NFL Spread Sheet: Over bettors win big in Week 1
The over went 12-3-1 as Week 1 surprisingly turned into a scoring bonanza.
The shortened offseason? Didn’t hurt offenses, as many had predicted.
Kicking off from the 35? That did lead to more touchbacks, 49 percent through Sunday’s games. But three were returned for touchdowns, tying a Week 1 record.
“The defenses and special teams just looked like a mess,” Las Vegas Hilton SuperBook manager Jay Kornegay told ***********. “This time of year, with a limited number of reps, usually defenses have the advantage. It certainly surprised us to see that kind of success on kickoffs and offense.”
Randall Cobb, Percy Harvin and Ted Ginn Jr. scored on returns of 108, 103 and 102 yards respectively. Today’s return men “are lightning bolts back there,” Kornegay said. “Even though they’re five yards deep, they’re taking it out.”
Ginn, Darren Sproles, Eric Decker and Patrick Peterson returned punts for touchdowns, too. And the Jets returned a blocked punt for a score. Nothing inflates scores faster than special teams touchdowns.
And how about those passing games? Everyone knows the NFL becomes more heavily a passing league each year, but this was ridiculous. Fourteen quarterbacks threw for at least 300 yards in Week 1; the last three opening weekends produced just 11 300-yard games.
And there were three 400-yard performances, two coming in New England’s 38-24 win in Miami. Thus we have a list of passing leaders no one could have projected: Tom Brady (517), Cam Newton (422), Drew Brees (419) and Chad Henne (416).
LIONS TRAIN KEEPS ROLLING
Do you realize Detroit has covered 10 straight, including preseason? The Lions are 9-1 SU in those games after Sunday’s convincing 27-20 win in Tampa Bay. It wasn’t just that Matthew Stafford was healthy and Calvin Johnson proved uncoverable, as usual. Detroit outrushed the Bucs 126 to 56.
Now the Lions host reeling Kansas City, which lost Pro Bowl safety Eric Berry for the year in an embarrassing 41-7 home loss to Buffalo.
The Lions went 7-1 ATS at Ford Field last season. The three times they were favored at home, the Lions covered by an average of 16 points.
Even with Detroit laying 8.5 against a division winner from a year ago, look for the public to be all over the Lions again.
TRENDS THAT DON'T END
With Green Bay’s 42-34 escape against New Orleans, Super Bowl champs improved to 8-1-2 ATS in subsequent openers.
Pittsburgh’s 35-7 loss in Baltimore dropped Super Bowl losers to 0-12 ATS in their following openers. The Steelers are still laying two touchdowns this week against Seattle.
After each of their four losses last year, the Steelers bounced back to cover, and did so by an average of 9.5 points.
MIXED bag for new coaches
The NFL has eight new head coaches, but only five are true rookies. Denver’s John Fox was a longtime boss in Carolina, and Dallas’ Jason Garrett and Minnesota’s Leslie Frazier served as interim head coaches last year.
The five real newcomers – Cleveland’s Pat Shurmur, Carolina’s Ron Rivera, Oakland’s Hue Jackson, Tennessee’s Mike Munchak and San Francisco’s Jim Harbaugh -- went 2-3 SU and ATS in Week 1.
If you include the other three, new coaches went 2-6 SU and 4-4 ATS.
Most improved D?
We don’t want to make too much of one game, especially one against the Manning-less Colts, but Houston’s defense could be the most improved. New coordinator Wade Phillips moved Mario Williams to OLB in the 3-4, and Williams responded with two sacks and three QB hurries.
Williams also forced Kerry Collins into an intentional grounding call. ILB Brian Cushing added a team-high seven tackles.
The 34-7 Texans win stayed under the total of 44 – a rarity amid the Week 1 scoring barrage.
The over went 12-3-1 as Week 1 surprisingly turned into a scoring bonanza.
The shortened offseason? Didn’t hurt offenses, as many had predicted.
Kicking off from the 35? That did lead to more touchbacks, 49 percent through Sunday’s games. But three were returned for touchdowns, tying a Week 1 record.
“The defenses and special teams just looked like a mess,” Las Vegas Hilton SuperBook manager Jay Kornegay told ***********. “This time of year, with a limited number of reps, usually defenses have the advantage. It certainly surprised us to see that kind of success on kickoffs and offense.”
Randall Cobb, Percy Harvin and Ted Ginn Jr. scored on returns of 108, 103 and 102 yards respectively. Today’s return men “are lightning bolts back there,” Kornegay said. “Even though they’re five yards deep, they’re taking it out.”
Ginn, Darren Sproles, Eric Decker and Patrick Peterson returned punts for touchdowns, too. And the Jets returned a blocked punt for a score. Nothing inflates scores faster than special teams touchdowns.
And how about those passing games? Everyone knows the NFL becomes more heavily a passing league each year, but this was ridiculous. Fourteen quarterbacks threw for at least 300 yards in Week 1; the last three opening weekends produced just 11 300-yard games.
And there were three 400-yard performances, two coming in New England’s 38-24 win in Miami. Thus we have a list of passing leaders no one could have projected: Tom Brady (517), Cam Newton (422), Drew Brees (419) and Chad Henne (416).
LIONS TRAIN KEEPS ROLLING
Do you realize Detroit has covered 10 straight, including preseason? The Lions are 9-1 SU in those games after Sunday’s convincing 27-20 win in Tampa Bay. It wasn’t just that Matthew Stafford was healthy and Calvin Johnson proved uncoverable, as usual. Detroit outrushed the Bucs 126 to 56.
Now the Lions host reeling Kansas City, which lost Pro Bowl safety Eric Berry for the year in an embarrassing 41-7 home loss to Buffalo.
The Lions went 7-1 ATS at Ford Field last season. The three times they were favored at home, the Lions covered by an average of 16 points.
Even with Detroit laying 8.5 against a division winner from a year ago, look for the public to be all over the Lions again.
TRENDS THAT DON'T END
With Green Bay’s 42-34 escape against New Orleans, Super Bowl champs improved to 8-1-2 ATS in subsequent openers.
Pittsburgh’s 35-7 loss in Baltimore dropped Super Bowl losers to 0-12 ATS in their following openers. The Steelers are still laying two touchdowns this week against Seattle.
After each of their four losses last year, the Steelers bounced back to cover, and did so by an average of 9.5 points.
MIXED bag for new coaches
The NFL has eight new head coaches, but only five are true rookies. Denver’s John Fox was a longtime boss in Carolina, and Dallas’ Jason Garrett and Minnesota’s Leslie Frazier served as interim head coaches last year.
The five real newcomers – Cleveland’s Pat Shurmur, Carolina’s Ron Rivera, Oakland’s Hue Jackson, Tennessee’s Mike Munchak and San Francisco’s Jim Harbaugh -- went 2-3 SU and ATS in Week 1.
If you include the other three, new coaches went 2-6 SU and 4-4 ATS.
Most improved D?
We don’t want to make too much of one game, especially one against the Manning-less Colts, but Houston’s defense could be the most improved. New coordinator Wade Phillips moved Mario Williams to OLB in the 3-4, and Williams responded with two sacks and three QB hurries.
Williams also forced Kerry Collins into an intentional grounding call. ILB Brian Cushing added a team-high seven tackles.
The 34-7 Texans win stayed under the total of 44 – a rarity amid the Week 1 scoring barrage.
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