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Some use the term, Let actions speak louder than words. If that's the case, then our actions speak for themselves.
We dominated the NBA finals going 12-4 overall hitting at 75%. Not only that, but let's look back at what we've done.
February over 70% - 22 Game win streak/ Started another 15 straight bet win streak a week later
March Madness over 60%
April- Only losing month around 48%
May- Started extremely hot and lost some towards the middle. Ended right around 53%
June- Absolute fire again 75% NBA Finals 12-4 Over 70% last 50 Plays multi-Sports
Good luck, let's stay hot!
New Plays
550 CST
Uruguay -1.5 5U MAX
TT over 2 5U MAX
Cavani goal 2U
Exact score 4-0 1/2 U
6-20145 CST
Germany U21 TT Over 2 4U Germany -1 3U
428
Peru -1 5U MAX
Peru TT Over 1.5 risk 5U MAX
FH Over 1 3U
Guerreo goal 2U
6.18 255 CST
halftime Australia -3.5 for game 5U MAX
519
copa
Japan TT Over .5 2U
UPDATE 134 CST 6/17
Women's World Cup
Norway -1 1U
UPDATE 120 CST
Copa America Peru/Venezuela FH over 1 2U
Previous Plays
NBA Finals 3 MAX BETS
Over Fh 104.5 5U
3rd Q over 54.5 5U
Game over 224.5
For any questions or comments reach me @JerryBoKnows Twitter.
Be sure to check out my show MoneyLine with Josh Jordan on ESPN 97.5. We're on every Sunday from 10-noon, and we'll talk a lot of fantasy football and NFL gambling. Also, be sure to follow us @Moneyline975 on Twitter.
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Astros betting big on their biggest advantage tonight
Jul 8, 2025, 12:03 pm
Adding a player of Kevin Durant’s caliber was too valuable an opportunity for the Houston Rockets to pass up, even though it meant moving on from Jalen Green just four seasons after they drafted him second overall.
Durant was officially acquired from Phoenix on Sunday in a complicated seven-team transaction that sent Green and Dillon Brooks to the Suns and brought Clint Capela back to Houston from the Hawks.
General manager Rafael Stone is thrilled to add the future Hall of Famer, who will turn 37 in September, to a team which made a huge leap last season to earn the second seed in the Western Conference.
Asked Monday why he wanted to add Durant to the team, Stone smiled broadly before answering.
“He’s Kevin Durant,” Stone said. “He’s just — he’s really good. He’s super-efficient. He had a great year last year. He’s obviously not 30 anymore, but he hasn’t really fallen off and we just think he has a chance to really be impactful for us.”
But trading Green to get him was not an easy decision for Stone, Houston’s general manager since 2020.
“Jalen’s awesome, he did everything we asked,” Stone said. “He’s a wonderful combination of talent and work ethic along with being just a great human being. And any time that you have the privilege to work with someone who is talented and works really hard and is really nice, you should value it. And organizationally we’ve valued him tremendously, so yeah very hard.”
Green was criticized for his up-and-down play during the postseason when the Rockets were eliminated by the Warriors in seven games in the first round. But Green had improved in each of his four seasons in Houston, leading the team in scoring last season and playing all 82 games in both of the past two seasons.
Pressed for details about why Green's time was up in Houston, Stone wouldn't get into specifics.
“It’s the NBA and you can only do trades if a certain amount of money goes out and a certain amount comes in and there’s some positional overlap or at least overlap in terms of on ball presence,” he said. “And so that’s what the deal required.”
In Durant, the Rockets get a veteran of almost two decades who averaged 26.6 points and six rebounds a game last season and has a career average of 27.2 points and seven rebounds.
Houston loves the veteran experience and presence that Durant brings. Stone noted that the team had arranged for some of its players to work out with him in each of the past two offseasons.
“His work ethic is just awesome,” Stone said. “The speed at which he goes, not in a game … but the speed at which he practices and the intensity at which he practices is something that has made him great over the years and it started when he was very young. So of all the things that I hope rubs off, that’s the main one I think is that practice makes perfect. And I think one of the reasons he’s had such an excellent career is because of the intensity with which he works day in day out.”
Durant is a 15-time All-Star and four-time scoring champion, who was the Finals MVP twice. The former Texas Longhorn is one of eight players in NBA history to score at least 30,000 points and he won NBA titles in 2017 and 2018 with the Warriors.
Now he’ll join a team chasing its first NBA title since winning back-to-back championships in 1994-95.
“Everything has to play out, but we do — we like the fit,” Stone said. “We think it works well. We think he will add to us and we think we will help him.”