Packers provide postseason value

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Packers provide postseason value

Some underdogs play dead and are riddled with fleas, and the NFL has seen more than a few of those this season. But the Green Bay Packers and quarterback Aaron Rodgers qualify as bloodhounds going into a wide-open playoff race.

Handicapping this postseason is a task more treacherous than online dating. Some of the pictures and profiles are misleading. Every team has flaws, and there is no obvious favorite.

Indianapolis and New Orleans, the top seeds in the AFC and NFC, respectively, just stumbled through a combined five consecutive losses. So the recent form of the Colts and Saints -- despite the fact each team rested starters down the stretch -- suggests it's time to hunt for a live 'dog.

"In the NFC, you've certainly got to like what Green Bay is doing," said professional gambler Steve Fezzik.

The Packers have won seven of their past eight games. But the hottest team in the league resides in the AFC, where the second-seeded San Diego Chargers are riding an 11-game winning streak.

Four months ago, Fezzik sniffed out Green Bay and San Diego as teams with the most value in relation to their Super Bowl futures odds. "I'll stick with them," he said Sunday night.

Both the Packers and Chargers face tricky roads in the playoffs, and the odds are against them, with Green Bay more of a long shot. But I like Fezzik's picks. How can you not?

After a snowstorm in Buffalo and a late touchdown in Seattle, Fezzik emerged from Week 17 as the winner of the 21st annual Las Vegas Hilton SuperContest, the most prestigious NFL handicapping contest. Fezzik has won the SuperContest outright in back-to-back years, a feat never before achieved. He topped a field of 328 contestants in 2009 and 350 in 2008.

"That's unbelievable, isn't it? That's a big-time accomplishment," Hilton sports book director Jay Kornegay said.

To put it in perspective, when Johnny Chan won the World Series of Poker main event in 1987 and 1988, he beat a field of 152 other players the first year and 167 the following year.

Fezzik (********) said he was "very, very lucky" to win, but there's definitely some NFL handicapping acumen required to post a record of 53-29-3 against the spread.

"You've got to play well and you've got to get lucky," he said. "What's interesting is how everyone says I'm only a 'dog player, and that's all I can do is play 'dogs. Down the stretch, I was pounding favorites I thought had value. Early in the season, I was playing several favorites."

Fezzik won by a half-game. His winners Sunday included Buffalo, Carolina and New England. The Bills, 8-point favorites, buried the Colts in the snow, 30-7. The Panthers closed as 10-point favorites in a 23-10 victory over the Drew Brees-less Saints. The Patriots, 81/2-point underdogs, covered in a 34-27 loss at Houston.

Tom Brady was in and out of the game for New England, which lost receiver Wes Welker to a knee injury, reportedly for the entire postseason.

"That's the argument for resting players," said Brian Blessing of Las Vegas Sports Consultants. "But the Colts' situation is different because I think that is going to have a lingering effect on them."

Inexplicably, the Colts played Peyton Manning for three series, a week after sitting him in the third quarter of a loss to the Jets. If an injury to Manning was the fear, it's a mystery why he played at all against the Bills. He should have been resting on a recliner, not flinging passes in inclement weather.

"I don't understand why Manning would want to go out there for (three) series," Kornegay said. "What's the point?"

As for dead 'dogs, the Giants failed to show up in a 44-7 loss at Minnesota. The betting public was on the Vikings, but so-called sharp money on the Giants held the line at 71/2.

"You could tell right away the Giants were visiting their in-laws or something," Kornegay said. "They had no desire to be there."

The Philadelphia Eagles, 3-point underdogs, were flattened 24-0 at Dallas. The Cincinnati Bengals, 10-point 'dogs, were embarrassingly bad in a 37-0 loss to the Jets. The Arizona Cardinals, 3-point favorites, rested some key starters and took a 33-7 pounding by the Packers.

All three of those games will be replayed in the wild-card round, a truly bizarre occurrence.

The regular season took many incredible twists and turns. Who would have thought the Cleveland Browns would cover seven straight games at the end, or that the Pittsburgh Steelers would miss the playoffs?

Fezzik, handicapping the postseason race, called the Packers a "good dark horse." In terms of 'dogs, the Packers are in the hunt.
 

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Injuries on oddsmaker's mind

Injuries on oddsmaker's mind

Injuries on oddsmaker's mind

The 2009 NFL regular season concluded with a few record-breaking performances and a couple of heartbreaking playoff shortcomings.

The Houston Texans were poised for their first postseason appearance but couldn?t get any help from the Bengals or Raiders. Pittsburgh went down as the unlucky, 13th defending Super Bowl champion to miss the playoffs and the first team to do it consecutively (last in 2006).

Chris Johnson became the sixth player in NFL history to rush for more than 2,000 yards in a season and the first to do it for a non-playoff-bound team. Mark Sanchez goes down in the record books as the first rookie quarterback to throw at least 20 interceptions and still lead his team to the playoffs.

And in case you missed any of Week 17?s action, three rematches will be provided during the Wild Card playoff round set to kickoff Saturday.

Pete Korner, founder of the Sports Club in Las Vegas, joined ******** on Monday afternoon to discuss all four of the opening round matchups.

?As four playoff games go, I really love these games,? Korner said with enthusiasm. ?I think all the teams that made it deserve to be there and I see a very entertaining football weekend ahead. I also think it?s going to be good for the books because low numbers will prompt better two-way action.?

As the NFL playoffs go, the matchups get tougher and the spreads get tighter. Nary a number on the board exceeds 4 points and Korner predicts not a single game will fall within the pointspread.

?These are all games that are 4 and under so these are basically all pick ?em games,? he said. ?Either the underdogs will win straight up or the favorites will win by more than the spread. So it?s really just a matter of who you like so I would advise not overplaying the moneyline on a favorite.?

Last year?s Wild Card round didn?t have a spread greater than 3.5 and the closest game was decided by six points. The home teams went 2-2 straight up and against the spread while the favorites went 3-1 ATS. The under cashed in three of the four games.

The first postseason matchup goes off Saturday between New York and Cincinnati and is the only one of the Week 17 rematches that will be played at a different venue.

The Jets had to win to reach the playoffs and did it in convincing fashion in a 37-0 throttling over the Bengals in the football finale at the Meadowlands.

New York had more total plays from scrimmage (73) than Cincinnati had total yards (72). Carson Palmer was pulled in the second half, but the Bengals were held to zero passing yards in the contest.

Chad Ochocinco got TKOed in C.O vs. D-Revis I as he had streak of 120 straight games with a reception snapped. Ochocinco will look to exact revenge in the second bout.

Korner and the Sports Club didn?t put too much emphasis on the blowout when setting the line for this matchup. He opened Cincinnati favored by 2 with a total of 35. Most offshore books are currently offering a spread of 3 and total of 34.

?I think this is going to be a strong game for people that are coming back with the loser in these rematches,? said Korner. ?But the Jets are very live. They have a much larger following than Cincinnati. It?s sitting at 3 right now but I can see that going back down to 2.5.?

The Packers win over Arizona lifted the Cowboys from a wild card berth to the No. 3 seed. This playoff position movement was huge for Dallas because it now gets to play at least one game in Jerry?s Sanctuary where the ?Boys are 6-2 straight up and 5-3 ATS this season.

The Cowboys? defense is playing better than anyone in the league right now coming off two straight shutouts, but beating the same team three times in the same season always proves to be a tough task.

?Dallas was the most significant of the games and it showed that they are kind of peaking at the right time,? Korner stated. ?I think we put more into their opening number in relation to the result of the Eagles game than the other two rematches.?

The Sports Club sent out a spread of 4 with a total of 47. Korner admitted that they were on the high side with the total and expects it to close around 46.

You have to wonder if Bill Belichick will elect not to rest his star players in meaningless games ever again. There is a fine line a head coach must teeter when deciding to avoid risk of injury and staying in rhythm heading into the second season.

While the Patriots were vying for the No. 3 seed in the playoffs, it came at the expense of losing their top receiver. Wes Welker is out for the season after tearing his ACL and MCL in the first quarter of Sunday?s loss at Houston.

?That was the first thing that popped up (when making this line), he?s a key injury,? Korner said. ?They have other options there but Welker is a key component. But I don?t know if [his injury] translated to a numeric value on the line. Maybe it shifts half a point if he is playing.?

Korner released New England as 3.5-point favorites with a total of 43.

Despite not seeing a Patriots? playoff spread this low in a few years, Korner believes this number is accurate and doesn?t expect it to fluctuate much.

?There is no reason to believe Baltimore can?t win this one straight up,? he said. ?I don?t think there is going to be a lot of enthusiastic money that will push New England up.?

The Ravens won their Wild Card matchup as 3.5-point road dogs last year in Miami.

Ken Whisenhunt is another coach who may think twice before allowing his starters to play in games that have little to no implications.

Kurt Warner was yanked when the Cardinals fell behind 14-0 after the first quarter, but many skill players stayed on the field late into the game, including receiver Anquan Boldin.

Boldin injured his left ankle during the third quarter of the game and is listed as questionable for the rematch on Sunday against Green Bay.

Arizona?s defensive leader, Dominique Rodgers-Cromartie, was carted off the field in the first quarter of Sunday?s game but is expected to play this week.

Korner sent out a spread of 3 (even) in favor of Arizona and a total of 50. The spread is hovering around 2.5 at most markets now and the total can be found anywhere from 47 to 48.

?I wanted to stay high on the total with two high-scoring teams,? said Korner. ?This is the last game of the weekend and all the parlays will be coming down to this so I didn?t want to be low on the total. All the casual bettors bet the favorite and the over so I?d rather be high on that total.?
 

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Playoff Primer

Playoff Primer

Playoff Primer
January 4, 2010


The NFL Playoffs have arrived with 12 teams vying to hoist the Lombardi Trophy. Five clubs ? New England, Cincinnati, Green Bay, New Orleans and the New York Jets ? weren?t in the postseason last year. Seven squads are back in the playoffs but the defending champions, the Steelers, are already on vacation.

In the NFC, the Saints and Vikings are the No. 1 and No. 2 seeds, respectively. Meanwhile, the Colts and Chargers occupy the top slots from out of the AFC. These four teams will be chilling this weekend with byes, while eight clubs face do-or-die situations.

And that?s why we love the playoffs. There?s no gray area whatsoever. If you survive, you advance. If you lose, you?re headed home ? as in see-ya-beat-it and thanks for playing.

Gamblers have a day-night doubleheader set for Saturday. For starters, fourth-seeded Cincinnati will host the Jets at 4:30 p.m. Eastern at Paul Brown Stadium. Las Vegas Sports Consultants opened the Bengals as four-point favorites with a total of 36.





As of late Monday morning, most spots had Marvin Lewis?s team listed as either a 2 ? or three-point ?chalk.? The books at 2 ? were forcing bettors to lay double juice (risk $120 to win $100) on Cincy, while Bengals? bets were for even-money if laying three points. The total was reduced to 34 ?, while Rex Ryan?s club was plus-125 on the money line (risk $100 to win $125).

This is a rematch of the regular-season finale played Sunday night in the Meadowlands. Although the Bengals were gunning for the No. 3 seed, they rested workhorse running back Cedric Benson, who rushed for 1,251 yards and six touchdowns in a breakout campaign.

Other than that, however, Cincy was full-go in a game the Jets had to win to get into the postseason. They did so in convincing fashion, trouncing the Bengals 37-0 as 10-point home favorites. The 37 combined points jumped ?over? the 33-point tally when New York scored its last touchdown with 9:55 remaining.

How inept was Carson Palmer?s offense before he was yanked midway through the third quarter? Well, Cincy finished with the lowest amount of total offense (72 yards) in an NFL game since the Houston Oilers mustered just 83 yards in 1971. Palmer completed just 1-of-11 passes for zero yards and threw an interception.

Chad Ochocinco suffered a bruised knee in warm-ups, but he?s expected to be at full speed Saturday. The same can?t be said for DT Pat Sims, who is done for the year after breaking his forearm.

In Saturday?s prime-time affair, we get the second of three Week 17 rematches. This one will feature the Cowboys and Eagles in Arlington. LVSC opened Dallas as a 4 ?-point favorite with a total of 45 ?. As of late Monday morning, most spots had the ?Boys favored by four with the total adjusted to 45. Bettors can take Philadelphia to win outright for a plus-170 return (risk $100 to win $170).

Andy Reid?s team could?ve clinched a first-round bye and taken the No. 2 seed from Minnesota with a win at Dallas. But the Cowboys won their third straight game to garner the third seed in the NFC, beating up on Philly by a 24-0 count as three-point home ?chalk.?

Wade Phillips? team will have to beat the Eagles for a third time this year to advance. When they met in the City of Brotherly Love, Dallas collected a 20-16 win as a three-point road underdog.

Philadelphia went on the road in last year?s playoffs and won a pair of games ? at Minnesota and at the New York Giants before eventually losing at Arizona. Although the ?Boys appear to be rolling, gamblers should remember that they haven?t won a postseason game since 1996.

On Sunday, Baltimore and New England will collide in Foxboro for the lid-lifter at 1:00 p.m. Eastern. LVSC opened the Patriots as 6 ?-point favorites with a total of 42. When it was learned later Sunday that WR Wes Welker is ?out? for the playoffs with a knee injury, LVSC adjusted the Pats? number to 5 ?.





As of late Monday morning, most betting shops had Bill Belichick?s club as the four-point home ?chalk? with the total increased to 43. The Ravens were plus-170 on the money line.

New England went unbeaten at home this year, compiling a 5-3 spread record in eight outings. The Pats were 4-0 against the spread as single-digit home favorites, including a 27-21 win over the Ravens as one-point home ?chalk? back in Week 4.

Tom Brady threw for 258 yards and one touchdown, a 14-yard scoring strike to Randy Moss. Welker had six receptions for 50 yards. For the Ravens, Ray Rice ripped the Pats for 103 rushing yards on only 11 carries. Joe Flacco had 264 passing yards to go with two TD tosses and one interception.

Finally, the Packers will fly back to Phoenix again to take on the Cardinals at 4:30 Sunday. LVSC opened Arizona as a three-point favorite (at even-money) with a total of 48 ?. As of late Monday morning, most spots had the Cardinals favored by 2 ? with the total at 48.

Green Bay handed out woodshed treatment to the Cards in Week 17, rolling to a 33-7 triumph as a three-point road underdog. Aaron Rodgers completed 21-of-26 throws for 235 yards and one touchdown without an interception. On the flip side, Kurt Warner played sparingly, connecting on 4-of-6 attempts for 31 yards without a TD or a pick.

Since a stunning loss at Tampa Bay, the Packers have won seven of their last eight games. Even better, they are 7-0-1 ATS during this span. The lone outright defeat came at Pittsburgh when Ben Roethlisberger threw a TD pass to Mike Wallace on the final play of the game.

Let's not dismiss Ken Whisenhunt's squad based on the beatdown from the Pack. Remember, Arizona took similar shellackings late in the regular season last year from Minnesota at home and at New England in the snow, only to respond with its improbable run to the Super Bowl.

As for future numbers at Sportsbook.com, Indianapolis is the 5/2 ?chalk? (risk $100 to win $250). The Colts won their first 14 games, only to lose their last two when Jim Caldwell elected to rest key starters like Peyton Manning. San Diego, the No. 2 seed in the AFC, has the second-shortest future number at plus-350 (risk $100 to win $350).

Like Indy, the NFC?s top seed has lost its winning touch down the stretch. New Orleans started 13-0 before losing its last three games. Nevertheless, the Saints have the shortest odds of NFC teams at 4/1.

The rest of the future odds at Sportsbook.com look like this: Minnesota (6/1), Dallas (12/1), New England (12/1), Philadelphia (20/1), Green Bay (22/1), Arizona (25/1), Baltimore (25/1), Cincy (40/1) and the Jets (50/1).



--The ?under? is on an 8-1 run in the Cowboys? last nine games.

--The ?under? is on a 6-1 run in Arizona?s last seven outings.

--Jets rookie QB Mark Sanchez has an abysmal 12/20 TD-INT ratio.

--Props to St. Louis RB Steven Jackson, who never quit running hard and didn?t quit on his abysmal team (think Larry Johnson with the Chiefs). He finished second in the NFL in rushing yards (1,416), averaging 4.4 yards per carry.

--The Falcons still haven?t made the playoffs in back-to-back seasons in franchise history. However, they FINALLY have posted consecutive winning seasons after going 9-7 thanks to Sunday?s 20-10 win at Tampa Bay as 1 ?-point road favorites. The win over the Bucs also allowed 'over' backers (8 1/2) for Atlanta's season win total to cash tickets.
 

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Wild Card Weekend

Wild Card Weekend

Wild Card Weekend
January 4, 2010

We've been around long enough (53 seasons!) at THE GOLD SHEET to remember the pro football "wildcard" concept before the term was ever used. Indeed, the idea of non-winners of divisions or conferences actually making the playoffs was a foreign one until the old AFL broke with tradition in its final year of 1969, "expanding" its playoffs from two to four teams by inviting the runners-up in the old East and West Divisions into the postseason mix. Which is how the AFL ended up with two Western teams, Oakland and Kansas City, squaring off in the '69 title game after the championship battle had been drawn along East vs. West lines for the previous nine seasons. For the record, the Chiefs and Houston Oilers were the "extra" AFL playoff qualifiers that season, with Kansas City ending the championship reign of Joe Namath's Jets in a cold and windy Shea Stadium, 13-6, while the Oilers were bombed by the Raiders, 56-7, the following day. The Chiefs, of course, would go on to beat Oakland to win the final AFL title before upsetting Minnesota in the Super Bowl, technically becoming the first "wildcard" Super Bowl winner...before the term was even hatched!


The "wildcard" label officially became part of pro football lexicon the following season in 1970, the first year of the merged NFL, when the best division runners-up in the newly-named NFC and AFC were invited to the postseason. Detroit and Miami were the first "officially" named wildcard teams that year, and neither fared well that postseason, the Lions losing by an odd 5-0 score in a nonetheless pulsating defensive struggle at Dallas, while the Dolphins (who would be heard from again soon) succumbed to the Raiders in the Oakland mud, 21-14. The first post-merger wildcard winner was Baltimore (Colts, not Ravens), a 20-3 victor at Cleveland in 1971. Through 1977, wildcards were the 4th playoff seed in each conference, and there were no "bye" weeks in the playoffs until the week before the Super Bowl.

The introduction of a second wildcard team from each conference and the "wildcard round" coincided with the NFL expanding its regular-season schedule from 14 to 16 games (and playoff entrants from 8 to 10) in '78. For the next twelve seasons, those wildcard teams would face off against each other before the winners would advance to join the division champions from the AFC & NFC in the round of eight. There were changes again in 1990, when a third wildcard team was added to each conference, upping the total number of postseason participants to 12. This also doubled the number of games in wildcard weekend (from 2 to 4), as then only the top two division winners from each conference would get a "bye" in the first round, and the division winner with the worst record was thrown in with the wildcard teams for the initial playoff weekend. When the NFL reconfigured its divisions (from 6 to 8) in 2002, the wildcard round wasn't fundamentally altered. Although there would technically be only two wildcards (as opposed to three), there would still be the same four games in wildcard weekend, which now featured the two division winners with the worst records along with two wildcard entries from each conference.

In the meantime, the history of the wildcard round has proven rather colorful, starting with that first season in 1978, when Philadelphia and Atlanta were involved in a Christmas Eve nailbiter at old Fulton County Stadium. The Falcons, behind QB Steve Bartkowski, rallied for a pair of late TDs to take the lead before the Eagles' Mike Michel missed a last-second 34-yard field goal, giving Atlanta a 14-13 win. In the AFC, Houston, featuring rookie (and future Hall-of-Fame) RB Earl Campbell, won at Miami 17-9. The Oilers were back again in 1979 wildcard action, and though Campbell and QB Dan Pastorini were both KO'd in the 2nd half, Houston hung on to beat Red Miller's last Denver playoff team at the Astrodome, 13-7. Oakland's magical run through the 1980 playoffs began with a 27-7 wildcard win over the same Houston bunch (now ironically QB'd by longtime Raider Ken Stabler), ending Bum Phillips' days as Oilers coach in the process.

The wildcard round has often produced memorable games since, such as Buffalo's remarkable rally from a 35-3 deficit behind backup QB Frank Reich to overtake the Oilers in OT, 41-38, in 1992. The Bills were involved on the other end of a wild card round-thriller in 1999, victim of Tennessee's "Music City Miracle" 22-16 win, while San Francisco won a couple of hard-to-forget first-round heart-stoppers at home against the Packers in 1998 (30-27 in an unforgettable Steve Young vs. Brett Favre clash) and Giants in 2002 (39-38). Dallas and Seattle engaged in a memorable nailbiter in 2006, with the Cowboys botching a last-second, chip shot FG that allowed the host Seahawks to escape with a 21-20 win, while the Chargers survived a classic battle at Qualcomm Stadium vs. the Colts a year ago when prevailing by a 23-17 count in overtime. The occasional wildcard team has also ended up catching fire in the postseason and has gone all of the way to win the Super Bowl, including the 1997 Broncos, 2000 Ravens, 2005 Steelers, and 2007 Giants (as well as the '69 Chiefs and '80 Raiders).

There have also been a few different pointspread characteristics related to wildcard games compared to later playoff rounds. In particular, underdog teams have more than held their own in these first-round games (a bit of a departure from division round and conference title action), especially the shorter-priced (1-3 point) dogs that stand 24-16-2 vs. the number since '78, including 7-2 the last three years. Home dogs, usually rare in playoff action, have nonetheless popped up four times in wildcard-round battles the past two seasons (3-1 vs. line in those games) and are a noteworthy 11-3 vs. the number in first-round games since '78. Overall, wildcard dogs are 52-43-3 since '78. Although many believe the absence of the top two conference seeds in the wild card rounds has contributed to better overall underdog mark than in subsequent rounds, it's worth noting that one-sided results are still fairly common in the first-round games, with 7 of 16 since 2005 being decided by 14 points or more, as have close to half of them (44 of 98) since the wildcard round was introduced in 1978. As for recent wildcard-round "totals" trends, they've slightly leaned to the "unders" by a 20-15-1 count since 2000.

Following are the pointspread results for wildcard playoff games since 1978 (excluding the 1982 "strike" season, when all 16 playoff teams participated in first-round games).

NFL WILDCARD PLAYOFF GAMES SINCE 1978 CATEGORY VS. POINTS

1-3 pt. dogs... 24-16-2
3 1/2-6 1/2 pt. dogs... 17-15-1
7-pt. or more dogs... 11-12
Home dogs... 11-3
Road dogs... 41-40-3

Margins of victory (98 total games)-21 games have been decided by 1-3 points, 21 games by 4-7 points, 12 games by 8-13 points, and 44 games have been decided by 14 points or more.
 

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Coach Rex Ryan makes bold prediction by calling New York Jets favorites to win Super

Coach Rex Ryan makes bold prediction by calling New York Jets favorites to win Super

Coach Rex Ryan makes bold prediction by calling New York Jets favorites to win Super Bowl


DAILY NEWS SPORTS WRITER

Thursday, January 7th 2010, 4:00 AM
Related NewsRaissman: Rex TV would be tons of funSanchez learns from mistakes on road to playoffsNo man is an island, but quiet Revis is close From Chad to Ocho to Butt-head, he's a character Inside the Matchups: Jets vs. BengalsMyers: It's code red for Gang Green QBRex Ryan apparently isn't a fan of Cinderella.

Instead of embracing the underdog role, as most coaches do, Ryan stunned the football world Wednesday by declaring the Jets the team to beat in the NFL playoffs.

The Jets are a 50-to-1 shot to win the Super Bowl, according to one Vegas line, making them easily the biggest underdog in the 12-team field. When that was mentioned to Ryan, he scoffed.

"I wasn't aware of that, but to me we should be the favorites," he said.

Asked to clarify his comment, Ryan didn't back away.

"I mean in the whole tournament," he said, making sure everybody knew he wasn't simply referring to Saturday's wild-card game against the Bengals. "You know the way I feel. I think we have the best defense. I know we do. I know we have the best rushing attack. Those are two huge factors in our favor."

Ryan's remarks probably will end up on a bulletin board in Ochocinco Land, but the brash coach evidently doesn't care how his quotes play in Cincinnati - or anywhere else for that matter.

In some NFL cities, they're probably laughing. These are the Jets, who finished 9-7 to claim the fifth seed in the AFC.

Whose own coach assumed they were eliminated by a Week 15 loss to the Falcons.

Who received Curtis Painter on a silver platter from the Colts.

Who routed the less-than-motivated Bengals in the finale.

It's easy to mock the Jets' playoff worthiness, but Ryan has remained resolute in his belief. His confidence has trickled down through the ranks, from the coaching staff to the players. And the 37-0 rout of the Bengals didn't hurt.

"We think we can run the table, no question," said safety Kerry Rhodes. "We'd have to have a few things happen for us, but right now we think we're one of the best teams in the league."

Cornerback Lito Sheppard echoed that sentiment, saying, "We can't worry about what people project, we just feel like we're the best team out there right now. However that goes, that's what we feel."

The Jets became the first team since the 2001 Steelers to finish No.1 in rushing offense and No. 1 in total defense. That year, the Steelers went 13-3 and reached the AFC Championship Game before losing to the Patriots.

Ryan is counting on that formula - power football - to carry the Jets, although they will face a mirror-image team in the Bengals (No. 9 rushing, No. 4 defense). They're the two most run-oriented teams in the playoff field; the Jets run a league-leading 59% of the time.

"I think we have a real good shot," wide receiver Braylon Edwards said. "What makes it more special is that I think we have a good team that could possibly go the distance."

A week ago, Edwards all but guaranteed a win over the Bengals, declaring, "We won't lose this game." This time, he refrained from a prediction, saying it's a "different situation."

The Jets expect a better effort from the Bengals, who will get back four starters who didn't play last week - leading rusher Cedric Benson, defensive end Robert Geathers, defensive tackle Domata Peko and safety Chris Crocker.

They also figure the Bengals will be less vanilla on offense. And, oh yeah, Cincinnati has the home field for the rematch.

Worried? The Jets? Are you kidding?

"We definitely know that no team wants to play us right now," Rhodes said. "We're playing at a very high level. We're going to be a tough out for anybody."

After a season of tough talking, Ryan insisted he doesn't feel vindicated by the playoff berth.

"I was saying the whole time to judge us at the end of the year," he said. "Somebody was going to have egg on their face. I never wanted to wear that, but there was none of that for me."

But there might be if they're one-and-done.
 

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NFL Wildcard Round Handicapping

NFL Wildcard Round Handicapping

NFL Wildcard Round Handicapping

The playoffs are here. To NFL fans and bettors alike, it?s kind of a bittersweet time. In one sense, the best football is yet to come. On the other hand, there are only 11 games left to watch & wager on for the rest of the season. No more Sunday?s full of different options. At this point, your betting season has been pretty much defined, unless you plan on unleashing some off the wall money management strategy over the next month. Still, there?s money to be made in the postseason, and like always, you need to be prepared. Over the course of the next few weeks, I will be taking a closer look at each round of the playoffs, digging up trends, systems, and other angles that might help us profit. Of course this week, we start with the Wildcard Round.

One of the things you need to consider before beginning your playoff handicapping is that things have changed in the postseason over the course of the last decade. What used to be the norm has now become unusual, what formerly was automatic has been shaky in recent years. For instance, home field advantage is nowhere near what it used to be in the playoffs. The importance of getting a bye in the first round has been overtaken by the concept of staying sharp through repetition. And strangely, teams playing their best football at the end of the regular season have also not held any significant edge, rather, it is simply a matter of which team plays best from here on out.

Still, with all the unpredictability that the NFL playoffs have offered in recent years, there are some statistical, situational, and other variables that can be used as a basis for our handicapping. Let?s take a look at some of the basics of recent Wildcard Round history, then dig in a little deeper to see if we can?t uncover some nuggets.

General Wildcard Trends
Perhaps the most important thing you need to know about the Wildcard Round of the NFL playoffs in recent years is that home teams and road teams have split the last 20 games since ?05 straight up. That?s right, home teams are just 10-10 SU & 9-10-1 ATS. Here are some other tidbits:


There has been no specific edge in regards to the seed of the home team in winning or losing. In fact, since ?05, #4 seeds are 5-5 SU & 5-4-1 ATS while #3 seeds are 5-5 SU & 4-6 ATS.

The extra day of rest has proven a hindrance for home teams when it comes to Wildcard performance, as Saturday home teams are 6-4 SU & 6-3-1 ATS since ?05 while Sunday hosts have gone 4-6 SU & 3-7 ATS.

In general, the Wildcard Round has been a low scoring round, with 14 of 20 games over the last five years going UNDER the total, producing 42.1 PPG on totals averaging 45.0.

Over the last 11 years, when the road team has won outright in the Wildcard Round, UNDER the total is 13-2 (87%). Conversely, home team wins have been accompanied by an OVER the total in 11 of 19 (58%) Wildcard games since ?02.

Line Range Trends
The placement of a line by oddsmakers or the way that line moves over the course of the week has tipped the hand of some bettors. Take a look at these line specific trends:


Sizeable home favorites have been a solid bet in the Wildcard Round of late, as those laying a TD or more (7 pts) are 16-2 SU & 13-5 ATS (72%) since ?94, including five straight wins since ?05, both SU & ATS.

Wildcard home underdogs had won four straight games outright & ATS from ?95-03, but since, the pendulum has swung, with road favorites going 5-1 SU & 4-2 ATS (67%) since ?04, including two wins on Sunday of ?09.

Be leery of the mid-ranged Wildcard home favorites, as those laying 3.5 to 6.5 points have struggled, going just 10-10 SU & 8-11-1 ATS (42%) since ?94, including 2-4 SU & 1-5 ATS since ?03. Interestingly, seven straight games in this group have gone UNDER the total.

Small home favorites in the Wildcard Round have been more effective than their higher priced counterparts, perhaps benefitting from a lack of respect. Home chalk of 3-points or less are 15-5 SU & 11-6-3 ATS (65%) since ?93.

Be aware of how lines move throughout the week, as bettors have had success dealing with the opening lines in recent years. In fact, when betting action has moved the line one way or the other since ?03 in the Wildcard Round, this ?smart money? is 13-5-1 ATS (72%). In other words, if the line moves towards the home team over the course of the week, that home team has been successful, and same goes for the road clubs.

Interestingly, in the last 17 seasons of Wildcard Round betting, only nine games have seen the opening line move by 1.5-points or more throughout the week. In those games, home teams have gone 7-1-1 ATS (88%), regardless of the direction of the line move.

Total Range Trends
With the majority of Wildcard games going UNDER the total in recent years, you?d expect that we would be able to uncover some significant total angles by digging deeper. Let?s take a look:


The extreme totals have produced the most OVER games, while the moderately posted totals by oddsmakers have meant lower scoring games. Dating back to ?99, in games with totals posted in the 37-44.5 range, UNDER the total is 19-7 (73%). In games outside that range, the OVER has had at least a fighting chance, 8-10 (44%).

The betting public has had a very good handle on totals in the Wildcard Round, as since ?93, when incoming action has moved the total higher, OVER players have gone 13-9 (59%). When the total has been pushed lower throughout the week, UNDER bettors have gone 21-12 (64%). In other words, if history serves, you have about a 62% chance of winning a total wager just by following the money.

The chances of winning a total bet improve even more if the total move was 1.5-points or more throughout the week. In such cases since ?93, this ?smart money? has gone 17-6 (74%).

Scoring Trends
As always, there are certain point thresholds that teams reach in the Wildcard Round that greatly influence their chances of winning or losing.


Home teams that fail to reach 20 points have little chance of winning according to recent history, having gone just 1-13 SU & ATS since ?99. That same percentage of games, 13-1, went UNDER the total as well.

Those home teams that do reach and/or exceed the 20-point mark have been wildly successful in the Wildcard Round, going 28-2 SU & 23-5-2 ATS since ?99.

The scoring breakdown for road teams in the Wildcard Round is even more distinctive than it is for hosts. Those Wildcard visitors that fail to reach 20 points are just 1-31 SU & 1-30-1 ATS since ?93. The lone winner came in January ?06, when Washington won at Tampa Bay, 17-10.

When road teams do make it to 20 points or higher, their chances of success improve tremendously, as they are 21-16 SU & 25-9-3 ATS since ?93.

Specific Matchup Trends
Typically, about one of every four Wildcard games pits divisional opponents against one another. Of late, the advantage has gone to the familiar road team in these types of matchups. In fact, since ?03, road teams in divisional Wildcard games are 3-3 SU & 5-1 ATS. In the less familiar games matching just conference opponents, conservative play has been the name of the game, with 10 of 13 games having gone UNDER the total dating back to ?06.

Trends based upon Won-Lost Records
About one of every three Wildcard games matches teams with the same won-lost marks or the road team owning the better record. In such games over the last six years, the road club owns the edge, going 6-5 SU & 6-4-1 ATS. Here are a couple of other tidbits regarding won-lost marks and the Wildcard Round:


From 1994-2000, Wildcard hosts that had won 11 or more games in the regular season were 12-0 SU & 10-1-1 ATS in their first playoff game. Since however, they are just 8-7 SU & ATS, including 1-3 SU & ATS against a road team with 11 or more wins.

Home field is of little advantage to Wildcard hosts that won 9 or fewer games in the regular season, as they are just 5-5 SU & 3-5-2 (38%) in the Wildcard Round since ?94. Strangely, they are 3-1 SU & ATS vs. road teams that won 10 or more games.

Seemingly, the worse the road team, the better their chances lately of competing. Since ?03, road teams that won nine or fewer games in the regular season are 4-5 SU & 6-2-1 ATS (75%) in the Wildcard Round. In that same time span, road teams that won double-digit games are 8-11 SU & 9-10 ATS (47%).

Trends based upon Statistical Traits
Going into a Wildcard playoff game, do any particular statistical edges mean more to success than others? Let?s see?


Home teams with an edge in Offensive Points per Game are 24-15 (62%) ATS in the Wildcard Round since ?93. Road teams with this same edge are 11-14 (44%). However, since ?03, this stat has proven a great predictor or road upsets, as visiting teams scoring more Points per Game are 7-1 SU & 6-1-1 ATS (86%).

Home teams with an edge in Offensive 3rd Down Conversion Percentage are 14-7 (67%) ATS in the Wildcard Round since ?96. Road teams with this same edge are 13-16 (45%). Over the last five seasons, the team with the edge in this category is 11-8 ATS (58%).

The ability to run the football has not proven all that critical in Wildcard games of late, as since ?93, teams with an edge in Yards Per Rush are just 30-34-4 ATS (47%). Over the last seven playoff seasons, that record drops to 11-16-1 ATS (41%). YPR is obviously an overrated statistic.

Teams that have demonstrated a greater ability to produce big plays through the air, or those averaging more Pass Yards per Attempt, are 35-28-4 ATS (56%) in the Wildcard Round since ?93, and 18-9-1 ATS (67%) over the last seven seasons.

Teams averaging more Yards Per Play on offense are 38-26-4 ATS (59%) in the Wildcard Round since ?93, and 17-10-1 ATS (63%) over the last seven seasons.

Yards per Point has proven to be an effective predictor in Wildcard Round, as teams with an edge in this key stat are 39-25-4 ATS since ?93. Since 2003, this record is a scintillating 20-7-1 ATS (74%).

Turnover Differential has meant very little in terms of predicting Wildcard Round games since ?93, as teams with an edge in this stat are 32-32-4 ATS (50%). Over the last seven seasons, this record is 13-14-1 ATS (48%).

Teams with an edge in Defensive Points per Game are 34-29 (54%) ATS in the Wildcard Round since ?93. Recently however, this edge has meant very little, as better defensive teams in this stat are just 12-15 ATS (44%).

Teams with an edge in Defensive 3rd Down Conversion Percentage are 26-24-2 ATS (52%) ATS in the Wildcard Round since ?96. Over the last seven seasons, the team with the edge in this category is 11-16 ATS (41%).

The ability to stop the run on defense has proven somewhat important in Wildcard games of late, as since ?93, teams with an edge in Defensive Yards Per Rush are 34-29-4 ATS (54%). Over the last seven playoff seasons, there has been a decline in the importance of Defensive YPR, as teams with an edge are only 12-14 ATS (46%)..

Teams better at stopping big plays through the air, or those allowing fewer Pass Yards per Attempt, are 32-32-4 ATS (50%) in the Wildcard Round since ?93, and 9-18-1 ATS (33%) over the last seven seasons. Clearly, the offense is controlling this facet of the game more than the defense.

Teams allowing fewer Yards Per Play on defense are 34-29-4 ATS (54%) in the Wildcard Round since ?93, but only 10-16-1 ATS (38%) over the last seven seasons.

Defensive Yards per Point has turned out to be the most effective & consistent defensive predictor in Wildcard Round, as teams with an edge in this key stat are 35-29-4 ATS (55%) since ?93. Since ?03, teams with an edge in this stat are 15-12-1 ATS (56%), easily the best indicator of any defensive stat listed.

It?s evident from all of the above trends that offensive capability has proven far more important in recent years? Wildcard games than the demonstrated ability to stop teams.

What about the scenario where a team has the edge in both Offensive and Defensive Yards Per Point in a Wildcard matchup? Well, these teams are 23-13-1 ATS since ?93, and 12-4 ATS (75%) over the last seven seasons.

It figures to be a great playoff season in the NFL, particularly in the NFC, where there can be a legitimate argument for all six teams being capable of representing the conference in the Super Bowl. As of presstime, all six ranked in the Top 14 in the NFL in points scored, in the Top 12 in Offensive Yards per Pass Attempt, in the Top 13 in Offensive Yards Per Play, and five of the teams made up the Top 10 in Offensive Yards Per Point, with Dallas a low 25th. In the AFC, it would be hard to argue for anyone but San Diego and Indianapolis in a conference title tilt.

We?ll see you back next week when we look at the trends and recent history of the Divisional Round of the playoffs! Good luck this weekend.
 

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Can the Eagles rebound?

Can the Eagles rebound?

Can the Eagles rebound?
January 7, 2010


If there is one thing you can take out of the playoffs is that any team can make a run. Last year, the Cardinals proved that you can easily erase a weak regular season to come within minutes of winning the Super Bowl. Some teams can use just one deep playoff campaign void a decade of futility.

This Saturday?s NFC Wild Card showdown between the Eagles and Cowboys on NBCS at 8:00 p.m. EST will help someone get an 800-pound gorilla of their chest.

Philadelphia (11-5 straight up, 8-7-1 against the spread) comes into this game with hopes of getting past nightmares of what might have been.

The Eagles were heading into the last week of the regular season riding a six-game winning streak. And they knew that they controlled their own destiny for clinching the No. 2 seed in the NFC by needed to win in Week 17. All Philly had to do was go into Arlington and beat the Cowboys as a three-point road pup.

What bettors and fans got was a Philadelphia side that played like garbage in a 24-0 smackdown to the ?Boys. The Eagles gained just 228 yards and converted on three of their 12 third downs. Plus, they had the ball for just over 19 minutes. So Philly went from getting a home game in the playoffs to the sixth seed for the second straight year.

Philly head coach Andy Reid is trying to put a positive spin on it. ?At this point, you're in the playoffs. It's a single-elimination tournament. You really don't care who you play or where you play - you're in.? He continues, ?In our case, since we did play them last week, it's important to figure out what we did wrong and get that corrected.?

There?s a nice sized list for Reid to peruse as to what his Eagles did wrong. Philadelphia?s offense has to be the first issue that should be addressed. We already discussed the amount of yards they gained on the attack, but we should focus more on running game. The Eagles picked up a mere 37 rushing yards last week against the Cowboys.

We shouldn?t be too shocked by that low total as Philadelphia has been desperate to find any way possible to eat up clock time on the ground. The Eagles are ranking 22nd in the league with 102.3 rushing yards per game, thanks in part to losing Brian Westbrook for much of the year. Westbrook 17 yards on five carries last week. LeSean McCoy has picked most of the slack with 637 rushing yards and four scores during his rookie campaign.

?The Eagles have run for a total of 335 yards over their last four games against the New York Giants, San Francisco, Denver and Dallas. ?Philadelphia needs its running game to work in order to win.?

Philadelphia?s rushing attack will need to help open up its passing game, which has been lacking recently. Donovan McNabb has completed just 57 percent of his passes for 851 yards and four touchdowns to three picks in his last three starts.

McNabb will also be looking to figure out how exactly how to throw effectively against the Cowboys. Philly?s gunslinger has connected on 55 percent of his pass attempts for 450 yards, one score and two interceptions against Dallas in 2009. That?s goes along with seven sacks for a loss of 50 yards.

It can?t all fall on the quarterback?s shoulders; the receivers have to step up their play as well. DeSean Jackson will, of course, be the main target on offense. Jackson finished second in the NFL with 18.5 yards per catch and nine touchdowns. Yet he can?t figure out how to get free against the Cowboys, averaging 17.8 YPC with no scores in four career games. That means tight end Brent Celek may have to pick up the slack. Surprising this to say considering he was already averaging 97 yards receiving over the last three games.

Dallas (11-5 SU, 9-7 ATS) has been hearing over the last month of the season that they were cruising for another epic fail. It?s not like they could tell everyone to shut up since they posted a 7-13 SU and 4-14-2 ATS in December and January dating back to 2005. That is?until this season.

The Cowboys helped silence the critics this year with a 3-2 SU and ATS mark. They?ve made it back to the second season with the help of Tony Romo being under center. Romo has had the campaign of his career by completing 63 percent of his passes for 4,483 yards with 26 scores to nine picks. But he?s been positively stellar in his last five appearances, connecting on 69 percent of his throws for 310.0 YPG and nine touchdowns to only two interceptions.

Romo lit up the Eagles for 311 yards and a pair of scores while completing 77 percent of his passes last Sunday. He?s also had a fair amount of success against Philly over the last three seasons with 275.2 YPG passing and nine touchdowns through the air.

Dallas also has a legit receiver in its midst that doesn?t like to make reality shows that nobody watches. Miles Austin earned his spot in the Pro Bowl by finishing third in total receiving yards (1,320), 10th in first downs (59) fourth in touchdowns (11).

Joining Austin in Miami for the Pro Bowl is arguably the best tight end in the NFL, Jason Witten. The seven-year pro from Tennessee has been good for 11.0 YPC this year, while helping the Cowboys move the chains three times per game.

Austin and Witten combined for 166 yards receiving and a touchdown last weekend against Philadelphia. Plus, Patrick Crayton pulled in a score and 99 yards on four receptions in Week 17.

As great as the passing attack has been for the Cowboys, it?s the ground where this game will be won. Dallas has the fourth best running game in the league, averaging 131.4 rushing YPG in 2009.

Marion Barber and Felix Jones both had success moving the ball against Philadelphia as they compiled 91 rushing yards apiece last Sunday afternoon. Chirimbes sums it up best, ?The key to Philadelphia winning is them stopping Dallas' run game. In last weeks shut out loss the Eagles allowed the Cowboys to run for 179 yards. They?re toast if that happens again.?

The sportsbooks are looking for history to repeat itself this weekend by making the Cowboys four-point home favorites with a total of 45. Bettors can take a chance on Philadelphia to win outright for a plus-170 return (risk $100 to win $170).

Sportsbook.com is showing that 80 percent of the money they?ve received is coming in on the Eagles? money line. This play smacks directly of play against Dallas and its playoff history.

The Cowboys have been in a well documented playoff slump as they haven?t won a playoff game since beating Minnesota in the 1996 NFC Wild Card (0-6 SU, 1-5 ATS). What?s jaw dropping is the futility of Dallas? attack in those losses, scoring combined total of 81 points in those six postseason battles. Plus, there is that sticking point that Wade Phillips has never won a playoff game as a head coach. And there is the possibility that he could still be fired if he doesn't win this weekend. Yeah, no pressure there at all.

Dallas backers will quickly point out to everyone that there have been 19 occasions in NFL history where teams have met three times in a given season with one team holding a 2-0 mark. Out of those 19 times, revenge has been had just seven times.

Philadelphia has had a good season away from home, posting a 5-3 SU and 4-3-1 ATS mark. The Cowboys are 6-2 SU and 5-3 ATS in their tilts at ?Jerry World.?

Something that the Eagles? bettors should know is that they are only 9-11 SU over the last five years when labeled as road underdogs. However, they are 12-8 ATS during that stretch. Also, Andy Reid?s team is 6-4 SU and 7-3 ATS when playing as pups against teams from the NFC East in that same five-year run.

Dallas has enjoyed a great deal of success as a home ?chalk? over the past five seasons by going 25-13 SU and 19-17-2 ATS. The ?Boys aren?t great has home faves when up against their own division, as evidenced by an 8-7 SU and 4-10-1 ATS.

The Cowboys have also been extremely promising when following up as home favorites after a shutout with a 5-1 SU and 4-1-1 ATS record.

Futures bettors will be interested to know that you can take the Eagles to win the NFC at 8/1 and the Super Bowl at 16/1. Meanwhile, Dallas is listed at 11/2 to win the NFC title and 10/1 to hoist the Lombardi Trophy.
 

Lumi

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TT - Wild Card Weekend

TT - Wild Card Weekend

TT - Wild Card Weekend
January 7, 2010


The old adage ?Defense wins Championships? is often thrown around the gridiron in January and it?s been true for the most part. If you play mistake free football and sound defense, most coaches will tell you that it increases your chances of winning. If those two things happen, you?re also going to see some low-scoring affairs, which help total players cash ?under? tickets.
The first round of the playoffs is often tough to gauge from a total perspective since conservative game plans are abound. Looking back at Wild Card weekend the past three years, you can see the previous statement was true and it helped ?under? tickets go 8-4 (67%) over this span. Last season, the ?under? went 3-1 in the first round of the playoffs. For those of you keeping track, the ?under? went 134-118-3 (53%) during the 17-week regular season.

Let?s start the playoffs.

Saturday

New York Jets at Cincinnati (34)

The total on this game is the lowest on the board and it?s very hard to argue an ?over? play in this spot. For starters, temperatures are expected to be in the twenties for this afternoon battle and there is a 30 percent chance of flurries. Those conditions should suit these teams perfectly, especially with the matchup on the field.


On paper, the Jets own the league?s best defense (14.8 PPG, 252 YPG) and the Bengals? unit (18.2 PPG, 301 YPG) isn?t far behind. Offensively, both teams like to run the football which translates into running the clock. New York leads the league with 172 rushing yards per game and Cincinnati (128.5 YPG) has transformed into a running game this year as well despite having QB Carson Palmer behind center. His numbers have dipped considerably (180 YPG) and Chad Ochocinco (1,047 yards, 9 TDs) is the only true threat on the outside for Bengals, plus most believe he?ll be stifled by the Jets cornerback Darrelle Revis.

It?s hard to imagine the Jets won?t be having much success through the air either this weekend, since they probably won?t be throwing much. New York has proven it can win when QB Mark Sanchez doesn?t make mistakes, which means head coach Rex Ryan will handcuff the rookie. In the Jets? nine victories, seven of them came when the quarterback attempted less than 24 passes.

The Jets have watched the ?under? go 5-3 on the road and you can make an argument that the three ?over? tickets were lucky. Cincinnati has seen the ?under? go 6-2 at Paul Brown Stadium this year, largely due to an inconsistent offense (19.1 PPG).

In case you?re wondering, the Jets? 37-0 victory over the Bengals last Sunday saw the combined points sneak over the closing number of 33.5. Using this game in your handicapping is worthless for both the total and side.

Dallas at Philadelphia (45)

The Cowboys and Eagles square off for the third time this season and second time in two weeks. Last Sunday, Dallas blanked the Birds 24-0 and the closing number of 47 was never threatened. The Cowboys also stifled the Eagles 20-16 on Nov. 8 at Lincoln Financial Field. The ?over/under? on the first go ?round in Philly was 50, then it dropped three points last week and now the oddsmakers have opened this week?s primetime matchup at 45.

Is the drop too much? Rogers believes the movement is fair, considering the effort from Dallas? defense. He said, ?After giving up 33 points to the Giants in the Cowboys Stadium opener, the team has held every other opponent to 21 points or less at home this year. And, four of those opponents were held to 10 or less. Tony Romo gets all the headlines in the Lone Star State but the reason why he and head coach Wade Phillips are off the hook this December is clearly because of the defense.?

The defense is giving up 15.6 PPG, which is ranked second in the league. And if you toss out the 33 and 31 points that New York put up against Dallas, the Cowboys would be leading the league in defensive points allowed (13.3). The effort from the defensive unit has helped the ?under? go 8-1 in the final nine weeks.

Philadelphia does have the ability to score points albeit against everybody but Dallas. Andy Reid?s team averaged 26.8 PPG and that number would be 29.5 PPG if you take out the weak performances against the Cowboys. The Eagles have watched the ?over? go 10-6 but the total went 4-4 on the road.

Even though the two encounters this season went ?under? the number, the ?over? did cash in three of the previous four. The Eagles watched the ?under? go 2-1 last year during the playoffs and even though it?s past history, Dallas has only scored a total of 47 points in its last four postseason games. The ?under? has gone 3-1 over this stretch.

Sunday

Baltimore at New England (43)

We get a rematch here, as the Ravens and Patriots tangle for the second time this year after knocking heads in Week 4. New England held off Baltimore 27-21 at home on Oct. 4, which saw the combined points go ?over? the closing number of 45. The Pats couldn?t muster up any ground game against the Ravens and they were also aided by 85 penalty yards, a few questionable flags too. Baltimore moved the ball well at times but they were hurt by two turnovers and a key drop late in the game. Despite eclipsing the number, the ?over/under? dropped two points for Sunday?s clash and probably due to key numbers.

First, the Ravens (16.3) and Patriots (17.8) have both been stingy when it comes to allowing points this year. And those numbers have helped the ?under? cash for both Baltimore (10-6) and New England (11-5). Even though this pair have often hurt ?over? players, New England (26.7 PPG) and Baltimore (24.4 PPG) have lit up the scoreboard on occasion. The Ravens have put up 30 points or more in seven games and the Patriots have jumped the 30-point plateau five times.

New England has watched the ?over? go 3-2 in games versus playoff teams this season, but the ?under? has gone 4-3 in Baltimore?s games against teams playing in the postseason.

Looking at playoff history gives us a better barometer, especially for the coaching trends. John Harbaugh will be taking the Ravens to the postseason for the second straight season. Last year, the Ravens saw their first two playoffs games go ?under? before watching the AFC Championship contest against Pittsburgh go ?over? the total.

While Harbaugh?s sample size is only three games, the opposite can be said about the Patriots? Bill Belichick. The three-time Super Bowl winner has played eight playoff games at home during his tenure in New England. In case you?re wondering, the team has gone 8-0 SU and 4-3-1 ATS dating back to the 2001 season. Here?s the kicker for Total Players ? the ?under? is 7-1 in those games.

Green Bay at Arizona (47)

The Packers-Cardinals Wild Card matchup features the highest total on the board and considering it?s the last game of the week, don?t be surprised to see this number rise with the public action.

Green Bay has been become a public favorite lately and it?s hard to bet against a team that is 6-0-1 ATS in its last seven. During that stretch, QB Aaron Rodgers has helped lead the offense to 32.7 PPG. Surprisingly, the ?under? has gone 4-3 over that span, largely because the defense has held five of those opponents to 14 or less.

Arizona was a clear-cut ?over? team last year (15-5) and four of the ?under? tickets happened on the road. This season, it?s been the exact opposite for the Cardinals, who have watched the ?under? go 11-5, which includes a 6-2 mark at home. The offense is only averaged 23.4 PPG this year after averaging 27 PPG last season, but the key to more ?under? tickets has been the Arizona defense. The unit gave up 26 PPG in 2008 and they?ve trimmed that number to 20 PPG this year, almost a touchdown difference.

If you toss out Green Bay?s 33-7 meaningless victory against Arizona in Week 17, there are decent total trends for each team versus common opponents. The Packers have watched the ?over? go 3-0 against NFC West clubs and the Cardinals have seen the ?over? go 3-0 versus NFC North clubs.
 

Lumi

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Colts will use Stover in playoffs

Colts will use Stover in playoffs

Colts will use Stover in playoffs
January 7, 2010


INDIANAPOLIS (AP) -Jim Caldwell is kicking conventional wisdom to the curb.


The Colts coach plans to use Matt Stover during the playoffs instead of four-time Super Bowl winner Adam Vinatieri, regarded as the best clutch kicker in NFL history.

Caldwell explained his decision Thursday, saying Vinatieri had not fully recovered from midseason surgery on his kicking knee, and that Stover had done a ``great job'' since joining the team in October.

``I think the concern was health issues or whatever,'' Vinatieri said. ``I guess it makes sense. I didn't necessarily care for the decision. Obviously, all of us want to be on the field as much as we can, but I understand the concerns.''

Vinatieri still could get his chance.

The Colts (14-2) will not put the 36-year-old South Dakota native on injured reserve and intend to carry both kickers on the active roster, meaning Vinatieri may yet kick if he can get healthy.

Few teams have the luxury of choosing between two of the league's most productive and experienced kickers.

Vinatieri won three Super Bowls with New England, including two on game-winning kicks, before joining the Colts in 2006 and winning another title that year. He may be best remembered, though, for making the tying and winning kicks on a snowy New England night to beat Oakland in the playoffs in January 2002, the ``Tuck Rule Game.''

Stover won a Super Bowl ring with Baltimore in 2000 and ranks No. 4 among kickers with 2,004 career points. Vinatieri has 1,528 points, and both he and Stover rank among the top 15 all-time in field goals made.

But this decision came down to one factor: Health.

Vinatieri has played in only one game since Oct. 11, against the Jets on Dec. 27. His first extra-point attempt against New York was blocked, though Vinatieri later made a 22-yard field goal - barely longer than an extra point.

``He (Stover) has done a great job for us. He's fit in extremely well, he's very mature and he's done an exceptional job,'' Caldwell said. ``They are two great ones. You know it's a very unique situation, but that's kind of the way it is right now. But we feel good about our options.''

Stover, who handled every major kick for the Baltimore Ravens franchise from 1991 to 2008, was let go by the team in the offseason. He signed with Indy on Oct. 14, the day Caldwell announced Vinatieri would miss four to eight weeks after having arthroscopic surgery to remove cartilage in his right knee.

Since then Stover has been nearly flawless. He's made 33 consecutive extra points and 9 of 11 field goal attempts - one miss was from 52 yards - and he doesn't even have to worry about kickoff duties, which are handled by rookie Pat McAfee.

``My mindset, since I was signed, was to kick this team all the way to the Super Bowl and through it,'' Stover said. ``I'm not here to replace Adam. I'm here to help this team get to the Super Bowl and, unfortunately, Adam was injured during that time, which gave me that opportunity. This is for this year, this is to help this team win the Super Bowl and at this point, I feel confident in my abilities to be able to do that.''

Stover said the two are old hunting buddies, a relationship that could ease any potential strains while the Colts embark on another Super Bowl quest.

And both have been around long enough to understand Indy doesn't need any distractions heading into next weekend's divisional round game against Cincinnati, the Jets or Baltimore. The Colts earned a first-round bye and the AFC's top seed by winning their first 14 games this season.

``I don't make any of those decisions about who is activated and who is not, but I'm going to keep preparing like I'm going to be the guy who goes out on the field,'' Vinatieri said. ``If it happens that way, great, and if it doesn't, I'm going to be a good cheerleader.''

For now, the job belongs to Stover.

``Sometimes you don't need a kicker, but sometimes you do and if it comes down to that, I'll be ready,'' Stover said.
 

Lumi

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All rematches on wild-card weekend

All rematches on wild-card weekend

All rematches on wild-card weekend
January 7, 2010


Anyone who gets the feeling the NFC playoffs are vastly more wide open than the AFC probably is right. All six teams, including the four playing this weekend in wild-card games, seem capable of making the Super Bowl.


Not so for the AFC, where the two clubs on byes, Indianapolis and San Diego, look like the true cream of the crop.

Everything gets started with a rematch of last Sunday night's Meadowlands debacle, when the Jets routed the Bengals 37-0 to grab the final playoff spot. On Saturday night, another replay has Philadelphia at Dallas six days after the Cowboys blanked the Eagles 24-0 to win the NFC East.

Sunday has Baltimore at New England, a rematch of an Oct. 4 victory by the Patriots, and Green Bay at Arizona, one week after the Packers romped 33-7 at University of Phoenix Stadium.

---

Losing Wes Welker to a major knee injury last weekend will crimp the Patriots' offense, which can expect double-teams on Randy Moss every play. If the Ravens don't do that, they deserve to get beaten by the playmaker.

Tom Brady will have to look elsewhere quite often, which could mean many catches for the tight ends and running backs. Julian Edelman was a nice substitute for Welker when the veteran was hobbled earlier in the season, but can the rookie handle the big stage? Brady will expect him to.

Baltimore impressed throughout last year's playoffs behind a rookie QB, Joe Flacco, and a staunch defense. The Ravens won twice on the road, then lost at Pittsburgh in a brutal AFC championship game.

This year's Ravens aren't quite so physical or dangerous defensively, so their key player will be versatile running back Ray Rice. Bill Belichick often finds ways to shut down opponent's stars.

But it will be tight.

BEST BET: PATRIOTS, 20-17


Quite likely, this will be the most fun game, especially for anyone who likes a shootout. Both sides are well-equipped for high-scoring games, from Kurt Warner, Larry Fitzgerald and Anquan Boldin on the Arizona side to Aaron Rodgers, Greg Jennings, Donald Driver and Ryan Grant for Green Bay.

Yet each team has improved drastically on defense, sparked by big-play guys. Packers CB Charles Woodson has been as dominant as any defender in the league, and Cardinals DT Darnell Dockett is a monster up front.

Both sides are playoff-tested, although Warner has a huge experience edge over Rodgers.

The Packers went 5-4 on the road, while the Cardinals were just 4-4 at home.

UPSET SPECIAL: PACKERS, 30-28


Don't put too much stock in what happened last Sunday, because Bengals 1,000-yard rusher Cedric Benson and strong DT Domata Peko didn't play. Cincinnati should be a lot more interested, too - a chance for higher seeding had no effect against the desperate Jets last time.

The Bengals need to run effectively inside, because the Jets cut down the flanks with their aggressive defenders. And they must find a passing attack even if Jets cornerback Darrelle Revis shuts down Chad Ochocinco again.

For New York, the word is conservatism. As long as the game is close or the Jets are in front, Thomas Jones will carry the load. He's very capable.

Cincinnati has to force the Jets to throw, making rookie Mark Sanchez win it.

The Bengals were 6-2 at home; New York was 5-3 on the road.

BENGALS, 17-13


Dallas stepped up in December and early January. Now it's time for the Cowboys to show they can roll in the postseason.

Having swept the Eagles in the regular season, the Cowboys should carry tons of confidence into this one. They have found their stride on offense with Tony Romo, Jason Witten, Miles Austin and that three-pronged running attack. The defense has been punishing lately - just ask all those Eagles who were manhandled a week ago.

So this will be another rout, right? Uh, no. Not at all.

In fact, Philly is among the best NFL teams at making adjustments, and will find a way to unleash its young offensive threats: DeSean Jackson, LeSean McCoy, Brent Celek, Jeremy Maclin. The defense must be far more secure in its tackling and coverage, and is capable of that - particularly if its variety of blitzes are effective.

Another close one.

EAGLES, 24-23

---

RECORD:

Versus spread, 6-7 (106-127-3 season); Straight up, 13-3 (170-76 season)

Best Bet: 6-11

Upset Special: 10-7
 

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Pats start Sunday slate

Pats start Sunday slate

Pats start Sunday slate
January 8, 2010
The New England Patriots hosting the Baltimore Ravens is the marquee matchup on the Sunday NFL schedule.





New England is a 3 ?-point favorite with an Over/Under of 43 points. CBS will broadcast from freezing Foxboro at 1 pm ET.



Betting trends show roughly an Even split on the pointspread.



New England (10-6 SU, 8-7-1 ATS) has had a big home field advantage over the years. They?re undefeated in eight home playoff games under coach Bill Belichick. This year, they?re a perfect at 8-0 at home and 5-3 ATS.



The Patriots certainly aren?t as good as during their Super Bowl years. A lot of veteran talent was lost on defense, and it shows. The team may get back to that level defensively in a couple of years, but the playoffs are now!



Offensively, the loss of receiver Wes Welker really hurts. The team must run the ball against Baltimore, although the Ravens are top-5 defensively in that category.



Baltimore (9-7 SU, 8-7-1 ATS) is also a top-5 team running the ball. That will help in the expected cold weather of the 20?s. The Ravens are still mad about a 26-21 loss at New England back in October. The Ravens were driving for a winning score before an easy drop by receiver Mark Clayton.



This rematch looks like one heck of a contest.



Green Bay Packers (+1) at Arizona Cardinals



Green Bay (11-5 SU, 11-4-1 ATS) plays at Arizona for the second time in two weeks. A vast majority of bettors are taking the Cheeseheads. Last week was a 33-7 win for the Packers, who took the game more seriously.



Arizona (10-6 SU, 9-7 ATS) suffered some major injuries in that game. Receiver Anquan Boldin (ankle) and cornerback Dominique Rodgers-Cromartie (knee) got banged up.



Each missed some practice time this week, but both should play even at less than 100 percent.



A lot of trends in this game favor the visitors. Green Bay is 6-0 ATS in its last six games, and 6-2 ATS on the road (second best in the NFL). Arizona is just 3-7 ATS as a favorite.



The key to this game is Kurt Warner and the passing game against the Green Bay defense. If Warner struggles, or throws interceptions, then their reign as NFC defending champs will end quickly.
 

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Boys, Eagles meet again

Boys, Eagles meet again

Boys, Eagles meet again
January 8, 2010


There?s a Saturday Night Special this weekend, with an NFC East rematch between the Dallas Cowboys and Philadelphia Eagles.




Dallas is a four-point favorite with an Over/Under of 45 points. NBC will broadcast from Cowboys Stadium at 8 pm ET.



Betting trends show roughly 57% are backing the home team.



Dallas (11-5 SU, 9-7 ATS) came on strong down the stretch to win the NFC East. They had road victories at New Orleans and Washington, plus the big 24-0 home win over Philly (11-5 SU, 9-7 ATS) last week. The ?Boys went 3-0 ATS in those contests.

The game against the Eagles was a thing of beauty. Donovan McNabb was sacked four times and contained with 223 passing yards. The Eagles also couldn?t get the run game going. Dallas, on the other hand, rushed for 179 yards with the combination of Marion Barber and Felix Jones.



The biggest problem Dallas faces this week is familiarity. Dallas has now beaten Philly twice this year, and it?s very hard to go 3-0. McNabb is capable of making big strikes down the field, and whoever scores first will have a huge edge.



Tony Romo has played much better football the last six games, but expect Philly?s defense to dial up the blitz often. Last week they sat back in coverage. If Romo turns the ball over, Philly will be in business.



New York Jets (+2 ?) at Cincinnati Bengals



New York (9-7 SU, 9-7 ATS) and Cincinnati will start things Saturday with a 4:30 pm ET start. These teams played last week in New York, and Cincinnati mailed it in 37-0 with their playoff spot already secured.



Cincinnati (10-6 SU, 7-9 ATS) suffered some casualties in that game. Defensive tackle Pat Sims (forearm) is out for the playoffs. Wide receiver Chad Ochocinco hurt his knee, but should be able to go.



The Jets have a very good running game and defense. However rookie quarterback Mark Sanchez has been shaky all year, and likely won?t improve in a road playoff game.



New York will have a very conservative game plan, trying to keep this game close into the fourth quarter. Thomas Jones will be forced to run against an eight-man front, something he?s been successful at.



The Bengals? Carson Palmer must lead a balanced attack that includes running back Cedric Benson. Benson didn?t play last week.



Cincinnati was 6-2 SU (3-5 ATS) at home this year, and 1-7 ATS overall as a favorite.
 

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Playing the Wild Card

Playing the Wild Card

Playing the Wild Card
January 7, 2010
By Bodog

If someone thinks that parity is dead, then they haven?t seen this weekend?s Wild Card round. The card is littered with small favorites and the bettors are shying away from playing the pups. Except for one, that is.



Saturday: N.Y. Jets at Cincinnati (4:30 p.m. ET, NBC)



Rex Ryan believes that Jets (9-7 SU, 8-7 ATS) should be the favorites to win Super Bowl XLIV. They?re not; New York is one of the longshots on the futures market at 45-1, and the Bengals (10-6 SU, 7-8 ATS) are three-point favorites (+105) for Saturday?s Wild Card contest. Bettors are piling in on Cincinnati at about a 2:1 ratio according to the consensus reports at press time.



Ryan isn?t off base when he says that the Jets have the best defense in the NFL. They?re rated No. 1 overall in efficiency by Football Outsiders, and they also lead the league in more conventional stats like points allowed (14.8 per game) and yards allowed (251.6). It?s certainly hard to make an argument against them.



Cincinnati did get the benefit of the free look at Ryan?s defense last week in a 37-0 setback. Even though the score shows a blowout, it should be noted that Cincy treated this match as more of a preseason warmup than a regular season finale. They didn?t blitz QB Mark Sanchez (12 TDs, 20 INTs), but they almost certainly will on Saturday.



Saturday: Philadelphia at Dallas (8:00 p.m. ET, NBC)



These two teams couldn?t be ranked any closer as both the Eagles and Cowboys went 11-5 SU and 9-7 ATS. Philadelphia was ranked third in efficiency, with Dallas close behind in fifth. Yet the Cowboys are the biggest favorites on the Wild Card board at ?4. They were ?4 (?105) at the open, picking up a little extra juice with 57 percent support from the betting public.







Philly has been more of a public team than the ?Boys, as bettors began to leave Dallas? ship for an anticipated swoon in December. It never happened. The Cowboys went 3-0 SU and ATS to end the regular season, beating Philadelphia 24-0 in the finale as three-point home faves. The ?Boys also beat the Eagles (?3) 20-16 back at the Linc in Week 9.



The ?under? was the smart play as it cashed in for gamblers in both meetings during the regular season, with Dallas winning outright each game. However, the public has been beating the ?over? like a red-headed stepchild with the total only coming in at 45. The Cowboys defense has improved enough to drive the ?under? to the pay window in eight of the last nine games.



Sunday: Baltimore at New England (1:00 p.m. ET, CBS)



Don?t feel bad if you didn?t know who Julian Edelman was before this week. Edelman will be the man in charge of taking over for the Patriots? (10-6 SU, 7-7-2 ATS) Wes Welker, along with Randy Moss. He?ll be matching up against the Ravens (9-7 SU, 8-7-1 ATS), an elite defensive team that finished the year No. 1 in efficiency despite squeaking into the playoffs.



Even without one of their best targets, the Patriots are still 3.5-point favorites (?105) at Gillette Stadium, down from the standard ?110 juice as bettors shade ever so slightly to Baltimore. Timing is everything; sharps are grabbing the Ravens while they can with the spread at 3.5, in anticipation of a flood of public money on the Patriots over the weekend.



Sharps have also paid attention to the fact that New England?s defensive line is a little on the weak side, finishing 26th in the NFL in run blocking efficiency and 31 sacks. The Ravens have one of the best offensive lines in the NFL.



Sunday: Green Bay at Arizona (4:40 p.m. ET, FOX)



The smallest spread of the weekend is in Glendale, where the Cardinals (10-6 SU, 9-7 ATS) were originally favored by a field goal when the line opened up. Now Arizona is just a slight one-point ?chalk? thanks to bettors pounding the Packers. Consensus reports show 85 percent support for the Packers, the most profitable team in the NFL this season at 11-5 SU and 11-4-1 ATS.



Green Bay had little to no trouble in its 33-7 win over the Cardinals (?3) in Week 17, but Arizona was also in preseason mode with the NFC West already sewn up. The Packers took the money anyway for the sixth straight game to improve to 7-0-1 ATS over the second half of the season. They?re second only to Baltimore in overall efficiency and second in defensive efficiency, as well as second in yards allowed per game at 284.4.



The Cardinals were rather pedestrian in comparison at No. 13 in overall efficiency, but they too got a free look at the Packers last week and will adjust accordingly. The question is whether they have the talent to make it happen. WR Anquan Boldin (84 catches) has knee and ankle sprains and is currently listed as questionable for Sunday. Also, the status of CB Dominique Rodgers-Cromartie (bruised kneecap) remains uncertain.
 

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Las Vegas Playoff Moves

Las Vegas Playoff Moves

Las Vegas Playoff Moves


The Sports Books in Las Vegas will look to turn the tide on Saturday and Sunday with the NFL Wild Card weekend. Before I get into where and why the Sports Books are at the numbers they are now, we need to go back to Sunday night and Monday morning when most of Vegas put the lines up.

Wild Card weekend is the major exception to setting NFL playoff lines that has to have past history taken into serious consideration. Underdogs rule in this round, especially games where the favored number is set from 1 to 3 points.

As documented by Bruce Marshall of The Gold Sheet, Underdogs getting 1 to 3-points in the Wild Card round have gone 24-16-2 since 1978. As it turned out, two of the four games would be in that area with the other two very close.



The strategies and lines that went out on Sunday and Monday were vastly different throughout the city with a wide array of numbers for the shoppers. When I saw all the differing numbers, it reminded me of the old Vegas days before off-shore wagering when no one moved on air and there was nothing called a market number.

There were lots opinions out there and you could see the respect for the number ?3?. The book I like to reference the most when following lines is the Las Vegas Hilton Super Book because their shades on games generally seem to be more correct than most and they rarely use a market number. Jay Kornegay, Ed Salmons, and Jeff Sherman lead the staff of bookmakers at the Hilton and are the sharpest group in town.

Many of the Las Vegas Books opened the Bengals game 3-flat. Las Vegas Sports Consultants recommended the Bengals -4. The boys at the Hilton anticipated where the line was going to be, while respecting the number ?3? and tested the waters with Bengals -3 (+105) which basically baits any sharp out there, ?If you think the Bengals have value at 3 and you think the game will go to 3.5 or higher, come and get some plus money laying it.?

Well, obviously there wasn?t any sharp money to be found with the Bengals and soon the Hilton went to Bengals -3 (+110) after getting Jets money at +3 (-125) and then eventually down to -2.5-flat. That one move showed what people were willing to lay to get that 3-point value with the Dog in this round.

During the entire regular season, 15.2% of all NFL games landed ?3?. Over the last five seasons, ?3? has landed at a rate of 14.7% with 2006 coming at a robust 17.2% of the time.

Other Books went from their 3-flat Bengals number to 2.5 (-120) after taking bets on the Jets. The Hilton, through this whole process was able to generate an extra 15% and 20% juice on their wagers taken just by being a little creative and thinking outside the box.

The Bengals game is currently being booked across the board at 2.5-flat, but the Hilton got the better of it. Just about every Vegas Book doesn?t allow buys on or off three, so the bettors that took the points laying the high Hilton juice thought they had value laying up to an additional .20 cents to get to the all important number ?3?.

The same process occurred in similar fashion with Cardinals, except that game ran like Forrest Gump. The Hilton opened that game Cardinals -3 (+110) and they quickly moved to 2.5-flat. From there it ran all the way to Cards -1.

Thursday at the Coast Resorts Books, they moved the Packers to a 1-point favorite in a game they opened Cardinals -2.

?A 3-point move isn?t that bad when not crossing ?3?, said Scucci, right now the Packers are the trendy pick among most of the public and analysts. This will be our biggest game of the weekend not just because of the early action, but generally the last game on the board during a playoff weekend always generates the most action.?

?Even though we have moved the lines the other way, the public is taking three of the four favorites along with the Packers,? said Hilton Race and Sports Executive Director Jay Kornegay.

The Patriots had the biggest disparity from what was sent by LVSC and what was opened by the Books. LVSC sent out the Patriots a 6.5-point favorite while many opened them much lower, including the Hilton which started at 3.5 where it has stayed all week

The Cowboys-Eagles line has been steady all week with the Cowboys as 4-point favorites just about everywhere with the Hilton the low line at 3.5. This game features all kinds of stories beginning with DeSean Jackson?s Twitters saying something to the effect the Eagles are going to string up the Cowboys, to which the Cowboys -- who are 2-0 this season vs. the Eagles -- have posted it on their board for all to see.

The Cowboys on the other hand have the dilemma of dealing with their past failures, in particular Tony Romo and Wade Phillips. Neither have won a playoff game in their career. What will happen when, or if, Romo throws his first interception. He always seems to take it hard and they come in bunches. Should he struggle early in the game with all the mounting pressure, how will he react? On a positive note, we do know Romo DID NOT take a vacation prior to this playoff game. But the bad news is that he is still holding kicks.

Phillips has a lot to juggle himself. Not only is his job on the line -- win or you?re out -- but he also has to sit through Friday, January 8, 2010, the 10 year anniversary of the Music City Miracle where his Bills lost in the last second to the Titans where he unveiled one of his many dumb-founded looks.

Speaking of January 8, it?s Elvis? 75th birthday. Not only will his day be celebrated at Graceland, but the NBA teams in Memphis and New Orleans will have special Elvis nights honoring his birthday with Elvis look-alikes everywhere.

Las Vegas is the place where his career was reborn and there is no better place to get a feel for that era than at the Las Vegas Hilton, formerly the International where he played to sold out shows every time out during the early 70?s.

RIP EP, TCB!
 

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Coaching in the Playoffs

Coaching in the Playoffs

Coaching in the Playoffs

With the college bowl games now in the rear view mirror, let's examine the NFL Playoffs from a coaches' perspective. As you know, it's our contention that teams take on the personality of their head coach. Some play to win at all costs while others just play to win.


Here is a breakdown of how the current head coaches involved in this year's playoffs have fared in NFL post-season play in the past. Keep this list close too your schedule and refer to it before making a play. It can enhance your chances of winning (note: * designates a 'tie')?


Playoff Records
Team Coach SU ATS Favorite Underdog Best/Worst
Arizona Ken Whisenhunt 3-1 4-0 1-0 3-0 4-0 all games
Baltimore John Harbaugh 2-1 2-1 1-0 1-1 2-0 off win > 3
Cincinnati Marvin Lewis 0-1 0-1 0-0 0-1 none
Dallas Wade Phillips 1-4 1-4 0-1 1-3 0-3 off div opp
Green Bay Mike McCarthy 1-1 1-1 1-1 0-0 none
Indianapolis Jim Caldwell 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 none
Minnesota Brad Childress 0-1 0-1 0-0 0-1 none
New England Bill Belichick 15-4 9-9* 6-6* 3-3 1-5 vs opp off dog win
New Orleans Sean Payton 1-1 0-2 0-1 0-1 0-2 all games
NY Jets Rex Ryan 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 none
Philadelphia Andy Reid 10-9 11-8 5-6 6-2 4-1 w/revenge
San Diego Norv Turner 4-3 6-1 2-0 4-1 5-0 off DD win



Be sure to check back next week for an update on how home teams with rest fare in the NFL playoffs?
 

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NFL FIRST-ROUND PLAYOFFS: Eagles, Bengals eye reversals

NFL FIRST-ROUND PLAYOFFS: Eagles, Bengals eye reversals

NFL FIRST-ROUND PLAYOFFS: Eagles, Bengals eye reversals

Today's Week 17 rematches might go opposite way


Expect few dull moments in the NFL playoffs, which should be filled with intrigue for bettors and oddsmakers. The dominant teams throughout this season -- Indianapolis, New Orleans and Minnesota -- stumbled down the home stretch.

Meanwhile, teams such as San Diego, Dallas and Green Bay are charging their way into the playoffs with authority.

Don't think for a second that the eventual Super Bowl champion might not be playing today or Sunday. There is absolutely something to be said for maintaining a routine and getting hot at the right time.

Each of the past four Super Bowls featured a team that played in the wild-card round. In fact, three of the past four champions played in the first round of the playoffs. Pittsburgh, Indianapolis and the New York Giants went on to win titles, with Arizona coming up just short in last year's thrilling loss to the Steelers.

In a bizarre twist, three of this weekend's playoff games are rematches from Week 17. All three feature unique circumstances, but there has been an obvious impact on the wagering lines based on last week's results. Here's a preview of today's games:

? Philadelphia at Dallas (-4): The Cowboys were sent off as 3-point favorites over the Eagles last week, with the total closing at 47. Dallas dominated Philadelphia in the regular-season finale 24-0 and doubled the Eagles in total yards and time of possession in the process.

The shocking aspect of the game was that Cowboys quarterback Tony Romo had time to bake a cake in the pocket and subsequently proceeded to cook the Eagles' secondary. Look for Philadelphia to unleash the hounds today with countless blitz packages.

Eagles quarterback Donovan McNabb either lights it up or coughs it up. Last week he had that lost look on his face, laughing after every confounding miscue. It was reminiscent of his legendary pitiful performance at Cincinnati last season, when he didn't realize overtime could end in a tie. More often than not, however, he bounces back with a decent effort.

Dallas coach Wade Phillips has his team playing exceptional football, utilizing a balanced attack on offense and a defense that has posted back-to-back shutouts after containing the Saints three weeks ago.

The Cowboys face the challenge of beating the same talented team three times in a season. The pressure clearly is on Dallas and Phillips, who is 0-4 in the playoffs. Jerry Jones could cut the cord on Phillips in a Texas second if the Cowboys come up short.

In the two meetings with Philadelphia, Dallas did a remarkable job denying the big play. I think wideouts DeSean Jackson, Jeremy Maclin and Jason Avant will turn the tables and come up with a few quick strikes down the field, opening the underneath routes to tight end Brent Celek.

Last year, Philadelphia won road playoff games over the Vikings and Giants before falling to the Cardinals in the NFC title game. When push comes to shove, I have to side with Andy Reid over Phillips and take the Eagles plus the points.

? N.Y. Jets at Cincinnati (-21/2): The Jets pasted the Bengals 37-0 to get into the playoffs. Shoot holes through the Jets if you must for having the good fortune of facing two teams that basically rolled over while looking ahead to the postseason. But the bottom line is they're in, so deal with it.

Is the betting public overreacting to what they saw most recently? Money has supported the Jets throughout the week, as the game dropped below the key number of three.

We have to go between the lines to get a grip on what transpired. There's no way to prove it, but I'm certain the Bengals preferred the matchup with rookie quarterback Mark Sanchez this week as opposed to dealing with Matt Schaub, Andre Johnson and the Houston Texans. The troubling aspect of the beatdown was the Jets' dominance in the trenches.

The key to this game is simple. If Cincinnati can force Sanchez into third-and-long situations with regularity, the Bengals will advance.

Cincinnati running back Cedric Benson is fresh and should be a workhorse in this game. Running and stopping the run will get it done. Cincy has been solid all season, and you have to toss out last week's game at the Meadowlands. I'll go with the Bengals at home.
 

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BETWEEN THE LINES




Three reasons to like the Cowboys (-4) over the Eagles:
The Cowboys won both of their games against the Eagles this season, demonstrating they are the better team.
THE COWBOYS HAVE THE EDGE ON THE OFFENSIVE AND DEFENSIVE LINES.
THE COWBOYS' TONY ROMO HAS EXCELLED THE LAST MONTH OF THE SEASON, EVEN IN DALLAS LOSSES.

THREE REASONS TO LIKE THE COWBOYS-EAGLES UNDER (45):
WHEN THESE TWO TEAMS PLAYED EACH OTHER, BOTH GAMES WENT UNDER THE TOTAL. THE EAGLES HAVE SCORED A TOTAL OF 16 POINTS IN TWO GAMES AGAINST THE COWBOYS.
EIGHT OF THE PAST NINE COWBOYS GAMES HAVE GONE UNDER THE TOTAL AS THE DEFENSE HAS ALLOWED JUST 15 POINTS PER GAME.
THE COWBOYS, IF THEY GET THE LEAD, WILL TURN TO THEIR RUNNING GAME TO SHORTEN THE GAME. IF POSSIBLE, DALLAS WILL USE DEFENSE TO WIN THE GAME.

LAST WEEK: 1-1
SEASON: 13-19-2
 

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Top Trends and Angles

Top Trends and Angles

Top Trends and Angles
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Star Rating Game Time
NFL | (105) BALTIMORE @ (106) NEW ENGLAND | 01/10/2010 1:00 PM
Play ON NEW ENGLAND in the first half in All games when playing with 6 or less days rest
The record is 12 Wins and 1 Losses this season (+10.90 units)
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
NFL | (101) NY JETS @ (102) CINCINNATI | 01/09/2010 4:30 PM
Play AGAINST CINCINNATI using the money line in All games against AFC East division opponents
The record is 8 Wins and 27 Losses since 1992 (-27.40 units)
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
NFL | (107) GREEN BAY @ (108) ARIZONA | 01/10/2010 4:30 PM
Play OVER ARIZONA on the first half total in All games when playing against a team with a winning record in the second half of the season
The record is 9 Overs and 0 Unders for the last two seasons (+9.00 units)
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
NFL | (101) NY JETS @ (102) CINCINNATI | 01/09/2010 4:30 PM
Play OVER NY JETS on the first half total in All games in a road game where the first half total is between 16.5 and 17.5
The record is 13 Overs and 1 Unders since 1992 (+11.90 units)
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
NFL | (105) BALTIMORE @ (106) NEW ENGLAND | 01/10/2010 1:00 PM
Play ON NEW ENGLAND using the money line in All games in a home game where the total is between 42.5 and 45 points
The record is 22 Wins and 6 Losses since 1992 (+17.70 units)
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
NFL | (101) NY JETS @ (102) CINCINNATI | 01/09/2010 4:30 PM
Play AGAINST CINCINNATI using the money line in Home games against AFC East division opponents
The record is 5 Wins and 13 Losses since 1992 (-17.75 units)
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
NFL | (103) PHILADELPHIA @ (104) DALLAS | 01/09/2010 8:00 PM
Play ON PHILADELPHIA using the money line in All games off a division game
The record is 13 Wins and 3 Losses for the last three seasons (+12.00 units)
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Where the action is: Saturday's Wild Card games

Where the action is: Saturday's Wild Card games

Where the action is: Saturday's Wild Card games
By BETED.COM

Randy Scott is an oddsmaker for betED.com

New York Jets at Cincinnati Bengals (-2.5 -115, 34)

Opening Line: 2.5, 34.5

Where the early action is: 89 percent - Bengals

Comments: No wise action on this game yet. The public is all over Ciny here. This was a tough line to make as the Jets have won seven of their last eight matchups with the Bengals. Some books are using Bengals -3 with +110 as the vig. Because of the popularity on the Bengals we aren?t about to offer plus money yet so we added five cents to the -2.5 line to make it -115. But that might all change closer to game time if we don?t see any wise action come in. If it?s going to be a pure public game, then that will drive the line up to 3. We are still in a wait and watch mode.

Cincinnati has scored the fewest points of any team in the playoffs and is up against a top-ranked Jets defense. Early action was on the under 34.5, but has since evened out with the move to 34. There?s a good chance it will drop even more due to frigid weather conditions.

We are also receiving loads of Bengals teaser action moving the line to +3.5 or better and total points under 40 or better.

Philadelphia Eagles at Dallas Cowboys (-3.5, 45)

Opening Line: 4, 45

Where the early action is: 80 percent ? Eagles

Comments: Lots of Eagles backers here at +4. Still at +3.5 the action continues on Philadelphia. Both teams played to win last week and the Cowboys dominated the entire game and shut out the high scoring Eagles.

This is the rematch, same venue. This is the teams? third meeting this season. The Cowboys swept the season series with a 20-16 win in Week 9 and last week, 24-0.

The Cowboys are the hottest team in the league right now, riding a three-game winning streak. Dallas? quarterback Tony Romo was named NFC Offensive Player of the Month for December.
 

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THE HOT CORNER

THE HOT CORNER

THE HOT CORNER

MAL VAN VALKENBURG Review-Journal, 48-38-3 (overall record)

Today's best bet: Green Bay Packers (pick) over ARIZONA CARDINALS

When it comes to the NFL playoffs, I like going with the hot team, and that's the Green Bay Packers. Winners of seven of their last eight games, they have been a covering machine the past two months. The Cardinals boast a high-powered offense, but the Packers can match them TD for TD. Since November, the Cardinals have beaten only one team with a winning record.
 
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