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NFL Trends and Indexes - Week 2 (Thur., Sep. 12 - Mon., Sep. 16)

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  • #16
    NFL Underdogs: Week 2 pointspread picks and predictions
    Jason Logan

    Giants fans aren’t openly rooting for the team to struggle but deep down inside they want to see QB Eli Manning suck. Well, not this week guys.

    You know the cartoons, where the little devil appears on a character’s shoulder and nudges them towards those evil thoughts creeping into their brain? That’s New York Giants fans right now.

    Giants fans aren’t openly rooting for the team to struggle but deep down inside (down in the darkness of their guts) they want to see QB Eli Manning suck, so rookie passer and preseason darling Daniel Jones can save them from the pain. And that little shoulder devil is gnawing their ear off right now.

    To every devil, there’s a conflicting angel, and this little bugger is preaching Manning’s Week 1 stat line like it’s the Old Testament. The much-maligned veteran threw for more than 300 yards with a 68 percent completion rate and a touchdown in New York’s 35-17 loss to Dallas – a loss that despite what the devil may say, is not Eli's fault.

    Big Blue makes its home debut in East Rutherford this weekend against a Buffalo Bills team that has spent more at MetLife Stadium than the Giants. The Bills pulled a 17-16 road win over the New York Jets out of their jocks in Week 1, playing putrid football for the first three quarters.

    While it’s only a six-hour jaunt from Orchard Park to the Meadowlands, this is still the Bills' second straight road game and that thrilling victory over the Jets could set this team up for a letdown in Week 2. Buffalo fell victim to a similar situational spot on the road in Week 5 of the 2018 season, following a come-from-behind win as a visitor in the previous game.

    The Giants’ biggest issue in Week 1 was blown coverage and big plays allowed to the Cowboys, which is something the Bills just don’t do on offense (only 43 passing plays of 20-plus, and eight of 40-plus in 2018). Buffalo is at its best when running the ball and while it was only one week, the G-Men handled Dallas’ rushing game to the tune of only 2.96 yards per carry in Week 1.

    While we missed the best of this number earlier in the week (Giants were as big as +3), we’re listening to that angel on our shoulder and going with Eli & Co. to quiet the devil for at least one more week.

    PICK: New York +1.5


    JACKSONVILLE JAGUARS AT HOUSTON TEXANS (-9.5, 43.5)

    I’ve been staring at this one for a while and even broke down the incredibly difficult spot Houston is in for this Week 2 divisional battle in my weekly spot bets.

    Picture if you will, the club sandwich of situational capping: a letdown off a close MNF loss, a lookahead to a trip to L.A. and the Bolts in Week 3, and a schedule spot due to a short week to prepare and heel up from Monday’s matchup. Slather that sucker in mayo and jam it between two perfectly-toasted pieces of bread (with another stuck in the middle) and how could you resist not taking a big bite of the points in Week 2?

    Oh, Gardner Minshew. That’s why.

    The Jaguars are looking to the first-year passer out of Washington State to hold down the fort, after losing offseason acquisition Nick Foles to a broken collarbone in Week 1. Minshew was solid – actually he was pretty frickin’ great – in his first pro appearance, connecting on 22 of 25 passes for 275 yards with two touchdowns and an interception in the loss to Kansas City last Sunday.

    That resulted in a QBR of 88.3 for Minshew, which was just a few ticks off the pace of Week 1 counterpart and reigning MVP Patrick Mahomes (89.7 QBR) and ranked among the Top 8 for the NFL openers, along with names like Brady, Wentz, Prescott and ahead of Drew Brees (78.2) for Week 1.

    Week 2 is known for overreactions, and this near 10-point spread is classic Week 2 horseshit. The lookahead lines – which came out before Week 1 was played – had Jacksonville as a 3-point road underdog in Houston, with Foles as the projected starter. Even for all his postseason glory and locker room lore, there’s no way Foles is worth six and a half points to the spread, especially after he only threw eight passes for the franchise before get knocked out of his first game.

    And I haven’t even touched on the Jaguars defense. But we have a word count. Moving on.

    PICK: Jacksonville +9.5

    l
    LOS ANGELES CHARGERS AT DETOIT LIONS (+2.5, 48)

    This spread would probably look a little different if Detroit hadn’t barfed up an 18-point lead in the fourth quarter and received an inopportune timeout from offensive coordinator Darrell Bevell that helped set the table for Arizona’s dramatic comeback and the eventual tie game.

    For more than three quarters, the Lions looked really good. The Detroit defense was shutting the door on coaching golden boy Kliff Kingsbury’s new offense and the Lions' scoring attack was smashing home run plays like the damn MLB steroid era. I was high on Detroit entering the season, and I’m going to stay the course, expecting a complete game with the team back in Motown for Week 2.

    The Chargers are coming off a close one versus Indianapolis Sunday and make the flight for the early 1 p.m. ET start in Week 2. Los Angeles is missing some key bodies in the secondary, putting standout safety Derwin James and CB Trevor Williams on IR and playing without CB Michael Davis (hamstring) this week. The Bolts pass defense was down to three healthy corners and scrambling to find help this week.

    The big thing for Detroit will be protecting Matt Stafford from the L.A. edge rushers and getting better work from RB Kerryon Johnson. The Chargers were brutalized by the Colts' run game in Week 1, allowing 203 yards on the ground and 6.2 yards per carry.

    Again, I missed the good number of Lions +3 early in the week. If you can wait, see if this comes back up to a field goal with your bookie.

    PICK: Detroit +2.5

    Week 1 picks: 3-0
    Season to date: 3-0
    Last edited by StarDust Bum; 09-14-2019, 11:53 PM.

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    • #17
      Points of Interest: NFL Week 2 Over/Under picks and predictions
      Steve Paul

      Lamar Jackson & Co. scored at will against Miami. Jackson certainly looked better as a passer than in 2018, but he’s unlikely to see quite the same number of uncovered receivers Week 2.

      For Week 1, we talked about how despite a few year-to-year surprises, there’s a lot of continuity in the NFL in terms of which offenses/defenses are good/bad. We now have a week’s worth of data to help confirm some of what we thought we knew, while resisting the urge to crown Lamar Jackson the GOAT.

      OFFENSES

      The Saints, Chiefs and Patriots all were expected to be top-tier offenses and lived up to that billing, all finishing Top 6 in Week 1 by offensive EPA. The other big winners were a little more surprising as the Top 2 offenses in Week 1 were the Cowboys and Ravens. Both of those games featured numerous blown coverages, so while I’ll keep an eye out Week 2, I’m not ready to crown those offenses elite just yet.

      On the other end of the spectrum, we saw some surprising offensive duds. Jameis Winston cemented last week’s doubts of him, but the rest of the Bottom 5 were all surprising: the Browns, Steelers, Falcons and Packers. For now, I’m giving the Falcons and Packers the benefit of the doubt as they faced the two top defenses by EPA from 2018 but there should be some concern for the Browns and especially Steelers fans.

      DEFENSES

      The good defenses from 2018 all performed well again, with the Vikings, Bears and Ravens all Top 6 by EPA. Perhaps the biggest surprise of Week 1 was the Denver defense. Last week, I mentioned they’d been merely average the last couple years, but they looked much worse against the Antonio Brown-less Raiders, ranking Bottom 10 by EPA and 27th by success percentage allowed.

      Now, on to the picks...

      SEATTLE SEAHAWKS AT PITTSBURGH STEELERS (-4, 46.5)

      Two big things jump out in this game: first, the Steeler offense really struggled in its first game without Antonio Brown. Looking beyond the three points the Steelers scored, they ranked 30th by EPA and, most concerningly, ranked 31st in success percentage with well under a third of their plays having positive EPA. A banged-up Juju Smith-Schuster does nothing to help this week.

      Secondly, and just as importantly the Seahawks showed they want to continue their slow, run-heavy ways in 2019, running the ball on more than half of their plays and running only 49 total plays in their Week 1 game versus Cincinnati.

      Struggling offense plus slow game does not equal a lot of points.

      PREDICTION: Under 46.5


      ARIZONA CARDINALS AT BALTIMORE RAVENS (-13, 46.5)

      The market has moved 4.5 points already on this one but to me the final boxscore is misleading. Arizona put up a respectable 27 points on 387 yards in its comeback tie against the Lions in Week 1. But to watch that game though, is to watch a defense run out of gas.

      On their first 12 drives (ignoring a kneel-down at half), the Cardinals ran 53 plays for 163 yards and nine points. From that point on the Lions defense looked gassed, getting virtually no pressure and allowing the Cardinals to march down the field. Don’t expect the same against a Ravens stop unit that finished second by EPA in each of the last two years and continued that Week 1 against the undermanned Dolphins.

      On the other side of the ball, Lamar Jackson & Co. scored at will against Miami. Jackson certainly looked better as a passer than in 2018, but he’s unlikely to see quite the same number of uncovered receivers Week 2. Arizona’s defense was slightly below average in 2018 and performed slightly better in Week 1. The Cardinals are not going to shut down the Ravens completely but should put up a better fight than the Dolphins.

      PREDICTION: Under 46.5


      KANSAS CITY CHIEFS AT OAKLAND RAIDERS (+7, 53.5)

      The Chiefs made short work of the Jaguars defense which, despite its well-publicized struggles in 2018, was still a well-above average defense. They now face a Raiders defense that held up against the Broncos but ranked 32nd by EPA in 2018 and will be without starting safety and first-round pick Jonathan Abrams.

      The Raiders offense meanwhile put up an impressive performance against what was supposed to be a great Denver defense under new coach Vic Fangio. The Kansas City defense gave up 26 points and well over 400 yards to the Gardner Minshew (who?)-led Jags, leaving this one with all the makings of a shootout.

      PREDICTION: Over 53.5

      Week 1 picks: 2-1
      Season to date: 2-1
      Last edited by StarDust Bum; 09-14-2019, 11:54 PM.

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      • #18
        By: Josh Inglis


        EKELER EATS

        The Los Angeles Chargers are already in Defcon 3 as their offensive talent is dropping like Donte Moncrief catches. Heading into Sunday’s cross-country tilt against the Detroit Lions (+2.5), the Bolts will be without their starting tight end and possibly their No. 2 receiver as well as their kicker. To make matters worse, top wide receiver Keenan Allen will likely draw Lions corner Darius Slay who PFF has ranked as the eighth-best CB heading into 2019.

        Few offensive options + Austin Ekeler x (Philip Rivers) = Ek Eats

        One week after scoring the game-winning touchdown versus the Colts in overtime, Ekeler will be riding high against the Lions who gave up 132 all-purpose yards to David Johnson, including six receptions on seven targets for 55 yards and a score. The Chargers have no choice but to get the ball into Ekeler’s mitts and the best and most productive way to do that is through the air.

        We’re going to pass on Ekeler’s total receptions as it sits at 5.5 (+102) but hitting the Over on his receiving yards total of 45.5 (-114) and will also double down on his total yards (99.5) in what we see as a plus-matchup for the pint-sized back.

        BEARISH ON BOYD

        Are you getting behind the Andy Dalton MVP train at +15,000? Yeah, neither is anyone else. That’s not to say that the Red Rocket’s receiving corps isn’t talented but there won’t be many - if any - 400-yard passing games for the Bengals going forward.

        Cincinnati receiver John Ross exploded for 150-plus yards on 12 targets while fellow WR Tyler Boyd managed 60 yards on 11 targets. With Boyd likely to draw the tougher assignment against San Francisco CB Richard Sherman on the outside and averaging just 6.92 air yards per depth of target last week, there’s value in his receiving total of 73.5 yards in Week 2.

        The San Francisco defense was supposed to get lit up last week by Jameis Winston & Co. but instead scored two defensive touchdowns and held Bruce Arians’ offense to under 200 yards passing with three picks. Add in the fact that the Bengals allowed five sacks last week, and we are grabbing the Under 73.5 on Boyd’s receiving yards and can also get behind the Under on the Bengals’ team total of 23.5.

        THE AIR UP THERE

        Senior Industry Analyst Jason Logan wrote a great piece on the Chicago Bears and Denver Broncos matchup and how the altitude affects teams early in the season as their conditioning isn’t in midseason form:

        “Denver is the worst place to play early in the season, specifically in the Broncos’ home openers. Since 2000, Denver is an incredible 18-1 SU in home openers and has gone 11-4-4 ATS in those Mile High debuts (73 percent)”

        Logan goes on to mention that the lack of oxygen could be detrimental to the Bears. Head coach Matt Nagy ran an offensive play every 26 seconds (ninth most) last week and pushed it even more in the second half with a play every 21 seconds (fourth most in 2H). If the air is a big factor like these trends possibly indicate, then the Bears may have to play slower which could alter the rhythm of the offense and impair the quality of play.

        With the total already dropping a full-point to 40.5 after opening at 41.5, we are looking at Chicago’s team total for better value. We are ridin’ the Bears’ team total Under 21.5.

        DOUBLING ON BIG D

        On Wednesday we backed the Dallas Cowboys and Washington Redskins Over 46.5. Today, we are going back to the nation’s capital and doing some things that are usually a betting no-no.

        To make it clear, we are chasing a previous week’s performance AND laying 5.5 points on the road versus a divisional game. Usually, that’s a recipe for losing money, but Dallas’ new offensive coordinator Kellen Moore has the Cowboys doing things they weren’t doing under former coordinator Scott Linehan. Moore called play-action on 48 percent of the plays, motioned in 73 percent and ran three-WR sets on 73 percent, combining for 494 total yards of offense.

        Washington may also do a good job of shooting itself in the foot and giving the ball back to the Cowboys on Sunday. The Redskins had eight offensive penalties in Philadelphia (five holding, two false starts and a delay of game) and punted on five of their last seven possessions — scoring a TD and field goal.

        Coming into the season, Washington was ranked near the bottom of the league. With its competitive performance in Philadelphia, people may have forgotten just how bad this team is. Take Dallas' team total Over 26.5 and -5.5 for a double shot of Big D.

        THE LEGS IN L.A.

        Kickers are people too and our kicker props went 2-0 last week. For our third installment, we are taking a pair of kicking thoroughbreds in Los Angeles Rams’ Greg “the leg” Zuerlein and New Orleans Saints’ Wil “Gruff” Lutz.

        Zuerlein is already raining threes from downtown this year after hitting from 56 and 49 yards last week while Lutz is still riding high after his remarkable game-winning and career-best 58-yarder on MNF.

        In what looks like a beautiful forecast and optimal kicking conditions in Los Angeles, bang the Over 47.5 yards for the longest field goal.
        Last edited by StarDust Bum; 09-14-2019, 11:55 PM.

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        • #19
          Sunday Blitz - Week 2
          Kevin Rogers

          GAMES TO WATCH

          Seahawks at Steelers (-3 ½, 47) – 1:00 PM EST


          Seattle (1-0 SU, 0-1 ATS) faces its second consecutive AFC North squad after holding off Cincinnati in Week 1 as 9 ½-point favorites, 21-20. The Seahawks kept the Bengals out of the end zone in the second half, while Russell Wilson connected with Tyler Lockett on a 44-yard strike to start the fourth quarter to put Seattle in front for good. Seattle led the NFL in rushing last season by averaging 160 yards on the ground per game, but the Bengals limited the Seahawks to only 72 yards on 25 carries.

          Pittsburgh (0-1 SU, 0-1 ATS) had an opener to forget as the Steelers were routed by the Patriots, 33-3 as 5 ½-point underdogs. The Steelers were last held without a touchdown against the Jaguars in Week 5 of the 2017 season in a 30-9 defeat, as New England stymied Pittsburgh’s running game to the tune of 32 yards rushing on 13 carries. Pittsburgh enters this week in the favorite role as Mike Tomlin’s team posted a subpar 3-7-1 ATS mark as chalk in 2018.

          The Seahawks have struggled in September over the years by losing their last five road openers, while failing to cover in their past five Week 2 contests. To make matters worse, Seattle owns a dreadful 1-8 SU and 0-8-1 ATS mark away from CenturyLink Field in the opening month. The Steelers have fared well against the NFC at Heinz Field by winning seven of the past eight games in this situation.

          Best Bet: Steelers 21, Seahawks 20

          Vikings at Packers (-3, 43) – 1:00 PM EST

          One of the more impressive efforts in Week 1 came by Minnesota (1-0 SU, 1-0 ATS), who blasted Atlanta, 28-12 as 3 ½-point home favorites. Although Kirk Cousins attempted 10 passes and threw for under 100 yards, the Vikings’ offense was carried by running back Dalvin Cook, who racked up 111 yards on the ground and two touchdowns. Minnesota led 28-0 in the fourth quarter as the Vikings improved to 5-2-1 ATS in the past eight home contests.

          The Packers (1-0 SU, 1-0 ATS) lost their first seven road games last season before defeating the Jets in overtime in Week 16. Green Bay started 2019 on a strong note with an away victory at Chicago by defeating the defending NFC North champions, 10-3 as 3 ½-point underdogs. Aaron Rodgers hooked up with Jimmy Graham for the only touchdown of the game, while the Packers’ defense limited the Bears to 46 yards rushing.

          Last season, the Vikings and Packers finished in a 29-29 tie in Week 2 at Lambeau Field as Minnesota overcame a 13-point deficit to force overtime. Minnesota knocked off Green Bay at home, 24-17 in November to improve to 5-1-1 in the last seven matchups. The Packers struggled off a win last season by compiling an 0-5-1 mark in this situation, while last winning consecutive games in 2017.

          Best Bet: Vikings 24, Packers 17

          Saints at Rams (-2, 52) – 4:25 PM EST

          The last time these two teams hooked up in January at the Superdome, all hell broke loose due to one no-call on an obvious pass interference in the NFC championship. Instead of the Saints trying to run the clock out for the game-winning field goal, New Orleans kicked the go-ahead field goal and Los Angeles still had time to tie the game and force overtime. The Rams picked off Drew Brees and kicked a long field goal to win, 26-23 and head to the Super Bowl, while New Orleans remained at home with what-if’s and an eventual rule change in which teams can challenge pass interference calls this season.

          The Saints (1-0 SU, 0-1 ATS) rallied past the Texans on Monday night, 30-28, as New Orleans erased a pair of 11-point deficits. After Houston took back the lead in the final minute, Brees marched the Saints down the field to set up a 58-yard game-winning field goal by Wil Lutz, but New Orleans failed to cash as 6 ½-point favorites. Brees threw for 370 yards and two touchdowns, while running back Alvin Kamara racked up 169 yards from scrimmage.

          The Rams (1-0 SU, 1-0 ATS) held off the Panthers, 30-27 to cash as slight 1 ½-point road favorites. Carolina certainly looked better in Week 1 than its Week 2 loss to Tampa Bay, but the Rams led from start to finish and put together a stronger offensive performance than its showing in the Super Bowl against New England. Running back Malcolm Brown had one rushing touchdown in his career entering Week 1, but the former University of Texas standout scored two touchdowns against the Panthers.

          New Orleans won seven of eight games away from the Superdome last season and defeated Los Angeles in the regular season, 45-35 as 1 ½-point underdogs to hand the Rams their first loss of 2018. The Rams won eight of nine home games last season, as this is their shortest number to lay the Coliseum since a 54-51 triumph against the Chiefs as three-point favorites.

          Best Bet: Saints 31, Rams 28


          BEST TOTAL PLAY (0-1 last week)

          Over 46 ½ - Cowboys at Redskins
          These two teams hit the OVER last week against division foes as Dallas scored 35 points and Washington put up 27 in its loss at Philadelphia. This series has seen the OVER hit in six of the past seven matchups, while the Cowboys have scored at least 31 points in four of the last five meetings. This number opened at 45 and has jumped nearly two points throughout the week.

          TRAP OF THE WEEK

          Although San Francisco posted an 0-8 road record in 2018, the 49ers broke through with an opening week away victory at Tampa Bay. The Niners hit the highway for a second straight week and the expectation is the Bengals are better than they are following their one-point loss at Seattle. Cincinnati has covered five straight games dating back to last season, but four of those ATS wins came as an underdog of 9 ½ or more. It will be tough to see Andy Dalton throw for over 400 yards for a second straight week, while A.J. Green remains sidelined for Cincinnati.

          BIGGEST LINE MOVE

          The Patriots opened up as hefty 14 ½-point road favorites against the Dolphins at the Westgate Superbook last Sunday, but that number jumped as high as 19 before settling at 18 ½. New England ripped Pittsburgh in Week 1, while Miami allowed 59 points in an embarrassing home loss to Baltimore. The Dolphins have won four of the last five home meetings with the Patriots, while New England is 0-5 ATS in its previous five opportunities as a favorite of 18 or more since 2007.

          BETCHA DIDN’T KNOW

          Since 2014, there have been six ties in the NFL, including last week’s 27-27 deadlock between the Lions and Cardinals. Teams off a tie in this span have not fared well in the following game by losing in nine of 10 opportunities. The Lions welcome in the Chargers on Sunday, while the Cardinals travel to Baltimore as nearly two-touchdown underdogs.
          Last edited by StarDust Bum; 09-14-2019, 11:56 PM.

          Comment


          • #20
            Gridiron Angles - Week 2
            Vince Akins

            NFL PLAY ON ATS TREND:

            -- The Packers are 10-0 ATS (11.38 ppg) since Dec 07, 2009 as a home favorite with at least five days rest coming off a road win where they allowed fewer points than expected.

            NFL PLAY AGAINST TREND:

            -- The Ravens are 0-11 ATS (-7.64 ppg) since Sep 23, 2001 coming off a win where they had at least a 75% completion percentage.

            TOP NFL PLAYER TREND:

            -- The Colts are 0-11 OU (-9.50 ppg) since Dec 20, 2015 on the road after a game where TY Hilton had at least 75 receiving yards.

            SUPER SYSTEM OF THE WEEK:

            -- Teams which gained at least 500 total yards in week one are 14-2 ATS. Active on New Orleans and Baltimore.

            NFL O/U OVER TREND:

            -- The Raiders are 10-0-1 OU (9.45 ppg) since Dec 02, 2007 as a dog coming off a win as a dog where they allowed no more than 18 first downs.

            NFL O/U UNDER TREND:

            -- The Ravens are 0-13-1 OU (-7.50 ppg) since Oct 26, 2015 coming off a road game where they gained at least 22 first downs.

            NFL BIBLE ACTIVE TREND:

            -- The Redskins are 0-11 ATS (-13.86 ppg) at home after a loss in which they were up by at least a TD at the end of the first quarter.
            Last edited by StarDust Bum; 09-14-2019, 11:57 PM.

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            • #21
              Total Talk - Week 2
              Joe Williams

              We're hurtling into Week 2 after an eventful opening week in the National Football League. The sample size is obviously still very small, but we're already getting a pretty good idea about a handful of teams, especially those who look like they're going to have trouble on defense and be really, really bad.

              Thursday Blues

              The ‘under’ connected in the Week 1 matchup between the Green Bay Packers and Chicago Bears, and it wasn't even close. The under hit in the battle between the Tampa Bay Buccaneers and Carolina Panthers to kick off Week 2 on Thursday in Charlotte. It's quite the departure from the 2018 season when the 'over' connected in six of the first seven TNF games, while hitting in 10 of the 14 games on Thursday overall. During the 2017 season the 'over' was 6-2 in the first eight TNF games.

              The Thursday games have both featured divisional matchups, too. The under is now 4-2 in six divisional matchups during the early stages of the regular season with six more games on tap this weekend.

              Divisional Game Results Week 1

              Green Bay at Chicago Under (46.5) Green Bay 10, Chicago 3
              Washington at Philadelphia Over (44) Philadelphia 32, Washington 27
              Buffalo at N.Y. Jets Under (41.5) Buffalo 17, N.Y. Jets 16
              N.Y. Giants at Dallas Over (44.5) Dallas 35, N.Y. Giants 17
              Denver at Oakland Under (43) Oakland 24, Denver 16

              Line Moves and Public Leans

              Listed below are the largest line moves as of Friday evening.
              Arizona at Baltimore: 41 to 46 ½
              Minnesota at Green Bay: 46 to 43
              Dallas at Washington: 44 to 46 ½
              Jacksonville at Houston: 44 ½ to 43
              New England at Miami: 47 to 48 ½
              Buffalo at N.Y. Giants: 43 to 44 ½

              Listed below are the five largest leans for Week 2 per the betting trend percentages as of Friday evening.
              Arizona at Baltimore: Over 94%
              Cleveland at N.Y. Jets: Over 88%
              Philadelphia at Atlanta: Over 87%
              Jacksonville at Houston: Under 86%
              Chicago at Denver: Under 84%
              Seattle at Pittsburgh: Over 84%

              There is also a heavy lean on for the 'over' (83 percent) in the Kansas City at Oakland matchup, and heavy lean on the 'under' in New England at Miami (81 percent) battle.

              Handicapping Week 2

              We had five divisional matchups in Week 1 (with one already in the books), four NFC vs. NFC battles, five AFC vs. AFC contests and two tussles between AFC vs. NFC.

              Week 1 Total Results
              Year Over/Under
              Divisional matchups 2-3
              NFC vs. NFC 2-2
              AFC vs. AFC 4-1
              AFC vs. NFC 1-1


              The ‘over’ went 9-7 for the second consecutive season in Week 1. Perhaps 2019 is going down a different road, as the Green Bay at Chicago matchup is already an under result for Week 1.

              Taking a look at the remaining divisional battles for Week 2, here are some important trends to note:

              Dallas at Washington:
              The over has connected in six of the past seven meetings in this series, while cashing in four straight divisional matchups for the Cowboys. In addition, the over is 4-1 in their past five games following a straight-up win, although the under is 9-4 in their past 13 following a cover. However, the 'under' is 25-9 in the past 34 road games while going 7-3 in the past 10 games against teams with a losing overall mark. QB Dak Prescott has led the team to a total of 177 points over the past six battles with the Redskins, or an average of 29.5 points per game (PPG). The offense is averaging 26.9 PPG in the past 10 against NFC East opponents, too.

              As far as the Redskins are concerned, the over has connected in five of the past seven games against teams with a winning overall record. While the under is 9-4 in the past 13 following a straight-up loss, the over has cashed in four of the past five following a cover. The over is also 5-2 in the past seven Week 2 battle for the 'Skins, for whatever that's worth.

              Indianapolis at Tennessee:
              The retired Andrew Luck managed an 11-0 SU mark in his career against the Titans, while QB Jacoby Brissett is 0-2 SU while leading the team to a total of 39 points, or 19.5 PPG. The Titans dropped 43 points on the Browns in a road win in Week 1. In their past five games scoring at least 30 points they followed it up with 10, 17, 33, 14 and 12, or an average of 17.2 PPG. And remember, the Titans had a total of nine points from their defense as a result of a pick-six and safety, while another seven came as the result of a 75-yard pass play. The Titans piled up 31 points in the second half in Cleveland, too.

              The under is 4-1 in the past five AFC South battles for the Colts, while going 6-2 in the past eight games against AFC opponents. The under is also 10-3 in Indy's past 13 following a straight-up loss, and 8-3 in the past 11 following a non-cover in the previous week. For Tennesse, it's all over all the time. the over is 5-0 in the past five against AFC opponents, while going 4-0 in the past four in the Music City. The over is also 5-2 in the past seven games in the month of September. In addition, the over has connected in each of the past four meetings in Nashville.

              New England at Miami:
              The Dolphins were hammered for 59 points last week in a loss against the Ravens. Things figure to go from bad to worse for the Fins, as they face a Patriots offense which has posted 30-plus points in five of the past six, including 33 in their 30-point rout of the Steelers in Week 1 on Sunday Night Football. They scored a total of 71 points against the Dolphins in 2018, or an average of 35.5 PPG. The Patriots have hit the under in eight in a row when favored by double digits on the road, including twice last season in a 27-13 win over the Jets, and 25-6 victory against the Bills.

              Jacksonville at Houston:
              The Jaguars will turn to rookie QB Gardner Minshew after losing QB Nick Foles (collarbone) to an injury in Week 1. So much for that big-money signing. Minshew wasn't bad in his debut, however, completing 22-of-25 for 275 yards, two touchdowns and one interception in Week 1. The under is 5-2 in Jacksonville's past seven battles in the AFC South, while going 11-5 in the past 16 following a straight-up loss and 5-2 in the past seven following a no-cover. For the Texans, the under is 4-1 in their past five inside the division, and 4-0 in the past four at NRG Stadium.

              Minnesota at Green Bay:
              The under has cashed in seven of the past nine meetings in this series. In addition, the under is 22-7 in Minnesota's past 29 inside the division, while going 4-0 in Green Bay's past four against divisional foes. The under is also 4-0 in the past four for the Packers against teams with a winning overall record, and 8-3 in the past 11 overall. The under usually hits for Minnesota in Week 2, going 18-5 in the past 23 seasons. The total in his divisional battle last season was 45 and 48.5, but this season the total has been steamed down as high as 46 at some shops down to 43.

              Kansas City at Oakland:
              The Chiefs opened with 40 points in Jacksonville in Week 1, and they have hit the 'over' in 16 of their past 20 games on the road, with the total listed at 50 or higher in nine of those games. The Raiders surprised the Broncos on Monday night, dropped 24 points. Last season they averaged 25.1 PPG in eight home outings.The under is 20-8 in the past 28 meetings in this series, but the over has connected in five of the past six in the Black Hole. That includes a wild 40-33 battle last season in primetime. The under is 6-1-1 in the past eight for the Raiders following a straight-up win, and 3-0-1 in the past four following a cover.

              Heavy Expectations

              There are four games listed with spreads of a touchdown or greater for Week 2, with two games listed in double digits. The totals are ranging from 43 ½ to 53 ½ in these contests and cashing a total could come down to which teams lay off the gas in the second-half.

              Arizona at Baltimore (1:00 p.m. ET):
              The Ravens piled up 59 points in their road win against the Dolphins, and they'll welcome a Lions club for their home opener in Week 2. The Cardinals played to a 27-27 tie against the Lions and an 'over' result. The over has connected in five of the past seven games on the road for Arizona, while going 4-0 in their past four appearances on a field turf surface.

              New England at Miami (1:00 p.m. ET):
              The last time the Dolphins were a double-digit underdog they hit the 'under' in a game at Green Bay on Nov. 11, 2018, falling 31-12. In their past eight as a double-digit underdog, the under has connected in seven of those games dating back to Dec. 9, 2012.

              Jacksonville at Houston (1:00 p.m. ET):
              The Texans are favored by more than a touchdown at home, which has become commonplace in recent seasons. Last season they were favored by seven or more points in three of their home outings with the 'under' cashing in two of three. For the Jaguars, they were an underdog as a touchdown or more in just one game last season, at Houston on Dec. 30. The under connected in that one, and the under 3-1 in the past four road outings as a 'dog of seven or more.

              Cleveland Browns at N.Y. Jets (8:15 p.m. ET - Mon.):
              The news of QB Sam Darnold missing this game for mononucleosis changed the overall line dramatically. The total has been on the move, too, opening at 46 ½ at most shops, freefalling to 44. QB Trevor Siemian will make his first start for Gang Green against a Browns team which was embarrassed in Week 1 at home. These teams met in primetime last season, with the Browns topping the Jets 21-17 in an 'under' result on Sept. 20, 2018.
              Under the Lights

              Philadelphia Eagles at Atlanta Falcons (8:20 p.m. ET - Sun.):
              In the Sunday Night Football game, the Eagles and Falcons will tangle at Mercedes-Benz Stadium. The under has cashed in five of the past seven games on the road for Philly, while going 9-4 in their past 13 games following a non-cover. The under is also 47-21 in the past 68 games after scoring more than 30 points in the previous outing.

              For the Falcons, the under is 12-4 in their past 16 tries against teams with a winning record. The under is also 5-0 in the past five games after racking up 250 or more passing yards in the previous game. In addition, the under is 9-2 in the past 11 when scoring 15 or fewer points in their previous outing. In this series the under has connected in four straight meetings, too, while going 6-1 in the past seven tussles in Hotlanta.
              Last edited by StarDust Bum; 09-14-2019, 11:58 PM.

              Comment


              • #22
                SNF - Eagles at Falcons
                Matt Blunt

                Philadelphia Eagles at Atlanta Falcons (NBC, 8:20 p.m. ET)

                Recent Head-to-Head Meetings:
                Sept. 6, 2018 - Philadelphia 18 vs. Atlanta 12 (Eagles +1, Under 44)
                Jan. 13, 2018 - Philadelphia 15 vs. Atlanta 10 (Eagles +2.5, Under 40.5)
                Nov. 13, 2016 - Philadelphia 24 vs. Atlanta 15 (Eagles -1, Under 48.5)

                It's a rematch of last year's season opener on SNF this week, as the 18-12 season opener in 2018 between Philadelphia and Atlanta was one that resembled last week's season opener in the sense that defense and some sloppy play dominated the day. This time around, the Eagles have to be pleased to have QB Carson Wentz back on the field, as Wentz shook off a slow start in the 1st half vs Washington a week ago to lead the Eagles to a 1-0 mark.

                On the other side of the coin, it was another sloppy season opener for Matt Ryan and the Falcons offense a week ago, as a 21-0 halftime deficit turned into a 28-0 one by the start of the 4th quarter before a couple of garbage time TD's by the Falcons made the score a bit more respectable. Ryan did throw for 304 yards on 33-for-46 passing, but it was his two INT's that really stifled the Falcons early on in that game.

                Returning home for the home opener should help Ryan and the Falcons on SNF, but will it be enough to pull off the upset as small home underdogs?

                To start, at first glance, this is a line that looks to be right where it should be in terms of both side and total, as early action this week has come in support of the Eagles and the 'over'. Can't say that's too surprising after what we saw from each franchise in Week 1, but it's not like either side doesn't have plenty they'd like to improve on.

                For the Eagles, it's two-fold, as they'd love to eliminate the sluggish start they had against Washington and tighten up their defensive play as well. Hindsight is always 20-20, but the Eagles appeared to be taking Washington extremely lightly in that first half – on both sides of the ball – and they paid for it by trailing 20-7 at the break. They were able to flip the switch coming out of the break before grabbing the lead and pushing it up to double-digits before giving up a garbage time TD to allow Washington ATS backers through the back door, but Eagles fans would like to see the execution and focus that their team brought from minutes 30-58 throughout the entirety of this Falcons game.

                Whether the flipping of the switch was intentional or not, teams that go down that route tend to play with fire too often, and even though it's just Week 2, that is something to keep in mind for this contest. There are plenty in the betting market that are quite high on Philadelphia's long term prospects in 2019 (I am not one of them), but consistency effort is always key in achieving success in this league and that's the next step for Philadelphia in the coming weeks.

                For the Falcons, it's about cleaning up some sloppy 1st half play as well, although their ineptitude continued on well through the 3rd quarter of their loss to Minnesota. This team has so many talented weapons on offense that putting up 25+ points a week shouldn't be too hard for this Falcons team to do – especially at home. But mistakes in all forms are what hurt them a season ago, and if that becomes a theme in 2019, it's eventually going to fall on the shoulders of the head coach and questioning whether or not he's 'lost' the team. Being back at home this week should help the Falcons clean up some of those issues, but Philly's defense can be nasty when they want to be – see the 2nd half vs Washington – so Atlanta can't expect too much to come easy for them here.

                Total Talk

                This total has been bumped up a full 1.5 points since opening at 51, and with Wentz and Ryan and all the offensive weapons both sides have, it would only be that side of the total I'd look to get down on. Unless this number eventually gets to 53 by kickoff that tune probably shouldn't change, as being indoors in Atlanta on a fast track should help both offenses.

                What could hurt this game climbing over that number is the idea that all the prime time games outside of the Texans/Saints on MNF last week have been an under bettors haven. We've seen too very sloppy Thursday Night Football games now that never even sniffed the closing total, and even that Texans/Saints game needed 13 points in the final minute to push that game 'over' the number.

                Prime time games are generally going to get more 'over' love from the betting public and because of that you can find value on going 'under' some of these numbers. However, after the way these prime time games have gone so far, you know the NFL would prefer to see a much cleaner, crisper, contest on the national stage sooner rather then later, and this game has all the ingredients to potentially get that done. Betting percentages currently up at VegasInsider.com show a bit more then 70% of the bets have already come in on the high side of this number, forcing that move, and if you are late to the party in that regard you'll probably want to hit the 'over' before it hits 53.

                Side Spiel

                Those same betting percentages at the site are showing a number a little higher in the 70's in support for Philadelphia, pushing their number up about a point from the opener as well. Given that underdogs are now 4-1 ATS with three outright wins in NFL prime time games this year, the Falcons as a home dog do have some attractiveness to them in that regard. NFL teams hate to fall to 0-2 SU in a season right out of the gate, and with two division rivals already holding at least one victory, and Atlanta can't afford to fall too far behind this early again.

                There is good news and bad news for Atlanta in this spot too, as they are 9-7 SU at the Mercedes-Benz Stadium since moving into the building, but this is also the first time in any of those 16 contests where they've entered the game as an underdog. Underdogs and 'under' have been the way to go in prime time games so far in 2019, and Falcons fans would love to add their team's name to that list of winners this year.

                Final Thoughts

                In the end, this game looks to be one that's probably best to pass on from both a flat side and total perspective given how early it is in the year and the market action/moves we've already seen. However, the notion that this line and total are about where they should be for this game makes the contest one of those potential games where 'teasing' the game any which way could end up hitting.

                A 6-7 point teaser pairing either side with either total is the only way I'm really considering getting action down on this game, and from there it's all about personal preference really. Mathematically it does make a bit more sense to tease the Falcons side up through the +3 and +7 key numbers to go with either side of the total really (or an earlier game on Sunday), and teasing the Falcons side to the 'over' would be my preference here.
                Last edited by StarDust Bum; 09-14-2019, 11:59 PM.

                Comment


                • #23
                  Top six picks for Week 2 in Westgate Super Contest:

                  6) Falcons, +1.5 (729)
                  5) Rams, 2.5 (785)
                  4) Bengals, -2 (804)
                  T2) Steelers, -4 (966)
                  T2) Cowboys, -5 (966)
                  1) Browns, -2.5 (2,053)— Spread posted before Darnold declared out

                  2019 record: 3-3

                  Comment


                  • #24
                    Sunday's Week 2 Essentials
                    Tony Mejia

                    Colts at Titans (-3/43), 1 p.m. ET, CBS:
                    Jacoby Brissett had an excellent first outing in his now full-time role as Colts quarterback, putting some great throws in getting to overtime against the Chargers. L.A. had some key defensive personnel out and doesn’t offer much of a homefield advantage, so this divisional matchup with the Titans should offer a much tougher test. Indianapolis is looking for a better effort from top linebacker Darius Leonard after a rough outing in Carson, so his encounters with Tennessee star Derrick Henry will play a large role. Henry averaged over five yards per carry against Indy last season but got only 26 touches – one receiving target – in his team’s two losses.

                    The Colts will be without speed rusher Kemoko Turay (neck), who was disruptive last Sunday. Tennessee is still working with a patchwork offensive line due to tackle Taylor Lewan’s suspension and guard Kevin Pamphile’s knee injury, but that didn’t stop it from a big day in Cleveland and isn’t expected to be an issue here. Indianapolis has won 13 of 15 in the series but has dropped two of the past three against the Titans. To pull off an upset, the Colts will need another big game from RB Marlon Mack (174 yards in Week 1) and WR TY Hilton, who has had plenty of productive outings against Tennessee over the years. Temperatures on the field will be right around 100 degrees, so the better conditioned team should have the advantage come second half.

                    Chargers (-1.5/47.5) at Lions, 1 p.m. ET, CBS:
                    After surviving the Colts, the Chargers hit the road as a slight favorite despite a number of key injuries. By now you know RB Melvin Gordon is holding out, top tackle Russell Okung is on IR until at least week 6 and safety Derwin James is missing substantial time. Tight end Hunter Henry (knee) and a pair of key corners, Michael Davis (hamstring) and Trevor Williams (quad) won’t play against Detroit, while WR Mike Williams (knee) and linebackers Jatavis Brown and Denzel Perryman will be game-time decisions. Despite all the attrition, L.A. is making and expects to continue a run that has seen them win nine of 10 games away from their “home” environment in Carson. RBs Austin Ekeler and Justin Jackson will join top target Keenan Allen as Philip Rivers best options to try and secure another road win, while the Lions will be hoping to put blowing a massive lead and winding up tied with Arizona in the rear-view.

                    Lions tackle Taylor Decker (back) hasn’t been able to do much and could miss the game after struggling at left tackle against the Cardinals. Top linebacker Jarrad Davis (leg) is hoping to return, while DT De’Shawn Hand (elbow) and corner Rashaan Melvin (knee) are likely out. Top CB Darius Slay will need to help bottle up Allen to encourage Rivers to look elsewhere, so that will be this contest’s most telling matchup. Matthew Stafford had an excellent debut before losing his rhythm as the Lions tried to kill clock in Glendale, but he established instant chemistry with top pick T.J. Hockenson as the rookie tight end, who set a positional NFL record for most yards in a debut with his 124. Lions fans are hoping to be treated to a similar performance and a happier ending despite their team being a home ‘dog. The Chargers have won seven of eight meetings between these teams since 1981, only losing in their last trip into Ford Field back in 2011.

                    Bills (-2/44.5) at Giants, 1 p.m. ET, CBS:
                    The Bills looked lost, down 16-0 against the Jets late in the third, before LB C.J. Mosley exited and the offense finally hit their strides, scoring 17 points on three straight drives in a run punctuated by a blown coverage on a jump ball Josh Allen was fortunate to complete. The offense is young and figures to be that streaky, but the defense supplied many reasons to be hopeful that this group will be able to compete for a playoff spot. The unit is undoubtedly the reason Buffalo is favored on the road for the first time since Dec. 31, 2017, making this only the second occasion in 13 regular-season games that the Bills are laying points outside upstate New York. They’ll have a regularly healthy squad since WR Cole Beasley has been cleared to play after dealing with an illness, so only WR/KR Andre Roberts and CB Taron Johnson have been ruled out.

                    New York got off to a nice start against Dallas and then imploded, so the boo birds will file into MetLife Stadium cocked and ready to go if they don’t like what they see. Giants fans want to see rookie Daniel Jones but know its too early in the season to turn on Eli Manning, so he’ll have a grace period of sorts before they turn on him. Saquon Barkley rushed for 120 yards on 11 carries against the Cowboys and should see a much heavier workload considering Buffalo was the top pass defense in the league last season but was stuck in the middle against the run. Sterling Shepard is out due to a concussion, so New York is down to Bennie Fowler, Russell Shepard and Cody Core as receiving targets they can be sure will be healthy enough to play. Evan Engram will be Manning’s first option, but he’ll need one or two of his receivers to come through if the Giants are going to pull off a win to beat Buffalo for the fifth time in six tries since 1999. The Bills’ lone victory came in East Rutherford in 2003.

                    Cardinals at Ravens (-13/46), 1 p.m. ET, FOX:
                    There are a number of folks on the Cardinals here, hopping on the second-largest spread of Week 2 in hopes that the line is partially an overreaction to what Baltimore was able to do to in South Florida in hanging 59 points on the Dolphins. They’re not going to be able to carry any of those touchdowns over but have an opportunity to continue partying in the end zone if Lamar Jackson’s pocket prowess continues. John Harbaugh has been terrific early in the season throughout the course of his career and has excelled in home openers, while Jackson’s confidence shone through against a Dolphins secondary that is one of the strengths of that tanking, depleted group. Arizona remains without Patrick Peterson due to suspension but did pack Ravens legend Terrell Suggs, who returns to Baltimore on the heels of two sacks in his new team’s Week 1 tie.

                    Kyler Murray will look to build on finally finding a rhythm against Detroit in leading a fourth-quarter comeback after really looking like an overmatched rookie through the first three quarters. He’ll now also have to deal with a road atmosphere and a veteran defense. Corner Jimmy Smith hurt his knee in Miami and has been ruled out but the rest of the group is good to go since fellow corner Marlon Humphrey was cleared after a back issue. The Cardinals will hope to establish the run and screen game through David Johnson to keep the pressure off Murray but will likely need to hit a few home runs to have a chance to steal this late. The Ravens have won four of the last five meetings between these teams but dropped the most recent one, falling in Glendale in ’15.

                    Patriots (-18.5/48.5) at Dolphins, 1 p.m. ET, CBS:
                    The Patriots are the largest road favorite in 32 years, opening at 17.5 and steadily climbing. Antonio Brown hasn’t been placed on the commissioner’s exempt list and is therefore available to play if Bill Belichick wants to utilize him. All signs point to him debuting in his newest uniform in his backyard, so you can expect the South Florida native to want to make a splash. Despite the uneven preseason, he should be physically ready to have a massive impact. Josh Gordon shined in Week 1 alongside Philip Dorsett, a Ft. Lauderdale native who will also be tripping over his cleats to get over in front of friends and family. At this point, the Dolphins are nothing more than a punching bag or speed bump.

                    New starting tackle Julien Davenport, safety Reshad Jones and speedy receiver Albert Wilson have already been ruled out due to injuries, so a patchwork offensive line will be in play for Miami. Defensively, while prized DB Minkah Fitzpatrick will likely get his wish to be traded, he’s expected to be out there for this one. The Patriots have covered only one of their last six in South Florida, which combined with such a large number, should be able to pick up some action for Ryan Fitzpatrick and the ‘Phins. If you’re taking the points, just beware that it’s too early in the season for Tom Brady to be disinterested, especially with so many new toys. Baltimore racked up 643 yards and scored six offensive touchdowns by halftime, so if the Dolphins don’t show up ready to play, another embarrassment awaits. Thunderstorms could factor in, so if there’s lightning in the area, we might see stoppages.

                    Cowboys (-5.5/46.5) at Redskins, 1 p.m. ET, FOX:
                    Jerry Jones has to be thrilled that he relented and paid Ezekiel Elliott his money since it looks like he’s about to have a lot of fun. Zeke largely played decoy as Amari Cooper, Michael Gallup and Randall Cobb torched the Giants secondary as Dak Prescott dominated with his ball placement and decision-making. It’s not going to look that easy every week, but the Cowboys will try their best to replicate that effort in Landover. The Redskins lost their top defensive player with Jonathan Allen suffering an MCL tear and have issues in the secondary with Quinton Dunbar (knee) and Fabian Moreau (ankle) likely sidelined.

                    Washington will turn to Adrian Peterson after losing Derrius Guice to a knee injury and won’t have tight end Jordan Reed due to a concussion. Offensive tackle Trent Willliams is still a holdout, but none of this prevented the Redskins from securing a backdoor cover with six seconds left in Philly after blowing a 17-0 lead. Case Keenum had a productive day and rookie WR Terry McLaurin impressed, so those two will have to hook up for huge days if there’s going to be a surprise here.

                    Jaguars at Texans (-8/43), 1 p.m. ET, CBS:
                    Rookie Gardner Minshew got the bulk of the work in the preseason and often couldn’t generate much offense. He was working behind a backup offensive line with receivers who for the most part didn’t stick, but it was nonetheless stunning that he performed a complete 180 in taking over when Nick Foles broke his collarbone. Minshew set an NFL record for accuracy by completing 22 of 25 passes and made good on his first 13, adjusting immediately to the speed of the game. We’ll see how he fares on the road against an angry Texans defense that allowed itself to get clipped at the end by a 58-yard Will Lutz field goal on Monday night. J.J. Watt had a quiet evening and Drew Brees was able to get his playmakers the ball without much hassle, so Romeo Crennel’s group will look to atone here against a division rival’s rookie-led offense.

                    Although Deshaun Watson put Houston in position to win with clutch throws and Kenny Stills made an immediate impact, the Texans’ offensive line played terribly in allowing Watson to spend significant time on his back and running for his life. The Jags will get after him too, so new tackle Laremy Tunsil needs to bounce back with his pass protection while emerging as a game-changing force on screens. Speaking of which, slot receiver Keke Coutee is expected to return. Jacksonville’s defense will be missing DE Yannick Ngakoue and corner A.J. Bouye.

                    Seahawks at Steelers (-3.5/47), 1 p.m. ET, FOX:
                    Ben Roethlisberger had an awful debut against the Patriots, watching his streak of consecutive games with a touchdown pass end at 26. He didn’t look sharp, so facing an aggressive Seattle secondary will be a test, although it appears that he’s going to catch a break due to injuries. Seahawks safety Tedric Thompson (hamstring), DT Poona Ford (calf), DE Ziggy Ansah (shoulder) and CB/special teams captain Neiko Thorpe are all expected to miss this contest. With Juju Smith-Schuster cleared to play after a toe issue and center Maurkice Pouncey back to anchor the offensive line, the Steelers will at least be better equipped to help Roethlisberger bounce back. No matter how early it is, it wouldn’t be great for Pittsburgh to open 0-2 at home given the projected improvement of both the Ravens and Browns. This is an early must-win and should feature the return of safety Sean Davis (ankle) and possibly CB Joe Haden (shoulder).

                    The Seahawks will rely on Russell Wilson to lead a young offense on the road. Seattle went 4-4 SU last season but were in most games. Outside of two blowout wins, the Seahawks played six road games decided by a touchdown or fewer. They’ve been slow starters and have gone 1-6-1 ATS over the last few seasons in September. The Seahawks won the most recent meeting between these teams in 2015 but have been shut out on their last two trips to Pittsburgh.

                    49ers at Bengals (-1/46), 1 p.m. ET, FOX:
                    The 49ers rode a pair of pick-sixes past Tampa Bay last week and are back on the road hoping to start the season with consecutive wins despite Jimmy Garoppolo still working his back into a rhythm. He looked better against the Bucs than he did in the preseason and in practices, but did throw a pick-six of his own and can be harassed into mistakes. He does know how to get George Kittle the ball, which may make the difference here given Cincinnati’s new-look linebacker corps that also have to deal with Matt Breida, who is good to go as the starter.

                    Cincinnati has yet to clear RB Joe Mixon after he injured an ankle in Seattle but him being able to practice some late in the week is a good sign he’ll at least try to play in this home opener. Andy Dalton will look to prove he can make plays without A.J. Green commanding attention, but has to deal with a secondary that will see Jason Verrett make his 49ers debut and could also feature Jimmie Ward’s return from a hand injury. The Bengals could be without Mixon, Green and top tackle Cordy Glenn, who has been ruled out with a concussion.

                    Vikings at Packers (-2.5/43), 1 p.m. ET, FOX:
                    With both teams coming off victories, the NFC North will have an early leader setting the pace after this one. Matt LaFleur’s debut as head coach against the Bears came courtesy of a tremendous defensive effort and put Aaron Rodgers’ lack of comfort with the new offense on display. There should be progress in Week 2 at home considering David Bakhtiari and Bryan Buluaga are healthy enough to anchor the line and buy time for Rodgers to work his magic. The Packers play five of their next six at Lambeau Field and lived to tell about a rough night in Chicago to open the season, boosting team morale in that Rodgers was able to give LaFleur the game ball for his first win without any hint of sarcasm. Things are good in Packerland. We’ll see if that continues after the Vikings leave town.

                    Minnesota head coach Mike Zimmer and his defense is one reason Mike McCarthy had to move on since they’ve emerged as a major thorn in Rodgers’ side. The Vikes are 5-1-1 over the past seven meetings and have lost only a Christmas Eve game in Green Bay over the past few years. The elements won’t be an issue here on a perfect day for football with light winds and 70-degree weather in the forecast. Dalvin Cook looks like he’s back to his old self and the offense is completely healthy, so we’ll get a look at just how improved the Packers defense truly is.

                    Chiefs (-7/53.5) at Raiders, 4:05 p.m. ET, CBS:
                    The Chiefs will make their final scheduled trip to Oakland with the Raiders moving to Las Vegas next year, so this one promises to be spicy. Kansas City wasn’t slowed down by Jacksonville or by the loss of Tyreek Hill, who will miss at least a month with a shoulder injury. With Travis Kelce commanding all the attention in the middle of the field and Patrick Mahomes still able to get vertical through Sammy Watkins, Mecole Hardman and Demarcus Robinson, the Chiefs should continue to be the league’s most dangerous offensive team despite losing the fastest player on the roster. This should be a good test for that since the Raiders come in off a very nice defensive effort in beating the Broncos but lost hard-hitting rookie safety Johnathan Abram for the season due to a rotator cuff injury.

                    Kansas City really struggled against a rookie in Jacksonville’s Minshew, so it has something to prove against Derek Carr, who put the ball where it needed to be time after time in having his way with a Vic Fangio-led Broncos defense. If Darren Waller can continue to emerge as a top receiving target at tight end, we could get one last shootout at the Coliseum for old time’s sake if swirling winds aren’t a factor. Kansas City has won 10 of 12 in the series and three of four in Oakland following a 40-33 victory last season.
                    Last edited by StarDust Bum; 09-15-2019, 11:36 AM.

                    Comment


                    • #25
                      NFL Sunday odds and line moves: Public pounds Patriots, book desperate for Dolphins
                      Patrick Everson

                      The second Sunday of the NFL season features a huge pointspread in an AFC East contest. We check in on the action and odds movement for that matchup and three others, with insights from Derek Wilkinson, manager of The SuperBook at Westgate.

                      PATRIOTS AT DOLPHINS – OPEN +14.5; Move: +16.5; MOVE: +17.5; MOVE: +18.5; MOVE: +19; MOVE: +18.5; MOVE: +18; MOVE: +18.5

                      Defending Super Bowl champion New England didn’t miss a beat in Week 1, making perennial playoff contender Pittsburgh look like a JV unit. The Patriots (1-0 SU and ATS) built a 20-0 halftime lead and coasted to a 33-3 rout laying 5.5 points at home Sunday night.

                      On the flip side, Miami got hammered so badly in Week 1 that sportsbooks are already offering propositions on whether new coach Brian Flores’ squad will go 0-16. The Dolphins (0-1 SU and ATS) got boatraced by Baltimore 59-10 as 7-point home pups Sunday.

                      "The public just can't get enough of the Patriots," Wilkinson said of bettors' appetites for this 1 p.m. ET kickoff. "People are still betting the Patriots at -18.5. We can't go too much higher. If the Patriots cover, we just lose. The sharps like the Dolphins to cover, and we need the Dolphins to cover very heavily."


                      SAINTS AT RAMS – OPEN: -3; MOVE: -2.5; MOVE: -2; MOVE: -2.5; MOVE: -2

                      Defending NFC champion Los Angeles saw a 13-point lead dwindle to 3 points in the fourth quarter of its Week 1 tilt, but got the job done on the road. The Rams (1-0 SU and ATS) were up 23-10 late in the third quarter at Carolina and held on for a 30-27 win as 1.5-point favorites Sunday.

                      New Orleans got all it could handle in a wild Week 1 finish, also managing to start the 2019-20 campaign with a win. In the final 50 seconds against Houston, the Saints (1-0 SU, 0-1 ATS) sandwiched two field goals around a Texans touchdown to post a 30-28 victory as 6.5-point faves on Monday night.

                      These two met for the NFC title in January, where the Rams benefited greatly from a now infamous noncall of pass interference and went on to a 26-23 overtime victory as 3-point road underdogs.

                      "Right now, straight bets are fairly even, but we've got a lot of parlay money on the Saints. So the public is on the Saints," Wilkinson said, noting the total is also getting attention for this 4:25 p.m. ET meeting. "We opened 53.5, and we're down to 52. Looks like the sharps like the Under in this one."


                      SEAHAWKS AT STEELERS – OPEN: -4.5; MOVE: -5; MOVE: -3.5; MOVE: -4; MOVE: -3.5

                      Pittsburgh aims to bounce back from the aforementioned spanking in the Week 1 Sunday nighter. The Steelers (0-1 SU and ATS) mustered only a field goal early in the third quarter as they got blown out by New England 33-3 catching 5.5 points on the road.

                      Perhaps working in Pittsburgh’s favor is that Seattle will travel cross-country for one of today’s early kicks, a 1 p.m. ET start. The Seahawks (1-0 SU, 0-1 ATS) went off as healthy 9.5-point home favorites against Cincinnati in Week 1, but had to battle for a 21-20 victory.

                      "A lot of money on the Steelers so far," Wilkinson said, noting the line move belies the liability, as it was mostly an adjustment to Pittsburgh's awful Week 1 effort. "We need the Seahawks by a pretty decent margin. All the public money has been on the Steelers."


                      EAGLES AT FALCONS – OPEN: PICK; MOVE: +1; Move: PICK; MOVE: +1; MOVE: +1.5; MOVE: +2.5; Move: +1.5

                      Philadelphia got off to a shaky start as hefty chalk in Week 1, but at least got to the finish line with a victory. The Eagles (1-0 SU, 0-1 ATS) trailed Washington 17-0 five minutes into the second quarter, but rallied for a 32-27 victory giving 10.5 points at home Sunday. Philly was actually covering the big number, but gave up a Redskins touchdown with six seconds remaining.

                      Atlanta also got out of the gate poorly and never really recovered on the road in Week 1. The Falcons went to Minnesota as modest 3.5-point ‘dogs, fell behind 21-0 late in the second quarter and lost 28-12. Atlanta’s only TD came with just 1:05 left in the fourth quarter.

                      "A lot of people on the Falcons, and some sharp money on Atlanta. We like the Falcons too," Wilkinson said of the Sunday nighter, an 8:20 p.m. ET kick. "The public is betting the Eagles on parlays. At the end of the day, I think we'll be rooting for the Eagles."

                      Comment


                      • #26
                        MNF - Browns at Jets
                        Tony Mejia

                        Browns (-6.5/45) at Jets, 8:15 p.m. ET, ESPN

                        This went from Monday night must-see to potential dud on Thursday morning with the announcement that Jets quarterback Sam Darnold had contracted mononucleosis and would be out of the lineup for the next few weeks. Trevor Siemian will start instead as the Jets look to avoid an 0-2 start despite opening the season at home.

                        The Adam Gase era isn’t off to a great start, crashing just before the fourth quarter of Week 1’s 17-16 loss to the Bills rolled around. Linebacker CJ Mosley looked tremendous before suffering a groin injury that forced him out with New York leading 16-3. The Bills marched down the field twice in succession, immediately taking advantage of his absence.

                        Between Darnold’s exit and the uncertainty regarding Mosley’s availability for this one, it’s been an uncomfortable few days for the Jets, who have ruled out their linebacker for this date with the Browns. Defensive end Quinnen Williams, the No. 3 overall pick in April’s draft, won’t play either due to a foot injury.

                        Running back Le’Veon Bell is nursing a shoulder injury but should play, while left tackle Kelvin Beachum (ankle) and newly acquired receiver Demaryius Thomas (hamstring) will probably be game-time decisions. Thomas was acquired in part because Quincy Enunwa was played on IR due to a neck injury, removing one of Jets’ most explosive offensive players from the equation. When you add in all the guys sitting out due to suspension, Gase and new coordinator Gregg Williams will have to try and hang with a very motivated Cleveland team with a host of backups set to play major roles.

                        Bookmakers opened with the Browns as 2.5-point favorites on the heels of an embarrassing Week 1 home loss against the Titans. The number was hanging tight at 6.5 points with a few full 7-point spreads popping up on a few online sportsbooks after the Sunday night game closed. Underdogs went 8-6 against the number on Sunday following Tampa’s upset win in Carolina on Thursday. In all, six Week 2 ‘dogs have won outright.

                        The Browns were blown out in their home opener due to defensive breakdowns that compounded the sloppiest game of Baker Mayfield’s short career. He was picked off three times for the third time in his 15 appearances as a pro but he threw for 376 and 397 yards in those previous two games and didn’t look as loose with the football as he did against Tennessee. It was his first three-pick game at home and sapped the excitement out of the beginning of the Odell Beckham, Jr. era in addition to spoiling Freddie Kitchens’ debut as head coach.

                        Running back Le’Veon Bell is nursing a shoulder injury but should play, while left tackle Kelvin Beachum (ankle) and newly acquired receiver Demaryius Thomas (hamstring) will probably be game-time decisions. Thomas was acquired in part because Quincy Enunwa was played on IR due to a neck injury, removing one of Jets’ most explosive offensive players from the equation. When you add in all the guys sitting out due to suspension, Gase and new coordinator Gregg Williams will have to try and hang with a very motivated Cleveland team with a host of backups set to play major roles.

                        Bookmakers opened with the Browns as 2.5-point favorites on the heels of an embarrassing Week 1 home loss against the Titans. The number was hanging tight at 6.5 points with a few full 7-point spreads popping up on a few online sportsbooks after the Sunday night game closed. Underdogs went 8-6 against the number on Sunday following Tampa’s upset win in Carolina on Thursday. In all, six Week 2 ‘dogs have won outright.

                        The Browns were blown out in their home opener due to defensive breakdowns that compounded the sloppiest game of Baker Mayfield’s short career. He was picked off three times for the third time in his 15 appearances as a pro but he threw for 376 and 397 yards in those previous two games and didn’t look as loose with the football as he did against Tennessee. It was his first three-pick game at home and sapped the excitement out of the beginning of the Odell Beckham, Jr. era in addition to spoiling Freddie Kitchens’ debut as head coach.

                        Worse yet, the Browns were whistled for an incredible 18 penalties for 182 yards, making it their sloppiest game in 68 years. If they can’t find some discipline here, it won’t matter that the Jets won’t have Darnold to rely on. If Cleveland gives New York’s team of backups that type of help at MetLife Stadium, we’ll be getting another upset to add to the week’s collection. On that end, the Jets are paying out +240 for the outright win at Westgate Las Vegas Superbook.

                        Trevor Siemian will be making his first start since 2017 after nearly two full seasons of inconsistency ended after a December shoulder injury. He was with the Vikings last season but never got in a game and chose the Jets during free agency in part because Gase was so adamant about having him in place as the backup. Although the Jets will likely make some changes to what they would run under Darnold, expect to see a similar system as Siemian has stated he’s comfortable and eager to provide some continuity.

                        On the Browns’ end, Kitchens and Mayfield have an opportunity to respond to adversity in style if they can have some strong counters in place for when Williams comes with the house. They won’t have top guard Joel Bitonio due to an abdominal injury, so the offensive line isn’t going to be at 100 percent but has enough pieces to overcome the absence of one of the unit’s strongest links on the road. Versatile backup tackle Kendall Lamm is out with a knee injury.

                        Beckham, Jr. returns to MetLife Stadium as a visitor for the first time and made a pre-game impact by calling out Williams' reputation for dirty tricks as a defensive coordinator. If nothing else, he'll take some of the pressure off Mayfield while looking to make life easier for him on the field when the actual game unfolds.

                        Kitchens didn't hire Williams after beating him out for the head coaching gig both put their names into the ring for, so this game will be personal between these coaching staffs, which always adds a level of spice. Williams was ultimately hired by Gase and the Jets and has seen Mayfield’s bad habits up close and should have a game plan in place designed to try and confuse him and keep the mistakes coming.

                        While that would be easier to accomplish with Mosley in the middle calling the plays out and the explosive Williams serving as a disruptive force up front, he’s unable to count on either. Safety Jamal Adams will be the Jets’ most talented defensive player and should be at the center of whatever Williams has planned after bouncing back from hip and back soreness that kept him out of practice some this week.

                        Young LB Neville Hewitt will start in Mosley’s place and rookie fifth-round pick Blake Cashman should see extended time, so the Browns should be able to challenge them with a run game featuring Nick Chubb, who often gets overlooked due to Mayfield and his receivers. Tight end David Njoku scored the Browns’ only touchdown through the air and will also be able to punish the Browns if New York is too intent on keeping from Beckham, Jr. and Jarvis Landry from getting going. The Jets’ issues at cornerback were a major theme throughout training camp as a source of frustration for Williams, who couldn’t blitz as often as he wants to due to their inability to hold up in the back.

                        Only two weeks in, injuries are already the largest variable in this Monday nighter since Cleveland got unexpected news that corner Demarious Randall will have to sit this one out with a concussion. Linebacker Adarius Taylor is also out for a few weeks and DT Chris Smith may not play despite returning to practice following the tragic death of his girlfriend in an auto accident this past week.

                        Cleveland surrendered 43 points last week, but the defense actually wasn’t the issue. They held the Titans to just 13 offensive points until just a couple minutes remained in the third quarter and Derrick Henry broke loose for a 75-yard reception off a screen on a busted coverage. Tennessee added three fourth-quarter touchdowns, but once came on a pick-six and the other two came after the Titans took over in Browns territory.

                        Despite Darnold being ruled out, the total has barely budged. Some books opened at 46 and trimmed it to 45. Westgate hasn’t moved the number at all. Weather should be extremely pleasant with light breeze and temperatures in the low-70’s expected.

                        Last season’s game, which ended up becoming a rookie summit meeting between Mayfield and Darnold once the top pick entered after Tyrod Taylor suffered a concussion, saw the Browns win 21-17. Darnold was picked off on his last two drives and RB Carlos Hyde, now with Houston, helped Cleveland rally with a pair of second-half scoring runs. The Jets had won five straight games in the series prior to the loss. The Browns last beat the Jets in East Rutherford in 2007.
                        Last edited by StarDust Bum; 09-16-2019, 12:58 PM.

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                        • #27
                          Betting Recap - Week 2
                          Joe Williams

                          Overall Notes

                          National Football League Week 2 Results


                          Wager Favorites-Underdogs
                          Straight Up 9-6
                          Against the Spread 6-9

                          Wager Home-Away
                          Straight Up 6-9
                          Against the Spread 5-10

                          Wager Totals (O/U)
                          Over-Under 3-11

                          National Football League Year-to-Date Results

                          Wager Favorites-Underdogs
                          Straight Up 20-10-1
                          Against the Spread 13-17-1

                          Wager Home-Away
                          Straight Up 14-16-1
                          Against the Spread 9-21-1

                          Wager Totals (O/U)
                          Over-Under 12-18

                          The largest underdogs to win straight up
                          Buccaneers (+6.5, ML +250) at Panthers, 20-14
                          Seahawks (+4, ML +180) at Steelers, 28-26
                          Colts (+3, ML +155) at Titans, 19-17

                          The largest favorite to cover
                          Patriots (-18) at Dolphins, 43-0
                          Chiefs (-7) at Raiders, 28-10
                          Cowboys (-6) at Redskins, 31-21

                          Mining Road Wins

                          -- The San Francisco 49ers (+1, ML +105) paddled the Cincinnati Bengals by a 41-17 score, posting road victories in consecutive weeks to open the regular season for the first time since 1989 when they won three straight on the road in Weeks 1-3 with QB Joe Montana at the helm. The 49ers are averaging 36.0 points per game (PPG) while allowing 17.0 PPG while covering both games at one-point underdogs. Next up will be their home opener against the Pittsburgh Steelers in Week 3. The Steelers enter 0-2 SU/ATS, and QB Ben Roethlisberger (elbow) and RB James Conner (knee) might not be available.

                          Wounded Wings

                          -- The Philadelphia Eagles saw several star players leave their Sunday Night Football game against the Atlanta Falcons, but they held a late 20-17 lead in the fourth quarter before WR Julio Jones broke free for a 54-yard touchdown on a fourth-down play to secure victory for the home side. The Eagles lost WRs DeSean Jackson, Alshon Jeffery and Nelson Agholor to injuries, as well as QB Carson Wentz for a brief period. TE Dallas Goedert was also lost to an injury in a game which was super costly to the visitors, and they ended up losing and not covering, either.

                          Miami Mice

                          -- For the second consecutive weekend the laughingstock of the NFL was the Miami Dolphins. After opening the season with a 59-10 shellacking from the Baltimore Ravens the New England Patriots strolled into town as 18-point favorites. While the Patriots didn't get off to as quick of a start as the Ravens, they made up for lost time in the third quarter, including a pair of pick-sixes. When the dust settled, the Dolphins were on the short end of a 43-0 score, and they have been outscored 92-10 through the first two games. As such, they have opened as 21-point underdogs for their Week 3 road game against the Dallas Cowboys.

                          Total Recall

                          -- The under was 11-3 between Thursday's game and Sunday's entire slate, including the games with the top five totals on the board. Kansas City Chiefs-Oakland Raiders (53), Philadelphia Eagles-Atlanta Falcons (53), New Orleans Saints-Los Angeles Rams (52.5), New England Patriots-Miami Dolphins (48.5) and Tampa Bay Buccaneers-Carolina Panthers (48) each cashed the under, and a couple of the results were never in doubt. In fact, the Saints-Rams shootout never materialized, helped out in part by QB Drew Brees (hand/thumb) leaving the game, had a total of 6-3 at halftime. Hopefully you had a few 'under' tickets in your pocket this week.

                          Dolphins QB Ryan Fitzpatrick tossed a pair of pick-sixes in their blowout loss, but even his best (or worst) efforts couldn't help the total go 'over', similiar to Buccaneers QB Jameis Winston, who had two pick-sixes in an 'under' result in Week 1 against the 49ers.

                          -- On the flip side, the lowest total on the board was the Chicago Bears-Denver Broncos (40.5) game. It was expected to be a defensive grind, and it was. The Bears, who totaled just three points in their opening game loss in Week 1, didn't score their first touchdown of the season until the third quarter. Through eight quarters the Bears have generated just 19 total points, including only one touchdown. It's no surprise that the 'under' is 2-0 for Chicago so far. For the Broncos, they fell at Oakland in Week 1 on Monday Night, and they're 0-2 SU/1-1 ATS and the 'under' is also 2-0.

                          -- The 'under' is 2-0 in the first two primetime games of Week 2, with the Monday Night Football battle between the Cleveland Browns-New York Jets (45) still pending. The 'over' is 1-5 (16.7%) during the early 2019 primetime schedule.

                          Officially, the 'over' finished 26-25 (51.0%) in 51 games under the lights.

                          In 2017, the 'over' finished 25-23-1 (52.1%) in 49 primetime games.

                          In 2016, the 'over' in night games went (52.9%) through 51 games.

                          In 2015, the 'over' finished 20-28-1 (41.7%) in 49 primetime games.

                          In 2014, the 'over' went 33-17 (66.0%) in primetime games, and the 'over' was 28-22 (56.0%) in 2013.

                          Injury Report

                          -- As mentioned, the Steelers lost Roethlisberger (elbow) and Conner (knee) to injuries in the first half. QB Mason Rudolph and RB Jaylen Samuels were forced to pick up the slack. Big Ben is set for an MRI on Monday.

                          -- Brees (hand) banged his right throwing hand on a rushing Rams DT Aaron Donald, and he was unable to return. He will remain in Southern California to see a hand specialist. QB Teddy Bridgewater finished up, and would start Week 3 if needed.

                          -- Cardinals RB David Johnson (wrist) missed a chunk of the game at Baltimore due to a wrist injury, but ultimately was able to return and finish up.

                          -- Cowboys WR Michael Gallup (knee) left the game in Washington due to a knee issue, and he'll go for an MRI.

                          -- As mentioned, the Eagles lost Wentz (ribs, concussion) briefly before he was cleared to return. Jackson (groin) left in the second quarter and was unable to return, Jeffery (calf) left early and didn't come back. Goedert (calf) also left in the first half and didn't return, while Agholor (concussion) was out for a couple of drives before passing tests and returning to finish.

                          Looking Ahead

                          -- The Titans and Jaguars will do battle on Thursday Night Football in Northast Florida, with the Titans installed as slight road favorites (-2.5). They're 1-4 ATS in the past five games inside the AFC South, and 16-34-3 ATS in the past 53 against losing teams. The Jaguars are 3-9-2 ATS in the past 14 games ovoerall, and 2-5-1 ATS in the past eight divisional games, so something's gotta give. In this series, Tennessee has covered four in a row, while the favorite is 6-2-1 ATS in the past nine meetings. However, the Titans are 2-5-1 ATS in the past eight trips to Duuuuuval.

                          -- The Jets hit the road trying to cool off the Patriots on Sunday afternoon in Foxboro. The Jets are 2-5 ATS in the past seven road games, and 1-7 ATS in the past eight against AFC East foes while going 0-5-1 ATS in the past six against winning teams. The Patriots have covered seven of the past nine divisional games, while going 40-16-2 ATS in the past 58 at Gillette Stadium, including their 33-3 win against the Steelers in Week 1. In this series, the Jets are 0-3-1 ATS in the past four trips to Foxboro, and 1-4 ATS in the past five meetings overall. The home team is 7-1-1 ATS in the past nine meetings, while the under has cashed in six in a row.

                          -- The Giants and Buccaneers seem to meet fairly frequently despite the fact they're not in the same division. New York has connected in seven of the past eight on the road against the spread. The Bucs are 3-0-1 ATS in the past four against teams with a losing record, and 5-2-1 ATS in the past eight vs. NFC. In this series, the G-Men are 5-0-1 ATS in the past six trips to the RayJay, while going 6-1-2 ATS in the past nine meetings overall. The under is also 5-2 in the past seven meetings in Tampa.

                          -- The Bears and Redskins will square off on Monday night, with the Bears installed as four-point favorites to open. The road team is 7-2 ATS in the past nine meetings in this series, although the underdog is 6-2 ATS in the past eight meetings. The Bears are also 0-5 ATS in the past five meetings with the 'Skins.
                          Last edited by StarDust Bum; 09-16-2019, 01:01 PM.

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                          • #28
                            NFL Week 3 odds: Saints-Seahawks line waits for update on Brees' status
                            Patrick Everson

                            New Orleans quarterback Drew Brees suffered a hand injury early in Sunday's road loss to the Rams. If Brees misses next Sunday's game at Seattle, the Saints could be 5.5-point underdogs.

                            NFL Week 3 might be without one of the most prolific passers in league history, in one of the key matchups. Covers checks in on the opening odds and early action for four games, with insights from John Murray, director of The SuperBook at Westgate.

                            New Orleans Saints at Seattle Seahawks (No Line)

                            New Orleans could be in a world of hurt, depending on the severity of Drew Brees’ injury to his right hand. Brees exited during the second series Sunday against the Los Angeles Rams, and the Saints (1-1 SU, 0-2 ATS) couldn’t get anything going offensively in a 27-9 loss as 2-point road underdogs.

                            Seattle had its hands full while winning as a big Week 1 chalk against Cincinnati, then nabbed an impressive road victory as a Week 2 underdog. The Seahawks (2-0 SU, 1-1 ATS) took the lead five minutes into the second half at Pittsburgh and went on to a 28-26 win as a 4-point pup Sunday.

                            Until The SuperBook has some clarity on Brees’ injury, this Sunday tilt won’t be on the board, though Murray speculated on possible lines.

                            “Something like Seahawks -1 to -5.5,” Murray said of the potential opening number, depending on if Brees plays.

                            Los Angeles Rams at Cleveland Browns (+3)

                            Los Angeles is out of the gate 2-0 SU and ATS in defense of its NFC championship. The Rams, certainly benefiting from the aforementioned Brees injury, were tied at 6 with New Orleans five minutes into the third quarter. However, L.A. pulled away for an easy 27-9 win laying 2 points at home Sunday.

                            Cleveland still has Week 2 work to do, as it travels to face the New York Jets in the Monday nighter. The Browns were arguably the most-hyped team in the offseason, then got waxed by Tennessee 43-13 giving 5.5 points at home in Week 1.

                            “We decided to open it at Rams -3, knowing we will need the Browns pretty big by kickoff,” Murray said, alluding to expected heavy Cleveland action. “The line could go even higher if the Browns struggle Monday night against the Jets.”

                            For the moment, Cleveland is priced at -120 at +3, while L.A. is -3 (even). The Browns are in prime time two straight weeks, as this matchup is the Week 3 Sunday night game.

                            Baltimore Ravens at Kansas City Chiefs (-6.5)

                            Through two weeks, Patrick Mahomes and Kansas City look every bit a Super Bowl contender. On Sunday at Oakland, Mahomes threw four touchdown passes – giving him seven in two weeks – to lead the Chiefs (2-0 SU and ATS) to a 28-10 victory as 7-point favorites.

                            Baltimore is also off to a 2-0 SU start (1-1 ATS) after surviving a much-tougher-than-expected Week 2 test. The Ravens went off as 13-point home favorites against Arizona and held on for a 23-17 victory.

                            “It’s the first real test for the Ravens’ new offense, after facing the Dolphins and Cardinals to start the season,” Murray said. “Their defense will be tested, as well. Mahomes is the best player in the league and is firing on all cylinders.”

                            Houston Texans at Los Angeles Chargers (-3)

                            Houston could certainly be 2-0, but could just as easily be 0-2, so it’s probably fair enough that Bill O’Brien’s squad is 1-1 SU and ATS. After nearly stealing a Week 1 game at New Orleans, the Texans scrapped to fend off Jacksonville 13-12 as 7.5-point faves. Houston clinched the win when the Jags went for 2 and failed after a last-minute TD.

                            Los Angeles put up 30 points in a Week 1 overtime home win against Indianapolis, but the banged-up unit barely mustered double digits on the road in Week 2. The Chargers (1-1 SU, 0-1-1 ATS) led Detroit 10-6 at halftime, then didn’t score another point in a 13-10 setback laying 1 point.

                            This was one game that saw early action after going up late Sunday afternoon.

                            “We opened it Chargers -3 (-120), and it’s been moved to -3.5 (even) off money,” Murray said. “We were between those two numbers, but decided to open it low because the Chargers are battling so many injuries.”
                            Last edited by StarDust Bum; 09-16-2019, 01:03 PM.

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                            • #29
                              Close Calls - Week 2
                              Joe Nelson

                              Glancing at the scoreboard won’t tell you the whole story in most games. Here are some of the games that went down to the wire relative to the spread in the fourth quarter last week in Week 2 of the NFL regular season.

                              Tampa Bay Buccaneers (+6½) 20, Carolina Panthers 14 (48):
                              The Thursday night game featured a weather delay and a slow early scoring pace as Joey Slye hit four field goals to give the Panthers a brief 12-10 lead halfway through the third quarter. Tampa Bay answered with a 75-yard touchdown drive as the road underdog took a 17-12 lead heading into the fourth quarter on a Peyton Barber score. After a Carolina fumble and a missed Tampa Bay field goal, Barber would be the victim of a safety early in the fourth as the Panthers climbed within three points to keep overtime in the range of possibility. Getting good field position after the defensive score the Panthers were stopped on 4th-and-short just past midfield but a pair of punts followed before the Buccaneers extended the lead to six points. Cam Newton and the Panthers got the ball back with just over two minutes remaining needing a touchdown drive and they eventually reached the Tampa Bay 11-yard-line with a new set of downs. Short gains and a penalty left the Panthers facing 4th-and-1 from the 2-yard-line and a direct snap to Christian McCaffrey was sniffed out as the Buccaneers were the NFC South squad to avoid the 0-2 start.

                              Indianapolis Colts (+3) 19, Tennessee Titans 17 (43½):
                              The Colts had two first half touchdowns but led only 13-7 with another missed PAT from Adam Vinatieri. The Titans scored on a short field after the break to lead 14-13 and then after a Jacoby Brissett fumble, Tennessee added a field goal despite only picking up 14 yards. The Titans forced a punt and had the momentum to put the game away after pass interference call converted a big 3rd down. A few plays later Marcus Mariota was sacked on the subsequent 3rd down and the Titans settled for a kick to go up seven, only this time Cairo Santos missed. The Colts didn’t take advantage on its next possession but getting the ball back with just under seven minutes remaining the Colts were able to hit a big play with a 55-yard-run and got the eventual touchdown to take the lead. Vinatieri would again miss the PAT however to leave the lead in jeopardy. The Titans had an opportunity crossing midfield in the final minute but ultimately couldn’t get the job done as the Colts played a second-straight down-to-the-wire game, this time winning.

                              Detroit Lions (+1) 13, Los Angeles Chargers 10 (47):
                              The Lions missed a field goal six minutes before halftime and allowed the Chargers to add three before the break to trail 10-6. Matthew Stafford had an interception on the first drive of the second half but the Lions were bailed out with the defense forcing a fumble of Austin Ekeler on 1st-and-goal. More mistakes followed as the Chargers missed two field goals surrounding another Stafford interception before Detroit broke through in the fourth quarter with a big play to Kenny Golladay, leading 13-10. The Chargers reached the red zone late in the fourth quarter but went backwards and Philip Rivers wound up intercepted on 3rd-and-19 before the Chargers had a chance to struggle with the decision to try for the tying field goal from punter Ty Long who was serving as the kicker with Michael Badgley injured.

                              Dallas Cowboys (-6) 31, Washington Redskins 21 (46):
                              After a scoreless first quarter Washington took a 7-0 lead in the second quarter that held until Dallas hit a 51-yard touchdown with about six minutes remaining. Dallas also managed to find the end zone just before halftime to suddenly take a 14-7 lead. The Cowboys kept the momentum with another touchdown out of the break to lead 21-7 but Washington answered to sit a point short of the underdog number down 21-14. Dallas had a touchdown brought back on a penalty and Washington’s defense was able to hold for a field goal, sitting just one touchdown away from covering the number into the fourth quarter. A promising drive stalled just past midfield and with still more than 11 minutes on the clock Washington went for it on 4th-and-3 and came up empty. Dallas put the game away with another touchdown on the short field. Washington would climb back within 10 with a touchdown just ahead of the two-minute warning to clear the ‘over’ but they couldn’t get a stop to get the ball back.

                              Houston Texans (-7) 13, Jacksonville Jaguars 12 (43½):
                              Houston led just 6-3 through three quarters after a scoreless third quarter but the first touchdown of the game came from Deshaun Watson with just over 11 minutes remaining. That touchdown put the Texans past the favorite spread for the first time in the game. Gardner Minshew led the Jaguars down the field for a field goal to trim the margin to seven, with a spread that closed right at +7 from as high as +9½. The Jaguars held on defense to get the ball back and Jacksonville converted two fourth downs on the way to the red zone. With 30 seconds left Minshew connected with DJ Clark and down by one the Jaguars opted to go for the win but came up short on a Leonard Fournette rush attempt.

                              Green Bay Packers (-3) 21, Minnesota Vikings 16 (43):
                              After a win in Week 1 but limited offensive production for the Packers in Matt Lafleur’s debut, Green Bay came out firing in the home opener. The Packers scored just over two minutes into the game and eventually went up 21-0 early in the second quarter. Dalvin Cook broke a 75-yard run to break the momentum for the Packers and after missing an early field goal Dan Bailey added three before halftime to put the Vikings back in the game down 21-10 after the Packers opted not to kick on 4th-and-1 from the Minnesota 25. The Vikings thought they added seven on that drive with a three-yard score to Stefon Diggs questionably overturned via replay to call offensive pass interference under the new challengeable rules. Green Bay would fumble on its first possession of the second half and the Vikings added a short field touchdown to climb within five, with Bailey’s PAT blocked. Five straight punts followed as neither offense could get anything going and ‘over’ backers moaned after supposedly sitting pretty with the hot scoring start. The Vikings were poised to take the lead with about five minutes remaining reaching the Green Bay 8-yard-line with a new set of downs but Kirk Cousins made an ill-advised throw to the corner of the end zone that was intercepted on 1st down. Green Bay was able to run out most of the remaining clock to hold on despite the offense disappearing, while the ‘under’ also held on.

                              Chicago Bears (-3) 16, Denver Broncos 14 (40½):
                              The spread on this game fluctuated a lot after quickly rising from even to the Bears as a slight favorite. A common number was -2 for the Bears much of the weekend but on Sunday afternoon the Bears hit -2½ and eventually -3. Chicago didn’t impress early in the game but managed a 13-3 edge through three quarter to sit comfortably ahead of the number. In the fourth the Broncos completed a lengthy drive to add three points and were poised to tie the game with 1st-and-goal from the 4-yard-line. Joe Flacco eventually was intercepted but pinned deep Chicago punted a few plays later to give the Broncos another shot. This time Flacco delivered including two 4th down conversions and after the touchdown with 31 seconds left Flacco delivered what looked like the game-winning two-point conversion in a huge bold play from Vic Fangio against his old team. It was not to be as a borderline 1st down roughing the passer call gave the Bears a big boost and Mitchell Trubisky struck for 25 yards on 4th-and-15 in the final seconds. Chicago still had a timeout and new kicker Eddy Pineiro became a hero hitting from 53 yards.

                              Atlanta Falcons (+1) 24, Philadelphia Eagles 20 (53½):
                              The Falcons had a 17-6 edge in the third quarter of this game but Matt Ryan had an interception deep in his own territory to get the Eagles back in the game. Philadelphia appeared to add the two-point conversion as well but Carson Wentz was ruled down just short of the line as Atlanta held a five-point lead. Ryan would be intercepted in the end zone on the next possession when a field goal could have put the margin to eight points. After swapping punts Philadelphia delivered a tremendous 13-play drive to burn well over eight minutes to take the lead. Up by one the two-point conversion try loomed large on a spread that was commonly +2 before sliding to +1 and the Eagles hit Zach Ertz to lead by three. Atlanta stalled near midfield facing 4th-and-3 at its own 46 when a short pass to Julio Jones to get past the sticks turned into a 54-yard score. Up four Atlanta’s defense still had a lot of work ahead with the Eagles converting an epic 4th-and-14 for 43 yards and getting a free timeout as an Atlanta player was injured on the play. With still a minute to go, an Eagles score seemed inevitable but the Eagles picked up just two yards in the next three plays and faced 4th-and-8. Wentz hit Ertz again incredibly close to the line but he was ruled just short with that spot holding on review as Atlanta escaped with the win.

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