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| vBookie Event: Pats vs. Colts (Football) |
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#4 |
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Boston Bitch
Join Date: Apr 2005
Location: under the monolift
Posts: 17,294 | Points: 6799.30 (Donate)
Rep Power: 3004983
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I got 4,180,638,864.46 on the pats.
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KT021 for 5% over at trueprotein. Current max's Squat- 315x2 Bench -225x1 DL- 405x1 grip and rip baby |
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#5 |
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Another Day
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My mom got 2 tickets from a sales rep at work. Shes taking my dad though how sad is that. I'll be watching the game on TV.
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EVERY MAN DIES BUT NOT EVERY MAN LIVES I'VE GOT NO TIME FOR SYMPATHY CAUSE IT NEVER HAPPENED TO ME |
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#7 | |
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Boston Bitch
Join Date: Apr 2005
Location: under the monolift
Posts: 17,294 | Points: 6799.30 (Donate)
Rep Power: 3004983
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Quote:
Haven't you learned to never bet against the Pats? Every team this season that was supposed to present the Pats a challenge we man handled them. (Cincy, Skins were even supposed to put some points against us with there run game and us giving up 5 rushing yards a carry, Let us not forget the Chargers game where LT self -owned himself) .
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KT021 for 5% over at trueprotein. Current max's Squat- 315x2 Bench -225x1 DL- 405x1 grip and rip baby |
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#8 |
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Teabagged by Codeblue
Join Date: Apr 2005
Location: not Canada
Posts: 15,990 | Points: 6890.66 (Donate)
Rep Power: 5143735
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unbeaten at home in the past 13 games...superbowl champs....they came from behind and erased an 18 point lead to win in the playoffs against the Pats last year...lots of factors. but i think the Pats will still win
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#11 | |
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Another Day
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well god damn that is alot, I bet if you bet them all then it would matter
__________________
EVERY MAN DIES BUT NOT EVERY MAN LIVES I'VE GOT NO TIME FOR SYMPATHY CAUSE IT NEVER HAPPENED TO ME |
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#12 |
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Teabagged by Codeblue
Join Date: Apr 2005
Location: not Canada
Posts: 15,990 | Points: 6890.66 (Donate)
Rep Power: 5143735
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nah, it prob still wouldnt...considering the only thing i can do with points is change my title, which is always out anyways..and it only costs 4k to do it even if i could
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#13 |
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Another Day
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Colts-Patriots Big, but Still a Regular Season Game, Dungy Says
INDIANAPOLIS - If you listened closely all week, you could hear it. In Indianapolis, it came from Colts Head Coach Tony Dungy, and in Foxboro, Mass., it came at times from New England Patriots Head Coach Bill Belichick. Amid the hype . . . Amid the talk . . . Amid the prognostications . . . Amid what at times seemed a wall of noise leading to one of the most-anticipated NFL regular-season games in recent memory, came something else. Perspective. Because while Dungy said the game is unquestionably big, and it unquestionably will be well-chronicled and over-hyped, it also is a regular-season game - and in the first week of November, no less. “It's going to be fun,” Dungy said as the AFC South-leading Colts (7-0) prepared to play the AFC East-leading Patriots (8-0) at the RCA Dome Sunday at 4:15 p.m. “It will be fun, and it will be two good teams that know each other, but nothing more than that, really.” Belichick, discussing the match-up early this week, was asked if the game was particularly important or if it were just the next game. “It's the next game,” he replied. To many observers, of course, it is more. Much more. The Colts-Patriots game Sunday marks the latest meeting of two unbeaten NFL teams since the 1970 NFL Merger. Not only that, it’s a match-up of teams with star power, and of teams that have risen in the consciousness of NFL fans nationwide with their recent success. The Patriots won Super Bowls following the 2001, 2003 and 2004 seasons; the Colts won the Super Bowl following last season. Their quarterbacks, Tom Brady of the Patriots and Peyton Manning of the Colts, are widely considered two of the best of their generation, and perhaps all-time. Their coaches, Belichick and Dungy, are also two of the best in their profession, and the front offices of each team – led by Patriots General Manager Scott Pioli and Colts President Bill Polian – are two of the most-respected in the NFL. “It is a pretty good rivalry, which is good for football, which is a good thing,” Polian said this week. “Obviously, all of the attention there is anywhere in the football world will be focused upon it and anyone in the sports media world will be focused upon it, but it’s important to remember that it is just one game in November. “This will be a very interesting Sunday in November, but it won’t determine who the World Champion is by any means.” The recent match-ups have made for compelling viewing, and have created a rivalry built on mutual respect and high stakes. In 2003, the Patriots beat the Colts, 24-14, in the AFC Championship Game en route to the second of their three Super Bowl titles. In 2004, they beat Indianapolis, 20-3, in an AFC Divisional Playoff en route to their most recent Super Bowl title. In 2006, the Colts beat the Patriots, in the AFC Championship Game in the RCA Dome en route to their Super Bowl title. That’s the history between the teams, and that history has been repeated often this past week, but that history – as well as the pre-game talk and speculation – will have little bearing Sunday, Polian said. “This is a game that is going to be talked about and written about enough that by the time we kick off on Sunday we’ll all be tired of it, I think,” Polian said. “All of what is said and written isn’t going to have a thing to do with the outcome of the game or how the game is played. “I think the players on both teams and both organizations understand that.” The Colts, the four-time defending AFC South champions, have won a league-high 12 consecutive games dating to last season including postseason games. The Patriots, who have won the last four AFC East titles, have won eight consecutive games, the second-longest such streak in the NFL. As much as the victories, the Patriots have impressed many observers with the way they have won. Their average margin of victory this season is 41.3-15.9, and they rank first in the NFL in total offense and first in the NFL in passing offense. They have scored at least 34 points in every game this season, and have won every game by at least 17 points. Brady has thrown a league-high 30 touchdown passes with just two interceptions and he leads the NFL with a passer rating of 136.2. He also has set a league record with at least three touchdown passes in eight consecutive games to start a season. The Colts, for their part, have outscored opponents by an average of 32-14.6 this season, and Manning – the NFL’s Most Valuable Player in 2003 and 2004 – has thrown for 13 touchdowns with just three interceptions for a rating of 102.9. “They’re always meaningful games when we play them (the Colts),” Brady told reporters last week after a 52-7 victory over the Washington Redskins. “You can’t turn the ball over against the Colts. It’s usually seven points. You can’t punt the ball to them because it’s usually seven points.” Said Manning, “They’re playing great and it’s well-documented what we think about the Patriots, their organization and how good of a team we think they are.” Mostly this week, when the Colts discussed the importance of Sunday’s game, it wasn’t so much about beating the Patriots as maintaining what has been a hard-earned two-game lead in the AFC South. The Colts lead the division by two games over Jacksonville (5-2) and Tennessee (5-2). The Patriots lead the AFC East by four and a half games over Buffalo (3-4). The Pittsburgh Steelers lead the AFC North at 5-2 and Kansas City and San Diego are tied for the lead in the AFC West at 4-3. “You just don’t want to give an inch,” Manning said. “You don’t want to come out flat and lose one. In the AFC now, you can’t afford to lose one.” But while that will be one of the many storylines surrounding Sunday’s game, Dungy said the game mostly is important because it’s a mid-season game in November. It won’t, he said, decide home-field advantage in the AFC and it certainly won’t decide who wins the Super Bowl or even the AFC Championship. It’s a game, Dungy said. A big game, but nothing more. “I think it’s going to be more media-driven than anything else,” Dungy said. “Everybody’s going to say that home-field advantage in the playoffs is at stake and it may be. If it was Week 14, you’d know that for sure, but there’s no guarantee. It will be fun and it will be two good teams that know each other very well, but nothing more than that, really.” “They’re a good team. We’ve had a lot of good games against them in the past, and I think this will be another one. It’s going to be fun. I think it’s going to be good for the league. It’s going to be good for football. You’re going to see two very good teams playing, but it’s a regular-season game. “I think both of these teams will go out there and play and know whoever plays best on Sunday will win.”
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EVERY MAN DIES BUT NOT EVERY MAN LIVES I'VE GOT NO TIME FOR SYMPATHY CAUSE IT NEVER HAPPENED TO ME |
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#15 | |
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Im a cocksucker
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Wow that is fucked up.
I just bet a random amount and it made the betting even for both teams. 2147483647
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#21 | ||
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Im a cocksucker
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*****s gotta eat
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