I totally understand . . as I may have mentioned at some point in one of the threads you never know when a hot run is going to go cold or a cold run turns hot -- I do have a tendency of cutting back when things turn cold as I have never believed in chasing, just waiting for things to turn around -- when I am losing games in which I am clearly on the wrong side is when I cut back -- when I am losing because of the 'randomness' of being on the losing side of coin flips more often than the winning side I don't get overly concerned -- the past few days have more of the former so I likely will cut back the next few games, chart the games I considered to release but did not and when I am satisfied that I am 'seeing things right' I get back on the horse -- so instead of making 5 plays, for example, in college hoops on Saturday it might be more like 2 or 3 -- these are not hard and fast rules but rather general guidlines I try to follow -- the worst thing one can do is radically change how one analyzes things -- the old story of not over-reacting to what you've seen last -- I have long said that while you do not want to over-react you also do not want to fail to react -- everything must be considered; its just a matter of how much emphasis you place on what you saw last and too many people tend to put too much emphasis on a team's last result, especially if it is significantly different from that team's prior efforts and established performance level