Every sport book today is computerized, Back in my day money always
moved the line if a player was respected, and if the squares tossed enough money on a game most books would
move the line a little, However the big books would just sit and even take layoffs from the small stores, They knew even if the squares got hot in the end the juice would eat em up.Gone are the days when Billy Walters and his crew would
move the line 3 and 4 points, I'm talking sides not totals, Forget about what they did to the horseshoe with totals in the NBA, Back then you could catch small non computerized stores with bad lines to begin with, imagine a three point
move and the small store or
corner bookie is off on the line a few points to begin with, I could catch some game with 6 and seven point advantages, with computers today if you can catch a half or one point advantage your lucky.Even if you know the group
moving the line most of these store
move the lines on air, when I say air they just watch the screen from D.B. And
move the line before they even get hit, Hell even the big stores have the
sharps on small limits per call.
The headlights are about the same but come to a
sharper point on the inside
corner while the hood now features
sharper body lines that have been
moved more center compared to before.
That it feels slightly less focused and not as
sharp as the A 45 will come as no surprise — it's 40 mm higher and 30 kg heavier than the hot hatch — but its tendency to
move about if you lift off the power mid
corner gives it some much needed character.
The Crazy Drift: Not only is the Crazy Drift the most convenient way to speed through
sharp corners, but it is also the only
move covered here today which gets you «Crazy Combo» points.
The
sharp, straight
corners and fully metal build of the Nokia 6 are downright gorgeous, despite the fact that they seem to go against everything that many flagship manufacturers have been
moving toward (i.e. all glass, waterproof build).