Johnny finds his voice, pro-Ann, anti Andrew, a good place to be. Shane appears for one minute and looks like our winner, LPM 8.8 Two of my very few greens, Choo Choo!
Johnny finds his voice, pro-Ann, anti Andrew, a good place to be.Shane appears for one minute and looks like our winner, LPM 8.8Two of my very few greens, Choo Choo!
Amanda suddenly seemed a bit venomous to Ashley - I'm seeing her in a different light now. The "old lady grumpiness" thing beginning to show.
Didn't really get why Andrew turned on Johnny as strongly as he did - he was simply putting a case for the other side to explain Ann's behaviour, not to approve of it.
Shane looked like the sensible one amongst the chaos - I don't necessarily see it as deserving of the win as yet, but it certainly reinforces the "most normal/humble" image. Small red though at these odds.
Amanda suddenly seemed a bit venomous to Ashley - I'm seeing her in a different light now. The "old lady grumpiness" thing beginning to show.Didn't really get why Andrew turned on Johnny as strongly as he did - he was simply putting a case for the ot
Amanda`s price is just another example of the madness of Specials, Andrew`s a nasty drunk, both max reds Main concern for Shane`s prospects is this `Women` thingy; nice to see lower prices, but there`s potential for much shorter yet.
Amanda`s price is just another example of the madness of Specials, Andrew`s a nasty drunk, both max redsMain concern for Shane`s prospects is this `Women` thingy; nice to see lower prices, but there`s potential for much shorter yet.
More an "interpretation" than a definition - and one originally used by bookies, who were usually trying to lay odds to mug punters - "Hey, come and back this great horse - the price just got lower!" Reminds me of market traders saying "Cheap at half the price" when they ought to be offering something that would be cheap at twice the price.
I just try not to use "price" when the unambiguous word "odds" will do. You already said you were green but plenty of peeps don't bother to make it clear whether they are laying or backing when they say a price is high or low or even worse is when they say "such and such is a great price".
Apologies for the pedantry, but it's a bit of a bugbear of mine. I'm sure I'm not the only one.
More an "interpretation" than a definition - and one originally used by bookies, who were usually trying to lay odds to mug punters - "Hey, come and back this great horse - the price just got lower!" Reminds me of market traders saying "Cheap at half
I'm in agreement, the Amanda price is too short now, she came across as a bitter old haradin last night. I think there is mileage in Ashley's price if Amanda keeps going at her.
I'm in agreement, the Amanda price is too short now, she came across as a bitter old haradin last night.I think there is mileage in Ashley's price if Amanda keeps going at her.