Slipper Socks (ONE SIZE FITS ALL)


Slipper Socks (ONE SIZE FITS ALL)
Can’t keep your shoes or sneakers on? Great way to keep feet warm and dry inside. Non-skid surface. One size fits most. 80% Acrylic/20% Nylon

Customer Review: Not for men’s sizes
I was very disappointed with the size which works out to be more like ankle socks for me (men’s size 10.5). I find myself having to keep pulling them up to be comfortable. The low height does not keep me as warm as I would prefer. Definitely not the size you see on the picture (which has the sock almost up to the calf). What you see if definitely NOT what you get. The picture must have been taken with a child wearing it. Too bad…cause the fabric quality seems good. I’m going to have to keep them anyway as paying for return shipping would cost as much as the product did.

Customer Review: Slipper Socks as Advertised
I received the parcel containing a dozen pair of slipper socks, two each in six different colors, just as ordered. The quality is excellent, the order was received in a timely manner, the packaging was very good, and this customer is happy with the purchase. All but two pair are being distributed as Christmas gifts, and I am quite sure the recipients will be pleased to have received them. I also like the fact that the ‘one-size-fits-all’ feature allows for my gifting to children as well as to adults. Keep up the good work.

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adidas Kids’ Telstar TRX Hard Ground Soccer Shoe
Whether you’re already at the top of your game or getting ready to play your first, this shoe is an unbeatable value. Classic looks and performance at a great price for players of all levels.
Price: $19.95
Customer Review: FL soccer mom
Wonderful shoe! My 4 year old loves them! It is so hard to find peewee cletes and these are up to the usual adidas quality! I am already planning on getting another pair for fall soccer since I’m sure these will not fit by fall! Great find and great shoe!
Customer Review: Perfect for the Price
I found these shoes to be true to size. Like many cleats they are a bit narrow which is not an issue for us but is something to think about for the child you are buying for. At all of our local chain stores in our small town there was nothing close to this quality for the price. In fact, all the generic brands were over twenty dollars. Since the shoes are made out of man made materials, they do cause sweaty feet but I can not justify spending over fifty dollars for shoes that will only fit for one season.

The Blind Side: Evolution of a Game
By the author of the bestselling Moneyball: in football, as in life, the value we place on people changes with the rules of the games they play.

The young man at the center of this extraordinary and moving story will one day be among the most highly paid athletes in the National Football League. When we first meet him, he is one of thirteen children by a mother addicted to crack; he does not know his real name, his father, his birthday, or any of the things a child might learn in school—such as, say, how to read or write. Nor has he ever touched a football.

What changes? He takes up football, and school, after a rich, Evangelical, Republican family plucks him from the mean streets. Their love is the first great force that alters the world’s perception of the boy, whom they adopt. The second force is the evolution of professional football itself into a game where the quarterback must be protected at any cost. Our protagonist turns out to be the priceless combination of size, speed, and agility necessary to guard the quarterback’s greatest vulnerability: his blind side.
List Price: $24.95
Amazon Price: $16.47
Used Price: $2.83
Customer Review: 2 books for the price of one
This is about Michael Oher, an impressive mass of humanity and football talent from the Memphis ghetto and the evolution of the left tackle position into the 2nd highest and important position on the field after QB. Each could have been there own book, but Oher’s is a sad one, at first, a black kid “adopted” by a rich white family and put into an exclusive private school on the right side of the tracks. The Tuohy’s want it to be believed they saw a kid who needed a break but he would never have darkened their doorway if he wasn’t a 6″6″ hulk with the body fat of a fullback and speed to play hoops as well. Never mind that he didn’t talk at all, there were no previous school records and he was reading at a 3rd grade level. But he does persist and improve and by hook or crook graduates and accepts a scholarship to Ole Miss, where his adoptive parents went. But it’s hard to read about his upbringing and not cheer for the kid and care less why he got a chance, just as long as did. (and to that end the Touhy’s say they will do the same for more kids, albeit ones with athletic abilities). The emergence of the LT position (Oher’s spot) in importance is equally riveting, going from a “big ugly” spot where size was the only thing that mattered to getting people who could stop the new breed of pass rusher, equal size hulks with speed, like Lawrence Taylor. Since the game has changed from a running dominated to a passing dominated, the special skills necessary to play effective Left Tackle became more well know and realized, and with that the whole front line gained status and importance. Any game you watch today, the “key” in every broadcaster is how the line plays. Great, fast read.
Customer Review: An Amazing and Mostly (?) True Story of Redemption and Recruiting in the Hotbed of College Football
The story of a young illiterate black man of gigantic proportions being taken in–adopted– by a well-to-do white family and, not without some difficulty, making the most of his chance to succeed. A tragic, but heartwarming story..A little “too perfect,” however, when the young man winds up signing with his adopted white father’s alma mater leading some readers, especially those familiar with college football recruiting in the South, to suspect that the author left out or chose to overlook parts of the story—if he in deed had full access to the whole story. But there is enough ugliness and beauty here, earthy humanity, struggle and sacrifical love to offset that concern or suspicion….And sometimes truth can be stranger than fiction. TThis may be one of those times… Lots of valuable insight here into the challenges of inner city ghetto life, the challenges inner city high schools face, the recruiting process in the SEC and the evolution of the left offensive tackle position, all good stuff… Overall, a good book, a very good book, especially since it is a true story…but there is that scent, very faint, but still there….That’s unfortunate and perhaps unfair. But it’s still there.

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