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  • The Bum's April's End of the College Basketball Season Final Four !

    Final Four Betting Trends

    March 30, 2015


    NCAA Final Four Out

    It’s onward to Indy for the Final Four games.

    To put the wraps on the 2015 NCAA Tournament, listed below are some interesting trends and angles to as our Fab Four heads off to Nap Town this weekend.

    All results listed below are ATS (Against The Spread) and most recent, dating back as far as 1991 unless noted otherwise.

    FINAL 4 ROUND NOTES

    #1 Seeds not favored more than 5 points are 17-8 ATS (Duke, Kentucky and Wisconsin)

    #1 Seeds who are conference tourney champs are 4-1 ATS as a dog (Wisconsin)

    #1 Seeds who are conference tourney champs are 5-1 ATS off an ATS loss (Kentucky)

    ACC teams are 6-1 ATS (Duke)

    SEC teams are 0-3-1 ATS (Kentucky)

    Big 10 dogs are 3-5-1 ATS (Michigan State and Wisconsin)

    Teams off a SU dog win are 5-0-1 ATS (Wisconsin)

    Dogs who are 3-0 SUATS last 3 games are 8-17-1 ATS (Michigan State)

    Teams with revenge are 3-10 ATS (Michigan State and Wisconsin)

    CHAMPIONSHIP NOTES

    #1 Seed favs. are 8-2 ATS

    #5 or worse Seeds are 1-6 SU & 2-5 ATS

    Favorites of 5 < pts are 12-2 ATS

    Favorites who scored 80 > pts in the Final 4 round are 5-1 ATS

    Teams with a win percentage of .810 < are 2-6 ATS

    Dogs > 2 pts who allowed 60 > pts in the Final 4 round are 0-5 ATS

    SEC teams are 3-1 ATS

    ACC teams are 7-3 ATS

    Big 10 teams are 0-5 ATS

    COACH ME UP

    Duke’s Mike Krzyzewski is:
    65-19 SU and 41-41-2 ATS in NCAA tournament
    48-12 SU and 35-25 ATS vs. Big 10
    14-4 SU and 10-8 ATS vs. SEC
    2-0 SU and 1-1 ATS vs. John Calipari
    8-1 SU and 5-4 ATS vs. Tom Izzo
    2-1 SU and 2-1 ATS vs. Bo Ryan

    Kentucky’s John Calipari is:
    47-14 SU and 35-27-2 ATS in NCAA tournament
    17-10 SU and 13-14 ATS vs. ACC
    11-6 SU and 9-7-1 ATS vs. Big 10
    1-1 SU and 1-1 ATS vs. Tom Izzo
    0-2 SU and 1-1 ATS vs. Mike Krzyzewski
    1-0 SU and 0-0-1 ATS vs. Bo Ryan

    Michigan State’s John Tom Izzo is:
    46-16 SU and 36-24-2 ATS in NCAA tournament
    13-24 SU and 18-19 ATS vs. ACC
    250-122 SU and 206-171-4-1 ATS vs. Big 10
    15-4 SU an 12-6-1 ATS vs. SEC
    1-1 SU and 1-1 ATS vs. John Calipari
    1-2 1-8 SU and 5-4 ATS vs. Mike Krzyzewski
    12-16 SU and 16-12 ATS vs. Bo Ryan

    Wisconsin’s Bo Ryan is:
    24-13 SU and 21-14-2 ATS in NCAA tournament
    11-10 SU and 15-6 ATS vs. ACC
    189-83 SU and 135-133-4 ATS vs. Big 10
    8-5 SU and 7-4-2 ATS vs. SEC
    0-1 SU and 0-0-1 ATS vs. John Calipari
    16-12 SU and 12-16 ATS vs. Tom Izzo
    1-2 SU and 1-2 ATS vs. Mike Krzyzewski

    There you have it, trends and notes of teams and coaches for the NCAA Final Four and Championship games played over the last 26 years.

    Enjoy the rest of the ‘Dance’.
    Remember the 3 G's Gambling, Golf, Girls not in any particular order.....

  • #2
    Final Four Betting Outlook

    March 30, 2015


    The Final Four!

    It is a great week for sports fans with the start of baseball, the NBA stretch run, the Final Four and the culmination of the college basketball season next Monday at Lucas Oil Stadium in Indianapolis, Indiana for the national championship. It's clear that it's not the teams the start the season hot, but the ones that get hot when it really matters -- March and April!

    Many things happen over the course of a long season. Some teams play great basketball in December and January, only to break down from injuries or run out of steam down the stretch.

    For example, North Carolina started 17-4 but as February started the Tar Heels showed vulnerability, losing six of 10. A year ago Syracuse started hot before losing its first game in mid-February. From that point on they struggled to score and win, getting bounced by North Carolina State in the ACC Tournament.

    It works the other way, too. A team can have a tough non-conference schedule or need time to work in new pieces, then get hot down the stretch. Last season Michigan State overcame injuries in mid-season before getting healthy - - and hot, ripping through the Big 10 tournament with a 3-0 record both straight up and against the spread.

    It’s important to examine how a team played with overall stats, but also in three different sections:

    1) Early non-conference play

    2) Conference play

    3) Tournament time

    Two years ago, Miami started 22-3 before the national spotlight and a key injury took a toll, losing in the tourney to Marquette, 71-61. The previous year Missouri started 17-0 before stumbling in midseason, while Villanova won 16 of 17 to start the season, then broke down with injuries and poor play, finishing 3-10 SU and 1-12 ATS.

    Kansas always seems to have the spotlight on it. This season they started great, then had some erratic play down the stretch, including losses at Oklahoma, Kansas State, West Virginia, Oklahoma State and Iowa State. The previous season the Jayhawks had a late season injury to 7-footer Joel Imbiid (11PPG, 8 RPG), the Big 12 Defensive Player of the Year, a huge blow.

    The Jayhawks may have won the title seven years ago, but nine years ago it was a very different story: The Jayhawks started 20-1, only to go 3-6 straight up and 1-8 against the spread the last nine games. They never made it to the Final Four because of a 64-63 loss to Bucknell as a 13½-point favorite in the first round.

    Other times an easy early season schedule, youth, bad coaching, untimely injuries, bad luck, poor team chemistry or a combination of these can cut down a potentially great team. Youth and a loss of its best players toppled Florida after winning back-to-back titles and prevented a North Carolina repeat in 2010.

    Duke has seen its title hopes dashed in recent years, a stunning loss to Lehigh as 11-point chalk and last season getting bounced by Mercer, 78-71. This is nothing new. Gonzaga was taken down by Wichita two years ago, and four years ago No. 1 seed Pittsburgh saw its hopes crushed in a loss to Butler, 71-70. A few years ago No. 2 seed Georgetown took itself out of the tournament, blowing a 46-29 lead by trying to stall against Davidson with far too much time left.

    It is very easy for sports bettors to look into trends to try and predict the future.

    Trends can be helpful if there are reasons to support it. For example, from a betting perspective, what stands out about the last 10 Finals Fours?

    2014
    Florida 53 -6.5
    UConn 63 - -126

    Wisconsin 73 - 139
    Kentucky 74 -2

    2013
    Wichita State 68 -131
    Louisville 72 - -11

    Syracuse 56 - 131
    Michigan 61 -2

    2012
    Ohio State 62 - 3
    Kansas 64 - 136

    Louisville 61 - 136.5
    Kentucky 69 -8

    2011
    Butler 70 - 3.5
    VCU 62 - 133

    Kentucky 55 - 131
    UConn 56 - +2.5

    2010
    Butler 52 - 1.5
    Michigan State 50 - 125

    West Virginia 57 - 130
    Duke 78 - -2.5

    2009
    Michigan State 82 - 135
    UConn 73 - 4

    North Carolina 83 - 7.5
    Villanova 69 - 160

    2008
    Kansas 84 - 158
    North Carolina 66 - 3

    UCLA 63 - 135
    Memphis 78 - 3

    2007
    Georgetown 60 - 1
    Ohio St. 67 - 130

    UCLA 66 - 131
    Florida 76 - 3

    2006
    George Mason 58 - 132
    Florida 73 - -6

    LSU 45 - -2
    UCLA 59 - 123

    2005
    Louisville 57 - 144
    Illiniois 72 - -3

    Michigan St. 71 - 153
    North Carolina 87 - -2

    2004
    Georgia Tech 67 - 139
    Oklahoma St. 65 - -4

    UConn 79 - -2
    Duke 78 - 144

    2003
    Marquette 61 - -4½
    Kansas 94 - 153½

    Syracuse 95 - 153
    Texas 84 - -3

    2002
    Indiana 73 - 134
    Oklahoma 64 -6½

    Maryland 97 - 168
    Kansas 88 - -1½

    What stands out is that it has been the day of the dog. The underdog is 15-9-1 against the number, with 12 dogs winning straight up, including UConn last year. In addition, the games have gone 12-6 to the ‘under’ the last nine years.

    You can even make an argument that this would be the right time of the season to take a shot with the ‘dog on the money-line. However, this is where one needs patience, because trends can also be a fool's paradise.

    If you go back to the previous three Final Fours before the above content analysis, 1999-01, we find Duke topping Maryland 95-84, Arizona blowing out Michigan State 80-61, Michigan State beating Wisconsin 53-41, Florida topping North Carolina 71-59, UConn beating Ohio State 64-58 and Duke surviving Michigan State 68-62. What stands out is that the favorite won and covered in five of six, for a hefty 5-1 spread record.

    Even looking at totals, a similar pattern emerges. The last 13 years the ‘over/under’ has been almost equal, 14-12 ‘under’ in the Final Four. The three years before that the ‘under’ prevailed at a 5-1 clip. All of a sudden, those who look solely at trends as the key to the sports betting kingdom are stuck at close to a .500 winning percentage ATS.

    For the record, going back the last 20 years, the ‘under’ is 24-16 in the Final Four, with 21 ‘dogs covering while 18 favorites have gotten the money with one push. Again, trends are worth examining, but there needs to be reasons behind them if you're serious about putting down hard earned money on a side.

    Perhaps the most significant stat that stands out is that 16 of the 21 dogs that covered ended up winning the game outright, which shows how competitive and relatively evenly matched the games become when teams get this far in the season.
    Remember the 3 G's Gambling, Golf, Girls not in any particular order.....

    Comment


    • #3
      2015 NIT, CBI, CIT Results

      March 31, 2015


      National Invitation Tournament (NIT)
      REGION 1 - OLD DOMINION
      Date Matchup Score ATS Result
      Mar. 18 Charleston Southern at Old Dominion (-13) 65-56 Underdog-Under (142)
      Mar. 18 Green Bay at Illinois State (-2.5) 69-56 Favorite-Under (139.5)
      Mar. 17 William & Mary at Tulsa (-7) 70-67 Underdog-Under (142.5)
      Mar. 17 UTEP at Murray State (-5.5) 81-66 Favorite-Under (151)
      Mar. 23 Murray State (+3) at Tulsa 83-62 Underdog-Over (143)
      Mar. 23 Illinois State at Old Dominion (-4.5) 50-49 Underdog-Under (128.5)
      Mar. 25 Murray State at Old Dominion (-1) 72-69 Favorite-Over (139)


      REGION 2 - RICHMOND
      Date Matchup Score ATS Result
      Mar. 18 St. Francis Brooklyn at Richmond (-10) 84-74 Push-Over (132)
      Mar. 18 Arizona State (+1.5) at UConn 68-61 Underdog-Under (134.5)
      Mar. 17 North Carolina Central at Miami, Fl. (-8.5) 75-71 Underdog-Over (128)
      Mar. 17 Illinois at Alabama (-2) 79-58 Favorite-Over (135.5)
      Mar. 21 Alabama at Miami, Fl. (-4.5) 73-66 Favorite-Over (135.5)
      Mar. 22 Arizona State at Richmond (-4.5) 76-70 (OT) Favorite-Over (136)
      Mar. 24 Miami, Fl. (+2.5) at Richmond 63-61 Underdog-Under (133)


      REGION 3 - TEMPLE
      Date Matchup Score ATS Result
      Mar. 18 Bucknell at Temple (-12.5) 73-67 Underdog-Under (144)
      Mar. 17 George Washington (+4.5) at Pittsburgh 60-54 Underdog-Under (135)
      Mar. 17 Montana at Texas A&M (-10) 81-64 Favorite-Over (134.5)
      Mar. 17 Central Michigan at Louisiana Tech (-6.5) 89-79 Favorite-Over (154.5)
      Mar. 22 George Washington at Temple (-4.5) 90-77 Favorite-Over (128.5)
      Mar. 23 Louisiana Tech (+3) at Texas A&M 84-72 Underdog-Over (143)
      Mar. 25 Louisiana Tech at Temple (-4) - Favorite-Under (146)


      REGION 4 - COLORADO STATE
      Date Matchup Score ATS Result
      Mar. 18 South Dakota State (+8) at Colorado State 86-76 Underdog-Over (153)
      Mar. 18 Vanderbilt (+3) at Saint Mary's 75-64 Underdog-Over (143.5)
      Mar. 17 UC Davis at Stanford (-8.5) 77-64 Favorite-Under (151)
      Mar. 17 Iona at Rhode Island (-7) 88-75 Favorite-Over (153.5)
      Mar. 20 South Dakota State at Vanderbilt (-8.5) 92-77 Favorite-Over (148)
      Mar. 22 Rhode Island at Stanford (-5) 74-65 Favorite-Under (143)
      Mar. 24 Vanderbilt at Stanford (-4.5) 78-75 Underdog-Over (146)


      SEMIFINALS & FINALS
      Date Matchup Score ATS Result
      Mar. 31 Miami, Fl. (+1) vs. Temple 60-57 Underdog-Under (138)
      Mar. 31 Stanford (-4) vs. Old Dominion 67-60 Favorite-Under (133)
      Apr. 2 Miami, Fl. vs. Stanford - -


      College Basketball Invitational (CBI)
      FIRST ROUND
      Date Matchup Score ATS Result
      Mar. 17 Rider at Loyola Chicago (-5.5) 62-59 Underdog-Under (130)
      Mar. 18 Gardner-Webb at Colorado (-11) 87-78 Underdog-Over (159)
      Mar. 18 Pepperdine at Seattle (+5) 62-45 Underdog-Under (126)
      Mar. 18 Stony Brook at Mercer (-2) 72-70 Push-Over (132)
      Mar. 18 Eastern Michigan at Louisiana Monroe (+1.5) 71-67 Underdog-Over (131.5)
      Mar. 18 Vermont (+6) at Hofstra 85-81 Underdog-Over (154)
      Mar. 18 Radford (+1) at Delaware State 78-57 Underdog-Under (154)
      Mar. 18 UC Santa Barbara at Oral Roberts (+3) 91-87 Underdog-Over (144.5)


      QUARTERFINALS AND SEMIFINALS
      Date Matchup Score ATS Result
      Mar. 23 Radford at Vermont (-8.5) 78-71 Underdog-Over (140.5)
      Mar. 23 UL Monroe (+4.5) at Mercer 71-69 Underdog-OVer (130.5)
      Mar. 23 Oral Roberts at Loyola-Chicago (-6) 86-78 Favorite-Over (141)
      Mar. 23 Colorado at Seattle (+5.5) 72-65 Underdog-Under (141.5)
      Mar. 25 Vermont at UL-Monroe (+1) 71-65 Underdog-Over (134)
      Mar. 25 Seattle at Loyola-Chicago (-10) 63-48 Favorite-Under (135)


      FINALS (BEST-OF-THREE)
      Date Matchup Score ATS Result
      Mar. 30 Louisiana Monroe at Loyola-Chicago (-5.5) 65-58 Favorite-Under (128.5)
      Apr. 1 Loyola-Chicago at Louisiana Monroe - -
      Apr. 3 Loyola-Chicago at Louisiana Monroe - -


      CollegeInsider.com Postseason Tournament (CIT)
      FIRST ROUND
      Date Matchup Score ATS Result
      Mar. 16 New Hampshire at NJIT (-6.5) 84-77 Favorite-Over (132)
      Mar. 17 Eastern Illinois (+7) at Oakland 97-91 Underdog-Over (147)
      Mar. 17 James Madison at USC Upstate (-5.5) 73-72 Underdog-Over (144)
      Mar. 17 Bowling Green (-5.5) at Saint Francis (PA) 67-64 Underdog-Under (135)
      Mar. 17 Norfolk State at Eastern Kentucky (-10.5) 81-75 Underdog-Over (139)
      Mar. 17 UL-Lafayette (-2.5) at Incarnate Word 83-68 Favorite-Under (162)
      Mar. 18 UMES at High Point (-8) 70-64 Underdog-Under (149)
      Mar. 18 Dartmouth at Canisius (-3) 87-72 Favorite-Over (131.5)
      Mar. 18 Texas A&M Corpus Christi (+6.5) at Florida Gulf Coast 75-69 Underdog-Over (135)
      Mar. 18 Cleveland State (+1) at Western Michigan 86-57 Underdog-Over (140.5)
      Mar. 18 Kent State (+4) at Middle Tennessee 68-56 Underdog-Under (129)
      Mar. 18 UNC Wilmington at Sam Houston State (-8) 87-71 Favorite-Over (142)
      Mar. 18 Northern Arizona (-2) at Grand Canyon 75-70 Favorite-Under (151)
      Mar. 18 IPFW at Evansville (-7) 82-77 Underdog-Over (150)
      Mar. 18 Sacramento State (-2) at Portland 73-66 Favorite-Under (150)
      Mar. 19 UT Martin (+2.5) at Northwestern State 104-79 Underdog-Over (176)


      SECOND ROUND AND QUARTERFINALS
      Date Matchup Score ATS Result
      Mar. 20 High Point at Eastern Kentucky (-5.5) 66-65 Underdog-Under (139.5)
      Mar. 21 Canisius (+8) at Bowling Green 82-59 Underdog-Over (138)
      Mar. 21 Tennessee-Martin (+3.5) at South Carolina Upstate 60-49 Underdog-Under (143)
      Mar. 21 UL-Lafayette (+6.5) at Sam Houston State 71-70 Underdog-Under (148.5)
      Mar. 21 Northern Arizona (+3.5) at Sacramento State 78-73 Underdog-Over (146)
      Mar. 23 Cleveland State at NJIT (+3) 80-77 Underdog-Over (140)
      Mar. 23 Evansville (-3) at Eastern Illinois 83-68 Favorite-Over (147)
      Mar. 23 Kent State (-3) at Texas A&M Corpus Christi 69-65 Favorite-Under (135.5)
      Mar. 25 Tennessee Martin (+6) at Eastern Kentucky 70-69 Underdog-Push (139)
      Mar. 26 Evansville (+3) at UL-Lafayette 89-82 Underdog-Over (154)
      Mar. 27 Kent State at Northern Arizona (-2) 74-73 (OT) Underdog-Over (137)
      Mar. 28 Canisius at NJIT (-2.5) 78-73 Favorite-Over (145)


      SEMIFINALS & FINALS
      Date Matchup Score ATS Result
      Mar. 31 Tennessee Martin at Evansville (-6.5) 79-66 Favorite-Under (148)
      Mar. 31 NJIT at Northern Arizona (-4.5) 68-61 Favorite-Under (144)
      Apr. 2 Northern Arizona at Evansville - -
      Remember the 3 G's Gambling, Golf, Girls not in any particular order.....

      Comment


      • #4
        Armadillo: Wednesday's six-pack

        -- Golden State is 52-7 when Andrew Bogut plays, 9-6 when he doesn't.

        -- Average major league salary will be over $4M this year for first time.

        -- On top of that, ballplayers get $100.50 a day in meal money on the road.

        -- Serious question: why do college football teams practice in the spring?

        -- Gregg Marshall has won nine league titles in 17 years as a head coach.

        -- It is supposed to be 61 in Albany tomorrow; last time it was above 50 was December 27. This is not an April Fools' joke, at least I hope it isn't.


        **********

        Armadillo: Wednesday's List of 13: Happy April Fools' Day!!!!

        13) Cubs sent star prospect Kris Bryant to AAA, so they can keep him under team control for another year down the road; thats their choice, but don't tell me you're trying to win if you send one of your best guys to the minors, even if only for two or three weeks. How many pennant races come down to the last week or the last day of the season?

        12) Mark McLemore played 19 years in the big leagues, hitting .259 with a .349 on-base percentage in 7,239 plate appearances, so he knows a lot and is now a TV analyst for the Rangers, but he claimed the Cubs sending Bryant down was "so he could work on some things", which is total BS. McLemore has kind of a condescending tone that a lot of former athletes have-- he should lose it if he wants to be good on television.

        11) Does every NBA team visit the White House? The 76ers were there this week; think that practice will continue after the 2016 election?

        10) Miami 60, Temple 57-- Teams combined to go 8-40 from arc in brickfest that Temple led by five at half. Miami played without PG Rodriguez for third game in a row, which will help their young players next season.

        9) Stanford 67, Old Dominion 60-- Cardinal led 25-4, blew the lead, then pulled away late; ODU sub Ross was 7-7, rest of team was 14-54, with star Freeman a 6-24 disaster. Stanford-Miami is your NIT final Thursday night.

        8) 7,183 fans at Madison Square Garden for that twinbill; it is funny that the media refers to MSG as the "mecca of basketball", when they had 5,583 fans in Flagstaff, Arizona for the NJIT-Northern Arizona game, and Dayton annually puts 10,000+ fans in their arena for the NCAA play-in games.

        7) 35 of the 99 golfers at The Masters this week didn't go to college; of the 64 who did, six went to Georgia. No other school has more than three.

        6) I'm not criticizing DePaul for re-hiring Dave Leitao, but it is ludicrous that the Blue Demons paid a search firm to find a new coach, then came back with the name of a guy who coached that same team ten years ago.
        What exactly do athletic directors do? Go on the Interweb, look up names of some good teams and find out who the assistant coaches are-- its not hard!!!!

        5) Turner Sports needs to promote play-by-play guy Kevin Calabro to a more prominent role; he is very, very good. Calabro was the Sonics' announcer when they played in Seattle- he does work on the Pac-12 Network and does stuff on ESPN Radio but he is so much better than most of the play-by-play guys that work hoops now.

        4) Baltimore Ravens signed QB Matt Schaub to back up Joe Flacco, which is a sure sign of the QB shortage the NFL has right now.

        3) San Diego hired alum Lamont Smith to replace the fired Bill Grier as its coach; Smith was a recruiter at New Mexico, won't be as good a tactician as Grier is, but he'll get better players. Toreros' brass must be tired of getting whacked by San Diego State every December, then being a middling team in a pretty good WCC. We'll see.

        2) Seahawks are really going to let Russell Wilson play out his rookie contract, with chance he could eventually walk as a free agent? Why would you purposely tick off your starting QB? Wilson walked out on NC State once, he'll do it again. You don't want to go hunting for a new QB in this day and age.

        1) Remember, its April Fools Day!!!! Don't believe everything you hear today, except in this space, of course.....
        Remember the 3 G's Gambling, Golf, Girls not in any particular order.....

        Comment


        • #5
          See spot. See spot bet: This week's best spot bet opportunities

          Letdown spot

          Opening Day is a big deal for MLB clubs and brings with it plenty of jitters for Big League teams, some more than others. The Oakland Athletics seem to let those season debut butterflies get the best of them, losing 10 straight games on Opening Day. Oakland kicked off last year’s campaign with a 2-0 loss to Cleveland at home.

          The A’s have been outscored 50-13 in that 10-season Opening Day drought. Oakland has had the misfortune of beginning the season against the Seattle Mariners and their staff ace Felix Hernandez in half of those games, including four straight years from 2010 to 2013. This time around, Oakland opens the 2015 season at home to the Texas Rangers Monday. Can they avoid another Opening Day letdown?

          Lookahead spot

          The Chicago Bulls are clinging to third place in the Eastern Conference, just a game up on Toronto in the standings. The Bulls have a monster matchup ahead on the schedule this weekend, visiting LeBron James and the Cleveland Cavaliers on Easter Sunday. But before then, the Bulls have a home date versus the Detroit Pistons Friday.

          With the holiday weekend, the Bulls will be trying to cram in as much family time as they can around these games, which can often leave players unfocused – especially when you’re up against a non-contender like Detroit and staring down a showdown with the Cavs. The Pistons knocked off the Bulls 107-91 on March 21 and won 100-91 on February 20 with both games coming in Motown.

          Schedule spot

          The Washington Capitals are fighting to stay in the postseason picture, currently sitting in seventh in the Eastern Conference standings. They’re just three points ahead of No. 8 Boston and six points past Ottawa. The Capitals have a home stand against Carolina Tuesday then hit the road for a short three-game trip that could make or break their season.
          Washington travels to Montreal Thursday to play the first-place Canadiens, then heads to Canada’s capital for a showdown with the Senators Saturday. The Capitals complete their 3-in-4 nights trek Sunday with a final stop in Detroit to take on a Red Wings team currently in sixth but tied with Washington at 92 points.
          Remember the 3 G's Gambling, Golf, Girls not in any particular order.....

          Comment


          • #6
            NCAAB
            Dunkel

            Wednesday, April 1


            Loyola-Chicago vs Louisiana-Monroe

            Game 525-526
            April 1, 2015 @ 8:00 pm

            Dunkel Rating:
            Loyola-Chicago
            59.300
            Louisiana-Monroe
            57.726
            Dunkel Team:
            Dunkel Line:
            Dunkel Total:
            Loyola-Chicago
            by 1 1/2
            120
            Vegas Team:
            Vegas Line:
            Vegas Total:
            Louisiana-Monroe
            by 2 1/2
            125
            Dunkel Pick:
            Loyola-Chicago
            (+2 1/2); Under




            NCAAB
            Long Sheet

            Wednesday, April 1

            --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

            LOYOLA-IL (23 - 13) at LA-MONROE (24 - 13) - 4/1/2015, 8:00 PM
            There are no Top Trends with records of significance that apply to this game.

            Head-to-Head Series History
            LOYOLA-IL is 1-0 against the spread versus LA-MONROE over the last 3 seasons
            LOYOLA-IL is 1-0 straight up against LA-MONROE over the last 3 seasons
            1 of 1 games in this series have gone UNDER THE TOTAL over the last 3 seasons

            --------------------------------------------------------------------------------




            NCAAB
            Armadillo's Write-Up

            Wednesday, April 1

            CBI games (best-of-3 series, Loyola leads, 1-0)
            Loyola (-5.5) won Game 1 of this series 65-58 at home Monday, in game they trailed 26-24 at half; Ramblers shot 56% inside arc, have edge in depth- UL-Monroe played only two subs for total of 23:00. Warhawks won five of last seven games, winning last three home games by 3-4-6 points; they're an experienced (#62) team that is bit better on defense than offense. Loyola won three of last four road games, but their last road game was Feb 25. Sun Belt teams are 6-2 vs spread this postseason, 2-0 as favorites. MVC teams are 9-5 vs spread, 2-0 as underdogs.




            NCAAB

            Wednesday, April 1

            ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
            Trend Report
            ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

            8:00 PM
            LOYOLA OF CHICAGO vs. LOUISIANA-MONROE
            Loyola of Chicago is 4-1 SU in its last 5 games on the road
            Louisiana-Monroe is 18-7 SU in its last 25 games
            The total has gone UNDER in 8 of Louisiana-Monroe's last 12 games at home
            Remember the 3 G's Gambling, Golf, Girls not in any particular order.....

            Comment


            • #7
              Armadillo: Thursday's six-pack

              Best six, worst six major league teams in one-run games last season.

              San Diego, 33-21 Cincinnati, 22-38

              Baltimore, 32-23 Houston, 17-28

              St Louis, 32-23 Seattle, 18-27

              LA Dodgers, 25-20 Toronto, 15-20

              LA Angels, 27-22 Oakland, 21-28

              Milwaukee, 23-19 Arizona, 23-30


              **********

              Armadillo: Thursday's List of 13: Nobody asked me, but.........

              13) Gregg Marshall stays at Wichita State, which came up with a $3.3M salary to keep their coach out of Alabama. Basketball is serious business.

              12) Where does the Crimson Tide turn now? Steve Prohm? Richard Pitino? If you take a new job, no matter what the money is like, you better be sure you can win there or else you're fired three years later. Or sooner.

              11) Speaking of which, the Cubs fired Rich Renteria last fall after one season as manager, when Joe Maddon became available. Would love to see a TV network scoop Renteria up so we can get his insights on what managing the Cubs is like and what getting the boot after only one season is like.

              10) Curious to me how Dave Martinez is the only coach who went from Tampa to Chicago with Joe Maddon; most of the rest are still with the Rays.

              9) NFL Draft is four weeks from tonight and the top two QBs aren't going to be there. The more I think about Jameis Winston, the more I think I'd pass on taking him. Too many questions; I'm thinking Jimbo Fisher insulated him a lot from public scrutiny, and his NFL coach ain't going to be doing that. Life in the fishbowl can be unpleasant if you struggle on the field.

              8) Supposedly, 12 Florida State kids might get drafted this year, which means Coach Fisher has a rebuilding job ahead of him, including starting a new QB. Winston lost one game in two seasons as a starter; he'll be hard to replace.

              7) I'm not a morning person, but one of the best things about mornings are sausage biscuits with egg at McDonald's. Sadly, they stop serving them at 10:30, which is way too early for this late riser, but there is hope- McDonald's is going to start testing serving 24-hour breakfast in San Diego this spring.

              If this goes well and they start serving breakfast 24 hours a day, the way Jack in the Box does out west, it will be tremendous. Sausage biscuits are terrific!!!!

              6) People bet on exhibition baseball games; Pirates played the Orioles on the road last night-- Baltimore used a DH, while Pittsburgh didn't, since their pitchers have to bat next week. Game ended in a 3-3 tie, but if you bet the Orioles, you had an edge.

              5) There have been 300+ college basketball transfers; there are 351 D-I teams, so you do the math on how many kids make the wrong decision, or become unhappy with their playing time. Georgia Sate's Ron Hunter says he recruits some kids he knows he can't get, on hope that if they decide to transfer, they'll consider Georgia State then..

              4) Speaking of Hunter, how do some of these teams hire new coaches without giving him an interview? He's won at IUPUI and Georgia State, not exactly Kentucky/UCLA.

              3) Over/under total for Mets and Bronx Bombers are both 81.5; when was last time the Bronx total wasn't higher than the Mets' expectations?

              2) Chris Mullin is likeable; he was a great player, enjoyed his work on TV, hope he wins at St John's, but wasn't it a little weird how prominent Lou Carnesecca was at Mullin's press conference? Carnesecca is 90, has been out of coaching 23 years-- all that went thru my mind watching the press conference was that Carnesecca is still pulling strings behind the scenes, which if true, is an odd way to run a business.

              1) Quote of the Day, part II: "20th pick in this (NFL) Draft is the same as the 50th pick, to me." unnamed NFL scout to themmqb.com. All of which means the 2nd round could be almost as much fun as the first round.
              Remember the 3 G's Gambling, Golf, Girls not in any particular order.....

              Comment


              • #8
                NCAAB
                Dunkel

                Thursday, April 2


                StanfordvsMiami (Fla.)
                Game 707-708
                April 2, 2015 @ 9:00 pm

                Dunkel Rating:
                Stanford
                66.955
                Miami (Fla.)
                63.543
                Dunkel Team:
                Dunkel Line:
                Dunkel Total:
                Stanford
                by 3 1/2
                140
                Vegas Team:
                Vegas Line:
                Vegas Total:
                Stanford
                by 1 1/2
                134 1/2
                Dunkel Pick:
                Stanford
                (-1 1/2); Over


                Northern ArizonavsEvansville

                Game 709-710
                April 2, 2015 @ 7:00 pm

                Dunkel Rating:
                Northern Arizona
                55.376
                Evansville
                65.275
                Dunkel Team:
                Dunkel Line:
                Dunkel Total:
                Evansville
                by 10
                154 1/2
                Vegas Team:
                Vegas Line:
                Vegas Total:
                Evansville
                by 7 1/2
                141 1/2
                Dunkel Pick:
                Evansville
                (-7 1/2); Over




                NCAAB
                Long Sheet

                Thursday, April 2

                --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

                STANFORD (23 - 13) vs. MIAMI (25 - 12) - 4/2/2015, 9:00 PM There are no Top Trends with records of significance that apply to this game.

                Head-to-Head Series History
                There were no past matchups in this series during this time period.

                --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

                N ARIZONA (23 - 14) at EVANSVILLE (23 - 12) - 4/2/2015, 7:00 PM There are no Top Trends with records of significance that apply to this game.

                Head-to-Head Series History
                There were no past matchups in this series during this time period.

                --------------------------------------------------------------------------------




                NCAAB
                Armadillo's Write-Up

                Thursday, April 2

                NIT games
                Stanford is 12-3 outside Pac-12, winning four straight in this tournament after going 4-8 in last 12 pre-NIT games. Cardinal lost by 11 to Duke in its only ACC game; they've got good size, experience and shoot ball well but blew 21-point lead to ODU in semis Tuesday. Miami is 14-3 outside ACC, with all four wins in this event by seven or less points. ACC teams are 12-11 vs spread this postseason, 6-2 as underdogs; Pac-12 favorites are 6-5 this postseason. Miami PG Rodriguez missed last three games.

                CBI games (best-of-3 series, Loyola wins, 2-0)

                CIT tournament
                Evansville is 14-2 outside MVC, which won CBI (Loyola) last nite; Purple Aces won first two home games in this tournament by 5-13 points. Long trip, quick turnaround for Northern Arizona after they won at home in front of 5,800+ fans Tuesday, quite an event; Lumberjacks are 8-8 outside Big Sky, 1-4 vs top 100 teams, with only win vs #77 St Mary's in December- they've got five seniors in rotation. Big Sky teams are 4-3 vs spread this postseason, 1-2 as a dog. Missouri Valley teams are 7-5 against spread as a favorite.




                NCAAB

                Thursday, April 2

                ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                Trend Report
                ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

                7:00 PM
                NORTHERN ARIZONA vs. EVANSVILLE
                The total has gone OVER in 6 of Northern Arizona's last 9 games on the road
                Northern Arizona is 4-2 SU in its last 6 games on the road
                Evansville is 1-5 ATS in its last 6 games at home
                Evansville is 4-1 SU in its last 5 games

                9:00 PM
                STANFORD vs. MIAMI
                No trends available
                The total has gone UNDER in 4 of Miami's last 6 games
                Miami is 7-1 SU in its last 8 games
                Remember the 3 G's Gambling, Golf, Girls not in any particular order.....

                Comment


                • #9
                  NCAAB

                  Thursday, April 2

                  ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                  NIT Finals Betting Preview: Stanford vs. Miami
                  ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

                  Stanford Cardinal vs. Miami Hurricanes (+1.5, 134.5)

                  Chasson Randle is one win away from bookending his Stanford career with NIT championships and can complete his senior season in style with a victory against Miami (Fla.) on Thursday at Madison Square Garden. Randle became the Cardinal's all-time leading scorer on Tuesday in a semifinal win against Old Dominion as he scored 24 points to move his four-year total to 2,350 points, passing Todd Lichti's mark that stood for more than 25 years. Randle was Stanford's leading scorer as a freshman on its 2011-12 team that defeated Minnesota in the NIT championship game.

                  The Cardinal are aiming for their third NIT championship - they also won it in 1991 - while the Hurricanes had never even made the semifinals in 11 previous NIT appearances. Miami slipped past Temple in Tuesday's first semifinal behind junior guard Sheldon McClellan, who registered 16 points and 11 boards. The Hurricanes likely will not have point guard Angel Rodriguez (wrist), who has missed the last three games, and also will be without center Tonye Jekiri, who suffered a concussion in the first half against the Owls.

                  TV: 9 p.m. ET, ESPN

                  LINE HISTORY: Both the spread and the total have yet to move off their opening numbers of Miami +1.5 and 134.5 respectively.

                  ABOUT STANFORD (23-13 SU, 16-19-1 ATS, 17-18-1 O/U): Randle is hardly a one-man show for Stanford, as he averages 19.4 points to join Anthony Brown (14.9) and Stefan Nastic (13.5) in double figures, and the senior trio combined for 55 of the team's 67 points against Old Dominion. “For me to win an NIT championship, for our seniors, (if) we went out on top and won our last game ... that would be very special for us,” Randle told reporters. “For the younger guys, they will have something to hang their hats on for next year going into next season.” Brown is 6-of-9 from 3-point range in the last two games and has made 44.3 percent from the behind the arc on the season.

                  ABOUT MIAMI (25-12 SU, 17-17-1 ATS, 14-16-2 O/U): The Hurricanes continue to win on the defensive end, as they have captured seven of eight while holding their opponents to 62.3 points during that stretch. However, not having Jekiri (8.6 points, 9.9 rebounds, 51 blocks) could be a major blow on Thursday as the team's next best rebounder is McClellan (4.7) and no one else on the squad has more than 17 blocks. "We've been like a M.A.S.H. unit," Miami coach Jim Larranaga said to reporters. "But somehow, some way, these guys find a way to stick together."

                  TRENDS:

                  *Cardinal are 5-11 ATS in their last 16 games overall.
                  *Hurricanes are 4-1 ATS in their last 5 non-conference games.
                  *Over is 7-2 in Cardinal last 9 games following a ATS win.
                  *Under is 4-1 in Hurricanes last 5 games following a S.U. win.
                  Remember the 3 G's Gambling, Golf, Girls not in any particular order.....

                  Comment


                  • #10
                    VCU's Smart takes Texas hoops job

                    April 2, 2015

                    RICHMOND, Va. (AP) - Shaka Smart is leaving Virginia Commonwealth to coach the Texas Longhorns.

                    VCU sports information director Scott Day confirmed to reporters gathered at the campus Thursday night that Smart was making the move. Smart met with VCU players earlier in the evening at the Siegel Center, the team's home arena, and at least one player was seen crying when he left.

                    Texas athletic director Steve Patterson flew to Richmond on Thursday to close the deal.

                    Smart, who has won at least 26 games in each of his six seasons at VCU, has been one of the hottest names in college coaching since leading the Rams to the Final Four in 2011. Patterson has zeroed in on bringing Smart to Texas immediately after firing former Longhorns coach Rick Barnes last weekend.

                    Terms of Smart's contract were not immediately released and VCU said a statement would be released Friday. Barnes made $2.62 million last season. Smart made $1.8 million with the Rams.

                    The coach slipped into the building Thursday without speaking to the media gathered. VCU players were escorted from the meeting by university public relations and did not comment.

                    At VCU, Smart took over a program that had had great success under Jeff Capel, and then Anthony Grant. Smart hopes to avoid the pitfalls at Texas that his predecessors encountered when they left to take over programs at universities considered ''football schools.''

                    Capel lasted five years at Oklahoma before being fired, and Grant spent six at Alabama before he was dismissed.

                    By leaving before May 1, Smart owes VCU a $500,000 buyout. His contract also contains a provision that if he became a head coach at another institution, that school would have to play VCU in a home-and-home series, or pay VCU $250,000.

                    Smart is bolting for a Texas program that hasn't been able to unseat Kansas atop the Big 12. But the Longhorns also boast the wealthiest athletic department in the country and easy access to some of the nation's most fertile recruiting grounds in Dallas and Houston.

                    Barnes led Texas to 16 NCAA Tournaments in 17 seasons but his teams haven't made it out of the first weekend since 2008. Texas officials declined comment on Smart's hiring Thursday night.

                    Barnes' best years came from 2003-2008 when Texas made its first Final Four in more than 50 years and twice more reached the tournament's final eight. Texas also earned the program's first No. 1 ranking in the 2009-2010 season.

                    But the program had plateaued and the early-round exits in the tournament started to mount, despite rosters full of future NBA talent.

                    Smart is sure to energize Texas.

                    Under him, the Rams won the CBI postseason tournament in his first season. But he really became a hot coaching commodity when VCU made its monumental run in the NCAA Tournament the following year. The Rams went from being a questionable selection, barely getting a bid and playing in the First Four in Dayton, Ohio, to beating five major-conference schools to reach the Final Four.

                    The Rams have been back in the NCAA Tournament each of the past four seasons, but were eliminated in the round of 32 in 2012 and 2013 and lost their first game in overtime each of the past two seasons.

                    Beyond the Final Four run, this year might have been Smart's best coaching job at VCU.

                    The Rams lost Briante Weber, the leader of their ''havoc'' defensive style, on Jan. 31 to a knee injury, and played the last month and a half with scoring leader Treveon Graham bothered by a high left ankle sprain, sometimes even sidelined.

                    VCU (26-10) lost six of 10 late in the season, enduring its first three-game slide in Smart's six seasons, before winning five straight, including four in four days, to win the Atlantic 10 title.

                    Smart has led VCU to at least 26 wins in six consecutive seasons, a feat matched only by Duke. With the interest he has generated in basketball, a $25 million basketball practice facility is under construction and scheduled to be ready for use in the fall.
                    Remember the 3 G's Gambling, Golf, Girls not in any particular order.....

                    Comment


                    • #11
                      Marshall, Wichita State reach new deal

                      April 2, 2015

                      Wichita State coach Gregg Marshall agreed to terms on a new contact, choosing to remain with the Missouri Valley powerhouse after receiving overtures from Alabama.

                      Terms of the agreement, which was reached late Wednesday, were not disclosed because the final contract still must be signed. It is expected to be a significant raise from the base salary of $1.85 million that Marshall was making on his previous seven-year rollover contract.

                      Marshall has led the Shockers to four straight NCAA tournaments, including a trip to the Final Four in 2013. Wichita State lost to Notre Dame in the Sweet 16 this past season.

                      The 52-year-old coach has received interest from big-name programs before, including North Carolina State and Missouri. But he has almost always turned them down - Wichita State was able to finally pry him away from Winthrop after nine seasons, and that was eight years ago.

                      ''I've said how content and happy I am at Wichita State over and over and over,'' Marshall said last week, when the Alabama interest began to circulate. ''At the same time, I don't bury my head in the sand if a tremendous offer comes along. We look at it as a family, and that's something we've dealt with for 17 years.''

                      The Crimson Tide fired Anthony Grant two weeks ago, and athletic director Bill Battle almost immediately focused on Marshall as his replacement. Battle flew to Wichita this week, spending an entire afternoon making his best pitch - believed to be more than $4 million per year.

                      Marshall was considering a trip to the Alabama campus in Tuscaloosa later this week, but he instead chose to remain with the Shockers after agreeing to a reworked contract.

                      ''I fully respect his decision and wish him and his family all the best,'' Battle said in a statement late Wednesday. ''My objective in this search is focused on one goal: to get the best person available to lead the Alabama men's basketball program.''

                      One of the big drawbacks in Tuscaloosa may have been the clout of the Alabama football team, which tends to dwarf the basketball program. Marshall's team is the spotlight program at Wichita State, where there has not been a football program since the 1980s.

                      There are other benefits to remaining with the Shockers, too.

                      For one thing, the program is already established. Point guard Fred VanVleet and shooting guard Ron Baker, two of the best players in the nation, are expected to return for their senior seasons. And after a period of sustained success, Marshall has reeled in his best recruiting class yet, headlined by four-star forward Markis McDuffie.

                      Then there's the support. Wichita State has several well-heeled boosters who ensure the program has everything it needs to compete, including chartered jets for recruiting trips and game travel. Koch Arena is one of the best homecourt advantages in college hoops, and Shockers fans have snapped up every ticket available in the arena for years.

                      Throw in the fact that Wichita State knocked Kansas from the NCAA Tournament and it's hardly surprising that school administrators would do everything possible to keep Marshall in town.

                      ''It could be the last job I ever have. I could retire from there,'' Marshall said during a recent interview. ''Probably 13 of the last 17 years, we've had decisions to make, but I've had two jobs in that amount of time.''
                      Remember the 3 G's Gambling, Golf, Girls not in any particular order.....

                      Comment


                      • #12
                        Kentucky looking to do what UNLV couldn't

                        April 2, 2015

                        INDIANAPOLIS (AP) - Twenty-four years ago, UNLV arrived in Indianapolis for a coronation disguised as a Final Four.

                        The Runnin' Rebels were a college basketball juggernaut. They hadn't lost all season. In fact, they hadn't lost for 45 straight games, a streak that started with a run in the previous season to a national championship.

                        UNLV, led by Jerry Tarkanian, the towel-chewing defensive genius, arrived in Indianapolis needing two wins to become the first undefeated national champion since Indiana in 1976.

                        This week, Kentucky arrived in Indianapolis for a coronation disguised as a Final Four.

                        The Wildcats are a college basketball juggernaut. They haven't lost all season.

                        Kentucky, led by John Calipari, a coach who has turned recruiting into an art form, arrived in Indianapolis needing two wins to become the first undefeated national champion since Indiana in 1976.

                        The Wildcats face Wisconsin on Saturday in the national semifinals. That was the round in which UNLV's undefeated dreams were dashed by Duke, a team the Runnin' Rebels had beaten by 30 points in the championship game a year earlier. Duke, which plays Michigan State on Saturday, could get another chance to ruin a perfect run at the title, but that is looking way down a three-day road.

                        ''I'll never have a group of players like this again,'' Tarkanian, who died on Feb. 11, said the night of the 79-77 loss to Duke, a result that stunned the sports world. ''You only get a team like this once in your career. This was a very special group of kids.

                        ''I'm just sick,'' he said. ''It meant so much to these kids. I'm just hurting inside.''

                        When the game ended, Duke coach Mike Krzyzewski had his own problem. He had to get his team to settle down after the upset because the Blue Devils still had a game Monday night for the national championship.

                        ''I thought all week we had a chance but I wasn't going to be Joe Namath and say anything like that,'' Krzyzewski said 24 years ago. ''I thought if we could fight for 40 minutes we could win, not knowing if the kids could handle it. UNLV plays with such ease and we play with so much emotion.''

                        UNLV won its games by an average of 26.7 points per game. Only two games were decided by less than 12 points, a 7-point win over Arkansas in a 1-vs.-2 matchup and an 8-point victory over Georgetown in the second round of the NCAA Tournament.

                        ''I remember in practice, Coach K had us practicing five against seven, to get used to their speed and their quickness,'' Grant Hill, a freshman starter on that Duke team, said Thursday in Indianapolis where he will serve as a game analyst for CBS. ''We had a game plan, we'd been in a number of close games, we won some, some we didn't, but we had that experience, and they had not been in many close games, so our thing was let's hit them early, let them know we're here, we're going to play, and let's just manage the game and keep it close, and if it's close, the pressure is going to be all on them. That was our comfort zone, how we played all year.''

                        UNLV's starting lineup included first-round draft picks Larry Johnson, Stacey Augmon and Greg Anthony. It also had Anderson Hunt and George Ackles. All were upperclassmen.

                        Kentucky's roster is so deep scuba gear is recommended. Nine outstanding underclassmen who have all committed to ignoring minutes for wins and it's anybody's guess how many of them will be first-round NBA draft picks. Eight of the nine players in the rotation are averaging between 5.6 and 11.0 points per game. Eight players have been Kentucky's leading scorer in a game this season. The Wildcats did have three game decided by six or fewer points, but their average margin of victory was almost 21 points per game.

                        In the Midwest Regional semifinal, Kentucky destroyed West Virginia 78-39. Dominating was an understatement.

                        ''They were what I thought they were,'' West Virginia coach Bob Huggins said. ''That's the best defensive team I think that I've ever coached against. And when they're making shots, there's nobody going to beat them.''

                        Similar words were spoken 24 years earlier by Arkansas coach Nolan Richardson after the 1-2 matchup when he was asked what it would take to beat the Runnin' Rebels.

                        ''Play Detroit, the Lakers, one of those teams,'' he said. ''I've only been on the college level 11 years, but they are the best team I've ever seen.''

                        Hill said UNLV of 1991 and Kentucky of 2015 have some similarities, but there are differences.

                        ''You look at the record and that conjures up memories of Vegas,'' Hill said. ''I don't think (UNLV) had any close games. Kentucky has been in close games. And if you recall, UNLV had won the year before, killed Duke in the finals, and then they brought everybody back. They were older. They were seniors. They were upperclassmen. I think that's one of the differences.

                        ''I've heard people say they think Kentucky will lose. I think it's 70-30 from what I've seen that people think Kentucky will win. But I don't think anybody was thinking that Vegas would lose back in `91. I mean, the only people who thought we would win were on our team. I know my parents didn't think so.'
                        Remember the 3 G's Gambling, Golf, Girls not in any particular order.....

                        Comment


                        • #13
                          Raftery brings 'Onions!' to Final Four

                          April 2, 2015

                          INDIANAPOLIS (AP) - The voice was always unmistakable to Grant Hill, whether he was watching a game on television or listening over the radio during his formative years in suburban Washington, D.C.

                          The wit and wisdom. The tenor and tone.

                          The catchphrases.

                          ''He's been developing those for a while,'' Hill said with a laugh, gazing across a conference table at Bill Raftery, their 73-year-old source lounging against a high-backed chair.

                          ''I guess I'm not as creative or as humorous as my partner.''

                          Yes, they are partners now, all these years later. Hill and Raftery are part of a new-look broadcast crew for this year's Final Four, teaming up with longtime play-by-play voice Jim Nantz to bring Saturday night's national semifinals to what could be a record-breaking TV audience.

                          ''We're just three friends talking about the game,'' Hill said, ''and I don't know if that's how it comes across, but that's how it feels. So it's really cool.''

                          Hill will be broadcasting the Final Four for the first time, and coincidentally, in the same city where he helped lead Duke to the national championship. And for the first time, Raftery will get to bring ''Onions!'' to the TV side after more than three decades in the business.

                          ''When they called me, I was taken aback, to be honest,'' Raftery said, ''because there were so many good choices. I guess if you stick around long enough, they'll call your number.''

                          The new partnership was born out of necessity.

                          Steve Kerr had taken a coaching job with the Golden State Warriors, forcing CBS and partner Turner Sports to find at least one replacement. That wound up becoming two when Greg Anthony, who was part of the team a year ago, was accused of soliciting a prostitute.

                          With his Final Four pedigree and natural charisma, Hill was an easy choice. Raftery was the sentimental pick for the other spot, the ageless wonder who had earned his stripes.

                          Raftery's long and circuitous road to the center-court seat began when he left a coaching job at Seton Hall for a part-time broadcasting position in 1981. It was a groundbreaking move back in those days, when sports television was in its infancy and the thought that broadcast rights to the Final Four would someday command billions a farfetched dream.

                          He worked for a bank for many years to help make ends meet, but his uncanny ability to spin a phrase quickly made Raftery a popular broadcaster. CBS eventually hired him, as did ESPN, and for more than two decades he was the voice of the New Jersey Nets.

                          There, he had a chance to call games featuring Hill, by then an All-Star in the NBA.

                          Raftery insists his catchphrases just happen. They aren't something that he manufactures in his hotel room the night before a game, or that he dreams up in an elevator and then stashes away for future use. They are spontaneous bursts of emotion, genuine excitement that somehow seems to reach right through the TV or radio and embrace the audience.

                          ''I've always been around some pretty funny people,'' Raftery said. ''I think the biggest thing was when I started doing it, I was just trying to get out of the play-by-play person's way.''

                          In other words, Raftery had a mere moment to make his mark. Pithy became imperative.

                          Over the years, those catchphrases became part of the college basketball lexicon, kitschy but not quite cliche. How is a team starting out defensively? ''Man-to-man!'' Or maybe more accurately, ''Mantoman!'' Players don't drive to the basket so much as they ''take it to the tin!'' And why bank a shot off the backboard when you can score ''with a kiss!''

                          ''A lot of these were just, get in and get out,'' Raftery said. ''Not much more to it.''

                          Hill sheepishly admits that he's been honing his own catchphrases. Reluctantly, he even gave a few of them a test drive before unveiling them for millions on television.

                          ''I've been working on one, kind of getting into the paint, getting wet,'' Hill said. ''Getting messy. Like I said, I'm not as creative or humorous as my partner.''
                          Remember the 3 G's Gambling, Golf, Girls not in any particular order.....

                          Comment


                          • #14
                            Saturday's Top Action

                            April 2, 2015


                            MICHIGAN STATE SPARTANS (27-11) vs. DUKE BLUE DEVILS (33-4)

                            Lucas Oil Stadium - Indianapolis, IN
                            NCAA Tournament – Final Four
                            Tip-off: Saturday, 6:05 p.m. ET
                            Sportsbook.ag Line: Duke -5.0, Total: 138

                            No. 1 seed Duke takes on No. 7 seed Michigan State, as coaching legends Mike Krzyzewski and Tom Izzo lead their teams into the Final Four for the 12th time combined in the past 20 seasons.

                            The Duke Blue Devils and the Michigan State Spartans face off in the NCAA Tournament for the fourth time since 1998 (and the second time in the Final Four). The Blue Devils and Spartans have played nine times in total over that span, and Duke is 8-1 SU (3-5-1 ATS). Coach K’s one loss to Tom Izzo was a regional final in 2005 where the Blue Devils lost as 4-point favorites.

                            Duke and Michigan State’s most recent meeting was Nov. 18 of this season, with the Blue Devils coming out on top 81-71, covering the 8.5-point spread. This game, also played in Indiana (Banker’s Life Fieldhouse) was the second game of the season for the Spartans (third for the Blue Devils). Both teams shot over 50% from the field with Duke’s Quinn Cook and Jahlil Okafor combining for 36 points on 15-for-22 from the field. Michigan State held a +10 advantage on the glass, but shot only 5-for-20 from three (compared to Duke’s 7-for-14 from three).

                            Duke is 9-1 SU (8-2 ATS) in its past 10 games, while Michigan State is 8-2 SU (7-3 ATS) in that same span. Both the Blue Devils and Spartans have covered (4-0 ATS) in their respective tournament games to date. Duke took care of No. 2 seed Gonzaga (66-52) as a 1.5-point favorite to reach this point, while Michigan State knocked off No. 4 seed Louisville (76-69) as a 2-point favorite. The total has gone Under in six of Duke’s past eight games, while it’s gone Over in eight of Michigan State’s past 11 games.

                            Michigan State rolls into this meeting as a much different team than they were in November. As Tom Izzo-coached teams so often do, the Spartans are peaking at the perfect time. An issue for Michigan State, however, will be making Duke’s backcourt uncomfortable. To outrebound Duke in November by 10 and still lose by 10 points, the Spartans need to look no further than the fact that they didn’t force one turnover out of Duke guards Quinn Cook and Tyus Jones. Duke also held a huge edge at the free throw line (20-26 FTM), as Michigan State committed 22 fouls to Duke’s 16. Izzo has the Spartans playing their best defensive basketball of the season, as all four Michigan State tournament opponents have shot worse than 36.5% FG. Duke comes in with the 3rd ranked field goal offense in the country, and shot 54% against Michigan State in November, although it’s notable that Duke has struggled (by their standards) in their past two tournament games from the field, shooting 44% and 38% respectively.

                            The Spartans are led by their trio of stars, senior G Travis Trice (14.8 PPG, 5.2 APG, 2.2 3PM), junior G Denzel Valentine (14.5 PPG, 6.2 RPG, 4.4 APG) and senior F Branden Dawson (12.0 PPG, 9.1 RPG, 55% FG). Trice has taken the scoring burden head-on in the tournament, leading the Spartans in three of their four wins while averaging 19 points per game and hitting 3.3 threes per game. Trice is also shooting an impressive 89% from the line after hitting just 69% over the regular season. Valentine has been more aggressive on offense in the Spartans’ most recent two victories, taking 32 shots en route to 33 points. (After taking just 15 shots in their opening round wins). Valentine also has racked up 18 assists with only 5 turnovers in four tournament games. Dawson has scored single digits in his past two contests, but boasts 11-rebound performances in each game (while also blocking four shots versus Louisville).

                            G Bryn Forbes (8.6 PPG) has been a key offensive contributor for the Spartans off the bench, averaging 29 MPG in the tournament and making 53% of his threes (2.3 3PM) in that span.

                            Amidst all of the superlatives Duke has racked up, whether it be for their fifth-in-the-nation scoring offense (79.5 PPG), which shoots 50.2% from the field (3rd in NCAA), or their ever-climbing offensive efficiency as they’ve played effective offense while controlling pace in the tournament (1.2 points per-possession, 2nd in NCAA), the most important vehicle to Duke reaching the Final Four has been its defensive efficiency.

                            Early in ACC conference play, all that was talked about when mentioning Duke was its much-maligned defense in losses to Miami and North Carolina State. Duke even went to a gimmick 2-3 zone defense to try and stop the bleeding. Now, here they are in the tournament and haven’t given up more than 0.89 points per-possession in any of their four games, while holding one of the best offenses in the country (Gonzaga) to 52 points.

                            G Quinn Cook (15.7 PPG, 2.8 3PM), C Jahlil Okafor (17.7 PPG, 9.0 RPG, 67% FG) and F Justise Winslow (12.3 PPG, 5.9 RPG) have all been stalwarts in Duke’s tournament success. Okafor has not quite been his dominant self in the tournament with teams selling out to double him in the post, but he’s still managed 15 points per game on 66% from the field, and has contributed two blocks per game on defense. Cook has played fantastic defense in the tournament, neutralizing Utah’s Delon Wright and Gonzaga’s Kevin Pangos, while scoring 14.5 points per game himself. Winslow has been a ball of fire on defense, averaging 9.5 rebounds per game (double figures in three of four) along with 1.5 steals and 1.8 blocks per game.

                            G Tyus Jones (11.6 PPG, 5.8 APG) has been steady, but his heroics haven’t been needed to this point. Jones did score 15 points with six assists versus Gonzaga in his best performance of the tournament.

                            WISCONSIN BADGERS (35-3) vs. KENTUCKY WILDCATS (38-0)

                            Lucas Oil Stadium - Indianapolis, IN
                            NCAA Tournament – Final Four
                            Tip-off: Saturday, 8:45 p.m. ET
                            Sportsbook.ag Line: Kentucky -5.0, Total: 132

                            After a scare against Notre Dame, undefeated Kentucky looks to continue their magical season in a Final Four rematch from 2014 versus Wisconsin.

                            Kentucky and Wisconsin have been here before, and it resulted in one of the better tournament games in recent memory, a 74-73 Final Four win for the Wildcats (who were favored by 1) on a heroic Aaron Harrison three pointer. The 5-point spread marks a tie for the lowest amount that Kentucky has been favored this season (Dec. 27 at Louisville) and is the first time that the Wildcats have been less than a double-digit favorite since Mar. 3 at Georgia. Kentucky defeated a Notre Dame team (68-66) in the regional final to get to this point, failing to cover at -11.

                            Wisconsin will go into its second straight game as an underdog, having beaten Arizona at +1.5 to send Bo Ryan to his second straight Final Four and the third Final Four in Wisconsin history. The Badgers have never played in the championship game.

                            John Calipari’s Wildcats will be looking to return to the championship game after losing the title game to Connecticut last season. Calipari will be looking for his second NCAA title in his fifth Final Four appearance. Kentucky’s program will be looking for its 9th NCAA title with two more victories in Indianapolis. Kentucky is 1-3 ATS in its four tournament games and 5-5 ATS in its past 10 games. The Wildcats are 3-2 ATS in games where they are single-digit favorites this season and 19-18-1 ATS overall.

                            While not the length of Kentucky’s season-long streak, Wisconsin is 10-0 SU (6-4 ATS) in their past 10 games. The Badgers are 20-17-1 ATS overall this season. Wisconsin is also 4-0 ATS in its tournament history when playing a No. 1 seed. The total for six of Kentucky’s past eight games has been Under, while the total has been Over for seven of Wisconsin’s past ten games.

                            Wisconsin gets the Final Four rematch that it may, or may not have wanted. The faces for the opposing Wildcats will have changed some, but one Aaron Harrison still remains, as the protagonist for the Badgers’ exit in 2014. Wisconsin has a better offense this time around, as C Frank Kaminsky (18.7 PPG, 8.0 RPG, 57% FG), F Sam Dekker (13.9 PPG, 5.5 RPG, 53% FG) and F Nigel Hayes (12.4 PPG, 6.3 RPG, 50% FG) are all much-improved players since last March. Graduated G Ben Brust is the only Badger lost of key players from last season’s loss. The Badgers were able to successfully convert 19-of-20 from the free throw line to stay within striking distance of Kentucky last season, but only got eight points and five rebounds in a quiet night from star Kaminsky in the loss.

                            Kaminsky and Dekker enter the Final Four playing extremely good basketball – in Dekker’s case (21.8 PPG, 60% FG, 3.3 3PM/48% 3PT) the best basketball of his life. Without Dekker’s huge shot-making against Arizona (27 points, 8-for-11 FG, 5-for-6 3PT) with contested three’s in big moments, the Badgers would very likely be watching the Final Four from Madison, Wisconsin.

                            Kaminsky contributed a game-high 29 points versus Arizona, and has really upped his production going to the basket and drawing contact, averaging 6.5 made free throws per game (up from 3.6 FTM/G) in four tournament games. If Kaminsky can get the talented and imposing Kentucky big men in foul trouble, it’d really turn the tables in Wisconsin’s favor to reach the title game.

                            Wisconsin’s offense is very similar, from a pace and efficiency standpoint (1.22 points per-possession, 1st in NCAA) to Notre Dame’s. They don’t turn the ball over (7.1 TO/G, 1st in NCAA), don’t foul, and always make the extra pass. They feature the three quite as much, but Kentucky was hurt just as much by Zach Auguste and lapses in defensive rotations due to a patient offense than anything else. What should make this game interesting is that the Badgers have the size that the Fighting Irish lacked to compete on defense against Kentucky.

                            Unsung backcourt mates G Bronson Koenig (8.6 PPG, 42% 3PT, still undefeated as starter) and G Josh Gasser (6.9 PPG, 1.3 3PT) have to be accounted for due to their ability to knock down open jumpers when the defense collapses on Wisconsin’s talented frontcourt. Gasser hit big shots en route to 10 points against Arizona in the Elite Eight.

                            Kentucky looked human for the first time in a long while as they desperately watched Notre Dame’s Jerian Grant sail a three point attempt to blemish its perfect record. The faces on the Kentucky players told the story: This was a truly happy and relieved bunch to make the Final Four. Kentucky is beatable, but it is still the best team in the country.

                            If this is a wake-up call and Coach Calipari has the Wildcats come out swinging, it could be a very long evening for Wisconsin.

                            F Karl Towns (9.7 PPG, 6.7 RPG, 2.3 BPG) was outstanding in a breakout offensive game for the projected lottery pick, feasting on Notre Dame’s undersized interior for post field goal after field goal on the way to 25 points on 10-of-13 from the field. There’s no doubt that Kentucky is at home right now if not for Towns, who also posted a 21-point, 10-rebound effort in the first round win over Hampton.

                            Fellow freshman F Trey Lyles (8.4 PPG, 5.1 RPG) had been putting together a great tournament with double-figure scoring in Kentucky’s first three games, before a 9-point, five turnover dud against Notre Dame. Lyles had two blocks, but also had repeated defensive lapses allowing easy baskets for the Fighting Irish.

                            C Willie Cauley-Stein (9.3 PPG, 6.4 RPG, 1.6 BPG) will be key in a possible individual matchup versus Wisconsin’s Kaminsky. Cauley-Stein would prove the most athletic defender that Kaminsky has faced, and has blocked nine shots in the tournament over four games, but he’s been quite unproductive beyond blocks (no double-figure scoring games, six rebounds combined versus Notre Dame and Cincinnati).

                            G Andrew Harrison (9.2 PPG, 3.7 APG) has alternated good and bad games out of his four contests, while brother, G Aaron Harrison (11.3 PPG) also has only had two of four solid games, but even his one field goal versus Arizona was a huge, crunch time three – something he’s obviously made a name for doing.

                            G Tyler Ulis (5.6 PPG, 3.8 APG), and G Devin Booker (10.1 PPG, 1.6 3PM) could prove to be x-factors off the bench for Calipari.
                            Remember the 3 G's Gambling, Golf, Girls not in any particular order.....

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                            • #15
                              NBA
                              Short Sheet

                              Friday, April 3

                              NY Knicks at Washington, 7:05 ET
                              NY Knicks: 2-6 ATS in its last 8 games
                              Washington: 1-6 ATS in its last 7 games

                              Charlotte at Indiana, 7:05 ET
                              Charlotte: 15-4 ATS (+10.6 Units) as a road underdog of 3.5 to 6 points
                              Washington: 8-18 ATS in home games after 3 straight games forcing opponent to commit 14 or less turnovers

                              Toronto at Brooklyn, 7:35 ET
                              Toronto: 9-18 ATS when they make 43% to 47% of their shots
                              Brooklyn: 28-10 ATS when they score 99 to 104 points in a game

                              Milwaukee at Boston, 7:35 ET
                              Milwaukee: 41-31 ATS in all games
                              Boston: 51-82 ATS after scoring 100 points or more 3 straight games

                              Oklahoma City at Memphis, 8:05 ET
                              Oklahoma City: n/a
                              Memphis: n/a

                              Orlando at Minnesota, 8:05 ET
                              Orlando: n/a
                              Minnesota: n/a

                              Detroit at Chicago, 8:05 ET
                              Detroit: 12-4 ATS after having lost 2 of their last 3 games
                              Chicago: 53-75 ATS in home games

                              Denver at San Antonio, 8:35 ET
                              Denver: 3-12 ATS off a road loss by 10 points or more
                              San Antonio: 15-5 ATS in home games after covering 5 or 6 of their last 7 against the spread

                              New Orleans at Sacramento, 10:05 ET
                              New Orleans: 42-31 ATS in all games
                              Sacramento: 9-21 ATS revenging a same season loss vs opponent

                              Portland at LA Lakers, 10:35 ET
                              Portland: 16-7 ATS when playing 8 or more games in 14 days
                              LA Lakers: 19-33 ATS when playing 8 or more games in 14 days
                              Remember the 3 G's Gambling, Golf, Girls not in any particular order.....

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