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  • #76
    Essentials - Week 2
    September 16, 2018
    By Tony Mejia


    Sunday

    Indianapolis at Washington (-6/48), 1 p.m. ET, CBS:
    : Andrew Luck will try to build on a decent debut against a ‘Skins defense that should generate pressure since they’ve got the edge up front. Left tackle Anthony Castonzo will sit again due to a hamstring injury and last week’s starting right tackle, J’Marcus Webb, landed on IR with his own hammy issue. Denzel Good remains sidelined too so rookie Braden Smith and Joe Haeg will line up at tackle. Washington had just two sacks of Arizona’s Sam Bradford but will have a crowd behind it to help try and rattle Luck, so getting rid of the ball quickly is going to play a major role. RB Marlon Mack missed Week 1 but returns form a hamstring injury to take some carries from rookie Jordan Wilkins.

    While Indy’s backs may be toying with rattles and pacifiers, 33-year-old Adrian Peterson comes off a 96-yard outing in Week 1 and teamed with Carlos Thompson to go over the 200-yard mark in Glendale. The Colts ranked 26th in rushing yards per game allowed last season and were gashed some by Joe Mixon in the season-opening home loss. Indy keying on the run should give Alex Smith opportunities to look good for the locals in his home debut. Although this location is closer to the damage caused by Hurricane Florence than most venues hosting games this week, rain isn’t expected to be in the forecast.

    Carolina at Atlanta (-6/44), 1 p.m. ET, FOX: The Cowboys’ inability to block up front or create much downfield via the passing game helped mask the fact that the Panthers didn’t exactly set the world on fire in their Week 1 win. We did see Cam Newton calling his number on straight draws more than we’ve seen over the past few years, something he’s referred to as getting back to what he does best. The Panthers want to keep him healthy and fresh, but if the opener was any indication, are going to let him do his thing. With Greg Olson out with a foot injury and unlikely to contribute, it’s on Newton to cultivate new weapons and help them emerge. With guard Trai Turner out with a concussion, the offensive line is down yet another body after already losing tackles Matt Kalil and Daryl Williams for at least two months.

    These NFC South rivals know each other well and can console one another since they’ve been among the unluckiest teams in the league thus far, records aside. While Carolina comes in 1-0, Atlanta lost a winnable game in Philly and added injury to insult, twice. Terrific young LB Deion Jones (foot) and safety Keanu Neal (ACL), both starters, were lost for the season, so Dan Quinn and coordinator Marquand Manuel will have to rebuild on the move. Top RB Devonta Freeman hurt his knee and will be out at least a few weeks, leaving duties to the very capable Tevin Coleman but nevertheless adding to the team’s depth issues. Atlanta is heavily favored, perhaps moreso than many expected, but its recent history against the Panthers at home may factor in some since it has won eight of the last 10 (SU and ATS) played between the Georgia Dome and Mercedes-Benz Stadium. The Falcons are 14-2 (13-3 ATS) in their last 16 September home games.

    Minnesota at Green Bay, 1 p.m. ET, FOX:
    Aaron Rodgers practiced Saturday to increase the likelihood he’ll suit up for this huge early NFC North game against the team that ended his 2017 season prematurely. He wasn’t moving around well at all during last week’s epic comeback against Chicago, so an appearance here would mean he’s going to try and beat one of the top defenses in pro football with only his brain and arm. He won’t be very mobile and faces a healthy Vikings defense that harassed Jimmy Garoppolo into three picks in handing him his first loss as an NFL starter.

    Rodgers would be replaced by DeShone Kizer if he decides to exercise caution and take the week off, which is one reason the SuperContest went to a 7-point spread favoring Minnesota when those lines came down Wednesday. Kizer just joined the team in March and was picked off in addition to fumbling after taking over for Rodgers against the Bears. Keep that in mind given the possibility that Rodgers starts but doesn’t last all four quarters. Davante Adams will be out there despite shoulder pain, so Green Bay will at least be able to challenge the Vikes secondary at full strength. Rookie Mike Hughes made the biggest play in Minnesota’s Week 1 win over San Francisco, striking for a pick-six.

    L.A. Chargers (-7.5/43) at Buffalo, 1 p.m. ET, CBS: For a team that doesn’t have a homefield advantage, playing on the road is no big deal. That was the case last year for the Chargers, who went 4-4 outside of their “home” in Carson, winning games on both coasts since they beat each of Met Life Stsdium’s residents once. They were 5-2-1 ATS in true road games last season and won both games they were favored in outright. Philip Rivers will have to get it done without tackle Joe Barksdale’s protection since he left the game last Sunday with a knee injury and won’t return. Second-year Joe Tavi (Utah) will make his second career start.

    If there’s a way the Bills are going to reverse course after being the league’s biggest embarrassment in Week 1 by winning their home opener, pressuring Rivers into mistakes is their best bet. Shaq Lawson won’t play due to a bum hamstring, but end Jerry Hughes and tackles Kyle Williams and Star Lotulelei could still prove formidable for an L.A. offensive line that’s thin on bodies. The defense will have to help pick up Kyle Allen, who is making his first career start and becomes the second rookie in this class to start, falling in behind New York’s Sam Darnold. The Bills aren’t expecting a special debut since he’s got a lot of work to put in and is far more raw than his Jets’ counterpart, but if he can keep plays alive with his feet or hit a big play with his arm, they’ll be able to hang around. That would be a step up from last week. L.A. pass rushers Joey Bosa (foot) and Corey Liuget (suspension) won’t play, aiding Allen’s cause.

    Houston (-3/43) at Tennessee, 1 p.m. ET, CBS: Deshaun Watson isn’t dealing with any lingering effects after being beat up by the Patriots last week, or if he is, he’ll be playing through them in Nashville. He didn’t look like the version who took the league by storm for a few weeks before being injured. His first snap resulted in a fumble. He was picked off. Passes sailed. He never got comfortable, so between rust and pressure, he looked awfully rough against New England. Act 2 gets underway against a Titans defense that he had his coming out party against, albeit in Houston. Watson threw for four scores and ran for another in a 57-14 rout last October 1, beginning his brief run of world domination. Right tackle Seantrel Henderson broke his ankle last week, but Watson will have De’Andre Hopkins (foot) and Will Fuller (hamstring) to throw to.

    The Titans saw Marcus Mariota get beat up in Miami in between lightning delays and came up a big loser in the longest game in league history. Beyond the Week 1 setback, of greater importance was the loss of Delanie Walker to a gruesome ankle injury likely to end his season. The Titans enter this home opener with starting tackles Taylor Lewan and Jack Conklin in addition to backup Dennis Kelly, Kevin Pamphile and undrafted Tyler Marz will be tasked with protecting the franchise. Mariota has been dealing with a pinched nerve in his elbow that has caused numbness in his fingers, so Blaine Gabbert has also been prepared to play this week. The Titans are 1-5 in their last six September home games and are 4-10 SU (3-11 ATS) against the Texans since 2011, so it’s no surprise to see them open as a home ‘dog given all their issues.

    Kansas City at Pittsburgh (-5.5/53.5), 1 p.m. ET, CBS:
    Ben Roethlisberger is on the list of quarterbacks to be concerned about entering Sunday since he was dealing with an elbow injury. Josh Dobbs took first-team snaps in case he’s needed to pinch hit but Roethlisberger is likely to gut it out despite the fact that he wasn’t sharp at all after getting clocked late in the fourth. Luckily, he’ll have Le’Veon Bell to shoulder the load… oh, right. James Conner did have an excellent debut as the fill-in as Bell continues his holdout, but the offensive line that does the heavy lifting in Pittsburgh won’t be as formidable if guard David DeCastro can’t play after breaking his hand in a costly tie in Cleveland.

    The Chiefs couldn’t have asked for a better season debut for Patrick Mahomes II, making his second NFL start after getting his feet wet in a meaningless Week 17 game last week when he was still serving his apprenticeship. It’s his show now, and he displayed full control with some jaw-dropping throws showing off zip that you can’t teach. He lit up the Chargers despite Travis Kelce finishing with just once reception, so don’t be surprised if feeding his All-Pro tight end is on today’s agenda. He’ll be starting his third straight career road game but facin a secondary that may be missing starting corners Joe Haden (hamstring) and Artie Burns (toe), though the latter is expected to play. Expect to see plenty of veteran Coty Sensabaugh and second-year man Cameron Sutton, which means we’ll see how well Mahomes identifies mismatches. Numbers favor the Chiefs here too since the Steelers haven’t covered in any of their last five home games despite winning four outright – all one-possession games decided by four points or less.

    Miami at N.Y. Jets (-3/42.5), 1 p.m. ET, CBS: One of these teams is going to be 2-0 and the greatest threat to the Patriots’ throne at the end of this one, which obviously doesn’t mean all that much. Still, don’t be Debbie Downer. Considering where these franchises have been of late, stuck in hopeless mediocrity or the miserable state of being the perennial butt of a joke, being perfect through two would be cause for cautious optimism in New York or South Florida. The Jets were last 2-0 in ’15, while you have to go back to ’13 for the last time the ‘Fins got there. Ryan Tannehill did some good things in his long-awaited return but did throw two interceptions while Darnold threw a pick-six on his first pass, then settled in to put on a show on a Monday night. We’ll see whether the short week affects the rookie and his Jets teammates but it likely won’t, home opener and all. LB Josh Martin (concussion) and safety Marcus Maye (foot) will be absent but the defense that picked on Matthew Stafford relentlessly returns mostly intact.

    The Dolphins are relatively healthy everywhere but up front, where they had to put guard Josh Sitton on IR with a torn rotator cuff and have starting tackles Laremy Tunsil and Ja’Wuan James nursing hamstring injuries. New York is favored in a game for the first time since December 2016 and have covered seven of their last nine home games. Miami has won three of four in the series.

    Philadelphia (-3.5/45) at Tampa Bay, 1 p.m. ET, FOX: The Eagles survived the Thursday night season opener thanks to fabulous defense in the red zone, which, let’s face it, they got an assist from the Falcons on. The Bucs didn’t require help in pulling off the biggest Week 1 upset in a 48-40 shocker at New Orleans. Ryan Fitzpatrick may be sparking himself up a QB controversy if he builds on a 4-touchdown performance in which he threw for 417 yards. Jameis Winston can only watch for another two games due to suspension, but De’Sean Jackson may prefer Fitzpatrick, who threw him two long TD passes and lets him go and get it in a way Winston hasn’t been able to. He’ll play after clearing concussion protocol, but corner Brent Grimes and Vernon Hargreaves have been ruled out.

    A depleted secondary that Drew Brees tore up has a much easier task since Nick Foles hasn’t been able to get the passing game on track and will again be missing top threat Alshon Jeffery due to a shoulder injury. The Eagles will have WR Shelton Gibson back, but versatile threat Darren Sproles won’t play after his strong Week 1 return was spoiled by a hamstring tweak. Nelson Agholor and Zach Ertz will need to find ways to exploit the Bucs. It’s going to be a hot, humid day in Tampa, so we’ll see which team is better conditioned come second half. Have the defending champs rested on their laurels? At times throughout this preseason, that allegation was heard. A 2-0 start without Carson Wentz, whether it’s pretty or not, would be a strong rebuttal.

    Cleveland at New Orleans (-9.5/49), 1 p.m. ET, FOX: The Saints join the Packers and Broncos as teams that get to spend the first two weeks of the season at home, so there’s some pressure not to completely waste this opportunity to get off to a good start. Sean Payton’s former defensive coordinator and brother in “Bountygate,” Gregg Williams, will bring his aggressive defense into the Superdome after they created the miscues that allowed Cleveland to leave a stadium without a loss for the first time since 2016. Rookie Denzel Ward picked off a pair of passes and former No. 1 pick Myles Garrett is certainly capable of doing some damage if he’s ever able to get to Brees, who threw for 439 yards and three scores in the upset loss to Tampa. It wasn’t his fault.

    “Take your pick,” was Payton’s response to the question of where blame actually did lie, which included being in the right frame of mind to start the season. New Orleans has been experimenting with its linebacker rotations and will have to see if a secondary that made tremendous strides last season can rebound from a sluggish start. The Saints will be facing Jarvis Landry, rookie Antonio Callaway and tight end David Njoku among others, but Josh Gordon tweaked a hamstring at a non-team event and will be released on Monday, ending a tumultuous chapter with Cleveland. The Browns will be missing starting linebackers Christian Kirksey (shoulder) and Emmanuel Ogbah (ankle), which certainly can put the team in a bind with options like Alvin Kamara, Ted Ginn and the newly healed Cameron Meredith to contend with. Michael Thomas had 16 catches in the opener and will run into Ward, making for an attractive matchup to key in on.

    Arizona at L.A. Rams (-13.5/45), 4:05 p.m. ET, FOX: After feeling their way through the first half in Oakland, the Rams flexed their ample muscles in putting away the Raiders, scoring the final 23 points and controlling the game from all angles. The pass rush, stacked with bodies to ensure guys stay fresh, was fierce and menacing. Putting Ndamakong Suh out there with Aaron Donald has to speed up a quarterback’s internal clock. Newly acquired Aqib Talib and Marcus Peters used to be AFC West but are now thick as thieves as one of the league’s top cornerback tandems. Jared Goff knows where all his receivers are supposed to be at all times, which means Sean McVay has brought him along exactly as desired. Robert Woods is playing the role of the No. 1 receiver, allowing Brandon Cooks and Cooper Kupp to play to their strengths. Todd Gurley and the attention he commands makes it all work. So, where’s the flaw? It’s no wonder the Rams have become the first favorite of over 10 points, a rarity this early in the season.

    The Cardinals could get steamrolled if they’re not able to get started earlier than they did at home against Washington. David Johnson finally found the end zone over 54 minutes in Arizona joined Buffalo and Dallas as teams that failed to score in three of four quarters. The Bills failed to find the end zone and enter Week 2 as the lowest-scoring team but the Cards bring up the rear in the NFC East, drawing little spark from Sam Bradford, who threw for just 153 yards and was picked off once. He hooked up Larry Fitzgerald seven times and tried to feed Johnson but really could never find a rhythm. Johnson is considered probable despite a back issue but tackle Andre Smith has been ruled out with an elbow injury.

    Detroit at San Francisco (-6/48), 4:05 p.m. ET, FOX: Jimmy Garoppolo hadn’t lost a real game as a starter since his days playing for current Syracuse head coach Dino Babers at Eastern Illinois. He was the reason the 49ers lost too, throwing three interceptions and failing to connect on a number of big plays that were available through tight end George Kittle or rookie Dante Pettis. Entering his first full season as a starter and wit h a full training camp under his belt, Garoppolo can now begin to cultivate connections and should be able to make better use of his talent at home against a much less imposing defense than he saw in Minneapolis. Deep threat Marquise Goodwin won’t be available, but between the names mentioned above, veteran Pierre Garcon, slot receiver Trent Taylor and another tight end, Garrett Celek, he’ll have plenty of targets to help him avoid a losing streak.

    Detroit will start Matthew Stafford despite how banged up he looked after getting roughed up by the Jets, who sent him to the bench for a spell and then victimized him via interceptions when he decided to return despite clearly looking limited. The hope is that he’ll be able to bounce back despite the short week situation that is compounded by a trip out to the West coast. Matt Patricia faces the challenge of keeping this team he basically inherited from fracturing since the word is they’re not particularly fond of his methods as it is. The defense will have its two standouts since DE Ezekiel Ansah (shoulder) has been upgraded to probable and top corner Darius Slay wasn’t even included on the injury report despite hurting his knee and exiting during a key stretch where the Jets took over.

    New England (-1.5/44) at Jacksonville, 4:25 p.m. ET, CBS: We didn’t have to wait long to get this AFC Championship rematch, so it will definitely register on the Tom Brady mortality meter how pumped he is to try and send a message here. After being harassed by one of the league’s top defenses into taking whatever he could, finishing with 290 yards on 26 completions, the master ultimately got the better of an athletic Jaguars defense that’s among the best he’s seen over the past decade by rallying the Patriots from a 14-3 deficit thanks to a 14-3 fourth quarter where he threw a pair of touchdown passes. Considering this game won’t be played in friendly Gillette Stadium and he’ll take on a healthy Jags defense with what’s essentially a rebuilt receiving corps, Gronk aside, this should be an excellent challenge for him.

    New England’s defense started incredibly slowly under Patricia last season, so Bill Belichick has to be pleased that this year’s group has taken to new leadership and an aggressive scheme so nicely, having enjoyed a strong preseason and largely controlling Houston’s Watson and a dangerous offense that really couldn’t get going in Foxboro. The Patriots will look to hassle Blake Bortles into mistakes and errant throws the way the Giants were able to last week and probably won’t have to deal with Leonard Fournette, who is considered doubtful with a hamstring issue. This is one of the few games on Sunday’s slate that may be affected by weather since thunderstorms could become part of the story in the second half.

    Oakland at Denver (-6.5/46), 4:25 p.m. ET, CBS:
    Social media trolls had a lot of fun with Jon Gruden during that second-half beating he was powerless to stop. Maybe he would’ve been more comfortable in a cozy press box on Monday night, but ESPN wasn’t going to be paying him $100 million over the next decade to sit there. Plus, he got the itch, and there’s only one way to scratch it, even if it will ultimately involve a lot of losing. Oakland has a unique timetable in that it is moving to Las Vegas and ultimately rebuilding but doing so with hand-picked veterans Gruden is counting on to help him set a foundation. Derek Carr made an awful second-half mistake and Amari Cooper was invisible again, playing decoy as Jared Cook emerged as the Raiders’ most effective weapon. Marshawn Lynch found the end zone and ran as hard as he ever has, albeit not as effectively as when he had a different, younger version of beast mode engaged. The Broncos intercepted Russell Wilson twice and Von Miller created a fumble, so despite losing Talib, the defense still has teeth and could be formidable again.

    Case Keenum threw three interceptions and still managed to win, hooking up with veteran Emmanuel Sanders 10 times and hitting mainstay Demariyus Thomas for the game-winning score, but this team is loaded with young guys and new faces on that side of the ball, riding Devontae Booker and rookies Royce Freeman and Philip Lindsay, all Pac-12 products. Rookie receivers DaeSean Hamilton and Courtland Sutton figure to factor in the passing game as the season progresses, but a veteran Raiders secondary may have a few advantages to tap into. It was surprising to see the line creep up near seven points given the Broncos’ freefall last season, but Oakland’s road struggles probably factored in some since the Raiders have only one once in their last seven excursions away from the Black Hole, going 1-5-1 ATS.
    Remember the 3 G's Gambling, Golf, Girls not in any particular order.....

    Comment


    • #77
      Tom Brady vs. Jaguars is one-sided confrontation
      September 15, 2018
      By The Associated Press


      If there's ever going to be a changing of the guard in the AFC, then Sunday's visit to Jacksonville by the Patriots would seem a perfect time.

      Except when you look at the numbers that say Tom Brady doesn't lose to the Jaguars.

      Ever.

      Jacksonville had a 10-point lead at New England in the second half of the AFC championship game last January when Brady worked his magic, helped mightily by the Jaguars' discomfort being so close to making the Super Bowl. It shouldn't have been a surprise in this matchup: Brady now is 8-0 against the Jags, the only AFC team without a win against the five-time Super Bowl champion and three-time league MVP. He has 19 TDs and two interceptions against Jacksonville while completing more than 70 percent of his passes for more than 1,800 yards.

      So solving Brady, as it is for most teams, is a must for Jacksonville in this battle of opening-game winners that could wind up pivotal for the AFC playoffs.

      ''It's going to be an emotional environment,'' Brady said. ''I think everyone, whenever you play some of the best teams, you want to see where you're measured up to, and that defense has been ranked very high all last year, and I could see why. We practiced against them. They were very good. They've got a lot of very talented players - some of the guys that are probably the best at their position. So, it's going to be a great environment for football.''

      Brady has 224 career wins, one shy of the NFL record held by kicker Adam Vinatieri, whose Colts are at Washington.

      Jacksonville could be short-handed in a key area: running back Leonard Fournette has hamstring issues, and the Jags need a strong running game to keep Brady on the sideline.

      T.J. Yeldon would get the start if Fournette can't go.

      ''He has always been good,'' coach Doug Marrone says of Yeldon. ''I think he is more explosive. He's stronger. He's elusive. I think he can carry a load of carries.''

      The weekend began with Cincinnati's 34-23 home victory over Baltimore. Andy Dalton threw four touchdown passes in the first half - three to A.J. Green - to help the Bengals improve to 2-0. The Ravens are 1-1.

      Philadelphia (1-0) at Tampa Bay (1-0)

      One reason the Eagles had the NFC's best record in 2017 was a 6-2 road mark. They were sloppy yet victorious in their opener at home against Atlanta and haven't played since Sept. 6. Nick Foles gets the call at quarterback again with Carson Wentz still not ready, though Philly's running game with Jay Ajayi, who had two touchdowns last week, and strong defense could decide things.

      The Buccaneers come off an impressive upset win at New Orleans in which Ryan Fitzpatrick showed why he has been a quality fill-in passer for years. He threw for a career-best 417 yards, four TDs, and had no interceptions against the Saints. He also scored a rushing TD.

      FitzMagic indeed.

      Kansas City (1-0) at Pittsburgh (0-0-1)

      As ugly as the Steelers' performance was in the rain in Cleveland, that's how pretty Chiefs fan think their team's work was in Los Angeles.

      But this is a nightmare matchup for KC: The Steelers have won seven of the last eight vs. the Chiefs, who are 0-6 in Pittsburgh since 1986. Plus, the Steelers are 15-2 in home openers at Heinz Field.

      Two of the NFL's most dynamic wideouts go at it here: All-Pro Antonio Brown for Pittsburgh, WR-KR Tyreek Hill for Kansas City. Don't take your eyes off the field.

      Minnesota (1-0) at Green Bay (1-0)

      Right up until kickoff, the fans at Lambeau Field will be holding their breath to see if Aaron Rodgers can go. Green Bay is in massive trouble if he can't, as last week's heroic performance by A-Rod in the comeback victory over Chicago showed.

      ''Yeah, well, you know he walks on water, so I'm sure he's going to play,'' Minnesota coach Mike Zimmer said.

      The Vikings aren't the Bears and won't likely be playing passively if they get a lead. Not with that dynamic defense that handed Jimmy Garoppolo his first pro defeat in the opener.

      Carolina (1-0) at Atlanta (0-1)

      Not only did the Falcons falter in Philly in their opener, they had two significant long-term injuries with safety Keanu Neal and linebacker Deion Jones. The defense kept them in the Eagles game while Matt Ryan struggled. Sure, he completed 10 passes for 169 yards to Julio Jones, but Ryan generally was off the mark.

      Carolina has its own injury woes, losing star TE Greg Olsen with a foot problem. Its defense was super stingy against Dallas, with LB Luke Kuechly in on 13 tackles.

      Miami (1-0) at New York Jets (1-0)

      Barring a tie - and we all know those never happen in the NFL, right? - one of these teams will be a surprising 2-0 Sunday night.

      The Dolphins come off the longest NFL game since the 1970 merger, outlasting Tennessee in 7 hours, 8 minutes, including 3:59 in multiple weather delays. RB Frank Gore has 14,087 career yards rushing and needs 15 to surpass the Jets' greatest runner, Curtis Martin (14,101), for fourth place on the NFL's list.

      Sam Darnold threw a pick-6 on his first pro attempt, then reversed things with aplomb at Detroit. The Jets' defense deserves the highest accolades for making Matthew Stafford look like an inept rookie, something Darnold didn't resemble beyond that opening pass.

      Cleveland (0-0-1) at New Orleans (0-1)


      Oh yeah, they do have ties, which for the Browns is a monumental achievement considering they lost all 16 games in 2017 and were 1-15 the previous year. Oddly, the Browns overwhelmingly lead this series 13-4, winning five of the last six meetings.

      WR Michael Thomas had a Saints single-game record 16 catches last week for 180 yards and a score. Drew Brees will target him often, sometimes against rookie Denzel Ward, who had two picks of Ben Roethlisberger in the opener.

      Arizona (0-1) at Los Angeles Rams (1-0)

      All seven of the new head coaches lost last week, none more distressingly than Arizona's Steve Wilks at home against Washington. QB Sam Bradford, the top overall draft choice by the Rams in 2010, now is the Cardinals' starter, and he has an all-time great receiver in Larry Fitzgerald. Yet Arizona was outclassed in its first game for Wilks.

      No such problems for the Rams, who looked strong in all phases at Oakland. A worry, though, is losing All-Pro kick returner Pharoh Cooper to an ankle injury.

      Oakland (0-1) at Denver (1-0)

      The glow from the return of Jon Gruden as coach will fade into the Mile High air if the Raiders put forth another mediocre showing in this bitter rivalry. Oakland struggled in the second half in falling to the Rams, with only TE Jared Cook a consistent positive with nine catches for a career-best 180 yards. The defense clearly missed Khalil Mack.

      Von Miller was a terror against Seattle: Miller had three sacks, two forced fumbles and a fumble recovery. He's one of three active players (Robert Quinn, Terrell Suggs) with two career games with at least three sacks and two forced fumbles.

      In all, Jon Gruden's teams are 1-9 against the Broncos, with the one win coming in Oakland in 2001.

      Indianapolis (0-1) at Washington (1-0)

      The last time Frank Reich coached in a game that counted, he helped Philly win a Super Bowl. His Colts blew a big lead at home to Cincinnati, but at least Andrew Luck is back behind center. And Luck likes the look of Redskins burgundy: He threw for 370 yards, five TDs and one interception in his only previous game vs. Washington.

      RB Adrian Peterson moved into 10th place all-time in rushing yards after gaining 96 last week at Arizona. Washington's defense was stout and ranks second overall.

      Houston (0-1) at Tennessee (0-1)

      After their long, weather-related wait to eventually lose in Miami, and a right elbow injury to Marcus Mariota, the Titans could use a boost in a key early season AFC South game. Mariota should play for new coach Mike Vrabel, who was an assistant in Houston the last four years under Bill O'Brien.

      The Texans have won nine of the last 12 against Tennessee, and O'Brien is 6-2 against the Titans. Houston lost at New England last week, but kept things close.

      L.A. Chargers (0-1) at Buffalo (0-1)

      So, first-round pick Josh Allen will start and hope to avoid another debacle after the 47-3 defeat at Baltimore. Allen will have a long leash. Remember, Buffalo's other QB, Nathan Peterman, threw five first-half interceptions in his start against the Chargers last year. He was just about as bad against the Ravens.

      The Chargers have won three straight and 17 of the past 22 meetings. They outscored the Bills by 113-44 in those three victories.

      Detroit (0-1) at San Francisco (0-1)

      It's impossible to fathom Stafford being as awful again. He threw four picks, one returned for a touchdown by the Jets. His passes were off the mark most of the game.

      Now that 49ers QB Garoppolo has lost a game, maybe the expectations in the Bay Area can be tamped down a bit. Keep a watch out for DL DeForest Buckner (2 1/2 sacks at Minnesota) and LB Fred Warner, who led all rookies with 12 tackles last week and forced a fumble.

      New York Giants (0-1) at Dallas (0-1)

      Easy to understand why the NFL keeps scheduling this matchup in prime time and why the broadcasting network loves it: big audiences. This year's faceoff doesn't have all that much charm considering both teams stumbled, particularly with the ball, in losing openers.

      Of prime interest will be the running backs, second overall pick Saquon Barkley, who excited Giants fans with his 68-yard TD burst in his debut, and Dallas star Zeke Elliott.

      Seattle (0-1) at Chicago (0-1), Monday night

      So the two night games in the second week of the schedule feature a combined record of 0-4. YAWN!

      Both teams lost close ones on the road, with the Bears infamously blowing a 20-point lead at Green Bay to a hobbled Rodgers. Seattle gave up 475 yards at Denver and the usually slippery Russell Wilson was sacked six times.
      Remember the 3 G's Gambling, Golf, Girls not in any particular order.....

      Comment


      • #78
        Mack off to good start, Bears try to rebound against Seattle
        September 16, 2018
        By The Associated Press


        LAKE FOREST, Ill. (AP) Khalil Mack sat out offseason workouts and the preseason, had just one week to learn a new system following a blockbuster trade, and still managed to dominate in his debut for the Chicago Bears.

        The two-time All-Pro performed exactly as envisioned in a prime-time opener.

        The Bears hope for more of that when they host Russell Wilson and the Seattle Seahawks on Monday night. They'd just like a different outcome.

        Chicago blew a 20-point lead in the second half against Green Bay on Sunday night, with a hobbled Aaron Rodgers leading the Packers to a 24-23 victory that spoiled Matt Nagy's coaching debut. But before that rally, Mack was the one stealing the spotlight.

        ''Obviously he's stepped in very well,'' defensive coordinator Vic Fangio said. ''But I think everybody likes to overanalyze things - how much can you play a guy that's just come in like that, no training camp, no nothing, hasn't played since whenever his last game was last season? But I think with special guys, you throw that stuff out the window. He's a special player. He did special things under special circumstances.''

        Mack held out the entire offseason and preseason with Oakland while seeking a long-term contract extension rather than play under the final year of his rookie deal. The Raiders finally traded him two weeks ago. And the Bears gave Mack the richest deal ever for an NFL defensive player: a six-year, $141 million extension that guarantees $90 million.

        Some long sessions getting up to speed with outside linebackers coach Brandon Staley followed.

        ''I've been ready for the grind, been waiting five months to feel the grind,'' Mack said. ''Yeah, we've definitely been doing that.''

        Mack sure looked ready against Green Bay.

        He had no trouble getting around Bryan Bulaga for a strip-sack against DeShone Kizer that led to a turnover. With Kizer hit by Roy Robertson-Harris as he unleashed a short pass, Mack returned an interception 27 yards for a touchdown near the end of the first half.

        But that wasn't all.

        He was closing in from the edge when Robertson-Harris came through the middle and landed on Rodgers' left leg while sacking the two-time MVP in the second quarter. Rodgers left the field on a cart, only to return in the second half.

        Mack also had pressure on Kizer when Roquan Smith got a sack on his first NFL play.

        ''He wasn't always in the best position, but he still could come up and make a play or make something happen,'' Seahawks coach Pete Carroll said. ''To be as good as he is, to be the (2016 NFL Defensive Player of the Year), you have to have all the attributes and he has them. Speed, strength, explosion, savvy, motor - he has all that stuff. He's just getting in shape too, so he's going to get better.''

        It's the second time in as many games the Seahawks (0-1) will be facing an elite edge rusher. They had to contend with Von Miller at Denver. And Seattle had its difficulties in a season-opening loss .

        The Broncos got six sacks, though some could be blamed on Wilson for running into trouble. Miller had three of them, and the Seahawks are facing another difficult challenge going against Mack.

        ''Both of them are very dynamic players,'' tackle Duane Brown said. ''Von is just a different kind of athlete. Very, very quick. Very fast off the ball, which Khalil has the same abilities. I think he uses strength a little bit more. He plays extremely hard. He's a factor in the run and pass game; someone you have to account for. I put those guys as 1A and 1B in the league on the edge.''

        The Bears see Mack as a player who can turn a solid defense into an elite unit and help them break a string of losing years. They have four straight last-place finishes in the NFC North and just one playoff season since the 2006 team made the Super Bowl.

        It helps that Mack appears to be getting a quick grasp on Fangio's system. He said he knows ''95, 99 percent'' of the playbook. He also felt ''great'' following last week's game, adding his body ''missed getting beat up.''

        He is also looking forward to playing at Soldier Field for the first time as a member of the Bears. In his only other game there, with Oakland in 2015, Mack sacked Jay Cutler on the final drive. But Robbie Gould kicked a 49-yard field goal in the closing seconds to give the Bears a 22-20 victory.

        ''I don't know what it's going to be like,'' Mack said. ''I've seen what it's like to play there, but I don't know what it's going to be like to be a part of the home team this time around. But I'm looking forward to it.''
        Remember the 3 G's Gambling, Golf, Girls not in any particular order.....

        Comment


        • #79
          iu;

          MIN at GB 01:00 PM
          GB +2.0
          O 45.0

          CLE at NO 01:00 PM
          CLE +9.5
          U 50.5

          CAR at ATL 01:00 PM
          ATL -5.5
          O 43.5

          KC at PIT 01:00 PM
          PIT -4.5

          PHI at TB 01:00 PM
          PHI -3.0........(POD )
          U 46.5

          MIA at NYJ 01:00 PM
          NYJ -3.0
          U 43.0

          LAC at BUF 01:00 PM
          BUF +7.5
          O 41.5

          IND at WAS 01:00 PM
          IND +6.0

          HOU at TEN 01:00 PM
          TEN +3.5

          ARI at LAR 04:05 PM
          ARI +13.5
          U 43.5

          DET at SF 04:05 PM
          DET +6.5
          O 48.5

          NE at JAC 04:25 PM
          JAC +1.5
          U 44.0


          OAK at DEN 04:25 PM
          OAK +6.5
          O 45.5
          Remember the 3 G's Gambling, Golf, Girls not in any particular order.....

          Comment


          • #80
            best bets 4 - 2 with Jax +1.5 and the under 44.0 also Oakland + 6.5 and over 45.5
            Remember the 3 G's Gambling, Golf, Girls not in any particular order.....

            Comment


            • #81
              NYG at DAL 08:20 PM

              DAL -3.0

              U 41.0
              Remember the 3 G's Gambling, Golf, Girls not in any particular order.....

              Comment


              • #82
                Prescott, Dallas D lead Cowboys to 20-13 win over Giants
                September 16, 2018


                ARLINGTON, Texas (AP) Dak Prescott accepted the challenge.

                The Dallas quarterback threw a 64-yard touchdown pass to Tavon Austin on the third play of the game and the Cowboys sacked Eli Manning six times in a 20-13 victory over the New York Giants on Sunday night.

                The Dallas defense was strong again, just as in an opening loss at Carolina, as the Cowboys (1-1) avoided the first 0-2 start in seven seasons under coach Jason Garrett.

                Manning and the Giants have started 0-2 for the fifth time in the past six seasons.

                After saying ''challenge accepted'' during the week to Giants safety Landon Collins' suggestion that New York had a better chance by forcing Prescott to throw, the 2016 NFL Offensive Rookie of the Year hit Austin in stride behind cornerback Janoris Jenkins. The speedy receiver cut back to his right before trotting across the goal line at an angle.

                ''When I said I accepted the challenge, we accepted the challenge, this offense and this team,'' Prescott said. ''To strike early and get it going, that's something we all wanted to do.''

                Dallas running back Ezekiel Elliott outgained Saquon Barkley in the first meeting in the pros between the former college rivals and high NFL draft picks. Elliott, who starred at Ohio State, rushed for 78 yards with a touchdown. Barkley, from Penn State, had just 28.

                Even Prescott outrushed Barkley, finishing with a career-high 45 yards on the ground while throwing for 160.

                Brett Maher had the first two field goals of his NFL career, including a 29-yarder after Damien Wilson forced a fumble on a sack of Manning and Taco Charlton recovered.

                The Cowboys shared the wealth on the sacks, with six different players recording a sack apiece: the linebacker Wilson, safety Kavon Frazier and defensive linemen Charlton, DeMarcus Lawrence, Antwaun Woods and Tyrone Crawford.

                The Giants had questions with the offensive front, and they'll only grow after Manning finished two sacks shy of the most in his career. New York also lost center Jon Halapio, who was carted off with an air cast on his right leg in the third quarter.

                Manning converted a pair of fourth downs on sneaks, but the sacks helped keep the Giants from converting those into points. He was even hammered when he wasn't behind the line of scrimmage - on a hit by linebacker Jaylon Smith on a 1-yard gain before New York's first points on Aldrick Rosas' field goal late in the third quarter.

                Prescott fooled the New York defense several times with fake handoffs to Elliott on keepers around end. The longest was a 15-yarder on Dallas' second possession, leading to Maher's first NFL field goal from 37 yards.

                For the second straight week, the Giants didn't get a touchdown until the fourth quarter. The Giants made it interesting when Michael Thomas recovered an onside kick after Manning's 18-yard scoring pass to Evan Engram with 1:27 remaining.

                The Giants settled for Rosas' 38-yard field goal to get within a touchdown with 11 seconds remaining, but the next onside kick went out of bounds.

                Manning finished 33 of 44 for 279 yards. Austin had two catches and led Dallas with 79 yards receiving.

                AIR TIME

                Although Barkley was stifled in the running game, he led everybody with 14 catches for 80 yards. Odell Beckham Jr. had four catches for 51 yards. Engram added seven for 67.

                DELAYED DEBUT

                Dallas tight end Rico Gathers was active for the first time in his third NFL season. The former Baylor basketball player was open in the end zone on one play, but Prescott overthrew him when pressure came. Gathers was targeted twice without a catch.

                INJURIES

                Giants: Punt returner Kaelin Clay injured an ankle in the second quarter and didn't return. He had another adventurous moment a week after his late muff cost the Giants a chance to rally against Jacksonville. He was indecisive and a punt, which bounced in front of and straight into him. He hung on to it.

                UP NEXT

                Giants: Another Texas trip to Houston.

                Cowboys: At Seattle.
                Remember the 3 G's Gambling, Golf, Girls not in any particular order.....

                Comment


                • #83
                  NFL Today, Week 2
                  September 16, 2018


                  SCOREBOARD

                  Monday, Sept. 17

                  Seattle at Chicago, 8:15 p.m. EDT. The Seahawks are 23-9 in Monday night games, including an 11-game win streak snapped by Atlanta last November. Coach Pete Carroll needs two victories to tie Mike Holmgren's club-record 90, counting the regular season and postseason. Carroll has 79 regular-season wins, seven shy of Holmgren's franchise mark. The Bears are playing in prime time again after a gut-wrenching loss at Green Bay last Sunday night. Edge rusher Khalil Mack plays at Soldier Field for the first time since the blockbuster trade from Oakland on Sept. 1. Hall of Famer Brian Urlacher will be inducted into the Bears Ring of Excellence at halftime.

                  ---

                  STARS

                  Passing


                  -Patrick Mahomes, Chiefs, was 23 for 28 for 326 yards and six touchdown passes in Kansas City's 42-37 win over Pittsburgh. His 10 touchdown passes through two weeks are the most by a quarterback through two games in NFL history. Mahomes' six scores tied Len Dawson's franchise mark set in 1964 against Denver when the Chiefs played in the American Football League.

                  -Blake Bortles, Jaguars, was 29 for 45 for 377 yards and four touchdown passes and an interception in Jacksonville's 31-20 win over New England.

                  -Ryan Fitzpatrick, Buccaneers, was 27 for 33 for 402 yards and four touchdown passes and an interception in Tampa Bay's 27-21 win over Philadelphia. Fitzpatrick, who threw for 417 yards and four touchdowns in Week 1, joins Mahomes and Drew Bledsoe (1997) as the only quarterbacks in NFL history with at least four touchdown passes in each of their team's first two games of a season.

                  -Ben Roethlisberger, Steelers, was 39 for 60 for 452 yards and three touchdowns in Pittsburgh's 42-37 loss to Kansas City. Roethlisberger has 51,852 yards passing, surpassing Hall of Famer John Elway (51,475) for seventh place on the passing yardage list.

                  -Kirk Cousins, Vikings, was 35 for 48 for 425 yards and four touchdown passes and an interception in Minnesota's 29-29 tie with Green Bay.

                  ---

                  Rushing

                  -Matt Breida, 49ers, had 11 carries for 138 yards, including a 66-yard touchdown, in San Francisco's 30-27 win over Detroit.

                  -Tevin Coleman, Falcons, had 16 carries for 107 yards in Atlanta's 31-24 win over Carolina.

                  -Phillip Lindsay, Broncos, had 14 carries for 107 yards in Denver's 20-19 win over Oakland.

                  ---

                  Receiving

                  -JuJu Smith-Schuster and Jesse James, Steelers. Smith-Schuster had 13 catches for 121 yards and a touchdown. James had five catches for 138 yards and a touchdown in Pittsburgh's 42-37 loss to Kansas City.

                  -Adam Thielen and Stefon Diggs, Vikings. Thielen had 12 catches for 131 yards and a touchdown and Diggs had nine receptions for 128 yards and two touchdowns in Minnesota's 29-29 tie with Green Bay.

                  -Will Fuller and DeAndre Hopkins, Texans. Fuller had eight catches for 113 yards and a touchdown and Hopkins had six catches for 110 yards and a touchdown in Houston's 20-17 loss to Tennessee.

                  -Travis Kelce, Chiefs, had seven catches for 109 yards and two touchdowns in Kansas City's 42-37 win over Pittsburgh.

                  -Brandin Cooks, Rams, had seven catches for 159 yards in Los Angeles' 34-0 win over Arizona.

                  -Keelan Cole, Jaguars, had seven catches for 116 yards and a touchdown in Jacksonville's 31-20 win over New England.

                  -Christian McCaffrey, Panthers, had 14 catches for 102 yards in Carolina's 31-24 loss to Atlanta.

                  ---

                  Special Teams

                  -Geronimo Allison and Josh Jackson, Packers. Allison blocked a punt and Jackson recovered in the end zone for a touchdown in Green Bay's 29-29 against Minnesota.

                  -Kevin Byard and Dane Cruikshank, Titans. Byard, a safety, threw a 66-yard touchdown to Cruikshank on a fake punt in Tennessee's 20-17 win over Houston. Byard's TD pass was the longest by a defensive player in the Super Bowl era, easily topping the mark set by Rams defensive back Ed Meador on Nov. 19, 1967.

                  -Mason Crosby, Packers, made 5 of 6 field goals in Green Bay's 29-29 tie with Minnesota.

                  ---

                  Defense

                  -Darius Leonard, Colts, had a game-high 18 tackles, sacked Alex Smith and forced Jordan Reed to fumble in Indianapolis' 21-9 win over Washington.

                  -Jurrell Casey, Titans, had two sacks and a forced fumble in Tennessee's 20-17 win over Houston.

                  -Cameron Jordan, Saints, had two sacks in New Orleans' 21-18 win over Cleveland.

                  -Melvin Ingram III, Chargers, had 1 1/2 sacks in the Chargers' 31-20 win over Buffalo.

                  ---

                  NATIONAL ANTHEM

                  Miami Dolphins wide receivers Kenny Stills and Albert Wilson again took a knee during the national anthem, this time before the team's game against the New York Jets at MetLife Stadium. Last Sunday, Stills and Wilson also took knees, and were the only players in the NFL to do so.

                  Colin Kaepernick, then with the San Francisco 49ers, sparked the ongoing controversy by kneeling during the pregame ritual in 2016 - his way of protesting police brutality and social injustice in America. He thanked both Stills and Wilson on Twitter last week for ''their unwavering strength by fighting for the oppressed.''

                  On Thursday, Stills insisted that his pregame statements are not going away.

                  ''It's something I'm committed to forever,'' he said.

                  Elsewhere, Chargers tackle Russell Okung stood behind the line of Los Angeles players with his right arm raised and hand in a fist before the game at Buffalo.

                  Oakland Raiders running back Marshawn Lynch sat on a cooler for the national anthem, while Denver receiver Demaryius Thomas and linebacker Brandon Marshall went inside the tunnel. Lynch rode a stationary bike just before the anthem before taking a seat behind the bench. He was surrounded by team personnel.

                  Elsewhere, Marquise Goodwin of the 49ers, who was out of uniform because of an injury, raised a fist during the anthem before San Francisco's game against Detroit.

                  ---

                  MILESTONES

                  The Minnesota Vikings and Green Bay Packers played to a 29-29 tie at Lambeau Field. It was the NFL's second consecutive week with a tie (Cleveland-Pittsburgh in Week 1). This is the first season to feature a tie in each of the first two weeks since 1971, which saw Miami and Denver tie 10-10 in Week 1 and Atlanta and the Los Angeles Rams tie 20-20 in Week 2. ... Dolphins running back Frank Gore has 14,112 yards rushing and is fourth on the career list, passing Hall of Famer Curtis Martin. Gore trails Barry Sanders, Walter Payton and Emmitt Smith. ... Steelers wide receiver Antonio Brown caught nine passes for 67 yards, becoming the fastest player in NFL history to reach 750 receptions (117 games). ... Saints wide receiver Michael Thomas has 28 receptions this season. Thomas surpassed Andre Rison (26 catches in 1994) for the most by a player in his team's first two games to start a season in NFL history. ... Indianapolis kicker Adam Vinatieri converted all three of his extra-point attempts in the Colts' 21-9 victory at Washington. Vinatieri, who has 2,501 points in 23 seasons, joined Hall of Famer Morten Andersen (2,544) as the only players in NFL history with at least 2,500 points.

                  ---

                  STREAKS & STATS

                  Jacksonville's 31-20 win over New England was its first win over Tom Brady. They entered the game 0-8 against the Patriots quarterback. ... Atlanta's 31-24 win over Carolina was the fifth time the Falcons have scored at least 30 points under offensive coordinator Steve Sarkisian, compared with 13 times in 19 games during the 2016 season. They have yet to score 40 points under their current coordinator; Atlanta did it six times in Kyle Shanahan's final season. ... The Chargers won their fourth straight meeting against the Bills, and haven't trailed Buffalo since a 23-14 loss on Oct. 19, 2008. ... The Dolphins beat the Jets 20-12 for their first 2-0 start since 2013. The Bucs held off the Eagles 27-21 for their first 2-0 start since 2010. ... Patrick Mahomes' six touchdown passes tied the most ever allowed by the Steelers in franchise history. Buffalo Bills Hall of Famer Jim Kelly threw six against Pittsburgh in 1991. ... The Rams have won their first two games for the first time since 2001, when they started 6-0 en route to the third Super Bowl appearance in team history. Since trailing Oakland 13-10 at halftime in the opener, the Rams have scored 57 unanswered points over their past six quarters.

                  ---

                  FINALLY, THE END ZONE

                  It took nearly 95 minutes of game time for the Bills to finally find the end zone. The drought finally ended on Chris Ivory's 1-yard plunge with 11:06 left in the third quarter. Buffalo was the only team not to score a touchdown in Week 1.

                  ---

                  EJECTED

                  Atlanta Falcons safety Damontae Kazee was ejected from their game against Carolina for a vicious hit to the head of Panthers quarterback Cam Newton early in the second quarter.

                  Newton was struck after running for 10 yards on a fourth-and-4 play in Falcons territory. He was sliding to the turf at the end of the play when Kazee dove low to deliver a helmet-to-helmet hit that snapped back Newton's head.

                  Teammate Torrey Smith raced in to deliver a hit that sent Kazee to the turf, also drawing a personal foul penalty but not an ejection.

                  While officials sorted out the penalties, Newton was quickly examined and returned to the field without missing a play.

                  ---

                  RETIREMENT

                  Veteran cornerback Vontae Davis left the Bills at halftime of their game against the L.A. Chargers. He later announced his retirement after 10 seasons in a statement after the game.

                  ''This isn't how I pictured retiring from the NFL,'' he said. ''But today on the field, reality hit me and hard. I shouldn't be out there anymore.''

                  ---

                  JUST FOR KICKS

                  Cleveland's Zane Gonzalez missed two field goals and two extra points in a 21-18 loss to New Orleans. His last attempt could have tied it in the final seconds.

                  Green Bay and Minnesota played to a 29-all tie. Daniel Carlson of the Vikings missed two field goals in overtime, and Mason Crosby missed one at the end of regulation for the Packers.

                  Miami's Jason Sanders and New York's Jason Myers were both wide on PATs in the Dolphins' 20-12 victory over the Jets. Oakland's Mike Nugent missed a PAT against Denver, Pittsburgh's Chris Boswell missed an extra point against Kansas City and Tampa Bay's Chandler Catanzaro did so as well against Philadelphia.

                  ---

                  HOT, HOT, HOT

                  It was 97 degrees at kickoff for the Jaguars and Patriots, with a heat index of 107. According to the NFL, it is the hottest game since Green Bay played at Arizona in 2003.

                  Meanwhile, Denver's game against the Raiders was the hottest home game in franchise history for the Broncos, at 92 degrees.

                  ---

                  SIDELINED

                  Arizona Cardinals wide receiver Larry Fitzgerald was sidelined by a hamstring injury, and Detroit Lions cornerback Darius Slay, Denver Broncos right tackle Jared Veldheer and New England Patriots safety Patrick Chung were among a group of players diagnosed with concussions. Fitzgerald got hurt in the second half of Arizona's 34-0 loss at the Los Angeles Rams. The 35-year-old Fitzgerald finished with three receptions for 28 yards. Slay left Detroit's 30-27 loss at San Francisco in the third quarter. Jimmy Garoppolo finished with 206 yards passing and two touchdowns for the 49ers. New England also lost defensive end Trey Flowers to a concussion. Flowers was injured in the first quarter of the Patriots' 31-20 loss at Jacksonville when he collided with teammate Keionta Davis. Chung was injured in the second half.

                  ---

                  SPEAKING

                  ''I don't have nothing to say about Vontae so I'll give him a little bit more respect than he showed us today as far as quitting on us in the middle of the game. Never seen it, ever. Pop Warner. High school. College. Pros.'' - Bills defensive end Lorenzo Alexander on cornerback Vontae Davis leaving the team at halftime. Davis later announced his retirement.

                  ---

                  ''It snowballed. I was overcompensating. I get paid to make those kicks and I have to make them.'' - Browns kicker Zane Gonzalez. Gonzalez missed two extra points and pushed the second of his two missed field goals wide right in the final seconds, and the Saints held on for a 21-18 victory that extended the Browns' winless streak to 19 games.
                  Remember the 3 G's Gambling, Golf, Girls not in any particular order.....

                  Comment


                  • #84
                    Trends to Watch - September
                    September 16, 2018
                    By Marc Lawrence


                    HOME TEAMS

                    Keep an eye on (Good): Off another sensational NFL Preseason Baltimore is an excellent home team this month at 30-17 ATS and have Buffalo (9/9) and Denver two weeks in the land of crab cakes.

                    You might think Buffalo's best home month is December, but it's not. They are strong in September at 34-22 ATS but only have one homer, against the L.A. Chargers on Sept. 16th.

                    Detroit is a solid 30-19 ATS in the Motor City and has the Jets on the first Monday Night game of the season and Dallas on the third Sunday of the month (9/23). San Francisco is thought to be revitalized this season and is 28-17 ATS this month in their building, but they have a nasty opening slate and just the Lions (9/16) at home early.

                    Keep an eye on (Bad): Arizona has three games in Glendale to start the season with the Redskins (9/9), Bears (9/23) and Seahawks (9/30) and we will find out right away if the oddsmaker 5.5 win total is correct.

                    Carolina will be tested right off the bat with it's poor 16-24 home spread record, with Dallas there on Week 1 and Cincinnati in Week 3. Speaking of the Bengals, the days of "The Jungle" are long gone with a 17-29 ATS record. And it might not improve with Baltimore in Cincy for the second Thursday night affair.

                    After playing in Arizona in their season lid-lifter, Washington hosts Indianapolis and Green Bay the next weeks trying to better 18-31 ATS home mark.

                    AWAY TEAMS

                    Keep an eye on (Good): For the first three months of the season, Dallas is an exceptional away club and that starts with a 33-18 ATS mark in September. Given their past, going to Carolina (9/9) or Seattle two weeks later would not imposing for the Cowboys.

                    Denver is none too shabby either at 28-18 ATS and they get tested only once, at Baltimore on the 23rd. Fellow AFC West partner Kansas City also fits this quality profile at 34-19 ATS. One concern for the Chiefs starting the season is at the Chargers and at the Steelers for first-time starter Patrick Mahomes.

                    Bad: It's been a while since the Rams were this good after last season. They are a horrific 16-32 ATS in the road whites and they play the late game in Oakland on MNF, before a three-game homestand.

                    Keep an eye on (Bad): New coach, new system, but same old results for Chicago away from the Windy City? The Bears are 19-29 ATS on the road and go to the not so frozen tundra at Lambeau Field on the 9th and to the red-hot Arizona desert on the 23rd.

                    As good as Detroit is at home, that's basically home bad they are on the road at 19-31 ATS. At San Fran on a short week in Week 2 won't be easy and likely or will a trip to Big D on the 30th.

                    Most years, Pittsburgh labors early and is an unsightly 17-31 ATS on the road. They are often not covering as away favorites and let's see how they do in that role at Cleveland in Week 1 and on the third week of MNF at Tampa Bay.

                    FAVORITES

                    Keep an eye on (Good): Seattle is 31-20 ATS, but they are in transition. There is a chance they might not be a favorite all month, but chances are they will be at least once against @Chicago (9/17), Dallas (9/23) and @Arizona (9/30).

                    Bad: For years, the Rams, no matter where they were from, they were a brutal favorite. Their record of 12-30 ATS record explains that, but things could be changing. This L.A. bunch has the young loaded roster and is expected to be favored in all four of their games this month. Nonetheless, paying attention to history still matters.

                    Keep an eye on (Bad): Sportsbooks are calling for Arizona to be last in their division, but because of three home games this month, they will be favored at least twice. That might not be good since the Cardinals are only 11-20 ATS, facing Washington (9/9) and Chicago (9/23)

                    At 12-23 ATS when handing out points, Carolina is not a pretty play. The Panthers will give points to Dallas in Week 1 and Cincinnati in Week 3, both at home.

                    Chicago has a similar record to Carolina at 14-23 ATS and will catch Tampa Bay in Week 4 as a fave. Da Bears might be a very small favorite in Week 2 in the Windy City against Seattle, but the prior week's results will determine that.

                    UNDERDOGS

                    Good: Dallas has been a sharp 27-11 ATS in this role they will be around a three-point pooch at Carolina to start the season. The early line had the Cowboys catching points in Seattle (9/23) but that could change.

                    Keep an eye on (Good): Kansas City is a nice 29-18 ATS as a September dog and as we start the month, they are receiving digits in two away games at the Chargers (9/9), and Pittsburgh (9/16).

                    The Vikings ship also travels well as underdogs at 27-18 ATS and they will be in Green Bay (9/16) and at the Rams on the last Thursday of the month.

                    DIVISION

                    Keep an eye on (Good): The Chiefs have been well prepared for AFC West action to begin the season with a 24-13 ATS mark. Good chance to improve in Game 1 against the Bolts in L.A.

                    Bad: It's Gruden 2.0 in Oakland and at 11-22 ATS versus division competitors, Week 2 at Denver might not be good.

                    Keep an eye on (Bad): Chicago is 18-27 ATS this month in the NFC North and it could get worse with a trip to Green Bay on Sunday Night football.
                    Remember the 3 G's Gambling, Golf, Girls not in any particular order.....

                    Comment


                    • #85
                      MNF - Seahawks at Bears
                      September 16, 2018
                      By Kevin Rogers


                      The Seahawks (0-1 SU, 0-0-1 ATS) entered the season opener by losing six consecutive road games in September as Seattle visited Denver. In spite of a grabbing a fourth quarter lead on a Russell Wilson 51-yard touchdown connection with Tyler Lockett, the Seahawks fell short in a 27-24 defeat to the Broncos. Seattle’s defense intercepted Case Keenum three times, but the Broncos outgained the Seahawks from a yardage standpoint, 470-306, while racking up 25 first downs compared to 13 by Seattle.

                      Seattle also committed three turnovers in the loss as Wilson was picked off twice, while running back Chris Carson lost a fumble in the third quarter. The second Wilson interception came on the final drive deep in Seattle territory, but the Seahawks’ quarterback also threw three touchdown passes, including one to former Broncos’ standout Brandon Marshall. The game sailed OVER the total of 42 ½, while Seattle pushed as a three-point underdog as the Seahawks last won a game in Week 16 of last season following an 0-4 preseason.

                      The Bears (0-1 SU, 1-0 ATS) were on their way to an impressive road upset of the Packers last Sunday night by jumping out to a seemingly commanding 20-0 lead at Lambeau Field. It helped Chicago’s cause that Packers’ quarterback Aaron Rodgers exited the game in the second quarter with a knee injury as newly acquired linebacker Khalil Mack returned an interception for a touchdown.

                      However, Rodgers returned in the third quarter and led Green Bay to an incredible 24-23 comeback victory, capped off by a 75-yard touchdown strike to Randall Cobb late in the fourth quarter. The Bears managed a cover as seven-point underdogs, but left Green Bay with a division loss as quarterback Mitchell Trubisky threw for 171 yards and rushed for a touchdown. Chicago has dropped 10 straight division contests dating back to December 2016, while last winning a road game against an NFC North opponent in 2015 at Green Bay.

                      SEATTLE DUE?

                      The task for Pete Carroll’s team on Monday night is try to not only pick up their first win of the season, but also halt this seven-game road losing streak in September. The Seahawks started 0-2 on the road last season (and 0-2 overall), but managed to win five of their next six games away from CenturyLink Field, while going 8-4 overall before a late meltdown prevented Seattle from the postseason.

                      Since Carroll arrived in Seattle back in 2010, the Seahawks have gone 0-2 through two road games twice (2011 and 2015), while the Seahawks are riding an 0-4 ATS streak in the last four Week 2’s dating back to 2014.

                      LAY THE POINTS AND RUN

                      In Trubisky’s rookie season, the Bears covered in all four opportunities as a home underdog, including outright victories over the Steelers and Panthers. However, Chicago struggled when laying points by posting a 1-2 SU/ATS record with the only victory coming against the winless Browns in Week 16. Dating back to the start of 2015, the Bears own a dreadful 1-7 SU/ATS mark as a favorite, including six outright losses at Soldier Field.

                      SERIES HISTORY

                      These two teams are meeting for the first time since 2015 when the Seahawks crushed the Bears, 26-0 as 16 ½-point favorites at CenturyLink Field. Seattle had started the season 0-2 before picking up that shutout, while limiting Chicago to 146 yards of offense. Wilson hooked up with Jimmy Graham for the only offensive touchdown, while Lockett returned the second half kickoff 103 yards for a touchdown.

                      Seattle has captured four of the past five matchups with Chicago since 2010, while making its first trip to Soldier Field since 2012. The Seahawks held off the Bears in overtime, 23-17 as three-point underdogs in December 2012, as the last four meetings in Chicago have sailed OVER the total.

                      MONDAY NIGHT LIGHTS

                      The Seahawks have appeared on Monday night football once in each of the past seven seasons. Seattle has compiled a 6-1 SU and 5-2 ATS mark in this stretch, while making its first road appearance on a Monday night since 2014 in a 10-point victory at Washington.

                      The Bears have split their last six Monday night contests since 2014, but interestingly enough have gone 1-3 at home in this stretch. Chicago was squeezed by Minnesota in the final seconds last season, 20-17 at Soldier Field in Trubisky’s first start, but the Bears barely covered as 3 ½-point underdogs.

                      HANDICAPPER’S CORNER

                      NFL expert Joe Nelson checks in with his thoughts on Seattle’s performance at Denver, “There were some positives for a Seahawks team with perhaps the most grounded expectations entering Carroll’s ninth season. Earl Thomas returned in time for the game and made an impact with an interception as a veteran leader on a defense that has lost many key players the past two years. Wilson nearly willed Seattle to a win by himself as the Seahawks had three late possessions down three late in the game and lost by just three despite running 17 fewer offensive plays.”

                      On the flip side, Nelson looks at Chicago’s late meltdown at Green Bay, “Trubisky took four sacks and gained just 4.9 yards per pass, but he had only one turnover and that was in a desperation fourth down play at the end of the game. The running game produced 5.1 yards per carry as the offense could be improved for Chicago after scoring just 16.5 points per game last season as Matt Nagy’s offensive background could pay dividends over time now in his second game as head coach.”

                      LINE MOVEMENT

                      This line stayed pretty steady through most of the week since the Bears opened up as three-point favorites last Sunday night. However, Chicago is currently a 4 ½-point favorite at most books, while other books that have the Bears at -5. The total opened at 43 ½, but has slightly moved to 43 at many outlets.
                      Remember the 3 G's Gambling, Golf, Girls not in any particular order.....

                      Comment


                      • #86
                        NFL RECORD FOR SEPT......

                        DATE W-L-T % UNITS RECORD

                        09/16/2018 17-8-0 68.00% +41.00
                        09/13/2018 0-2-0 0.00% -11.00
                        09/09/2018 15-10-1 60.00% +20.00
                        09/06/2018 2-0-0 100.00% +10.00

                        Totals...............34-20-1.....62.96%.....+60.00


                        NFL BEST BETS:

                        DATE........................ATS..................U NITS....................O/U................UNITS..............TOTAL

                        09/16/2018.............5 - 2..................+14.00...................3 - 2...............+4.00..............+18.00
                        09/13/2018.............0 - 1...................-5.50.....................0 - 1................-5.50...............-11.00
                        09/09/2018.............4 - 4...................-2.00.....................8 - 3...............+23.50............+21.50
                        09/06/2018.............1 - 0..................+5.00.....................1 - 0...............+5.00..............+10.00

                        Totals....................10 - 7..................+11.50..................12 - 6...............+27.00............+38.50
                        Remember the 3 G's Gambling, Golf, Girls not in any particular order.....

                        Comment


                        • #87
                          Monday’s six-pack

                          Top 6 picks in the Westgate SuperBook NFL handicapping contest (3,123 entries)

                          1) Houston even (1,514)- L
                          2) NJ Giants +3 (933)- L
                          3) Pittsburgh -4 (910)- L
                          4) New England -1 (902)- L
                          5) Philadelphia -3.5 (808)- L
                          6) LA Chargers -7 (781)- W

                          Season record: 5-6-1

                          Quote of the Day
                          “There’s either not a concise plan on both sides of the ball, or their kids haven’t bought in. I wouldn’t be surprised if they fixed it. Their skill players [on offense] and talent on defense is really good. But for whatever reason they don’t look like they’re playing hard.”
                          An unnamed assistant coach, talking about Florida State’s football team

                          Monday’s quiz
                          Which NFL head coach’s son is the starting QB at Vanderbilt this year?

                          Sunday’s quiz
                          ESPN college football analyst Kirk Herbstreit was a QB at Ohio State.

                          Saturday’s quiz
                          Mike Sherman was coach of the Packers before Mike McCarthy.


                          ******************************


                          Monday’s Den: Wrapping up an NFL Sunday

                          Chiefs 42, Steelers 37— Don’t think I’ve ever seen this before; Patrick Mahomes threw six TD passes in a game where his offense faced only five 3rd down plays the whole day. More TD passes than 3rd down plays? Doesn’t happen much.

                          Chiefs led 21-0, it was 21-21 at the half; Pittsburgh scored 58 points in its first two games, but they didn’t win either one of them. And Le’Veon Bell has coughed away $1,760,000 in just two weeks, because…….well, I don’t know why. Guess he doesn’t want to play.

                          Saints 21, Browns 18— Cleveland outgained Saints by 52 yards, but Browns’ kicker missed two FG’s, two PAT’s, including one with 1:16 left that would’ve given the Browns a 19-18 lead. Don’t scrimp when it comes to paying kickers; they decide who wins close games. Gregg Williams’ defense held Saints to 5.6 yards/play, but it wasn’t good enough.

                          Vikings 29, Packers 29 OT— Two weeks, two ties; not sure I can remember a kicker missing two FG’s in same OT period, but Vikings’ rookie Carlson was 0-3 in this game, 0-2 in OT. Why do contending teams have rookie kickers?!?!?!?!

                          Green Bay scored only one offensive TD, tried six FG’s; they scored a TD on a blocked punt on Minnesota’s first series. Total yardage here was 480-351 Vikings, but they didn’t win.

                          Titans 20, Texans 17— A gentleman in Las Vegas wagered $100,000 on the Texans in this game; imagine having the onions to bet $100K on a team coached by Bill O’Brien?? Total yardage was 437-283 Houston, but Titans got the home win.

                          Tennessee led 14-0 early behind backup QB Gabbert, but Houston rallied to lead 17-14 early in 4th quarter, before Titans kicked FG’s on their last two drives to win the game.

                          Falcons 31, Panthers 24— Falcons have now won five of last six series games, with all five wins by 7+ points; Carolina lost its last four visits here. Atlanta is 13-2 vs spread in its last 15 home openers. Total yardage was 442-439, Atlanta averaged 9.7 yards/pass attempt. Cam Newton took a vicious shot to the head as he slid after a run; the tackler was ejected.

                          Rams 34, Cardinals 0— Arizona needs to play rookie QB Rosen now, because Sam Bradford isn’t competing; he dumps the ball off quick as hell so he won’t get hit. If Rosen isn’t ready, then play Mike Glennon, because the defense got depressed in this game. They know they have no shot.

                          Cardinals had five first downs, 137 total yards, and lost field position by 20 yards, in a game where Rams’ kicker Greg Zeurlein strained a groin muscle before the game. Punter Johnny Hekker kicker a FG and a PAT- Rams went for two the other times they scored.

                          Chargers 31, Bills 20— Buffalo trailed 26-0/28-6 at halftime of its two games, but at least now rookie QB Allen is getting needed experience that hopefully will pay off down the road (can you hear us, Arizona?). Chargers scored 59 points in splitting their first two games; they visit the Rams in the LA Coliseum next week.

                          Dolphins 20, Jets 12— First-place 2-0 Miami ran out to a 20-0 lead, won field position by 10 yards- two of their three TD drives were less than 50 yards- they held Jets to 42 rushing yards. Dolphins covered four of their last five road openers; under is 20-5 in their last 25 road openers.

                          NFL Network has Jets-Browns on this Thursday night; huge game for both teams. Winner will either be 2-1 or 1-1-1 after three weeks, a big improvement.

                          Buccaneers 27, Eagles 21— Ryan Fitzpatrick is 48-61 for 819 yards in two wins; Jameis Winston ain’t getting his job back after his suspension ends next week, at least not right away. Bucs had two drives of one play, 75 yards each- they averaged 11.2 yards/pass attempt.

                          49ers 30, Lions 27— Underdogs were 10-4 against spread Sunday, including this back-door cover by Detroit, which scored two TD’s in last 8:40 to beat the number.

                          Matthew Stafford threw 53 passes, Lions ran ball only 18 times; he may make $9M a year more than Tom Brady, but Stafford’s career record is 60-67, his playoff record is 0-3. Matt Patricia is learning the hard way that winning without Brady ain’t so easy.

                          Guess who the Lions play next week? Brady and the Patriots, on Sunday night.

                          Jaguars 31, Patriots 20— Jax’ville avenged their loss in LY’s AFC title game; they converted 10-14 on third down, held Gronkowski to two catches for 15 yards and overcame a -2 turnover ratio. Yardage was 481-302 Jaguars; people have to stop riding Blake Bortles, he’s winning lot of games lately.

                          Broncos 20, Raiders 19— Oakland led 12-0 at halftime, 19-7 with 3:00 left in third quarter, but Denver scored on all four second half possessions (two TD’s, two FG”s), kicking winning FG with 0:06 left, giving them two home wins, by total of four points. Raiders converted only 3 of 10 third down plays and fell to 0-2.

                          Colts 21, Redskins 9— Indy converted 9 of 16 on 3rd down, scored 21 points on three red zone drives. Redskins kicked FG’s on both their red zone drives, ran ball for only 65 yards- they were 5-15 on third down. Colts are 9-4 in their last 13 games vs NFC teams. Redskins have now lost six of their last seven home openers;

                          Cowboys 20, Giants 13— Dallas held rookie RB Barkley to 28 rushing yards, sacked immobile QB Manning six times, and won a game that took well under 3:00 to play, shortest NFL game I can remember in long time. Barkley did catch 14 passes for 80 yards; Beckham was held to four catches, 51 yards.
                          Remember the 3 G's Gambling, Golf, Girls not in any particular order.....

                          Comment


                          • #88
                            Mack, Amukamara lead Bears over Seahawks 24-17
                            September 17, 2018


                            CHICAGO (AP) Khalil Mack had one of six sacks against Russell Wilson, Prince Amukamara returned an interception 49 yards for a touchdown and the Chicago Bears beat the Seattle Seahawks 24-17 Monday night to give coach Matt Nagy his first career victory.

                            Mack, who landed with Chicago after a blockbuster trade with Oakland in September, had a strip-sack in the first half and consistently pressured Wilson in another dominant performance.

                            Amukamara jumped the route on a pass intended for Rashaad Penny near midfield for his first career touchdown, making it 24-10 with 6:37 left. It was his first interception since 2015 with the New York Giants.

                            Danny Trevathan then stripped Wilson with his second sack of the game. The Bears' Leonard Floyd recovered the fumble, and Chicago hung on after blowing a 20-point lead in a season-opening loss to a hobbled Aaron Rodgers and the Green Bay Packers.

                            The Seahawks (0-2) lost for just the second time in nine Monday night games under coach Pete Carroll.

                            Wilson has been sacked six times in each game this season. With the Bears applying constant pressure and his receivers struggling to get open, the four-time Pro Bowl quarterback completed 22 of 36 passes for 226 yards with two touchdowns and an interception.

                            Chicago's Mitchell Trubisky was 25 of 34 for 200 yards. The No. 2 overall pick in last year's draft, Trubisky threw touchdown passes to Trey Burton on Chicago's first possession and rookie Anthony Miller early in the fourth quarter. But he was also intercepted two times by Shaquill Griffin.

                            The Bears presented longtime linebacker Brian Urlacher with his Ring of Excellence for being inducted into the Hall of Fame.

                            The ceremony came after an ugly first half that saw Trubisky get picked off twice and Wilson get sacked five times. But the Bears managed to take a 10-3 lead to the locker room.

                            Trubisky gave them a 7-0 lead when he shoveled to Trey Burton from the 3 on Chicago's first possession, finishing a 96-yard drive. He also led a drive to the Seattle 7, only to throw two incomplete passes - one that should have been picked off by Justin Coleman - before Cody Parkey kicked a 25-yard field goal to make it 10-0 with just over a minute left in the half.

                            The Seahawks didn't score until Sebastian Janikowski nailed a 56-yard as the half ended.

                            NATIONAL ANTHEM

                            Seahawks defensive tackle Quinton Jefferson and offensive tackle Duane Brown stayed off the field during the national anthem, something they did in the opener and preseason.

                            INJURIES

                            Bears: RB Tarik Cohen suffered an ankle injury. ... DT Akiem Hicks walked off gingerly with two minutes left after he was hurt rushing the quarterback.

                            UP NEXT

                            Seahawks: Host Dallas on Sunday.

                            Bears: Visit Arizona on Sunday.
                            Remember the 3 G's Gambling, Golf, Girls not in any particular order.....

                            Comment


                            • #89
                              Tuesday’s six-pack

                              Six interesting college games this weekend:

                              — Washington State @ USC (-4)- Friday night

                              — Stanford (-1.5) @ Oregon

                              — Florida (-4.5) @ Tennessee

                              — Texas Tech @ Oklahoma State (-13)— Listed total is 79.

                              — TCU (-3) @ Texas

                              — Wisconsin (-3.5) @ Iowa

                              Quote of the Day
                              “Look, coach (Chip) Kelly, if you wish to call him this is 4 and 26 for his last offensively called football games… Dorian has only played in 3 of the last 30 games… Can you say duped!”
                              Michael Robinson, whose son is UCLA’s QB.

                              Tuesday’s quiz

                              Who was the Chicago Bears’ coach last time they were in the Super Bowl?

                              Monday’s quiz

                              Giant coach Pat Shurmur’s son is the starting QB at Vanderbilt this year.

                              Sunday’s quiz
                              ESPN college football analyst Kirk Herbstreit was a QB at Ohio State.

                              ****************************

                              Tuesday’s List of 13: Nobody asked me, but……

                              13) Cleveland Browns were going to cut WR Josh Gordon over the weekend, but they traded him instead, to New England; they got a 5th-round draft pick in exchange.

                              12) It is too bad HBO’s Hard Knocks ends when the final rosters are named in training camp; seeing all that drama play out behind closed doors would’ve been good TV.

                              11) I know Nebraska is 0-2 for the first time since 1957 and they lost to Troy State Saturday, but ragging on Troy is a mistake- Trojans also won at LSU last year- they’re 24-6 in their last 30 games, and are favored to win the Sun Belt this season.

                              10) USC didn’t score a touchdown at Stanford two weeks ago; they didn’t score a point on their last nine drives at Texas- those two losses should have some Trojan coaches nervous, and since the head coach is signed up thru 2023, I’m talking about assistants on offensive side of the ball.

                              9) Jerry Jones bought the Dallas Cowboys for $154M in 1989; they’re worth right around $5B now. Not the best GM of a football team, but a damn good businessman.

                              8) Last two years, San Francisco Giants are 2-17 at Coors Field in Denver.

                              7) Defensive tackle David Onyemata of the Saints got fined $40,108 for two hits in the Week 1 loss to Tampa Bay. Problem is, Onyemata’s game check was $39,375- he lost $700 by playing in the game.

                              6) Florida State is 1-2 this season, and has looked awful in all three games.

                              In coach Willie Taggart’s previous head coaching stops, he went 11-25 in his first season at those schools; this is his third stop in three years, which is weird for a head coach, and his system is a lot different than Jimbo Fisher’s. If panic set in and FSU wanted to fire Taggart, it would cost the school around $21M, so that probably ain’t happening. At least this season.

                              5) Former NBA player Brent Barry got a job in San Antonio Spurs’ front office, which takes him off TV and that is a loss for those of us who watch NBA games on TV- he was a good analyst.

                              4) Mets won their season series with the Phillies the last seven years, their longest streak of that kind over any opponent, ever.

                              3) Seattle Seahawks have played 33 Monday Night Football games; last night was only their 10th such game on the road.

                              2) Eagles get starting QB Carson Wentz back this weekend, for first time since he got hurt out in LA last December. Philly split its first two games this season.

                              1) One of the best lines I’ve heard in Hard Knocks over the years was from Texans’ coach Bill O’Brien, who called the NFL “…..the most competitive business in the world” while talking to his team after the final roster had been determined.

                              Pretty accurate statement; there is such a fine line between success and failure.
                              Remember the 3 G's Gambling, Golf, Girls not in any particular order.....

                              Comment


                              • #90
                                WEEK 3

                                Thursday, September 20, 2018
                                Time (ET) Away Home
                                8:20 PM New York Jets Cleveland Browns

                                Sunday, September 23, 2018
                                Time (ET) Away Home
                                1:00 PM New Orleans Saints Atlanta Falcons
                                1:00 PM Denver Broncos Baltimore Ravens
                                1:00 PM Cincinnati Bengals Carolina Panthers
                                1:00 PM New York Giants Houston Texans
                                1:00 PM Tennessee Titans Jacksonville Jaguars
                                1:00 PM San Francisco 49ers Kansas City Chiefs
                                1:00 PM Oakland Raiders Miami Dolphins
                                1:00 PM Buffalo Bills Minnesota Vikings
                                1:00 PM Indianapolis Colts Philadelphia Eagles
                                1:00 PM Green Bay Packers Washington Redskins
                                4:05 PM Los Angeles Chargers Los Angeles Rams
                                4:25 PM Chicago Bears Arizona Cardinals
                                4:25 PM Dallas Cowboys Seattle Seahawks
                                8:20 PM New England Patriots Detroit Lions

                                Monday, September 24, 2018
                                Time (ET) Away Home
                                8:15 PM Pittsburgh Steelers Tampa Bay Buccaneers


                                ***************************


                                NFL RECORD FOR SEPT......

                                DATE W-L-T % UNITS RECORD

                                09/16/2018 17-8-0 68.00% +41.00
                                09/13/2018 0-2-0 0.00% -11.00
                                09/09/2018 15-10-1 60.00% +20.00
                                09/06/2018 2-0-0 100.00% +10.00

                                Totals...............34-20-1.....62.96%.....+60.00


                                NFL BEST BETS:

                                DATE........................ATS..................U NITS....................O/U................UNITS..............TOTAL

                                09/16/2018.............5 - 2..................+14.00...................3 - 2...............+4.00..............+18.00
                                09/13/2018.............0 - 1...................-5.50.....................0 - 1................-5.50...............-11.00
                                09/09/2018.............4 - 4...................-2.00.....................8 - 3...............+23.50............+21.50
                                09/06/2018.............1 - 0..................+5.00.....................1 - 0...............+5.00..............+10.00

                                Totals....................10 - 7..................+11.50..................12 - 6...............+27.00............+38.50
                                Remember the 3 G's Gambling, Golf, Girls not in any particular order.....

                                Comment

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