Best I can tell you is sit tight, many good cappers here with all the angles you could ask for. The people in the ALL SPORTS DISCUSSION area don't have much use for services.
make sure you buy the whole year so you get whats rightfully yours.
jim feist is amazing
ty gaston hits 90%
spreitzer and cokin are deadly
wayne root is the best
ill give you steuy gots for free
big al has amazing trends and angles.
charlies hits ever 50*
kevin duffy owns the nfl
now make sure you buy at least 4 of the guys i listed above full season packages and football will be a cashback season for you
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Coon is the one that asked for the help with a service and I offered it to him.. I have been in this forum for a couple years and give out quality selections out to the forum. I check out the forum and when I am on a hot streak I see people asking for my picks. No hard feeling but you weren't the one asking for advice
2015-2016 Season
NCAA Football:0-6, -15 UNITS
LOCKS: 0-0
NFL: 0-0, +0 UNITS
LOCKS: 0-0
NBA: 0-0, +0 UNITS
LOCKS: 0-0
NCAA HOOPS: 0-0, +0 UNITS
LOCKS: 0-0
Boy C, Basically gave you what you asked for...
There are many cappers on this site that if you follow, you can't go wrong.
Don't be such a hard ass, watch, learn and listen, you'll make money.....
Coonsis- If you want to shell out $$$ for a service that's fine but most of us would rather keep that cash and work on our own capping abilities. You don't have to jump right in betting a bunch of money right out of the gate. You'll find out that there are some pretty damm good cappers right in here to coatail. Hang in there bro. Don't get so uptight. Another thing. When you lose (and you will) don't chase it by doubling up. Don't change your bet.
Stick around and have some fun this year.
let the Old Kaptain try and explain this situation thats got you flustered....
Your inquiry/request is legit...and asked in a proper manner..First asked at 3:48 CST--no response for 1hr:42 minutes, then you put this out...That time frame is by far the most hectic times for some one to answer you...everyone is busy trying to get caught up in todays baseball games...I for one, saw it, and was gonna reply later on tonight (regarding football) 2 days away---after getting my bases in order...
It is the General consensus of this Forum to not utilize Services, as we put them out for free, and have some of the best (better than services) pickers on this site for free...Their documented (honestly done) records indicate so...
I can understand your frustrations, however; going about it this way is gonna get you nothing...Lay low....Bide your time...Tonight/tomorrow AM, and I'll try and put something together for you...First thing is harmony...we're all here for the same thing...Be patient---don't cut off the hand that could possibly feed you...kmann---aka--Kaptain TOF
1. Not knowing what it takes to be a winner.
Being driven by unreality and false hopes. It takes 52.38% winners to break even. Seasoned pros understand that at least 50% of all pointspread decisions are decided by serendipity?a random stroke of good or bad fortune. Respect, even fear, the Luck Factor. Be satisfied with anything around 60% winners and be grateful for anything above it.
2. Being undisciplined in managing your money.
Letting losses depress or immobilize you; impulsively forcing the action in an irrational way. You?re not going to be a winner with foolish money management. There?s no such thing as the law of averages in sports betting. Never bet more than twice your normal play no matter how promising a game may look. Trying to get even (e.g., on a Monday night) can be a curse. View the handicapping exercise as you would a 12-round fight. You?re not going to win every round; it?s the overall final decision that counts. Establish a steady pattern of play. Remember, if you play too fast, you can?t last. And if you play too slow, you gotta? go. Moderation is the key. Just like in life itself.
3. Lacking patience.
Failing to look for every edge, both in the pointspread dissection and the current up-to-date assessment of the teams. Shop for the best prices on each game. A half-point here and a point there is often the difference between a winning or losing season. Don?t play bad numbers. If you?re dealing with only one source, you?re going to be at a disadvantage. Don?t overreact to injury reports, especially those involving high-profile players. The pointspread will usually reflect the news by the time you hear it. And besides, good teams often compensate while the opposition may become overconfident.
4. Failing to set priorities.
Refusing to properly and intelligently identify the most important handicapping factors; the tendency to be distracted by insignificant items or unverified reports. Compare the fundamental strengths and weaknesses of both teams. Analyze the match-ups with respect to what each team must do to defeat the other. Reflect upon whatever psychological elements might exist to give one team a decisive motivational advantage. Don?t try to ?Einstein? the game or imitate Freud. Avoid being obsessed with playing favorites. Remember, you can usually find five times as many reasons to go with the favorite; it?s human nature. The sports handicapping exercise isn?t that complex. It often comes down to which team is superior and which is more highly motivated to win on that particular day.
5. Blindly following some groundless technical trend or falling for back-fitted numerical regressions.
A technical trend is meaningful only when it captures the essence of a team?s personality, character or chemistry. Or when it considers the nature of the sport itself. For instance, records based on particular conditions that remain constant are to be respected. But discard the casual coincidences. As English historian Arnold Toynbee said of the world?s vicissitudes, ?Life is a series of trendless fluctuations.?
6. Betting with your heart, not your head.
Bonding emotionally with your favorite teams. Don?t overreact to the most recent games or an impressive TV showing; they have little to do with a balanced, intelligent inquiry. Such performances are usually isolated efforts and may distort a more sensible appraisal. Few teams are really as good as they look in winning, or as bad as they look when losing. Don?t focus too much attention on the flamboyant qualities of a team. A tenacious, determined defense usually perseveres against a flashier, offense-minded opponent. Remember, offense sells tickets; defense wins games. Don?t be ?romanced? by getting extra points with bad teams. They?ll tease you at times, but seldom make you a winner. In fact, it?s not a bad strategy to be a contrarian and go against the ?conventional wisdom.? Another rule: when in doubt, take the points.
7. Falling for tips, wired games and other nonsense.
Tips are a dime a dozen, and you probably won?t find a single so-called wired game in your lifetime. During the course of a season there are all kinds of rumors circulating, often generated by those wanting to manipulate the pointspread for their own interests. If you are never influenced by these whispers and stick with proven disciplined handicapping basics, you?ll be money ahead. Anything really worthwhile is generally not going to be available to the public. And, even if it were, it would not make that much of a difference in the long term. There are more sins to avoid, but these should suffice for the time being.
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