You see a lot of articles from
cappers, industry insiders and gaming editors talking about how the public is
wrong. It is always an intriguing situation as I watch football during the
day myself, and bet against late line moves and even halftime. Because of
this business I cannot post these plays in time for sales and money making
opportunities for my clients due to time constraints, but I thought I would
track these moves and public plays from a new perspective this weekend and break
it down. Is the public stupid or did they beat the books this
weekend? I am going with the top 5-7 plays from the public consensus polls
on-line and track the wins and losses in both the NCAA on Saturday and the NFL
on Sunday.
My contention has always been to
play the contrarian and go against strong public moves where a game is totally
lopsided in terms of how it is wagered, and if the public continues to drive a
line higher, I like to move against the line and take the extra points,
especially in the NFL. Let's see how this breaks down on the weekend of
September 28th. Can the public outsmart the books this weekend? Did
the oddsmakers put enough space between the favorite and the underdogs?
The action is not balanced as you can tell on the posted games, and I notice
that every consensus play on Saturday is a favorite, not one underdog.
Going into this I am skeptical that 7 games, laying big points is going to come
out in the public's favor. Remember the books like as close to 50/50
action as possible on each game so they get their vig on the action bet which is
10% in football, and they do not care who wins or loses.
On Saturday morning at 9 AM CST
here is the top 7 in College football, I will then come back in here and post
and win or loss and then analyze the results at the end of the weekend. We
will do the same with the Top 5 games in the NFL.
| Saturday's Top Public plays from
WagerLine are the following: |
| Troy
-12 |
82% took Troy
against Louisiana Monroe |
RESULT:
WIN |
| Louisville
-8 |
76% took them
against NC State |
RESULT:
WIN |
| Central Florida
-22 |
76% took them
against UL Laf |
RESULT:
LOSS |
| Hawaii
-26 |
74% took them
against Idaho |
RESULT:
WIN |
| Cincinnati
-14 |
73% took them
against San Diego St |
RESULT:
WIN |
| Michigan
-16.5 |
73% took them
against Northwestern |
RESULT:
LOSS |
| Penn St.
-3 |
72.4% took them
against Illinois ( 2053 people on Penn St and 778 on Illinois) |
RESULT:
LOSS |
Saturday and Friday saw 5 out of
the top 10 teams fall to lesser opponents, most shocking was Oklahoma losing to
an inferior team, while Texas was getting pounded by Kansas State, who is
underrated. Ironically both play each other this week in the Red River
War. The public went 4-3 on consensus plays on Saturday, taking the books
money with lopsided action. However, when laying big points it should be
noted that teams like Florida and Oklahoma also garnered a lot of public money,
including mine as I laid it with both of them and lost.
One thing I am certain of after
this weekend in football in the NCAA. Parity is present. Laying bug
numbers with GOOD teams is very dangerous. Many had close calls, including
highly touted Southern Cal who slipped to #2 now in the AP Top 25 poll because
of it, and Cal against Oregon was much closer than I thought it would be.
Florida getting beat at home and Texas getting beat at home by teams they were
defeated by last year was a shocker. The Big 12 South, highly rated over the Big
12 North, saw the top 2 teams POUNDED by Big 12 north teams. Teams like
Clemson and Penn State, who were in tough games they should have won, never made
the plays when needed to close the deal and lost. Tommy Bowden at Clemson
has had a terrible run in close games where the Tigers simply cannot close them
out, or make big plays when needed. A TD called back because of a penalty
and 2 missed field goals were their demise once again.
| NFL
Sunday Top Public Plays |
| Houston
-2.5 |
72% took
them against Atlanta |
RESULT:
LOSS |
| Green Bay
-2 |
67% took them
against Minnesota |
RESULT:
WIN |
| Dallas
-11.5 |
64% took them
against St. Louis |
RESULT:
WIN |
| Pittsburgh
-5 |
64% took them
against Arizona |
RESULT:
LOSS |
| Baltimore
-4.5 |
63% took them
against Cleveland |
RESULT:
LOSS |
The NFL Continues to frustrate me
more so than any of my 16 years in the NFL handicapping arena. You simply
cannot rely on numbers, stats and injury reports. The public also went 2-3
ATS on the top 5 consensus plays of the day. Coaches and organizations
list players doubtful on injury reports and then they have career games that
day. As a capper who relies on quality information and relies on
handicapping stats and recent performance, it is almost impossible on any given
Sunday without luck to sweep the board.
The NFL is simply so loaded with
parity other than a few select teams like Dallas at the moment, and the
Patriots, anything else is up for grabs. Take the Giants on Sunday
Night. Allowing over 32 ppg on defense, they looked better than the 1985
Bears, setting an NFL record with 12 sacks and rendering the Eagles who lit it
up for over 50 points the week before, to look like some Junior College team
playing the in the Pros on Sunday Night. Jekyll and Hyde each and every
week, and even the public consensus struggled on Sunday. They lost and
went 2-3.
In my little weekend study it was
very interesting to note that all consensus plays were favorites, college and
pro. That looks like a dangerous proposition down the road if the recent
trend continues. Laying numbers over 10 to 14 in college ball and playing
favorites of 5 or more in the NFL, especially on the road is a bad bet right
now. Trends and patterns change from week to week in the NFL and even out,
but right now it is a crapshoot for even the savvy to figure
out.
Get more from Tony at www.sportsaudioshows.com.