I wondered if any intimidation goes on in Outlaws games. I browsed game photos and studied player eyes. Yes, intimidation is part of Outlaws football.
| This is the Mike Singletary stare done Outlaws style.  I wonder if  the quarterback (Wilke?) is intimidated by the linebacker who is zeroed in on her. And where is the defensive line?  | 
| If I were Dallas' Newkirk I'd be intimidated. Wouldn't you? | 
| Number 75 is huge, Julie Wilke isn't.  If I were Julie I'd be intimidated. Time to run or pass. Get out of there.  | 
Kids in sports learn early on to "keep you eye on the ball," a principle generalized and quoted ad nauseum in business meetings to remind managers to keep focused on enterprise goals. When I started this little study of players' eyes I was stuck by the focus. In the following photos, the players are focused on the goal, which is sometimes the other player.
| This could be filed with the intimidation photos but the quarterback doesn't know she's in trouble so isn't intimidated. But Soho is focused, eye on the ball/quarterback/objective.  | 
| The Dallas tackler doesn't have that intimidating glare - but she is focused.  | 
| Two players eye-to-eye, each focused on controlling the other. Every play matches athletes in contests of strength and will.  | 
My favorite photos, found when I looked at eyes of the players, are two that made me smile.
| The ball is coming - why is the receiver looking at me?   Why isn't her eye on the ball? I don't know.  | 
| Julie is one of my favorite and was the subject of a recent player profile in this blog. I love her expression as she rolls out to her left looking for an escape route.  | 
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