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Jim Kruger - Nation's
#1 NBA Totals Handicapper
2007-08 Season+Playoffs!
In Net Units Won/Net profit
Record:  80-42 - 65.6%
The Sports Monitor of Oklahoma
http://thesportsmonitor.com/07'8nba.html


Jim Kruger - Nation's
#1 NCAA Football Handicapper
2006 Season!
In Net Units Won/Net profit
The Sports Monitor of Oklahoma
http://thesportsmonitor.com/06collftb.html


Jim Kruger - Nation's
#3 NBA Handicapper
2006-07 Season!
In Units Won/Net Profit 
The Sports Monitor of Oklahoma
http://thesportsmonitor.com/06'7nba.html

Paul Stone:  #2 in net profit 2005-06
CFB reg. season & bowls combined
The Sports Monitor of Oklahoma
www.thesportsmonitor.com

Paul Stone- 2003-04- #2 in Net Profit 
College Bowl Season

The Sports Monitor of Oklahoma

Jim Kruger - Nation's
#1 Baseball Handicapper
2005 Season!
In Units Won/Net Profit 
 as monitored by: 

Gurutracker

Jim Kruger - Nation's 
#1 NBA Handicapper
2005-2006!
In Units Won/Net Profit 
 as monitored by: 

Gurutracker

Jim Kruger - Nation's 
#1 NBA Handicapper
2003-2004!
In Units Won/Net Profit 
 as monitored by: 

Gurutracker

Jim Kruger - Nation's 
 #1 NHL Handicapper        
2003-2004!
In Won/Lost Percentage 
#2 in Units Won in 2004
as monitored by:Gurutracker
http://www.gurutracker.

Jim Kruger - 2003-2004!
Nation's #1 NBA Handicapper
Net Profit by 2 to 1 margin!
The Sports Monitor of Oklahoma
www.thesportsmonitor.com/03'4nba.html 

Jim Kruger
2003-04 Winner of the NBA
Ultimate Handicapping Challenge
http://uhchallenge.com/standings-nba-past-0304.php

Jim Kruger-2003-2004 Nation's 
#2 NCAA Football Handicapper

Ultimatecapper Free Sports Picks

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5 straight profitable college hoops years!
4 out of 5 profitable NBA years!

Jim Kruger was #1 in NBA Totals last year, 80-42, 65.6%,
including the playoffs as documented by the Sports Monitor of Oklahoma

Jim Kruger was # 1 in the nation in NBA Net Units Won, 2003-04
as documented by the Sports Monitor of Oklahoma!

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                       NFL Divisional Playoff Betting Info
                                                              By Steve Makinen, StatFox.com

The NFL postseason tournament is down to the “Elite Eight” if you will, and only the team that wins three more games from here on out will emerge with the title. The next set of games, the Divisional Playoff Round, gives us our first look at the top seeds since the regular season ended, as they had the luxury of bye week in the Wildcard Round. Does this vacation give them any benefit when it comes to winning or covering the pointspread? Does being a favorite or underdog matter? Do the teams’ key stats provide any indication as to who will advance? I’m here to look at all those questions as I analyze the recent history of the NFL Divisional Playoff Round.

I’ll be looking at past pointspreads and totals, home/road dichotomy, and giving an update on the statistics of teams heading into their playoff games, and the numbers generated in the actual games.

General Divisional Playoff Round Trends


Although the home and road teams split the four wildcard games of a year ago, the hosts were only able to beat the Vegas number in one the games, that being Green Bay over Seattle. Those results extended what has now become a significant run of 9-1 ATS dominance by the road team in the Divisional Round. Of this year’s home teams, Carolina, NY Giants, Pittsburgh, and Tennessee, only the Steelers have hosted a Divisional Round game in the last five years.

·  Home teams have won 47 of the 64 Divisional Round playoff games since ’93. The ATS results are exactly split 31-31-2.

·  Road teams have been the hot bet of late, on runs of 9-1 ATS the L10 Divisional Round playoff games and 14-6 ATS in the L20.

·  Of the last 12 Divisional Round playoff games with pointspreads in the competitive +3 to -3 range, home teams are just 7-5 SU & 5-6-1 ATS.

·  Double-digit Divisional Round favorites own a low 10-5 SU & 7-7-1 ATS record since ’93, and are just 1-2 SU & 0-3 ATS over the last three seasons.

·  The higher the pointspread, the better the chance for a high scoring game in the Divisional Round. In games with a favorite line of -6.5 or more, the OVER is 24-13.

·  #1 Seeds in Divisional Round playoff games are 7-3 SU since ’04, but just 2-8 ATS. AFC #1’s have lost five straight games ATS. UNDER the total is on a 9-2-1 run in #1 seeded games.

·  Since the ’00 season, there have been seven occasions where one team has gone into the playoffs with the league’s best record. That team is 3-4 SU & 1-6 ATS in the Divisional Round. This year that team is Tennessee.

·  #2 Seeds have split their last 10 games outright and are 4-6 ATS. OVER is the more common total occurrence in those contests, 7-3.

·  The top two seeded AFC teams have been more prone to upsets lately than their NFC counterparts. Since ’04, AFC Divisional Round hosts are 5-5 SU & 2-8 ATS. Those from the NFC are 7-3 SU & 4-6 ATS.

·  The last four teams to pull an upset in the Wildcard Round own a 3-1 SU & 4-0 ATS record in the Divisional Round.

·  As strange as it sounds, the home teams in the Divisional Round with 12 wins or less are upset less often than those with 13 wins or more. Those with 12 wins or less are 25-5 SU & 16-13-1 ATS since ’93, compared to 22-12 SU & 15-18-1 ATS for 13+ win clubs.

·  Eleven regular season wins seems to be the magic number for success by road teams in the Divisional Round. They are 14-13 SU & 17-10 ATS since ‘93. Those teams that won 10 or less games in the regular season but won their wildcard game are just 3-34 SU & 14-21-2 ATS in that same span.

·  The more extreme the posted total, the better the chance of the Divisional Round playoff game going OVER the total. In games with totals of 37 or less, the OVER is 11-5. In games with totals 49 or higher, the OVER is 7-3-1.

·  The secret to the NFC road underdog upset has been defense. In fact, in the last seven NFC Wildcard Playoff games where road teams pulled upsets, the total result has been UNDER, and the home team has averaged just 10.7 PPG.

·  In terms of scoring, 27 points is the magic number for home team success in the divisional playoffs. In games where they score 27 or more, they are 29-5 SU & 26-8 ATS (76.5%) since ‘93. In games where home teams don’t reach 27 points, they are a flip-of-the-coin 15-15 SU but an awful 5-23-2 ATS (17.9%)!

·  For the road team in the Divisional Round, success hinges on the modest 18-point mark. Those scoring 18 or more are 14-13 SU & 21-6 ATS, those producing 17 or less are 3-34 SU & 10-25-2 ATS

·  Like the Wildcard Round, the home team essentially dictates the total result. In past Divisional Round games where the hosts scored 23 or more points, the OVER is 27-9-1 since ‘93. In games where they fail to reach 23 points, the UNDER is 22-5.

NFL Playoff Statistical Analysis


For those of you who may have missed last week’s Wildcard Article, I introduced some reasons as to why statistics are an important piece to the puzzle that is NFL playoff handicapping. But which stats matter the most to playoff success?

To help answer this question, I’ve taken the results of past postseason games, all rounds, and cross-referenced them against the statistics of the teams playing going into that game. The statistical categories considered were some of the most common found at places like StatFox.com, Handicappers Lounge and other websites covering the NFL.

Here is a list of the categories I studied:

·  Won-Lost Records

·  Offensive and Defensive Points Per Game

·  Scoring Differential

·  Offensive and Defensive Rushing Yards Per Game

·  Offensive and Defensive Rushing Yards Per Attempt

·  Offensive and Defensive Passing Yards Per Game

·  Offensive and Defensive Passing Yards Per Attempt

·  Offensive and Defensive Yards Per Play

·  Turnover Differential

Here are the records from that article, updated to include the ’09 Wildcard games…

Trends of Teams from Stats Recorded during a Playoff Game


In looking at the stats that teams generate in postseason games and their relationship to winning or losing, I’ve decided to stick with the longer range study, since ’93. I firmly believe that the recipe of how teams win hasn’t changed. They still need to make big plays through the air, win the turnover battle, and put the game away by running the football. Both theoretically and statistically, these three factors have proven most vital to winning playoff games. Take a look.

 

·  Turnovers have proven to be the most crucial of these factors, as teams that have turned the ball over fewer times in a playoff game are an incredible 119-24-3 ATS (83.2%). Strangely, three teams last year turned the ball over fewer times and lost ATS.

·  Teams that rush for more yards in a playoff game are 127-40 ATS (76.0%). The team that is ahead typically will run the ball more, but still it is important to know which team can better control the line of scrimmage. Keep in mind though, that the record of this trend last January was just 6-5 ATS.

·  Teams that average more yards per pass attempt, or those that create more big plays through the air, have compiled a mark of 118-49 ATS (70.7%) in playoff games. Big plays via the passing game give teams leads, which in turn allow them to run the ball more and avoid turnovers.

·  When you combine the factors and find teams that have edges in all three key statistical aspects, the records go to 76-2 SU & 68-7-1 ATS (90.6%). In fact, home teams that have enjoyed edges in all three have a perfect record of 54-0 SU since 1993 in the playoffs! New England was the one home winner to do it last January vs. Jacksonville, but ironically, the Patriots failed to cover a lofty 13-1/2-point spread.

Statistical Angles of Teams Heading into a Playoff Game


Taking the statistical categories I listed above and comparing the figures for the teams heading into their playoff games, I was able to come up with 33 different playoff betting systems that produced either better than 55% or worse than 45% results. If you consider that these are just pure raw statistics that are available to the average Joe bettor in the newspaper, this is a pretty extensive list. Be sure to jot down some of the teams that qualify in this year’s playoff games and take advantage.

Won-lost Record
• Road teams with an even or better record than host are 12-11 ATS (55%)
Record in ’09: 1-2 ATS
- Qualifiers for ‘09 DIV: None

Scoring
• Home teams scoring 26.0 PPG or more are just 14-20 ATS (41.1%)
Record in ’09: 2-0 ATS
- Qualifiers for ‘09 DIV: AGAINST NY Giants
• Road teams scoring 26.0 PPG or more are 9-5 ATS (64.3%)
Record in ’09: 1-0 ATS
- Qualifiers for ‘09 DIV:
San Diego, Arizona, Philadelphia
• Home teams allowing less than 17 PPG are 21-16 ATS (56.8%)
Record in ’09: 0-0 ATS
- Qualifiers for ‘09 DIV:
Pittsburgh, Tennessee
• Road teams allowing less than 17 PPG are 18-11 ATS (62.1%)
Record in ’09: 1-0 ATS
- Qualifiers for ‘09 DIV:
Baltimore
• Home teams outscoring their opponents by less than 5.0 PPG on the season are 8-14 ATS (36.4%)
Record in ’09: 1-2 ATS
- Qualifiers for ‘09 DIV: None
• Home teams outscoring opponents by more than 11.5 PPG on the season are just 4-6 SU & 1-9 ATS (10%).
Record in ’09: 0-0 ATS
- Qualifiers for ‘09 DIV: None
• Road teams outscoring opponents by more than 11.5 PPG on the season are just 1-2 SU & 0-3 ATS (0%).
Record in ’09: 0-0 ATS
- Qualifiers for ‘09 DIV: None

Rushing Stats
• Teams that run for more yards per attempt on the season are 46-40 ATS (53.5%).
Record in ’09: 1-3 ATS
- Qualifiers for ‘09 DIV:
Tennessee, San Diego, Carolina, NY Giants
• Teams that run for more yards per attempt on the season and are an underdog are 25-18 ATS (58.1%)
Record in ’09: 1-2 ATS
- Qualifiers for ‘09 DIV:
San Diego
• Home teams that average 106 RYPG or less are 14-5 ATS (73.7%)
Record in ’09: 1-0 ATS
- Qualifiers for ‘09 DIV:
Pittsburgh
• Home teams that average 136 RYPG or more are just 7-13 ATS (35.0%)
Record in ’09: 0-1 ATS
- Qualifiers for ‘09 DIV: AGAINST
Tennessee, AGAINST Carolina, AGAINST Tennessee
• Road teams that average 136 RYPG or more are 12-10 ATS (54.5%)
Record in ’09: 1-1 ATS
- Qualifiers for ‘09 DIV:
Baltimore
• Teams that allow fewer rushing yards per attempt on the season are 48-38 ATS (55.8%).
Record in ’09: 3-1 ATS
- Qualifiers for ‘09 DIV:
Baltimore, Pittsburgh, Arizona, Philadelphia
• Teams that allow fewer rushing yards per attempt on the season and are an underdog are 29-20 ATS (59.2%)
Record in ’09: 2-1 ATS
- Qualifiers for ‘09 DIV:
Baltimore, Arizona, Philadelphia
• Home teams that allow more than 4.35 YPR on the season are 7-12 ATS (36.8%)
Record in ’09: 0-0 ATS
- Qualifiers for ‘09 DIV: AGAINST
Carolina
• Road teams that allow 3.90 YPR or fewer are 24-11 ATS (68.6%)
Record in ’09: 2-0 ATS
- Qualifiers for ‘09 DIV:
Baltimore, Arizona, Philadelphia
• Road teams that allow 4.15 YPR or more are just 11-19 ATS (36.7%)
- Record in ’09: 0-2 ATS
- Qualifiers for ‘09 DIV: None
• Road teams that allow more than 125.0 RYPG are 9-6 ATS (60.0%)
Record in ’09: 0-1 ATS
- Qualifiers for ‘09 DIV: None
• Road teams that allow fewer than 100.0 RYPG are 23-14 ATS (62.2%)
Record in ’09: 2-0 ATS
- Qualifiers for ‘09 DIV:
Baltimore, Philadelphia

Passing Stats
• Teams that pass for more yards per attempt on the season and are an underdog are 19-14 ATS (57.6%)
Record in ’09: 1-2 ATS
- Qualifiers for ‘09 DIV: Baltimore, San Diego
• Home teams that gain more than 7.40 yards per pass attempt or more on the season are just 9-16 ATS (36.0%)
Record in ’09: 2-1 ATS
- Qualifiers for ‘09 DIV: AGAINST Carolina
• Road teams that gain 6.10 PYA or less on the season are 12-6 ATS (66.7%)
Record in ’09: 0-0 ATS
- Qualifiers for ‘09 DIV: None
• Teams that pass for more yards per game on the season and are an underdog are 20-15 ATS (57.1%)
Record in ’09: 1-1 ATS
- Qualifiers for ‘09 DIV:
San Diego, Arizona, Philadelphia
• Teams that allow fewer passing yards per attempt on the season are 39-47 ATS (45.3%).
Record in ’09: 2-2 ATS
- Qualifiers for ‘09 DIV: AGAINST
Baltimore, AGAINST Philadelphia
• Home teams that allow 192.0 PYPG or fewer are 10-16 ATS (38.5%)
Record in ’09: 0-0 ATS
- Qualifiers for ‘09 DIV: AGAINST
Pittsburgh

Yards Per Play Stats
• Home teams that gain less than 5.1 yards per play on offense are just 3-8 ATS (27.3%)
Record in ’09: 0-0 ATS
- Qualifiers for ‘09 DIV: None
• Home teams that gain 6.15 or more yards per play on offense are also just 3-8 ATS (27.3%)
Record in ’09: 0-0 ATS
- Qualifiers for ‘09 DIV: None
• Road teams that yield 4.90 yards per play or fewer on defense are 15-5 ATS (75.0%)
Record in ’09: 2-0 ATS
- Qualifiers for ‘09 DIV:
Baltimore, Philadelphia
• Home teams that outgain their opponents by 0.25 or less yards per play (differential) on the season are 6-15 ATS (28.6%)
Record in ’09: 0-1 ATS
- Qualifiers for ‘09 DIV: None
• Home teams outgaining their opponents by 1.00 or more yards per play are just 1-9 ATS (10%)
Record in ’09: 0-0 ATS
- Qualifiers for ‘09 DIV: AGAINST
Pittsburgh
• Road teams outgaining their opponents by 0.25 or more yards per play on the season are 12-6 ATS (66.7%)
Record in ’09: 2-1 ATS
- Qualifiers for ‘09 DIV:
Baltimore, San Diego, Arizona, Philadelphia

Turnover Stats
• Road teams that enjoyed a turnover differential of more than +1.00 per game on the season are 8-2 ATS (80%)
Record in ’09: 0-0 ATS
- Qualifiers for ‘09 DIV: None

Statistical Combination Angles
• Teams that gain more yards per attempt both rushing AND passing are 26-21 ATS (55.3%)
Record in ’09: 1-3 ATS
- Qualifiers for ‘09 DIV: San Diego, Carolina, NY Giants
• Teams that gain more yards per attempt both rushing AND passing and yield fewer rushing yards per game are 11-6 ATS (64.7%)
Record in ’09: 1-1 ATS
- Qualifiers for ‘09 DIV: None

Good luck on the Divisional Playoff games this weekend. See ya next week for the Conference Championship action!



2008-09 Season Win NBA Bets
By Jim Kruger, vegassportsauthority.com

Living in Las Vegas for many years and being a season ticket holder for UNLV basketball and football and thus a long-time observer of Mountain West Conference sports, the only thing that surprised me more than Utah center Andrew Bogut being the first player drafted in the 2005 NBA draft by the Milwaukee Bucks was quarterback Alex Smith from Utah being the first player drafted in that year’s NFL draft. 

Now mind you, I don’t have anything against the University of Utah nor even the Beehive State in general.  But I watched these guys first hand perform in college and I just couldn’t see either one of them being worthy of the title of “America’s Most Wanted Draft Choice”. 

Well, maybe Alex Smith will change positions and turn out like former All-American Kansas QB Nolan Cromwell, who was drafted in the second round by the LA Rams as a defensive back.  Cromwell went on to play in four straight Pro Bowls. 

While Andrew Bogut isn’t wearing a cape and performing in All-Star dunk contests, he is quietly turning out to be an upper quality post man in the NBA.  Which leads us to our first season-win wager for the 2008-09 NBA season.   

 

Take Milwaukee OVER 30.5 ! 

I have had the good fortune of having traveled around the country, and even the world  (if Arkansas counts), in my short lifetime  (I plan on living to be 105.  I want to see the Kansas City Royals in another World Series).  However, I have never been to Milwaukee.  My wife is dying to go so she can experience the “Laverne and Shirley Tour” and a first hand visit to the Shotz Brewery. 

The Milwaukee Bucks made it to the Eastern Conference Finals in 2001.  That was their zenith this century.  Milwaukee won 26 games last year, down from 28 the year before.  That was one of only three instances out of twelve possibilities over the past four seasons where an NBA team fell below 30 wins for the season and did not improve by at least eight games the following season. 

The Bucks have a new General Manager, John Hammond.  He was VP of Operations for the Detroit Pistons for a number of years, a very successful franchise.  Hammonds had turned down other offers in the past, perhaps he just liked working down the street from the Shotz plant. 

The Bucks have a new coach, fiery Scott Skiles.  Skiles won’t win any personality awards with players, but he will improve a team immediately.  Defense will be the focus along with a new sense of discipline.

The Bucks decided to play for the now and not the future in trading away young Chinese seven-footer Yi Jianlian to the Nets.  They lost potential in exchange for a sure thing.  Jefferson will remove a lot of pressure from Michael Redd to be the main scorer every night.

Center Bogut has turned into a legit scoring option with 38 double-doubles & is a good shot blocker and should improve again this year.  The X-factor is PF Charlie Villanueva.  He just doesn’t always show up.  (which will give him an immediate reservation to Coach Skiles doghouse).  In games last year that Charlie V. played at least 35 minutes, he averaged 25.4 points and 10.8 rebounds.  Maybe he just needs to be in the game and not waiting on the bench.

The weak spot is at point guard where former Sonic (remember them?) Luke Ridnour resides.  However, we aren’t asking the Bucks to win the division title, just get into the 30’s in total wins.  Something I feel very comfortable in putting my money on.

Take the Portland Trailblazers OVER 43.5!

Okay, I have to admit a bias for the GM of Portland, former point guard for the 1988 national champions of my alma mater, the University of Kansas, Kevin Pritchard.  Besides Pritchard’s talent of making shots off-balance, in my eyes his most remarkable talent was being able to have a grizzly five-o’clock shadow beard every single day of his college career.  He is the only guy I have ever seen at that age look older than Greg Oden!

Pritchard has done a remarkable job in building the Blazers through a myriad of moves in the past few years.  I watched Brandon Roy in the Vegas Summer League a few years ago and proclaimed him the future rookie of the year.  The man was unbelievable. 

Portland now has possibly the best rookie with last-year’s injured center Greg Oden.  Oden has been impressive in pre-season and gives the team an aspect many teams only wish to have.

An acquisition that many people are excited about is Spaniard 6-5 Rudy Fernandez who helped Spain to the Silver Medal in the Olympics.  He attacks the rim and will get to the line.

PF LaMarcus Adridge made a quantum leap in his second year and could give the Blazers effective high-low action with Oden.  The Blazers have very good front court depth with Channing Frye, Ike Diogu, and Joel Przybilla   

The biggest preseason surprise has been French draftee SF 6-8 Nicolas Batum, mostly known for his defense.  The team also plays defense finishing in the top ten in most categories.  Getting G Martell Webster back from injury into the season will be a plus.  PG is the weak spot but Steve Blake is steady.

Portland won 41 games last year.  They need to improve defensively but having Oden in the lane will help.  They are a better team this year and should eclipse the OVER in season wins.

Other plays that I have made and recommend:

 

Memphis OVER 22.5 wins

 

Charlotte UNDER 36.5 wins

 

Good luck, it should be a fun season!

Jim Kruger #1 in NBA Totals Picks in 2007-08 as documented by the Sports Monitor of Oklahoma!
Reg. Season + Playoffs:  80-42, 65.6%!

A Winning Regular Season in the NFL, NCAA FB, NBA, & NCAA Hoops in 2007
as monitored by The Sports Monitor of Oklahoma

Jim Kruger #1 in the Nation in CFB in 2006 at The Sports Monitor of Okla. in net units won!

Paul Stone #2 for 2005 NCAA FB at The Sports Monitor.com of Okla.!

Jim Kruger #3 in in the Nation in NBA 2006-07 at The Sports Monitor of Okla.
 in net units won!

Jim Kruger #1 at Procappers.com in the NBA 2006-07


Jim Kruger #3 at Procappers.com in CBB 2006-07

Jim Kruger was #1 in units won in the 2004 NBA at The Sports Monitor.com of OKC! 

Jim Kruger was Quarter-Finalist in 2006-07 World Series of Handicapping!

Jim Kruger #1 in College Football 2006 at 
www.Procappers.com in net units won & Winning %!


Jim Kruger Won the Ultimate Handicappers Challenge in NBA 2003-04!

Jim Kruger was #2 in the Nation in College Football in 2003-2004!

Jim Kruger was #1 in units won in 2005 Baseball at Gurutracker.com!

Jim Kruger was #1 in units won in 2006 NBA at Gurutracker.com!

Jim Kruger was #1 in units won in 2004 NBA at Gurutracker.com!

Jim Kruger in the Las Vegas Review-Journal:
http://www.lvrj.com/sports/10761431.html
Jim Kruger in the Las Vegas Review-Journal:
http://www.lvrj.com/sports/7860127.html

Jim Kruger in the Las Vegas Review-Journal:
http://www.lvrj.com/sports/7132326.html
Jim Kruger in the Las Vegas Sun:
http://www.lasvegassun.com/sunbin/stories/sun/2007/may/21/566624119.html?Jim%20Kruger

Looking Back to Help You Look Forward
By Jim Kruger
3-30-08

 

 

This is the final week of college basketball for the 2007-08 season.  This also signals a period of depression forthcoming for me.  The college basketball season just never seems to last long enough for me.  As compared to baseball, the NFL, and professional basketball, those seasons seem to go on long enough, or in the case of bases, perhaps a little too long.  Until there is some sort of playoff system in college football, that season leaves me wanting for more just like craving for the Olive Garden waiter to bring our table more breadsticks. 

To satisfy my “Jonesing” for college hoops, I will pull out my old tapes of great games such as the 1988 Kansas win over Billy Tubb’s Oklahoma squad in the championship game, the Duke-Kentucky match with Christian Laettner hitting the miraculous buzzer shot, a recorded documentary on the exciting Pistol Pete Maravich, and will also start preparing for next season.  I will open 2007-08 Blue Ribbon book and Sporting News College Basketball Annual and start making notes on every team, returning starters, anticipated new coaches, etc. 

What changes will happen next year in college hoops?  Well, perhaps most importantly is the moving back of the three-point line one foot.  What will be the effect of this change of rules?  What teams will this affect the most? 

I will look for teams that have a high percentage of three point shots attempted versus two point shots, the schools that get a large percentage of their points from behind the arc.  The basic assumption is that overall the shooting percentages will go down for the long-range bombers.  Will offenses overall be setting up a foot further back and thus opening up the court a little more?  With a more wide-open court and increased spacing, logic would say quicker teams will have more of an advantage.  The importance of a team’s athleticism will go up a bit. 

Schools like Michigan State or UCLA who take very few three-point shots proportionately will not be affected much offensively. Will teams that pressure the perimeter, like UCLA, be affected more defensively?

What teams have point guards returning?  What was their personal assist to turnover ratio?  Naturally, I make the list of the returning starters, percentage of scoring and rebounding returning,  and percentage of minutes played is returning?  I break down the returnees by class.  It is time to analyze the incoming freshman and transfer class.  The JUCO players coming in can all contain high accolades of scoring leaders, All-Conference, and JUCO All-American.  It is important to separate the wheat from the chaff and realize that an All-Conference player from Butler County JUCO in Kansas is playing competition at a much higher level than the scoring leader from Connecticut’s Martha Stewart Junior College. 

The sheer enormity of the landscape of college hoops teams that have a point spread next to their games every season requires a serious sports bettor to prepare himself way in advance to the upcoming season.  And, there is no better time to start than when the previous season is still fresh on your mind. 

We have to have a base to work from and it is always best to start at a high level.  Let’s take a look at how the conferences did this season in college hoops.

The Atlantic Coast Conference had the best RPI rating again this year with the PAC-10 coming in second with last-year’s runner-up Southeastern Conference sliding to fourth place.  The Big 12 finished third.  The Big East once again finished fifth rounding out the top 5.  The Big Ten fell to sixth after finishing fourth the previous season.

What conferences improved the most this year and who slipped some? 

The biggest improvement in my mind falls to the Atlantic 10.  Not only did Xavier make it to the Elite 8, but they had 3 teams in the NCAA Tournament and numerous more in the NIT and CBI.  The A-10 moved up in conference RPI ratings from tenth place to seventh.  Their non-conference went from 54.1% to 64.3% with 21 more wins and 17 fewer losses.  Massachusetts is still alive in the NIT semi-finals at the time of this article.  Dayton beat a mighty Pittsburgh team handily as well as Louisville.  Charlotte had a nice ten-point win over Clemson.

How about the Metro Atlantic?  They moved up six slots in conference RPI rankings, improved their non-con record from 40.4% to 45.2%, and had the largest improvement in RPI by almost 30 basis points.  They are also playing tougher competition as the MAAC improved their overall strength of schedule more than any other conference.  The Siena Saints were the darling of the league as they beat Stanford by 12 points, Boise State on the road in bracket-buster weekends by 23, and downed Vanderbilt by 21 in the first round of the NCAA Tourney. 

The Sun Belt Conference with their marquis team, Western Kentucky, making it to the Sweet 16 also showed great improvement.  A movement of 6 notches up the conference RPI belt along with a non-conference improvement of a net of 24 games going from a poor 38.6% to 48.0%. 

The Big 12 moved up to the third best overall conference RPI ranking from last year’s seventh place.  Their non-conference RPI rating was second best.  Kansas into the Final Four along with Texas in the Elite 8 led the way and as of this writing had a nice 10-5 SU record in the Big Dance.  Texas had nice non-conference wins over UCLA on the road and also versus the Volunteers of Tennessee.  Oklahoma also contributed some nice wins over West Virginia, Gonzaga, and Arkansas. 

A conference that took a step back was the Missouri Valley.  After previous years with great success in the NCAA Tournament with Southern Illinois, Bradley, and Wichita State making it to the Sweet 16, the MVC fell from the sixth highest-rated conference to the 8th best.  Their non-conference record fell from an impressive 71.2% to 63.6% as they had a net loss of 17 games. 

However, the biggest loser of them all was the Western Athletic Conference.  The WAC somehow slid 11 spots down to finish as the 20th best league, behind the Patriot League and the Southland Conference.  They had the biggest drop in non-conference winning percentage going from 57.1% to 46.3%. 

Looking at RPI and non-conference records is important, but so is looking at point-spread records for the year. 

 

The Atlantic 10 improved greatly as stated above, but they also did well in non-conference games against the spread, 82-60, 57.7%.  It stood out that A-10 schools were 11-2 ATS as a home dog before conference play began. 

The ACC, the #1 conference was 76-63 ATS, 54.7%, a reasonable mark considering many of the games probably had an inflated point-spread.

The #2 rated league, the Pac-10, performed better away from home, 55.6% winners against the spread, but had a slight losing year at 47.4% at home in non-conference action.  One thing that did stand out was when a PAC-10 team was a  non-con favorite, the game went Under the total 36.7% of the time with a 50-29-2 mark. 

The Big 12 was 65-54 in non-league action, 54.6%, but really had a favorite-dog dichotomy covering 65.1% of their games as favorites but only 39.1% as underdogs. 

If you felt that the Southeastern Conference was down a bit this year, the numbers would support you.  The SEC only covered 47.6% of their non-conference games this year.  As an underdog they were only 42.9% successful ATS and even a worse 28.6% SU record. 

Number 5, the Big East, was 76-86, 46.9%  They did poorly at home covering only 41.7% of the time, 43-60.

 

The Big 10 also slid in non-conference action as well as RPI winning only 46.4% against the number and only 40% is they were on the road in non-con games.

The Southern Conference with this year’s upstart Davidson covered the point spread 56.8% of the time out of league and even more impressive, 63.5% of the time, 33-19, when on the road.  Those away games also went Over the total 60% of the time. 

The Missouri Valley had Drake as one of the best stories of the year, but in non-conference play the MVC covered only 37.5% of their games when put in as an underdog. 

How about the best conference to bet against in the preseason?  The Western Athletic

Conference is the hands down winner with a sad 31-58-2 ATS record, 34.4%   It was a shade worse when they were underdogs, covering only 30.6% of their games. 

And finally, in using the excellent www.statfox.com website, we find that the college basketball team that won the most units against the spread this year came from the horrific WAC,
New Mexico State, with a stellar 24-8 ATS record, +15.2 units for the year.  When you think about it a second, it definitely makes sense.

The Final Weeks of NBA Action

By Jim Kruger

3-16-08

It is turning into Spring around the country.  And with the new season, we can expect to see all of the following:

 

  • In preparation of Spring Break, college students flocking to tanning salons, many salons with catchy names such as Annie's Fanny Tanning, Tanfastic Voyage, Jamaican-Me-Tan, and my favorite, which is owned by a guy with the last name of Nutt:  Nutt ‘N Butt Tans. 

  • Distinct signs of flora and fauna in your region such as the first robin showing off its red breast after returning home or the beautiful monarch butterfly heading back home on its lengthy annual migration.  Jonquils popping their heads out from the ground in anticipation of another glorious round of yellow blooms.  (of course some of us have bad memories when we were a kid cutting the lawn for the first time ever and mowing right over “the tall thick weeds” not realizing they were your mother’s favorite flower)

 

  • Catchers and pitchers showing up in spring training camps for another long season of baseball or perhaps some additional Senate hearings.

 

  • The re-opening of the Dairy Queen in my grandparent’s small home town of King City, MO. 

 

  • And, naturally, the tanking of games by certain NBA teams.

 

The end of the regular season of the NBA can be full of excitement, boredom, and what some people would consider to be atrocities.  Of course, if you ask the NBA czar, David Stern, about what we can expect for this year’s final few weeks of the “fan-tastic” NBA, you will only hear praise and not even the hint of teams not playing their best, losing games on purpose,  or perhaps teams “shelving players” in order to make their squads less competitive.

There are actually a few reasons an NBA team would tank a game(s).  The most obvious one is in order to get the best position possible for the upcoming NBA Lottery.  As most fans realize, the lottery is to determine the draft slots of the worse teams.  However the worst team does not always have the first pick in the draft.  Therefore, there is a significant incentive to perform poorly, once the team’s chances of making the playoffs have ended. 

The lottery probabilities are not equal either as the first team receives 25% of the ping pong balls to be drawn out, the second team has 19.9% and the third team 15.6%, on down the line.  This makes the reverse progress of a team’s record all the more profitable in the long run.

Being careful about the dynamics of the end of the season can bring you profits or be quite costly.  Last year the Golden State Warriors were looking to end a thirteen-year drought of not making it to the playoffs.  In their next-to-last game of the year, the Dallas Mavericks traveled to the Bay to play the Warriors, who coincidentally stood a very good chance to be
Dallas
’s first round opponent in the playoffs.

It was my belief that the Mavs would want to teach the upstart Warriors just how good the team was with the best record in the NBA last year, Dallas, and would try to gain the psychological advantage by beating them soundly.  Subsequently, I bet on the Mavericks. 

 

Much to my surprise, and the linesmaker’s as well, Dallas decided not to play their starters at all in order to give them a day of rest and I lost a sizable wager.  Golden State smoked the Mavs by 29 points as five NBA players with a total of 33 starts that year were down by 24 points at halftime.  I did feel somewhat vindicated when Dallas lost their opening round playoff series to Golden State, the #8 seed, 4 games to 2. 

In order to get to make the playoffs,
Golden State had to win their final game of the year at Portland.  It wasn’t an overly difficult task as Portland
was “resting” a number of their players including Brandon Roy and Zack Randolph resulting in a 22-point Warrior win.

The LA Clippers would have been the 8th seed if
Golden State won and they had beaten New Orleans in a game that started 30 minutes after the Warriors match against Portland.  The Clips found out in the fourth quarter Portland
had won ending their own playoff hopes and LA subsequently lost a fourth-quarter lead and the game. 

Since there is absolutely no punishment against tanking games, and the commissioner refuses to admit it happens, so why not lose on purpose if it helps your team in the future? 
Boston
coach, Doc Rivers, who was an NBA player himself, has said that tanking games in pursuit of ping-pong balls is epidemic and has been for more than a decade. 

How do you, as a sports bettor, benefit, or at least avoid catastrophe, the last few weeks of the NBA season when wagering on games?  First, take more heed when looking at the injury report.  Normally, when you see a key player is listed as probable or even as a “game-time decision”, the chances are he will be playing that night.  However, late in the season, players  that used to play through injuries are more likely going to sit for the game. 

Next, follow the bottom standings, the teams who have a chance to make the lottery.  Last year
Memphis was legitimately in pursuit of the leagues worst record.  Once the Grizzlies clinched this dubious position, after a six-game losing streak, they won their final three games including wins over the Spurs and Nuggets. 

A similar situation last year happened with
Milwaukee as the Bucks closed the season 3-13.  However, they were 2-2 in the last four games after their lottery position was guaranteed.

 
Watch for coaches who in the fourth quarter of a close game are not playing their starters and instead have the “project stiff” out there along with multiple bench players trying to “pull out the victory”.  Heck, sometimes coaches don’t wait until the fourth quarter to effectively “lose a game,”  A great
example was Boston's 92-84 loss to Charlotte on March 21, 2007.  The Celtics, an 8 1/2-point home favorite, led by 15 points at halftime. But coach Doc Rivers left all five of his starters on the bench as his team blew the lead and the game.

 

Also, watch for coaches who late in the season shake up the starters or playing rotation significantly.  Excuses are usually made that they want to get a good look at players who are going to be future contributors to the team.  A paraphrase heard frequently is “we want to see what they can do in a game-time environment”.  Right….

Be cognizant of certain situations which may almost demand that a team loses a certain game.  One of my largest wagers last year was made against
Minnesota
when I learned they would have to give up a first-round draft choice to the Los Angeles Clippers from a prior trade two years earlier if they did not finish in the NBA drafter lottery.  It came down to the last game of the year for Minny.  In order to ensure they did not give that draft choice away, the T’Wolves HAD to lose their last game. 

What was fascinating was that
Minnesota was only behind by 3 points at halftime.  Not too worry.  The Timberwolves continuously bailed out of the lane in the second half giving the opposition a free path to the basket for an easy dunk.  Minnesota was outscored by 19 points in the second half in a game that saw such “stars”as Bracey Wright and Justin Reed getting ample playing time for Minnesota.


Also, it is not just very bad teams that might lose a game on purpose.  Some front offices might have their team tank a game in order to help another team reach the playoffs. 

Also, some teams might not want to finish in a certain playoff slot if that means they will be matched up in the playoffs against a team they don’t do as well against.  It behooves them to drop down a slot to face a different team. 

A great betting strategy that I used frequently last year was watching for teams that were tanking games but who were competitive in the
first half of a game.  I would bet against the “tanking team” for the second half as frequently they collapsed after intermission. 

I tried to identify teams who were deliberately tanking by keeping track of their ATS margins. 
Naturally, the oddsmaker is watching for evidence of teams purposely losing games and will adjust the line accordingly.  However, last year the three teams with the worse record in March and April combined for a 19-56 straight-up record but still had a pitiful 22-51-2 record against the spread.  Tanking teams also don’t play very good defense and the Over can be a successful betting strategy as evidenced by our “bottom three” having their late season games go Over 58.7% of the time.

It is not too early to watch for teams ready and willing to lose and other situations that can benefit your bankroll, no matter what David Stern might say.


Profitable NBA Fun Facts!

By Jim Kruger

2-10-08

 

I have always been enamored with trivia, odd facts, and unusual details.  When the “Trivial Pursuit” board game came out I was in heaven just reading the question and answer cards from it.  For some odd reason, I have a propensity to remember the unimportant, inconsequential, details that really have no value at all in life. 

Remembering that Bob Gibson, former St. Louis Cardinal pitcher, had a microscopic ERA of 1.12 in 1968 never helped me determine when to buy corn or sell pork bellies short when I was a stock and commodities broker.   When I was single, I can’t recall one girl who was impressed I knew all of the fifty states’ capitals.   I never even got to “second base” when I rattled off the capitals of the Central and South American countries.  Nobody has ever paid me a dime that I know in an episode of the “Beverly Hillbillies”, when the Clampetts opened up their restaurant in Beverly Hills they named it the Happy Gizzard.  Maybe if I could get on a television show like “Jeopardy” or “One Versus One Hundred” all of this useless knowledge accumulated in my gray matter would finally reap benefits for me.  At least I could meet Alex Trebek, one of my childhood heroes. 

Since those fun facts don’t make us any money, I thought I would try and find some NBA fun facts that we could use to help us make some cash.  Maybe these bits of information will be quirky enough you will be able to remember them just as I remember Barney Fife’s landlady was Mrs. Mendlebright. 

Kobe Bryant is a true superstar.  He has been accused of being a ball hog and only caring about his own stats.  What type of results do the Lakers have in the next game after Kobe scores 35 or more points?  I didn’t include playoff games as teams are more focused during the playoffs. 

Your first fun fact to remember is to play the Over in Laker games after Kobe has scored 35 points in the previous game.  He has achieved that mark 132 times according to my database and the Over is 80-52 in those games, a sweet 60.6% winner.  Now I’m going to make the fun fact more difficult to remember but more profitable.  If the Lakers won the game in which Kobe filled the basket, the Over in their next contest improves to 63.9%, 53-30.  And, if the game after Kobe’s scoring outburst is also against a Western Conference opponent, your Over ticket cashes 68.3% of the time, 41-19!  That rings my cash register enough for me to pay attention to Kobe’s scoring output on a daily basis.

Kobe can go on scoring streaks and in fact has scored 35 or more points in two consecutive games 60 times in his career so far.  If we use our previous most favorable qualifiers that the next game is against a Western Conference team and the Lakers won both of the previous two games, our Over now has a record of 20-7, 74.1%.  One note of interest though, apparently after two straight games of Kobe lighting up the scoreboard, an attitude comes over the Lakers in game three as they cover the point spread only 37% of the time, 10-17.  Oh, just in case you are curious if Kobe goes for 35+ three games in a row, if the Lakers are playing at home in that fourth game the Over is 14-5. 

Our next fun fact is one that Ed Meyer, a good friend of mine and a fellow handicapper, likes to talk about.  Why this trend happens is difficult to understand.  When a team is on a road trip with consecutive games in Boston and New York, it doesn’t matter which city is first, if they win the first game, unbelievable they almost always never win straight-up nor cover the point spread in the second game.  Since 1996, the team who won in the first game either at Boston or New York, has a straight-up record in the second game of 3-23 and an ATS mark of 2-24.  In my mind, that is one of the most astounding fun facts in any sport.

I have listed below a number of quick hitters, fun facts with a title that maybe will help you remember them. 

*  Bullied in Detroit:
We went to Detroit and got beat and now we are playing at home without a day off and we are an underdog:  You win only 14.3% of the time and cover the point spread in only 19% of those games.

*  A Well-Rested Richard Hamilton at home:
The Pistons are home off of a home win in which Richard Hamilton played less than 30 minutes and Detroit is now playing a game as a home favorite:  The Under happens 86.7% of the time.

*  Don’t invite the Spurs to our house:

You just got done playing San Antonio at home and now you are at home again.  Over the past two seasons you are only 12-25 ATS and a very sad 3-10 against the number if you actually beat the Spurs. 

*  Tired Suns on the road:

When Phoenix is playing back-to-back games on the road with no rest between them and they are a short favorite of five points or less playing a team with a day of rest, the Suns are a sad 3-16 ATS.

*  I love the New York nightlife:
Road teams after playing the Knicks in New York over the past seven years cover the point spread only 36.1% of the time in their next game if they are playing without any rest.

*  Spurs Under Thunder:
I have two very strong trends on the Spurs Under the total with identical records.  The Under is 18-2 when the Spurs are rested at home and are a 5 to 10 point favorite and they are playing a team coming off a home game without any rest.  Also at 18-2 Under is when the Spurs are at home as a 5 to 10 point favorite playing a rested opponent and San Antonio’s next game is out of town the very next day. 

*  Pass me the ball!
If a team is off of a loss where they had 25 or more assists in the game and their opponent had 15 or fewer assists, the pass-happy team is 20-4 ATS in their next game since 2003!

*  If it’s Tuesday…
And you are a home dog of five points or more with a day of rest playing a team without any rest, you are 17-3 ATS!  The Spurs visiting Seattle on January 29th was the most recent victim of this trend.

*  Sunday is Under and Monday is Over:
These season the Under is 50-28, 64.1%, on Sundays and the Over is 45-30, 60%, on Mondays. 

Maybe these NBA Fun Facts will become popular enough that one day in the future when I turn Jeopardy on, I can hear a contestant say, “What is the against the spread coverage rate in a conference game for the Lakers after Kobe Bryant has scored 35 points in two straight games?”


 

Time to Fade?
By Jim Kruger

1-13-08

 

On Tuesdays, I meet with a group of professional sports bettors and handicappers at a restaurant on the west side of Las Vegas to discuss and analyze the upcoming games.  We have our own private room to give us freedom to discuss at will and show emotion when we have differing opinions.  While I have been handicapping sporting events for many years, besides getting a good lunch, going to the Tuesday Group continues to enhance my handicapping abilities.  I have learned to have confidence in my plays from Big Richie.  The Fez has caused me to sharpen my math skills.  Watching Teddy C. eloquently take the other side and be a contrarian, albeit sometimes just to aggravate us, reminds me to always consider all options.  If you want to learn how to bet totals, you listen to Charlie J.  One of the participants, who prefers to go by the moniker of the “Ace of Spades”, (something to due with the guys who collect taxes, I think) has brought up more interesting angles than I ever thought was possible. 

Make no bones about it, these guys are sharp.  However, a few years ago when favorites were covering at a record pace in the NFL, there were some bankrolls getting smaller as most of the guys look to play underdogs first.  As the season continued until the latter weeks and favorites were still covering at an amazing clip, the prevailing talk on Tuesdays was that it couldn’t continue.  The dogs were certainly going to be barking soon and the squares were going to pay!  Our confidence increased in week 11 when dogs went 9-7.  “Things were returning to normal,” the dog lovers said.  However, dog-lovers were crushed quickly with two consecutive weeks of favorites going 12-4 ATS.  During the 2005 NFL season, some of us modified how we handicapped and bet games, some of us didn’t.


This NBA season is reminiscent of the 2005 NFL season.  First, let me confess.  I am not doing well in the NBA this year, .500 at best.  To qualify myself, I have done very well in the past handicapping the NBA.  In an effort to uncover my shortcomings in handicapping the NBA this year, I discovered an epiphany.  Currently, there are seven teams covering the point spread at a rate above 60%.  Is that unusual?  To quote a show I grew up on, Rowan and Martin’s Laugh-In, “you bet your bippy”. 

Beginning with the 2002 campaign, there have been a TOTAL of four instances when a team has finished with a 60% or better ATS winning percentage.  And, what is even more amazing, two of those four times a team barely made it to that level with an exact 60% ATS winning percentage.  But this year there are seven teams at this magical level?  How can this be?


What has allowed seven teams to be hitting at 60% ATS and above is the fact four teams this season are only winning at a 40% or worst rate against the spread.  And just like the number of high percentage winning teams, this is quite abnormal.  It has only happened a total of four times the prior five seasons that a team failed to cover more than 40% of their games!  However, in this unique 2007-08 campaign, there are four teams at 40% or worse against the spread. 

So what does this mean to the average Moe, Larry, or Curly?  Well, first it explains why most cab drivers in Boston and Detroit are cashing a lot of tickets.  And, just like the fall of 2005, the normal “sharp guy” is not doing well.  Betting against your double-digit favorites has not been profitable.  It means you should be very wary about betting on Detroit, Boston, Port