Alabama Vs Arkansas - KOD And Other Plays

THE KOD

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PLAY


Football - Saturday, September 25, 2010

Alabama Money Line (-280) Game

1444/515

PLAY


................................................................

PLAY

Football - Saturday, September 25, 2010

Stanford Spread -2? (-160)

(2 Point Buy) Game

888/555


PLAY


...................................................................

PLAY

Football - Saturday, September 25, 2010

Georgia Spread +3 (-160)

(2 Point Buy) Game

801/500

PLAY

KOD

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THE KOD

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Let me be the first to say it in here


Alabama aint losing this game.

I didnt wager on the Georgia / Arkansas game but if I had I was taking Arky.

What I saw that will make this game unwinnable for Arky is this.

At the end of the game Arky was playing scared. Yep I seen it myself. They were playing not to lose

On the last play of the game Georgia had one secondary player out of position for the winning touchdown or that game would have ended in a tie and then overtime.

Mallet looks good but just does not handle pressure in the pocket well. And Arky has no running game except for the big fullback.

Alabama rolls them like cheesesteak.

When you look at what Alabama has been through in big games from last year to now and then you look at Petrino and what his Arky team has done.

There is no comparison.

I smell money and it smells green !
 

THE KOD

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yeh I got alot of time Hoops.

Hope to find some nice tittys to take my mind off things.

I am going to make quite a few plays this week and also coattail another capper this week.

Havn't decided who yet but does THUNDERBOOMERS ring any bells ?

I am worried for Notre Dame this week Vs Stanford.

They may be going the wrong direction.
 

THE KOD

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NSAPNL6_LARGE.JPG

What are you doing here? Tell me why you are here. If you are not here to win a national championship, you're in the wrong place. You boys are special. I don't want my players to be like other students. I want special people. You can learn a lot on the football field that isn't taught in the home, the church, or the classroom. There are going to be days when you think you've got no more to give and then you're going to give plenty more. You are going to have pride and class. You are going to be very special. You are going to win the national championship for Alabama.

If you want to walk the heavenly streets
of gold, you gotta know the password,

"Roll, tide, roll!"

..............................................................

Meet you on Glory Rd coach, it runs right off of
Victory Lane and that is where I lives

gotta know bear is up there and will be watching this game closely
 

ThrowinPicks

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You put the "mega" in megalomaniac when it comes to posting here at MJ's...

GL with the play.
 

TLankford

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earlier in the week i thought this game was a no-play. slowly but surely the scales are tilting towards bama, just not the 7. as much as i hate teasers, i will be finding a game to put with bama in a teaser and putting maximum wager on it
 

THE KOD

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earlier in the week i thought this game was a no-play. slowly but surely the scales are tilting towards bama, just not the 7. as much as i hate teasers, i will be finding a game to put with bama in a teaser and putting maximum wager on it
.................................................................

I think the other team to put in the teaser is

Stanford.

gl :00hour
 

THE KOD

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PLAY

Football - Saturday, September 25, 2010

Stanford Spread -2? (-160)

(2 Point Buy) Game

888/555

PLAY


...........................................................

Adding this play today. Notre Dame is a very proud team but their Luck will run out in this game. Andrew Luck that is.

GO CARDINALS !~
 

THE KOD

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Leadership
Six Elements Of Mental Toughness
Christine M. Riordan, 09.17.10, 01:20 PM EDT

There are at least six markers of mental toughness from sports psychology that apply equally well to business situations. As with athletes, business leaders need to ask, am I mentally tough enough to compete?

1. Flexibility. Game-ready leaders have the ability to absorb the unexpected and remain supple and non-defensive. They maintain humor even when the situation becomes tough. If something isn't going well or doesn't turn out as expected, they remain flexible in their approach and look for new ways to solve the problem. Just like a quarterback faced with a broken play, a leader may have to decide quickly on a different way to get the ball down the field.

Also, leaders must continually be open to re-educating themselves, even in the basics, which they may have taken for granted for too long. They need to exercise caution in defensively falling back on ideas they know and are comfortable with rather than looking for new ways of doing business.

2. Responsiveness. Game-ready leaders are able to remain engaged, alive and connected with a situation when under pressure. They are constantly identifying the opportunities, challenges, and threats in the environment. They understand that they need to think differently about how their environment and business operate.

The problems we encounter now are messier and more complicated than ever before. They often can't be solved in the ways others were. Game-ready leaders look for new ways to think about these problems and, more important, look for fresh ways out of these problems. They have a sense of urgency about responding to the changing face of business.

Just as a coach may change strategies at halftime in response to the way a game is going based on the opponent's strengths and weaknesses, game-ready leaders in business must respond to changes in the environment and the players.

Relying on old assumptions about how business operates and assuming that last year's trends still hold today is dangerous. Leaders make decisions and act based on up-to-the-minute and in-depth knowledge of what is really going on in business now.

3. Strength. Game-ready leaders are able to exert and resist great force when under pressure and to keep going against insurmountable odds. They find the strength to dig deep and garner the resolve to keep going, even when in a seemingly losing game. They focus on giving their best and fighting hard until the end, with persistent intensity throughout the game.

The story of Team Hoyt, Dick and Rick, is an inspirational example of drawing on both inner and physical strength. Rick was born in 1962 to Dick and Judy Hoyt and was diagnosed as a spastic quadriplegic with cerebral palsy. His parents were advised to institutionalize him because"there was no chance of him recovering, and little hope for Rick to live a 'normal' life. This was just the beginning of Dick and Judy's quest for Rick's inclusion in community, sports, education, and one day, the workplace. In the spring of 1977, Rick told his father that he wanted to participate in a 5-mile benefit run for a lacrosse player who had been paralyzed in an accident. Far from being a long-distance runner, Dick agreed to push Rick in his wheelchair, and they finished all 5 miles, coming in next to last. That night, Rick told his father, 'Dad, when I'm running, it feels like I'm not handicapped.' At that moment, they formed Team Hoyt and have run many races together with now impressive times. The 2009 Boston Marathon was officially Team Hoyt's 1,000th race."

Just as athletes dig deep to find the physical and psychological strength to continue through adverse and tough situations, game-ready business leaders must exhibit the same strength. As James Loehr puts it, top athletes think, "While this is tough, I am a whole lot tougher." Game-ready business leaders bring the same intensity, through all the continual pounding.

4. Courage and ethics. Game-ready leaders do the right thing for the organization and the team. They suppress the temptation to cut corners or to undermine others so they come out on top. They have the courage to make the hard but right decisions for the organization.

A famous story I share with my son as an example of courage and ethics in sports is that of the tennis player Andy Roddick. In 2008 Roddick was the No. 1 seed at the Rome Masters. He was at match point and about to win. The umpire called his opponent for a double-fault serve. Walking to shake his opponent's hand, Roddick noticed a ball mark on the clay--in bounds. Roddick got the umpire's attention and pointed out that the ball had nicked the line but was in fact in bounds. The match continued. Roddick went on to lose the match, and his beyond-the-call-of-duty honesty made him famous as an upstanding person, an opponent who would do the right thing. Game-ready leaders in business do the same.

PepsiCo ( PEP - news - people ) provides a great business example of this. A disgruntled Coca-Cola ( KO - news - people ) employee and two other individuals attempted to sell proprietary information to Pepsi. Pepsi received a package containing a sample of a new Coke product and other information. Pepsi immediately informed Coke, which contacted the FBI. Game-ready business leaders ultimately win by making the right and courageous decisions.

5. Resiliency. Game-ready leaders rebound from disappointments, mistakes and missed opportunities and get right back in the game. They have a hardiness for enduring the downs of a situation. They remain optimistic in the face of adversity and quickly change when necessary.They resolve to make things better and are experts at figuring out ways to do more with fewer resources. How about the resiliency of Detroit Tigers pitcher Armando Galarraga, who was just one out away from pitching a perfect game when Jim Joyce, the first-base umpire, called a runner safe who was indeed out? Joyce had made an error. Galarraga was certainly deeply disappointed, but he continued to pitch and get the next batter out. Afterward, Joyce admitted the error and apologized. Galarraga shrugged it off, saying, "Everyone makes mistakes."

6. Sportsmanship. Game-ready leaders exhibit sportsmanship. They don't let the opponent know when he or she has gotten them down. "Chin up," I say to my son. Clearly we all experience disappointment, attacks from others, an occasional blow to the stomach. However, the behavior exhibited by game-ready leaders after losing or being attacked by others or the situation sets the tone for the rest of an organization. Additionally, top athletes support their teammates and their roles. If teammates start competing with and attacking one another, it is definitely difficult to win.
Living in Denver, I follow the Denver Broncos. Kyle Orton has done an outstanding job of displaying sportsmanship while under public scrutiny. Brought to the Broncos last year, he has been the subject of constant press speculation about possibly being replaced. The drafting of Tim Tebow brought on another press outcry, that Kyle was out and Tim was in. Kyle handled it with grace and dignity. Putting his mind to the game and the team, he got on the field and simply practiced hard, welcoming his new teammate. In the face of even internal competition, Kyle Orton exhibits the mentality of "Bring it on!"

We all need these same markers of toughness to succeed and lead in today's business environment. We cannot succeed on technical skill alone. Companies have tough questions and situations to address. Game-ready leaders go into today's business environment with their best mental game and with the attitude of "Bring it on!" After all, who doesn't love the challenge and fun of a demanding, complex game?

.................................................................

Alot of relevance about what it takes to be a success in sports wagering.
 
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THE KOD

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Arkansas needs a ton of things to work out for them to even have a chance of winning this game against Alabama .

Running game is a big issue on offense for the Razorbacks and also stopping the run up the gut on defense.

When Arkansas needs a perfect game played at home to win, I think this is asking too much of this team.

I honestly don't think there is a team in the country that can beat Alabam this weekend.

Arkansas defense is weak up the gut as was shown last week at Georgia.

And that is exactly where Ingram and Richardson will be running. :scared After about a thousand yards of that for awhile. Then here comes
McElroy out of play action. :scared :scared

Mallet is not going to have the time he had playing against that Georgia defense. If Mallet is not capable of tucking and running for a first down, it is going to be a beat down for him.

ROLLTIDE !
 
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