, every year.
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Many newbies make these critical mistakes when it comes to NFL.
Don't let last week's performance influence your decision. And all these "handicapping" stats really don't mean sh..it. Don't over analyze all these meaningless stats, books already factored them in. It's like buying stocks. Do you really think you're smarter than the Wall street, thinking certain stocks are over valued or under valued? It;s called efficient market theory. All relevant information/data already put the stock at equilibrium point of supply & demand at a certain price.
Pretty much same thing with football, especially NFL wagering. You just got to look at a spread & based on your intuition, you pick a team. And this intuition is based on many years of experience, heart breaks, seem em all, done em kind of experience. I don't ever look at stats or even personnels in a team because all that work was already done for me by the odds maker.
So for tonight's game; Minny looked awesome so far this season beating up Panthers & Packers.
NYG lost to average Redskins & couldn't score against sorry assss defense Saints, barely beating them.
All these past performances are already factored when odds maker put out the line. And wise guys already slammed them so now what you have is a fair market price of -3.5 or -4 on Minny.
I think based on this line, NYG will bounce back & beat Vikes because it mostly is like that in NFL, every year.
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