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  • #16
    Oklahoma vs. Villanova
    March 31, 2016

    For the first time since 2009, Villanova (33-5 straight up, 19-17 against the spread) advanced past the first weekend of the NCAA Tournament two weeks ago. With that monkey off its back, Jay Wright’s squad proceeded to beat Miami and Kansas to land in Houston for the 2016 Final Four.

    Oklahoma, another No. 2 seed like ‘Nova, came out of the West Region by beating top-seeded Oregon this past Saturday at Honda Center in Anaheim. In doing so, Lon Kruger is back in the national semifinals for the first time since taking Florida to the 1994 Final Four in Charlotte.

    The Westgate SuperBook in Las Vegas opened Villanova as a two-point favorite with a total of 149 points. By Sunday afternoon, the tally had been adjusted all the way down to 146.5. The number for the side hasn’t budged whatsoever, but the ‘under’ was down to 145 by Wednesday.

    Villanova is -135 on the money line, leaving the Sooners as +115 underdogs. For first-half wagers, the Wildcats were one-point ‘chalk’ as of Thursday afternoon.

    Wright’s team has won four in a row both SU and ATS, including a 64-59 win over Kansas as a two-point underdog in last Saturday’s Elite Eight showdown. The 123 combined points provided an easy winner for ‘under’ supporters as it never threatened the 145-point number.

    Ryan Arcidiacono, Kris Jenkins and Josh Hart scored 13 points apiece for the winners, while Daniel Ochefu produced 10 points, eight rebounds, one steal, one blocked shot and two assists without a turnover.

    Villanova was nearly perfect at the free-throw line, making 18-of-19 attempts (94.7%). Jenkins converted all six of his shots from the stripe, while Arcidiacono made 6-of-7 at the line.

    Villanova forced KU into 16 turnovers to overcome a poor shooting day when it made only 21-of-52 (40.4%) from the field. Mikal Bridges, a freshman forward, came up with five steals and also had six points and three boards.

    In the South Region semifinals at KFC Yum! Center in Louisville, Villanova destroyed Miami by a 92-69 count as a four-point favorite. The 161 combined points sailed ‘over’ the 140-point tally.

    Jenkins and Arcidiacono were sensational against the Hurricanes with 21 points apiece. Jenkins made 8-of-10 shots from the field, including 5-of-6 from 3-point range, and finished with nine rebounds, four assists, one steal and one blocked shot.

    Arcidiacono, the senior point guard, drained 4-of-7 from downtown and handed out four assists compared to one turnover. In fact, Arcidiacono has committed only two turnovers in his last 97 minutes of playing time.

    Ochefu and Hart added 17 and 14 points, respectively, against UM. The Wildcats finished the night shooting 62.7 percent from the field, 66.7 percent from behind the 3-point line (10-of-15) and 94.7 percent from the free-throw line (18-of-19). They also beat the ‘Canes on the boards by a 26-16 margin.

    Villanova owns a 7-6 spread record in 13 games as a single-digit favorite.

    Oklahoma (29-7 SU, 14-20 ATS) advanced to its fifth Final Four in program history and its first since 2002 by downing Oregon 80-68 as a one-point underdog. The 148 combined points stayed ‘under’ the 153-point total.

    Buddy Hield erupted for 37 points on 8-of-13 shooting from behind the arc. Jordan Woodard added 13 points, while Isaiah Cousins produced 11 points, seven assists, five rebounds and one steal.

    OU did an outstanding job of defending the 3-point line, forcing the Ducks to make only 4-of-21 launches form downtown. The Sooners won the rebounding battle by a 33-29 margin.

    Oklahoma had failed to cover the spread in seven straight games until facing Texas A&M in the West Region semifinals. After the Aggies raced out to an early six-point lead, Kruger’s bunch responded with a 34-9 run to take a 19-point lead into halftime.

    OU would finish the job in the second half, capturing a 77-63 victory as a 2.5-point ‘chalk.’ Woodard buried 5-of-6 treys in a game-high 22-point effort. He also dished out five assists, grabbed three rebounds and had two steals.

    Hield produced 17 points, 10 rebounds and three assists, while Ryan Spangler had 10 points and eight boards.

    Hield, the two-time Big 12 Player of the Year, is averaging 25.4 points, 5.7 rebounds and 2.0 assists per game. The Bahamian product is shooting at career-high clips from the field (50.4%), 3-point land (46.5%) and the free-throw line (88.0%).

    When these schools met in Honolulu on Dec. 7, Oklahoma coasted to a 78-55 win as a five-point underdog. Cousins was the catalyst for the Sooners, producing 19 points, 10 assists, six rebounds and one steal while committing just a pair of turnovers. Hield hit 4-of-9 from 3-point range in an 18-point effort.

    Villanova couldn’t buy a bucket from downtown against the Sooners, shooting an abysmal 4-of-32 (12.5%) from long distance. Arcidiacono, Hart and Phil Booth scored 10 points apiece in the losing effort.

    There will plenty of talk about depth perception at this event that’ll be played in the Texans’ football stadium. At this same venue for three games of the South Region semifinals and finals last year, the four teams combined to make only 26.7 percent of 3-point attempts

    This could prove problematic for the Sooners, who rank second in the nation in 3-point shooting percentage (42.8%).

    Unlike Oklahoma, Villanova doesn’t lean too much on 3-point shooting, ranking No. 139 in the country with a 35.4 percentage. The Wildcats have been great at the line throughout the Tournament as noted above. They rank second in the nation in FT percentage (78.4%). Also, ‘Nova ranks 15th in the country in scoring defense, limiting foes to a 63.6 PPG average.

    OU has been an underdog seven times this year, posting a 5-2 spread record with four outright wins.

    The ‘over’ has hit at a 10-3 clip for the Wildcats in their last 13 games to improve to 19-17-1 overall.

    The ‘under’ is on a lucrative 12-2 roll in OU’s last 14 games. The Sooners have seen the ‘under’ go 19-15 overall.

    Tip-off is scheduled for 6:05 p.m. Eastern on TBS.

    **B.E.’s Bonus Nuggets**

    -- The updated futures at Sportsbook.ag look like this: North Carolina -110, Villanova +260, Oklahoma +350 and Syracuse 10/1.

    -- Hield’s odds to win Most Outstanding Player of the Final Four are +350 (risk $100 to win $350). Hart and Arcidiacono have 5/1 and 8/1 odds, respectively.

    -- Oklahoma is seeking its first national title in men’s basketball. The Sooners made it to the finals in 1947 and 1988, only to come up short. Billy Tubbs’s ’88 squad featured Mookie Blaylock and Stacey King but went down against a Kansas team coached by Larry Brown. This KU squad was dubbed “Danny [Manning] and the Miracles.”

    -- Villanova is looking for its first national title since 1985 when it shocked the world by knocking off Georgetown in the finals at Rupp Arena in Lexington.

    -- Chris Beard is the new head coach at UNLV after leading Arkansas Little Rock to a 30-5 record and a Round of 64 win over Purdue in his lone season as a Division-I coach. Beard served on Bobby Knight’s staff at Texas Tech. Knight, who isn’t doing interviews these days, agreed to chat with Matt Youmans of the Las Vegas Review-Journal about Beard earlier this week. The former Indiana coach who won three national titles for Hoosiers ripped off this gem to Youmans, “You have a lot of experts in Las Vegas and they would probably have some hesitation if you hired Jesus Christ or Red Auerbach at the same time.” Knight remains in my Top Five of dudes I’d like to drink 10-15 Budweisers with, including Charles Barkley, Bill Raftery, Larry Bird either of the Van Gundy Brothers. (Steve Spurrier doesn’t make the cut because he can’t improve his stock in my eyes; he can only hurt it and I don’t ever want that to happen.)
    Remember the 3 G's Gambling, Golf, Girls not in any particular order.....

    Comment


    • #17
      Syracuse vs. North Carolina
      April 1, 2016

      North Carolina is the last No. 1 seed left standing in the 2016 NCAA Tournament. Syracuse in the first No. 10 seed to ever advance to the Final Four, getting to Houston after losing five of its last six games that had it extremely anxious on Selection Sunday.

      When the ‘Cuse’s name appeared on the board, CBS Sports’s Doug Gottlieb immediately exclaimed, “What?!”

      Nevertheless, Jim Boeheim has his program in its fifth Final Four of his 40-year tenure, seeking a second national title. The Orange beat Roy Williams’s Kansas team to cut down the nets in the 2003 NCAA Finals.

      Williams is in his eighth Final Four and is hoping to bag a third national title, which would elevate him into elite company. The only coaches with three or more national titles are John Wooden, Adolph Rupp, Mike Krzyzewski, Bobby Knight and Jim Calhoun.

      The Westgate SuperBook in Las Vegas opened North Carolina (32-6 straight up, 19-18 against the spread) as a 9.5-point favorite with a total of 146.5 points. The number for the side briefly went down to nine but was back to 9.5 as of early Friday night. The total has been reduced to 145.

      Gamblers can take the Orange to win outright for a monster +425 payout (risk $100 to win $425). For first-half wagers, UNC is a 5.5-point ‘chalk’ with a total of 67.

      Most betting shops have a slew of proposition bets available. For instance, Sportsbook.ag has adjusted lines that offer great value for those that are extremely bullish on a certain side or total.

      For instance, if you think UNC is going to win in blowout fashion, you can back the Tar Heels laying 14.5 points for a +200 return (risk $100 to win $200). On the flips side, for bettors liking the ‘Cuse, it can be had at +4.5 for a +215 payout (risk $100 to win $215).

      North Carolina advanced to the national semifinals with victories over Florida Gulf Coast (83-67), Providence (85-66), Indiana (101-86) and Notre Dame (88-74). The Tar Heels have won nine consecutive games, going 7-2 ATS, and haven’t tasted defeat since a 79-74 loss at Virginia on Feb. 27.

      UNC has covered the number in three straight, including the win over the Fighting Irish as a 9.5-point favorite in the East Region finals at Wells Fargo Center in Philadelphia this past Sunday. The 162 combined points jumped ‘over’ the 153.5-point total.

      Brice Johnson was the catalyst, scoring 25 points and pulling down 12 rebounds. All five UNC starters were in double figures, including Joel Berry II, who had 11 points and eight assists without committing a turnover.

      Kennedy Meeks scored eight straight points early in the second half to stretch UNC’s five-point halftime lead to an 11-point cushion. However. Notre Dame responded with a 12-0 run to roar back into the lead.

      It wouldn’t last, though, as UNC went on a 12-0 run of its own and was back ahead by double digits at the 9:19 mark. The Irish would get no closer than eight the rest of the way.

      Johnson has been a monster in the Tournament, posting three straight double-doubles. He’s averaging 22.0 points, 9.8 rebounds and 3.5 blocked shots in the last four games.

      Marcus Paige, UNC’s senior point guard who had an inconsistent campaign, has played solid in recent weeks. Paige has scored in double figures in six straight games. He is averaging 14.0 points per game in the Tournament with a 14/4 assists-to-turnovers ratio.

      UNC ranks 10th in the nation in scoring (83.0 PPG) and 16th in field-goal percentage (48.2%). However, the Tar Heels are horrible from 3-point land, shooting at just a 32.1 percent clip that ranks them No. 289 in America.

      The lack of dependency on 3-pointers is probably a plus, however, especially at this venue where the Texans play football. Depth perception can be an issue is such a huge arena, evidenced by 26.7 percent shooting from downtown in last year’s South Region semifinals and finals.

      Syracuse (23-13 SU, 20-15 ATS) had to overcome a 16-point second-half deficit to oust top-seeded Virginia by a 68-62 count as an eight-point underdog in last Sunday’s Midwest Region finals.

      Malachi Richardson, a freshman wing, sparked the rally with 23 points, seven rebounds and two steals. Senior forward Michael Gbinije finished with 11 points, six assists, four rebounds and a pair of steals. Tyler Roberson had 10 points and eight rebounds before fouling out, while Trevor Cooney tallied eight points, four steals and three assists without a turnover. Freshman forward Tyler Lydon produced 11 points, six rebounds and five blocked shots.

      The Orange had more steals (11) than turnovers (seven), while UVA committed 13 turnovers and had only three steals.

      Syracuse has covered the spread in five consecutive games and seven of its last eight. The Orange has been an underdog 15 times this year, compiling a 9-6 spread record with six outright wins.

      The ‘Cuse had to rally in its Sweet 16 showdown against Gonzaga as well. The Bulldogs led most of the way, but the Orange captured a 63-60 win as a four-point underdog. They hooked up money-line backers with a +150 payout.

      Leading by one in the final seconds, Lydon blocked a Gonzaga shot in the lane. I thought it was a clear foul, but there was no whistle.

      Gbinije scored a team-high 20 points for the winners. Cooney scored 15 points and Lydon had six rejections.

      Syracuse got through the first weekend with wins over Middle Tennessee (75-50) and Dayton (70-51). The Blue Raiders stunned second-seeded Michigan State in the opening round to bolster the Orange’s path to Chicago and the Sweet 16.

      Boeheim’s bunch is 25th in the country in scoring defense (64.6 PPG). They play a vaunted 2-3 zone that usually gives opponents fits.

      These schools met twice during the regular season. In the first encounter at the Carrier Dome on Jan. 9, UNC collected an 84-73 win as a 7.5-point road ‘chalk.’ The 157 combined points went ‘over’ the 152.5-point total.

      Despite making only 3-of-16 attempts from 3-point range (18.8%) for the game, UNC pulled away in the second half after being tied at intermission. Isaiah Hicks led the way with 21 points and eight rebounds in just 22 minutes of playing time from off the bench. Justin Jackson added 16 points on 8-of-11 shooting from the field, while Johnson finished with 16 points, eight assists, four rebounds and two steals.

      Cooney scored a game-high 27 points in the losing effort, while Richardson contributed 16 points, five assists and four boards.

      In the rematch at the Dean Dome in Chapel Hill, UNC won a 75-70 decision but the ‘Cuse easily took the money as a 13-point road underdog. The 145 combined points stayed ‘under’ the 146.5-point total.

      Johnson led five double-figure scorers with 14 points and 10 rebounds. Gbinije had 17 points and seven assists in defeat.

      The ‘over’ is 18-17 overall for the Orange, but the ‘under’ has cashed in three of its last four games. The combined scores in Syracuse’s four NCAA Tournament games have been 121, 125, 123 and 130. The ‘under’ is 7-1 in Syracuse’s eight games that have had totals in the 140s.

      The ‘over’ is 20-18 overall for UNC. The ‘over’ is 8-4 in the Tar Heels’ 12 games that had totals in the 140s. The combined scores in UNC’s four NCAA games have been 162, 187, 151 and 150.

      This second semifinal game will tip 30 minutes after the conclusion of Oklahoma-Villanova on TBS.

      **B.E.’s Bonus Nuggets**

      -- Back in January, Syracuse’s odds to win the national title were 1,000/1 at the Westgate. As recently as two weeks ago, William Hill had the Orange listed with 400/1 future odds (hat tip to Matt Youmans of the Las Vegas Review-Journal).

      -- Jay Kornegay, the Westgate’s sports book director, told Youmans that they took four wagers on the ‘Cuse at 1,000/1, including a bet for $100.

      -- I like the prop for Marcus Paige’s points to go ‘over’ 12.5 (Westgate).

      -- This is UNC’s first Final Four appearance since 2009 and its 19th in school history.

      -- Here are the odds to win Most Outstanding Player at Sportsbook.ag: Brice Johnson +200, Buddy Hield +300, Josh Hart +500, Joel Berry II +600, Marcus Paige +700, Ryan Arcidiacono +800, Kris Jenkins 15/1, Michael Gbinije 22/1 and Malachi Richardson 25/1.

      -- South Carolina announced a four-year contract extension for Frank Martin on Friday.

      -- According to a report from CBS Sports’s Gary Parrish, Vanderbilt and Georgia Tech have both contacted Valpo’s Bryce Drew about their vacant head-coaching positions. As I noted on my blog page earlier this week, Duke assistant Jeff Capel is also in the mix for both jobs. There have also been indications that Monmouth’s King Rice could be in play for the Commodores. Rice played at UNC for Dean Smith. Eddie Fogler, the former Vandy coach, is running this coaching search. He was a long-time UNC assistant under Smith.
      Remember the 3 G's Gambling, Golf, Girls not in any particular order.....

      Comment


      • #18
        Saturday's Top Action

        OKLAHOMA SOONERS (29-7) vs. VILLANOVA WILDCATS (33-5)

        NRG Stadium – Houston, TX
        Tip-off: Saturday, 6:09 p.m. ET
        Sportsbook.ag Line: Villanova -2, 145.5

        In a battle of No. 2 seeds, Villanova and Oklahoma will play for a shot at a national title in Saturday night’s first game at NRG Stadium in Houston.

        Dec. 7th on a neutral court (Pearl Harbor) is where Oklahoma put on arguably its best performance of the season. Their opponent, Villanova, had perhaps its worst showing of the year. The Wildcats get to even the score as two-point favorites for the right to move on to Monday’s championship game, but have they figured out how to stop Buddy Hield and the Sooners?

        While December is a long time ago, the Sooners (14-20 ATS) established themselves as a force to be reckoned with – especially on the perimeter – with that 14-26 performance from deep.

        Oklahoma’s 78-55 trouncing of Villanova (OU +5) would springboard the Sooners into serious discussions about who would contend for a national title this season. Showing their true grit, Villanova (19-17-1 ATS) wouldn’t let that December loss to Oklahoma deny them a Big East regular season title, taking only two losses in regular season conference play before losing in the conference tournament semifinals.

        Villanova is 9-1 over its last 10 games. The Wildcats are 4-0 ATS in the NCAA Tournament, covering comfortably as favorites over UNC-Asheville, Iowa and No. 3 Miami (92-69, Nova -4), before gutting out a 64-59 (‘Nova +2) win last Saturday night over the tournament’s No. 1 overall seed, Kansas.

        Villanova was out-shot and out-rebounded in the win over the Jayhawks, but rode 11 steals (including the key last-second turnover forced by G Ryan Arcidiacono) and 18-19 from the charity stripe to advance to Houston.

        Oklahoma has now covered twice after failing to do so in their seven previous games. They defeated Cal-Bakersfield and Virginia Commonwealth in the opening rounds before getting past No. 3 Texas A&M (77-63, OU -2.5) and most recently No. 1 Oregon (80-68, OU +1), 80-68, last Saturday night. The Sooners are 8-1 (4-5 ATS) at neutral sites and 4-3 (5-2 ATS) as underdogs. Villanova is 8-2 (6-4 ATS) at neutral sites and 23-4 (9-18 ATS) as favorites.

        This is Oklahoma coach Lon Kruger’s second appearance in the Final Four, as 22 years ago (1994) he took Florida this far. Oklahoma last made the Final Four in 2002. Villanova’s Jay Wright is also going to his second Final Four, having taken the Wildcats this far in 2009.

        College basketball continues to get treated to the brilliance of Oklahoma G Hield (25.4 PPG, 50% FG, 46.5% 3PT). Hield continues to outdo himself. His 37 points against Oregon on 13-20 FG (8-13 3PT) -- marking his 12th 30+ point performance of the season -- propelled the Sooners into the Final Four. Hield now has 117 points through four tournament games, second all-time in that span only to Stephen Curry’s run at Davidson.

        G Isaiah Cousins (12.8 PPG, 4.6 APG) showed what he could do when given the keys to the Oklahoma offense as point guard, putting up 19 points and 10 assists against Villanova while going 4-4 from three. What’s scary for Villanova is that Hield was only pedestrian in the blowout win over the Wildcats in December, scoring 18 points on 6-17 shooting.

        Overshadowed in that win was how solid Oklahoma is on defense, as they held Villanova to 31.7% FG (4-32 3PT). The Sooners’ season-long defense showed up to the tune of 40.5% FG (35th NCAA) and Oklahoma’s defense did a similar number against Oregon (4-21 3PT) to advance this far. Villanova is very capable of throwing up another offensive dud, having shot 40% FG against Kansas after slicing up their first three opponents.

        F Ryan Spangler (10.3 PPG, 9.2 RPG) was equally impressive against Villanova with 11 points, 10 rebounds and 4 assists, helping the Sooners to a 41-33 rebounding edge. Spangler’s production has dropped off in NCAA Tournament play to 6.3 PPG and 7.3 RPG, partially due to matchups.

        G Jordan Woodard (13 PPG, 3.4 APG, 44.9% 3PT) had been lost in the latter part of the regular season, but seems to have regained his perimeter touch during NCAA Tournament time, as he’s scorching the nets at a 57.9% clip from three (16.8 PPG).

        Villanova’s all-around play (82.3 PPG NCAA Tournament, 54.1% FG in last three games) should give the Wildcats tons of confidence with an opportunity to show Oklahoma that the December blowout was just an aberration. This newfound offensive brilliance was highlighted by a 62.7% FG (10-15 3PT) performance against No. 3 Miami, a solid defensive club in its own right. The Wildcats would be well-advised to work closer to the basket on Saturday night, as their horrid three-point shooting was a big downfall in the December meeting between these two clubs.

        Villanova shoots two-pointers at a 56.8% clip, good for 3rd in the nation, led by senior C Daniel Ochefu (10.1 PPG, 7.6 RPG, 62% FG). Ochefu is also one of five Wildcats averaging more than 1.3 SPG in the NCAA Tournament, as he’ll have more chances to get takeaways against Oklahoma’s generous ball handlers (7.1 SPG against, 301st NCAA).

        One can’t talk about steals without mentioning Villanova freshman F Mikal Bridges (6.3 PPG), the lanky hero of Saturday’s win over Kansas with five steals, including the game-clinching hustle play after Arcidiacono (12.3 PPG, 4.3 APG) knocked the ball loose from Kansas guard Frank Mason III. A four-year starter, senior Arcidiacono has had an incredible tournament, averaging 16 PPG on 62.5% FG and 57.9% 3PT while going 13-14 from the free-throw line.

        Villanova’s regular season scoring leader, G Josh Hart (15.3 PPG, 6.7 RPG, 50.3% FG), has had a more low-key tournament (13.8 PPG) and went only 6-17 in the win over Kansas. The Wildcats’ long-range specialist, F Kris Jenkins (13.5 PPG, 2.5 3PM), will look to erase memories of his 0-6 performance from three in the loss to Oklahoma, and his 1-7 from three most recently against Kansas. Jenkins did have 21 points on 8-10 FG (5-6 3PT) in the win over Miami.

        Given Oklahoma’s lack of rim protection and Villanova’s earlier failures against the Sooners, don’t be surprised to see coach Wright put the ball in the hands of the slashing Hart and towering Ochefu to generate easier scoring chances with a spot in the national title game on the line.

        SYRACUSE ORANGE (23-13) vs. N CAROLINA TAR HEELS (32-6)

        NRG Stadium – Houston, TX
        Tip-off: Saturday, 8:49 p.m. ET
        Sportsbook.ag Line: North Carolina -9.5, 145

        North Carolina, the only remaining No. 1 seed, will face off against ACC foe and No. 10 seed Syracuse in the Final Four. The winner will move on to Monday’s national championship game.

        North Carolina (18-19-1 ATS) and Syracuse (20-15 ATS) meet for the third time this season as the Tar Heels look to sweep the Orange and move on to Monday’s national title game. The Tar Heels were winners over the Orange on Jan. 9 at the Carrier Dome, 84-73 (UNC -7.5), and again in Chapel Hill on Feb. 29, 75-70 (SU +12.5). North Carolina held Syracuse to under 30% 3PT on both occasions. This game pits two Hall of Fame coaches in Syracuse’s Jim Boeheim and North Carolina’s Roy Williams.

        They have faced each other four times as ACC rivals, with North Carolina winning the last three contests (1-1-1 ATS).

        Boeheim is 2-1 against Williams in the NCAA tournament, all while Williams was coaching Kansas, as now three of Boehiem’s five Final Four trips will be highlighted with Williams on the other sideline. Syracuse defeated Kansas in the Elite Eight in 1996 and in the 2003 National Championship game, while losing to Williams’ Jayhawks in the second round of 2001’s NCAA Tournament. No. 10 seed Syracuse has won and covered each of their NCAA Tournament wins to get here, and will be underdogs for the third straight game on Saturday night (+4 vs Gonzaga, +8.5 vs UVA, +9.5 vs UNC).

        Winners of nine straight, North Carolina has been favored in every game they’ve played since a road game on Feb. 1 at Louisville. The Tar Heels are an impressive 7-1 ATS in their last 8, only failing to cover at -23.5 against first-round NCAA opponent Florida Gulf Coast (83-67). North Carolina has a 16-point average margin of victory over their four tournament wins so far.

        The Tar Heels are 32-4 (18-17-1 ATS) overall as favorites and are undefeated (11-0, 8-3 ATS) in neutral site games. Syracuse is 6-9 (9-6 ATS) as an underdog and an impressive 7-1 (7-1 ATS) in neutral site games. In total trends, the UNDER is 14-7 in North Carolina’s last 21 games.

        Syracuse’s improbable run to Houston seemed all but dead multiple times over the last two rounds, and each time -- whether it was down 57-48 to Gonzaga or 54-39 against Virginia (two of the more efficient teams in the nation) -- Syracuse reached back for a full-court pressure defense that sped up the tempo and got the game back in reach for the Orange.

        That the Orange were able to pull out their last two wins while shooting worse than 39% FG in both games is all the more impressive. The vaunted Syracuse 2-3 zone, which helps limit opponents to 64.6 PPG (22nd NCAA) and 30.8% 3PT (13th NCAA), hasn’t been bulletproof against better opponents, as both Gonzaga and Virginia have shot better than 40% and each have shot a respectable 38.1% FG.

        Unfortunately, Syracuse’s zone is beatable inside with only freshman Tyler Lydon (10.2 PPG, 6.3 RPG, 1.8 BPG) protecting the rim. North Carolina relies on the three as little as any elite team in the country, and their 84 points on Jan. 9th is the most any opponent has scored at the Carrier Dome this season. Lydon does have 6 blocks in two games against North Carolina and is coming off of a very impressive 11-point, 6-rebound, 3-5 3PT performance against Virginia. As good as that line was, it wasn’t close to being the best freshman performance of the night for the Orange, as G Malachi Richardson (13.3 PPG, 4.3 RPG, 2.1 3PT) stole the show against the Cavaliers.

        Scoring 21 of his 23 points in the second half, Richardson single-handedly willed the Orange offense in the second half to nine straight possessions with a basket. No. 23 in Orange (Richardson) resembled the ghost of a famous No. 23 in Carolina Blue, hitting jumpers and driving in the lane with reckless abandon, and he’ll have to be just as fearless if Syracuse hopes to go where no double-digit seed has gone before – championship Monday.

        The Orange were paced all season by senior leaders G Michael Gbinije (17.6 PPG, 4.4 APG) and G Trevor Cooney (12.7 PPG), while the heart and soul of this team is in the motor of F Tyler Roberson (9 PPG, 8.4 RPG), who may play the biggest role in Saturday’s game as he tries to keep up with North Carolina’s talented frontcourt. The 6-foot-8 Roberson is averaging 11.8 rebounds per game in the NCAA Tournament.

        While there’s a not-rooted-in-logical-science argument that “it’s tough to beat the same team three times in a season,” North Carolina is in good position to dispatch Syracuse on Saturday and move into Monday’s national title game. They have a potent interior attack, led by one of the best frontcourt players in the nation in senior F Brice Johnson (17.1 PPG, 10.5 RPG, 61.6% FG). Interestingly enough, when these two teams met in Syracuse it was Johnson’s passing out of the high post (8 assists) that gave the Orange fits. Johnson went back to his standard double-double (14 points, 10 rebounds) in North Carolina’s home win.

        Emerging F Isaiah Hicks (9.1 PPG, 4.7 RPG, 61.4% FG) had a few eye-opening individual plays versus Notre Dame and put in 13 points and 7 rebounds in the second-round win over Providence. Hicks’ play is key because of his past success this season against the Orange (9-14 FG, 31 points and 14 rebounds over two games). His motor and athleticism mirror that of Syracuse’s Roberson.

        Williams isn’t afraid to turn to Hicks over starting F Kennedy Meeks (9.2 PPG, 5.8 RPG), who only played 27 minutes over the two games against the Orange. Regardless of which rotation coach Williams goes with up front, the Tar Heels will have a massive rebounding advantage over the Orange, who struggle to keep teams off the offensive glass. At 12.7 offensive rebounds per game, North Carolina is fourth in the nation crashing the boards.

        While North Carolina on paper doesn’t seem to be the type of team to scare Syracuse from deep, G Marcus Paige (12.3 PPG, 3.7 APG) is having an NCAA Tournament to remember. Finally looking like the all-league guard he was two seasons ago, Paige is 13-27 (48.1% 3PT) over his last four games. If Virginia guard London Perrantes scared the Syracuse zone, then Paige should be forcing the Syracuse coaching staff into a frenzied sweat with the way he’s shooting the ball.

        Pairing with Paige are steady sophomores in G Joel Berry II (12.8 PPG, 3.6 APG) and G Justin Jackson (12.2 PPG, 2.9 APG). Both are poised with good basketball IQs, combining for 26 PPG in the NCAA Tournament and 6.3 assists to just 1.8 turnovers per game.
        Remember the 3 G's Gambling, Golf, Girls not in any particular order.....

        Comment


        • #19
          CBB ATS

          CBB > (813) SYRACUSE@ (814) N CAROLINA | 2016-04-02 20:45:00 - 2016-04-02 20:45:00
          Play ON SYRACUSE against the spread in All games when playing with 5 or 6 days rest
          The record is 10 Wins and 0 Losses for the last three seasons (+10 units)

          CBB > (813) SYRACUSE@ (814) N CAROLINA | 2016-04-02 20:45:00 - 2016-04-02 20:45:00
          Play AGAINST SYRACUSE against the spread in All games on Saturday games
          The record is 4 Wins and 16 Losses for the last two seasons (-13.6 units)

          CBB > (811) VILLANOVA@ (812) OKLAHOMA | 2016-04-02 18:05:00 - 2016-04-02 18:05:00
          Play ON VILLANOVA against the spread in All games when playing against a team with a winning record
          The record is 52 Wins and 25 Losses for the last three seasons (+24.5 units)

          CBB > (811) VILLANOVA@ (812) OKLAHOMA | 2016-04-02 18:05:00 - 2016-04-02 18:05:00
          Play ON VILLANOVA against the spread in All games in non-conference games
          The record is 30 Wins and 12 Losses for the last three seasons (+16.8 units)
          -------------------

          CBB MONEYLINE

          CBB > (813) SYRACUSE@ (814) N CAROLINA | 2016-04-02 20:45:00 - 2016-04-02 20:45:00
          Play ON SYRACUSE using money line in All games when playing on a neutral court
          The record is 6 Wins and 1 Losses for the this season (+9.55 units)

          CBB > (813) SYRACUSE@ (814) N CAROLINA | 2016-04-02 20:45:00 - 2016-04-02 20:45:00
          Play ON SYRACUSE using money line in Road games when playing on a neutral court
          The record is 6 Wins and 1 Losses for the this season (+9.55 units)

          CBB > (813) SYRACUSE@ (814) N CAROLINA | 2016-04-02 20:45:00 - 2016-04-02 20:45:00
          Play ON SYRACUSE using money line in All games in all tournament games
          The record is 6 Wins and 1 Losses for the this season (+9.55 units)

          CBB > (813) SYRACUSE@ (814) N CAROLINA | 2016-04-02 20:45:00 - 2016-04-02 20:45:00
          Play ON SYRACUSE using money line in Road games in all tournament games
          The record is 6 Wins and 1 Losses for the this season (+9.55 units)

          CBB > (811) VILLANOVA@ (812) OKLAHOMA | 2016-04-02 18:05:00 - 2016-04-02 18:05:00
          Play ON OKLAHOMA using money line in All games after a non-conference game
          The record is 21 Wins and 6 Losses for the last three seasons (+14.35 units)

          CBB > (811) VILLANOVA@ (812) OKLAHOMA | 2016-04-02 18:05:00 - 2016-04-02 18:05:00
          Play ON OKLAHOMA using money line in All games in all lined games
          The record is 20 Wins and 7 Losses for the this season (+11.45 units)

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

          CBB FIRST HALF

          CBB > (813) SYRACUSE@ (814) N CAROLINA | 2016-04-02 20:45:00 - 2016-04-02 20:45:00
          Play ON SYRACUSE ?>in the first halfin Road games versus good offensive teams - scoring 77+ points/game
          The record is 13 Wins and 1 Losses for the last two seasons (+11.9 units)

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

          CBB TOTALS

          CBB > (811) VILLANOVA@ (812) OKLAHOMA | 2016-04-02 18:05:00 - 2016-04-02 18:05:00
          Play UNDER OKLAHOMA on the totalin Road games when playing against a team with a winning record
          The record is 10 Overs and 26 Unders for the last two seasons (+15 units)

          CBB > (811) VILLANOVA@ (812) OKLAHOMA | 2016-04-02 18:05:00 - 2016-04-02 18:05:00
          Play OVER OKLAHOMA on the totalin All games after scoring 80 points or more
          The record is 12 Overs and 3 Unders for the this season (+8.7 units)
          Remember the 3 G's Gambling, Golf, Girls not in any particular order.....

          Comment


          • #20
            SATURDAY, APRIL 2

            GAME TIME(ET) PICK UNITS


            VILL at OKLA 06:09 PM

            OKLA +2.5

            U 144.5



            SYR at UNC 08:49 PM

            UNC -9.5

            O 144.0
            Remember the 3 G's Gambling, Golf, Girls not in any particular order.....

            Comment


            • #21
              Villanova vs. North Carolina
              April 3, 2016

              Villanova and North Carolina cruised to easy victories Saturday in perhaps the most boring set of national-semifinal games in the NCAA Tournament’s storied history. Not boring because of ‘Nova or UNC, however, just uneventful in the way they coasted to blowout wins over Oklahoma and Syracuse, respectively.

              Jay Wright’s team went five years without playing beyond the first weekend of the Tournament, but it will play for the national title Monday night for the first time since Rollie Massimino’s team led by Ed Pinckney shocked Patrick Ewing and Georgetown in the 1985 finals at Rupp Arena in Lexington, KY.

              Roy Williams is seeking to join an elite group of head coaches who have three or more national titles to their credit. That group includes John Wooden, Adolph Rupp, Bobby Knight, Mike Krzyzewski and Jim Calhoun.

              This is Williams’s fifth trip to the Monday night game in his career. He took Kansas to the finals twice, losing both times to Duke (’91) and Syracuse (’03). He has gone 2-0 in the finals with UNC since leaving Lawrence for Chapel Hill.

              This is UNC’s 10th trip to the finals in the program’s illustrious history. Williams has the second-best career NCAA Tournament record among active coaches, going 70-23 (75.3%). Wright is 19-12 in the Tournament (61.3%).

              The Westgate SuperBook opened North Carolina (33-6 straight up, 20-18-1 against the spread) as a two-point favorite with a total of 151.5 points late last night in Las Vegas. In less than an hour, Jay Kornegay and Co. moved the Tar Heels to 2.5.

              As of mid-afternoon Sunday, UNC was a 2.5-point ‘chalk’ with a total of 150. UNC is -150 on the money line, leaving ‘Nova at +130 to win outright (risk $100 to win $130).

              Villanova (34-5 SU, 20-17-1 ATS) captured a 95-51 win over Oklahoma as a 2.5-point favorite in the biggest blowout in Final Four history. The Wildcats led by 14 at intermission and the Sooners quickly trimmed the deficit to nine on a Jordan Woodard putback of his own missed free throw.

              Lon Kruger’s bunch would get no closer, though. The Wildcats stretched the lead to 21 with 11:19 remaining on a 3-pointer by Phil Booth. They led by 33 at the under-8 TV timeout and it was over.

              Josh Hart had a game for the ages, scoring 23 points on 10-of-12 shooting in 30 minutes of playing time. The junior guard also had eight rebounds, two steals and four assists without a turnover. Kris Jenkins was sensational as well, producing 18 points, eight boards, two steals and one blocked shot.

              Ryan Arcidiacono, the senior point guard and lifeblood of Wright’s program for the last four seasons, finished with 15 points on just six shots from the field. Arcidiacono drained 3-of-4 launches from downtown and had three rebounds and three assists.

              Mikal Bridges (11), Booth (10) and Daniel Ochefu (10) were also in double figures. Ocheful had six rebounds, three assists, one steal, one rejection and didn’t commit a turnover.

              How ‘on’ was Villanova? Well, it made 35-of-49 shots from the field at a torrid 71.4 percent clip. Depth perception at NRG Stadium in Houston was not an issue whatsoever. The Wildcats hit 11-of-18 shots from beyond the arc (61.1%).

              On the flip side, OU made just 6-of-27 (22.2%) from 3-point land. The Sooners entered the game with the nation’s second-best three-point shooting percentage (42.1%).

              Villanova’s stifling defense limited Buddy Hield, a first-team All-American, to his second-lowest scoring output of the season with only nine points.

              Hield buried his first 3-point attempt, but he missed his next eight. He went 4-of-12 from the field, while Isaiah Cousins (3-of-14 FGs) and Woodard (3-of-10) were equally inept.

              “Just credit them for what they were doing. Made it tough on me throwing multiple bodies at me,” Hield said at the postgame presser. Hield said the Wildcats were “one of the best teams I’ve ever played in college.”

              Wright’s bunch has won four of its Tournament games by margins of 19 points or more. The Wildcats have covered the number in all five Tournament games, including their only close one in the 65-60 win over No. 1 overall seed Kansas in the Elite Eight. They have won their five games by an average margin of 23.6 points.

              Meanwhile, UNC has won its five games by an average margin of 16.2 points. The Tar Heels have covered in four straight and won each game by a minimum of 14 points. The lone non-cover came in the opening round when they knocked off Fla. Gulf Coast by an 83-67 count as 22.5-point favorites.

              North Carolina defeated Syracuse for a third time this year on Saturday, winning 83-66 as a 10-point favorite. The 149 combined points slipped ‘over’ the 142.5-point total.

              Brice Johnson and Justin Jackson scored 16 points apiece for the winners. Johnson pulled down nine rebounds. Kennedy Meeks finished with 15 points, eight boards, two steals and two blocked shots, while Marcus Paige was also in double figures with 13 points. Joel Berry II had eight points and 10 assists compared to merely one turnover.

              North Carolina has won 10 in a row while going 8-2 ATS. The Tar Heels made it to Houston by beating up on Providence (85-66), Indiana (101-86) and Notre Dame (88-74) after getting past Fla. Gulf Coast.

              Johnson has been the catalyst, averaging 20.0 points and 9.6 rebounds per game. His overall averages for the year are 17.0 points and 10.5 RPG.

              Villanova has been an underdog only twice this year, losing 86-75 at Virginia on Dec. 19 as a 5.5-point puppy. The other ‘dog spot came in the win over KU last weekend when it was catching two points from the Jayhawks.

              UNC has thrived as a single-digit ‘chalk’ this season, compiling a 13-4 spread record, including eight consecutive covers in such situations.

              These schools have met in the NCAA Tournament three times in the last 11 years. UNC has prevailed on each occasion. The Tar Heels won a 78-71 decision as a five-point favorite in the Round of 32 in 2013.

              They collided at the Final Four in 2009 with North Carolina capturing an 83-69 triumph as a seven-point ‘chalk.’ In the 2005 Tournament, UNC advanced with a 67-66 victory, but the Wildcats easily took the money as 11-point underdogs.

              The ‘over’ is 20-17-1 overall for the Wildcats after cashing at an 11-3 clip in their last 14 games.

              The ‘over’ is 21-18 overall for UNC, hitting in three straight and four of its last five.

              Tip-off is scheduled for 9:15 p.m. Eastern on TBS.
              Remember the 3 G's Gambling, Golf, Girls not in any particular order.....

              Comment


              • #22
                Monday's Top Action
                April 3, 2016

                VILLANOVA WILDCATS (34-5) vs. NORTH CAROLINA TAR HEELS (33-6)

                NCAA Championship Game – NRG Stadium – Houston, TX
                Tip-off: Monday, 9:15 pm ET
                Sportsbook.ag Line: North Carolina -2.5, 151

                Two of the best teams in college basketball finally clash when #2 Villanova faces #1 North Carolina in the NCAA Championship on Monday.

                The Wildcats have been absolutely dominant throughout the NCAA tournament, winning-and-covering in all five of their games up to this point. Their Final Four matchup was actually the most lopsided, as Villanova pummeled Oklahoma 95-51 as a 2.5-point favorite on Saturday. T

                he Wildcats shot 71.4% from the floor and held the Sooners to just 31.7%. If they can play that well on both ends of the floor then there is no way they will be denied a championship. North Carolina, however, has been pretty dominant as well.

                The Tar Heels defeated Syracuse 83-66 as 10-point favorites on Saturday. It was the team’s fourth straight win-and-cover and North Carolina has won all five of its tournament games by double digits. These two teams have met just three times since 1997 and North Carolina is 3-0 SU and 2-1 ATS in those contests.

                One thing that favors the Wildcats is that they are 19-5 ATS after allowing 65 points or less in two straight games over the past two seasons.

                The Tar Heels, meanwhile, are 17-7 ATS in neutral court games in that span.

                Villanova is coming off of a dominant performance over Oklahoma in the Final Four and one guy that really stepped it up was G Josh Hart (15.5 PPG, 6.7 RPG, 1.2 SPG). Hart finished the game with 23 points, eight rebounds, four assists and two steals and was 10-for-12 from the floor. He will need to find a way to be just as effective against a Tar Heels team that is loaded with talented wing players.

                G Ryan Arcidiacono (12.4 PPG, 4.3 RPG, 1.4 SPG) will also be counted on in a big way on Monday. Arcidiacono had 15 points in the win over Oklahoma on Saturday, but he’ll need to be even better on both ends of the floor on Monday. If he does not win his matchup with Marcus Paige then it’s very unlikely that the Wildcats will be crowned champions when this game is over.

                F Kris Jenkins (13.6 PPG, 3.9 RPG) is another guy that will need to make a huge impact from the wing. Jenkins is a big guy, but he is a 38.4% shooter from the outside and is 15-for-31 from three on the tournament.

                If he can make shots on Monday then it’ll stretch the floor and allow C Daniel Ochefu (10.1 PPG, 7.6 RPG, 1.5 BPG) to go to work in the paint. Ochefu will have to be effective in this one, as the Wildcats can’t afford to get slaughtered in the points in the paint battle. That means he’ll also need to step it up defensively against an incredible North Carolina frontcourt.

                Although Villanova is coming off of the 44-point victory, North Carolina has also been a force in this tournament. The reason the Tar Heels have been winning games so easily is their play in the paint.

                Fs Brice Johnson (17.0 PPG, 10.5 RPG, 1.5 BPG, 1.1 SPG) and Kennedy Meeks (9.4 PPG, 5.9 RPG, 1.1 BPG) have just been too much to handle for other teams. Johnson is averaging 20.0 PPG, 9.6 RPG and 3.0 BPG through five games in this tournament.

                He has done whatever he has wanted to around the basket offensively and he is a menace on the boards. If he can freely play his game on Monday then the Tar Heels will likely win the championship.

                Meeks, meanwhile, is a big body that knows how to score around the basket. His play has taken a ton of pressure off of Johnson, but he’ll need to play well defensively in this one.

                The x-factors in this game will, however, be G Marcus Paige (12.3 PPG, 3.7 APG, 1.2 SPG) and F Justin Jackson (12.3 PPG, 3.9 RPG). If Paige and Jackson can provide some scoring on the perimeter then the Tar Heels are likely going to win this one.

                This team is too difficult to stop around the basket and Villanova won’t be able to win if it has to deal with a Tar Heels group that is clicking on all cylinders.
                Remember the 3 G's Gambling, Golf, Girls not in any particular order.....

                Comment


                • #23
                  UNC looks for 6th title against Villanova
                  April 3, 2016

                  HOUSTON (AP) North Carolina will look for its sixth NCAA championship when the Tar Heels meet the Villanova Wildcats, trying for their second, on Monday night.

                  The Tar Heels (33-6) last won it all in 2009 and Villanova's only title came in 1985.

                  Both teams advanced to the championship game with lopsided wins, but Villanova's was far more of a blowout than North Carolina's.

                  The top-seeded Tar Heels beat 10-seed Syracuse 83-66 on Saturday night in a national semifinal for their 10th straight win. That was after the Wildcats made easy work of Buddy Hield and Oklahoma, with a 95-51 trampling that was the biggest margin of victory in a national semifinal game.

                  Villanova (34-5) did it with 71.4 percent shooting led by Josh Hart, who scored 23 points on 10 of 12 shooting.

                  That percentage was the second best in the history of the Final Four. The only team to shoot a higher percentage was that eighth-seeded team in 1985 eighth-seeded team coached by Rollie Massimino which shot 78.6 percent to pull an upset over Georgetown in the final.

                  ''They shot the ball very efficient tonight,'' Hield said of Villanova. ''If a team do this, I feel they can go win it all.''

                  It won't be easy against the only No. 1 seed to advance to the Final Four this season. Coach Roy Williams has already led two North Carolina teams to championships and this squad has won each of its five tournament games this year by an average of 16.2 points.

                  Nevada sports books opened betting on the title game with North Carolina as a 2-point favorite.

                  Williams wasn't ready to talk about the next game just minutes after North Carolina had wrapped up its semifinal victory.

                  ''Marty Schottenheimer, the coach of the Chiefs a long time ago, had the greatest saying in the world: `Enjoy the dickens out of it until midnight and then worry about that other team,''' he said.

                  North Carolina has reached the title game for the 10th time and it will be just the third appearance for Villanova.

                  The two schools have some tournament history with the Tarheels beating Villanova in the tournament on the way to their titles in 1982, 2005 and 2009. They downed the Wildcats in the national semifinals in 2009 before beating Michigan State for the championship.

                  The Wildcats seemed to handle their easy win exactly the way a coach would hope a team with its biggest game to come would. Forward Daniel Ochefu, who was one of six Villanova players to score in double figures, insisted there was no postgame revelry after Saturday night's victory.

                  ''It was very businesslike,'' he said. ''No one was celebrating. Everyone understands that our next game on Monday we'll be playing a great team and we're not celebrating. We told each other at the end of the game that we have a lot of work to do. We can still get better.''

                  North Carolina also had a balanced scoring attack in its semifinal win with Brice Johnson and Justin Jackson adding 16 points each to go with 15 from Kennedy Meeks and Marcus Paige's 13.

                  But it was the defensive effort of the Tar Heels that Williams was most excited about.

                  ''The last four weeks we've been much, much better defensively,'' he said. ''We had a brain lapse there for about three minutes in the second half, but other than that I thought we were really good defensively against a team that's hard to guard.''

                  The matchup on Monday could be interesting inside after both teams dominated in the paint on Saturday. Villanova outscored Oklahoma 38-20 inside and North Carolina had more points but the same margin by making 50 inside to 32 by Syracuse.

                  ''Our main goal is to play a similar goal to what we played tonight, get the ball inside, really try to pound it in there and knock down our free throws,'' Meeks said.
                  Remember the 3 G's Gambling, Golf, Girls not in any particular order.....

                  Comment


                  • #24
                    NCAA CHAMPIONSHIP GAME NOTES

                    -- #1 Seed favorites are 14-4 SU and 11-7 ATS

                    -- #2 Seeds are 3-7 SU and 4-6 ATS (0-5 SU & 1-4 ATS vs. #1 Seeds)

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

                    -- Favorites of 5 or less pts are 12-3 SUATS

                    -- Teams with a win percentage of .850 or greater are 12-6 SUATS since 1998

                    -- Teams with a win percentage of .810 or less are 3-7 SUATS since 2000

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

                    -- Favorites who score 80 or more in Final Four game are 5-1 SUATS since 1998

                    -- Dogs who allowed 60 or more pts in the Final 4 round are 2-13 SU & 4-11 ATS

                    -- Dogs of 3 > pts off a SU dog win are 1-6 ATS since 1998

                    -- ACC teams are 5-1 SU and 4-2 ATS versus #2 or lower seeds

                    -- Big East teams are 6-1 SUATS

                    -- Big 12 teams are 1-3 SUATS

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

                    COACH ME UP

                    North Carolina’s Roy Williams is:

                    68-22 SU and 50-39-1 ATS in NCAA tournament

                    191-79 SU and 132-131-7 ATS vs. ACC

                    21-5 SU and 16-10 ATS vs. Big East

                    112-32 SU and 72-71-1 ATS vs. Big 12

                    4-4 SU and 3-5 ATS vs. Boeheim

                    3-1 SU and 2-2 ATS vs. Kruger

                    3-0 SU and 2-1 ATS vs. Wright


                    Villanova’s Jay Wright is:

                    18-10 SU and 14-14 ATS in NCAA tournament

                    4-1 SU and 3-2 ATS vs. ACC

                    2-3 SU and 3-2 ATS vs. Big East

                    3-1 SU and 4-0 ATS vs. Big 12

                    12-9 SU and 12-9 ATS vs. Boeheim

                    0-1 SU and 0-1 ATS vs. Kruger

                    0-3 SU and 1-2 ATS vs. Williams
                    Remember the 3 G's Gambling, Golf, Girls not in any particular order.....

                    Comment


                    • #25
                      Brotherly battle between Jenkins, Britt for national title
                      April 3, 2016

                      HOUSTON (AP) Kris Jenkins and Nate Britt, brothers in every way except blood, are giving each other the silent treatment for about 48 hours.

                      Maybe they will exchange a ''good luck'' or a fist bump before Jenkins and Villanova (34-5) face Britt and North Carolina (33-6) on Monday night in the NCAA Tournament championship game. Otherwise, ''Nah,'' Jenkins said, ''no talking.''

                      It's the biggest competition yet between a couple guys who grew up trying to beat each other in everything. While the Wildcats-Tar Heels matchup might be a no-lose situation for the Britt family, for the players involved there will definitely be only one winner.

                      ''Whoever wins the game, obviously the other one is going to be hurt and going to feel bad,'' Britt said. ''That'll be permanent bragging rights for the rest of our lives.''

                      Jenkins and Britt met as 10-year-olds playing AAU basketball in the Washington D.C. area.

                      Eventually, Jenkins started playing for a team coached by Britt's father and spending lots of time at the Britts' home - especially when Jenkins' mother, Felicia, was spending almost all of her time at the hospital with her ailing infant daughter. Kori was 11 months old when she died.

                      When Felicia Jenkins, a former college basketball player, got a job coaching at Benedict College in Columbia, South Carolina, she felt it would be best for Kris to stay with the Britts in Maryland permanently. In 2007, the Britts became Jenkins' legal guardians.

                      ''It's been the greatest decision that's ever happened in my life,'' Jenkins said.

                      Villanova coach Jay Wright said Britt, not Jenkins, was his priority when he took a recruiting visit to the Britt home.

                      ''We liked Kris, but we thought he's overweight and he's not going to do all the stuff we do,'' Wright said.

                      But the 6-foot-6 Jenkins, who weighed as much as 280 pounds back in high school, liked what he heard from Wright. He ended up committing to Villanova, and dropping 40 pounds, and Britt chose North Carolina.

                      When the Tar Heels and Wildcats played each other in the first round of the 2013 NCAA Tournament, Jenkins and Britt watched the game together, rooting for their future schools - and not talking to each other. They trash texted each other and didn't even sit on the same couch.

                      ''That was fun,'' Britt said. North Carolina won 78-71.

                      The Britts have spent the past few weeks bouncing around the country watching their sons play.

                      Last weekend, they managed to attend all four Elite Eight games, two in Philadelphia (where North Carolina played) and two in Louisville (were Villanova played). Jenkins even attended North Carolina's East Regional championship victory against Notre Dame.

                      Nate Britt, the 6-1 guard who averages 5.5 points off the bench, said he does not know which section his parents and sister will be sitting Monday night.

                      ''I tried to ask them how they would remain neutral, what they would wear, but they didn't tell me,'' Britt said.

                      Jenkins, second on Villanova in scoring (13.5 per game), remains close with his birth parents. He says he has two families. And he roots for North Carolina all the time. Well, almost.

                      ''I do hope he plays well,'' Jenkins said. ''I hope he's injury free and things like that. But there's nobody in the world I want to beat more than my brother.''

                      Some things to watch for when Villanova plays North Carolina in the NCAA Tournament for the seventh time (the Tar Heels are 5-1).

                      ---

                      TWO POINTS

                      Both teams like to play with two point guards on the floor at once. For Villanova, it's senior Ryan Arcidiacono and freshman Jalen Brunson. For North Carolina, it's senior Marcus Paige and sophomore Joel Berry II.

                      ''It's always good to have multiple ball handlers and creators out there,'' Paige said. ''You saw last night against the (Syracuse) zone, Joel was able to penetrate the gaps and I was able to knock down some shots. And other nights I have a matchup where I can get in the paint and create things. And Villanova does the same thing with Brunson and Arcidiacono.''

                      ---

                      HISTORY

                      Villanova's only national championship was one of the most famous upsets in the history of not just the NCAA Tournament, but in all of American sports. The 1985 Wildcats upset Patrick Ewing and Georgetown in the final with a near perfect performance.

                      ''It's something we're always reminded of,'' Brunson said.

                      Rollie Massimino, 81, who coached the '85 team, told USA Today Sports he was hoping to attend Monday night's game. He lives in Florida and his wife has been ailing.

                      North Carolina coach Roy Williams can make history by becoming the sixth coach with at least three NCAA titles. He would match Bobby Knight and Jim Calhoun with three, and surpass his mentor and former North Carolina coach, the late Dean Smith.
                      Remember the 3 G's Gambling, Golf, Girls not in any particular order.....

                      Comment


                      • #26
                        North Carolina opens slight fave over Villanova for national championship

                        Villanova was impressive in their national semi final, but open as slight dogs to No. 1 North Carolina.

                        March Madness has now rolled into April, and we’re down to No. 1 seed North Carolina and No. 2 seed Villanova. The two teams will square off for the NCAA Tournament title Monday night at Houston’s NRG Stadium, where both coasted to Final Four victories Saturday night.

                        Villanova’s win was extremely impressive. The Wildcats went off as 2.5-point chalk against fellow No. 2 seed Oklahoma, but made the Sooners look like a one-legged man in a butt-kicking contest in a 95-51 shellacking. After leading by 14 at the half, ‘Nova (34-5 SU, 20-17-1 ATS) spanked the Sooners 53-23 in the final 20 minutes.

                        North Carolina (33-6 SU, 20-18-1 ATS) wasn’t quite that impressive, but the Tar Heels shot nearly 54 percent from the floor and got more easy buckets than you could count in an 83-66 win as a 10-point favorite.

                        The oddsmakers certainly expect the Heels to get a stiffer test from the Wildcats. John Lester, senior lines manager for Bookmaker.eu, told Covers his shop opened Carolina at -2, with the total at 151.

                        “It really does feel like we've got the two best, most complete teams in the tournament facing off for the national title,” Lester said. “This was somewhat of a difficult line to create because, save for one game, the wiseguys have been backing Villanova throughout the dance, while the Tar Heels have had heavy support from the squares. Public perception dictates North Carolina being the favorite.”

                        Jason Simbal, vice president of risk management for CG Technology, which operates several Las Vegas sportsbooks, said his shop set the initial number just a tick lower. But Tar Heels bettors didn’t let it stay that way for long.

                        “We opened North Carolina -1.5, which is the look-ahead line we had up all week,” Simbal said. “When the games ended today, they bet Carolina and we moved it to 2. We’ve got four times more money on the Tar Heels as of this moment.”

                        Both of Saturday’s games cleared the total, with Villanova-Oklahoma going a bucket over 144 and North Carolina-Syracuse topping the 142.5 total by 6.5 points. Simbal said CG pegged the championship game total slightly higher than Bookmaker, at 152.

                        “We’ve gotten some small bets on the over, but not enough to move the number.”
                        Remember the 3 G's Gambling, Golf, Girls not in any particular order.....

                        Comment


                        • #27
                          NCAAB
                          Dunkel

                          Monday, April 4


                          Villanova @ North Carolina

                          Game 601-602
                          April 4, 2016 @ 9:19 pm

                          Dunkel Rating:
                          Villanova
                          82.558
                          North Carolina
                          80.248
                          Dunkel Team:
                          Dunkel Line:
                          Dunkel Total:
                          Villanova
                          by 2 1/2
                          145
                          Vegas Team:
                          Vegas Line:
                          Vegas Total:
                          North Carolina
                          by 3
                          152
                          Dunkel Pick:
                          Villanova
                          (+3); Under




                          NCAAB
                          Long Sheet

                          Monday, April 4

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

                          VILLANOVA (34 - 5) vs. N CAROLINA (33 - 6) - 4/4/2016, 9:15 PM
                          Top Trends for this game.
                          N CAROLINA is 274-225 ATS (+26.5 Units) as a favorite since 1997.
                          N CAROLINA is 17-7 ATS (+9.3 Units) in all neutral court games over the last 2 seasons.
                          N CAROLINA is 17-7 ATS (+9.3 Units) when playing on a neutral court over the last 2 seasons.
                          N CAROLINA is 156-122 ATS (+21.8 Units) in non-conference games since 1997.
                          VILLANOVA is 44-27 ATS (+14.3 Units) in all games over the last 2 seasons.
                          VILLANOVA is 44-27 ATS (+14.3 Units) in all lined games over the last 2 seasons.
                          VILLANOVA is 12-5 ATS (+6.5 Units) after a non-conference game this season.
                          VILLANOVA is 13-4 ATS (+8.6 Units) in non-conference games this season.
                          VILLANOVA is 30-14 ATS (+14.6 Units) after allowing 60 points or less over the last 3 seasons.
                          VILLANOVA is 35-17 ATS (+16.3 Units) when playing against a team with a winning record over the last 2 seasons.

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

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




                          NCAAB
                          Armadillo's Write-Up

                          Monday, April 4

                          Since 1987, #1 seeds are 6-0 vs #2 seeds in a national final (4-2 against spread, covering last four). Villanova is 7th team since 1985 to win their national semifinal by 18+; in six finals that followed those wins, dogs were 5-1 against spread. North Carolina won its last ten games overall. Villanova won 10 of its last 11 games, losing by hoop to Seton Hall in Big East final. Villanova beat Oklahoma by 44, Miami by 23, Iowa by 19- they've hit their stride at right time. ACC, Big East teams split 12 games this season; favorites were 9-3 vs spread in those games. Carolina beat Villanova 78-71 in '13 first round NCAA game, making 11-21 on arc- Villanova was 4-21 on arc, but that was an 8-9 game in 2013.
                          Remember the 3 G's Gambling, Golf, Girls not in any particular order.....

                          Comment


                          • #28
                            CBB ATS

                            CBB > (601) VILLANOVA@ (602) N CAROLINA | 2016-04-04 21:15:00 - 2016-04-04 21:15:00
                            Play ON VILLANOVA against the spread in All games when playing against a team with a winning record
                            The record is 53 Wins and 25 Losses for the last three seasons (+25.5 units)

                            CBB > (601) VILLANOVA@ (602) N CAROLINA | 2016-04-04 21:15:00 - 2016-04-04 21:15:00
                            Play ON VILLANOVA against the spread in All games in non-conference games
                            The record is 31 Wins and 12 Losses for the last three seasons (+17.8 units)
                            --------------------

                            CBB MONEYLINE

                            CBB > (601) VILLANOVA@ (602) N CAROLINA | 2016-04-04 21:15:00 - 2016-04-04 21:15:00
                            Play ON N CAROLINA using money line in Road games when playing on a neutral court
                            The record is 22 Wins and 5 Losses for the last three seasons (+16.15 units)

                            CBB > (601) VILLANOVA@ (602) N CAROLINA | 2016-04-04 21:15:00 - 2016-04-04 21:15:00
                            Play ON N CAROLINA using money line in All games when playing on a neutral court
                            The record is 22 Wins and 5 Losses for the last three seasons (+16.15 units)
                            Remember the 3 G's Gambling, Golf, Girls not in any particular order.....

                            Comment


                            • #29
                              MONDAY, APRIL 4

                              GAME TIME(ET) PICK UNITS


                              VILL at UNC 09:19 PM

                              VILL +2.0

                              U 149.5
                              Remember the 3 G's Gambling, Golf, Girls not in any particular order.....

                              Comment

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