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Blindsiding Baylor was a risky move. It was grandstanding for the jury, I don't think it actually accomplished anything else.
The riskiest part was the part of the game doesn't play out much on TV, advocates on the jury. With the pairs it meant Natalie was left with three players who had automatic votes (advocates) on the jury and time with the jury to make their cases, while she had none unless Jeremy or one of the other three decided to go to bat for her.
The other risk, of course, was the possibility it would put a target on herself for the next boot.
Taking a pair to F3 with her would have been a safer move, but it wouldn't have been a big grandstanding move.
p l a c e h o l d e r t e x t g o e s h e r e - p l a c e h o l d e r t e x t g o e s h e r e - p l a c e h o l d e r t e x t g o e s h e r e -
p l a c e h o l d e r t e x t g o e s h e r e - p l a c e h o l d e r t e x t g o e s h e r e - p l a c e h o l d e r t e x t g o e s h e r e -
p l a c e h o l d e r t e x t g o e s h e r e - p l a c e h o l d e r t e x t g o e s h e r e - p l a c e h o l d e r t e x t g o e s h e r e -
p l a c e h o l d e r t e x t g o e s h e r e - p l a c e h o l d e r t e x t g o e s h e r e - p l a c e h o l d e r t e x t g o e s h e r e -