THE SPORTS ADVISORS
NBA PLAYOFFS
EASTERN CONFERENCE
(8) Detroit (39-44, 34-49 ATS) at (1) Cleveland (67-16, 51-32 ATS)
The top-seeded Cavaliers look to go up 2-0 in their opening-round best-of-7 series against the Pistons inside Quicken Loans Arena in Cleveland.
Cleveland jumped out early and never looked back in Game 1 on Saturday, winning 102-84 as an 11½-point favorite. Not surprisingly, LeBron James was the dominant force for the Cavaliers, scoring 38 points, grabbing eight rebounds and handing out seven assists. Cleveland shot 52.9 percent from the floor and committed just four turnovers in the easy victory.
Detroit has now lost four straight overall and five in a row at the betting window. Furthermore, the Pistons are just 2-7 ATS in their last nine contests and 1-7 in their last eight against Central Division rivals.
Cleveland continues to be the league’s most dominant team at home, posting a 40-2 record (29-13 ATS) at Quicken Loans Arena. The Cavs are on a 6-1 SU and ATS run overall, and they are looking to advance past the first round of the playoffs for the third consecutive year.
Including Saturday’s win and cover, the Cavaliers have won four of five head-to-head matchups with the Pistons this season (3-2 ATS), including the last four in a row. Cleveland is 12-5 ATS in the last 17 meetings with Detroit (playoffs included) and 6-2 ATS in the last eight at home. Finally, the chalk has cashed in nine of the last 10 overall.
James and the Cavs reached the Eastern Conference semifinals last year, where they lost a thrilling seven-game set to the Celtics. They beat the Wizards in six games in the opening round (4-2 ATS) and they went 10-3 ATS in the playoffs last season, including 5-1 ATS at home.
The veteran Pistons have reached the Eastern Conference finals each of the last six years, including last season when they fell to the Celtics in six games (3-3 ATS). Detroit played the Cavaliers in the 2007 Eastern Conference Finals, losing in six games and failing to cash in each contest. Detroit is 4-2 ATS in its last six first-round playoff games while Cleveland is 7-2 ATS in its last nine first-round contests. Detroit is just 18-24 SU and 13-29 ATS away from home this season.
The Pistons are on several negative ATS slides, including 1-8 after a straight-up loss, 1-5 on the road, 1-7 against Central Division teams and 1-6 as a pup, but they’re still 18-8-3 ATS in their last 29 conference quarterfinal games. Cleveland is on a host of ATS runs, including 35-16 at home overall, 31-13 as a home favorite, 8-1 as a playoff favorite and 5-0 against the Eastern Conference.
These two topped the total on Saturday, ending a seven-game “under” run in this rivalry. Still, the under is 29-7 in the last 36 battles overall and 18-6 in the last 24 in Cleveland.
Detroit is on “over” streaks of 4-1 overall, 8-3-1 on the road and 12-4-1 against Eastern Conference teams, but the team is also on “under” swings of 18-8-1 as a ‘dog in the playoffs and 24-10-1 when it gets two days off. The Cavaliers have gone over the total in six of their last nine overall, but otherwise it’s all “unders” for the squad, including 6-2-1 at home, 39-20-1 as a home chalk, 4-2 on two days of rest, 7-4-1 as a favorite and 22-9 after a spread-cover,.
ATS ADVANTAGE: CLEVELAND and UNDER
WESTERN CONFERENCE
(5) Houston (54-29, 41-41-1 ATS) at (4) Portland (54-29, 46-37 ATS)
The Rockets completely dominated the young Trail Blazers in Game 1 and will now look to take a 2-0 lead back to Houston when this best-of-7 clash resumes with Game 2 inside the Rose Garden.
Houston jumped out to an 11-point first-quarter lead in Saturday’s series opener and never looked back, spanking the Blazers 108-81 and easily cashing as a five-point ‘dog. The Rockets got a monster game from point guard Aaron Brooks who put up 27 points and dished out seven assists, pairing nicely with Yao Ming’s 24 points and nine rebounds (9-for-9 on field goals and 6-for-6 on free throws). Houston shot an amazing 58.5 percent from the field while holding Portland to just 41.7 percent and allowing just two Blazers to reach double-digit scoring.
The Rockets have won six of their last seven overall (5-2 ATS). They averaged just 85 points in their final two regular-season contests and they failed to score more than 93 points in four of their last seven contests before busting out in Game 1.
Prior to Saturday’s embarrassing loss, the Trail Blazers – who are back in the postseason for the first time in six years – had won six straight to end the regular season (5-1 ATS). During that winning streak, they didn’t allow a team to get more than 98 points, but they looked helpless against Houston on Saturday.
Saturday’s win was the first for a road team in this series this season, but the Rockets have now won eight of the last nine in this rivarly (5-4 ATS), including four of the last five played in Oregon (3-2 ATS).
The Rockets are in the playoffs for the fourth consecutive season, but they have lost six straight playoff series and haven’t gotten out of the first round since 1997. They were eliminated by the Jazz in six games last season (3-3 ATS) and they are just 3-8 ATS in their last 11 first-round playoff contests. Meanwhile, in addition to not making the postseason for six straight years prior to this season, Portland hasn’t advanced out of the first round since 2000.
The Blazers are now 34-8 (27-15 ATS) while the Rockets are 21-21 SU and ATS on the highway.
Houston is on ATS slides of 2-5 on the road and 9-23-1 after a spread-cover, but it is on positive pointspread runs of 5-2 overall, 4-1 in conference quarterfinal games, 6-1 against Northwest Division teams and 5-0-1 after getting two days off. Portland is on a plethora of positive ATS trends, including 13-4 overall, 21-9 as a favorite, 7-4 in first-round playoff games, 7-2 after getting two days off, 6-1 at home and 5-2 as a favorite of five to 10 ½ points.
The over was the play in Game 1 on Saturday, improving to 5-0 in the last five head-to-head matchups. Also, for the Trailblazers, the over is on runs of 7-2 at home, 5-0 against teams with winning records and 4-1 as a favorite of five to 10½-points. Conversely, the Rockets are on a host of “under” streaks, including 9-4 on the road, 5-3 as playoff ‘dogs, 6-2 as a pup and 4-2 after getting two days off.
ATS ADVANTAGE: PORTLAND
(8) Utah (48-35, 39-44 ATS) at (1) L.A. Lakers (66-17, 44-39 ATS)
The Lakers look to continue their dominance of the Jazz when they host Game 2 of this best-of-7 series at the Staples Center.
Despite sloppy rebounding play, Los Angeles still cruised to a 113-100 victory in Sunday’s series opener, barely covering as a 12-point home favorite. The Lakers, who ended the regular season with a 13-point home win over Utah a week ago tonight, shot a blistering 55.6 percent from the field in Game 1 and held Utah to 39.1 percent, and four Lakers scored in double figures, led by Kobe Bryant (24 points). However, L.A. got outrebounded 46-38, with the Jazz holding a 20-7 edge on the offensive glass.
Including consecutive wins over Utah, Los Angeles is 8-1 in its last nine games (6-3 ATS) and has won seven straight at home and 14 of its last 15 at Staples Center (8-7 ATS).
The Jazz have now dropped eight of their last 10 overall, going 2-11 ATS in their last 13. Utah also is mired in road slumps of 1-7 SU and ATS and 2-10 SU and ATS. Jerry Sloan’s squad has now given up an average of more than 110 ppg in its last 11 outings and it gives up an average of 106.5 ppg on the road for the season.
These teams met in the second round of the playoffs last year, with Los Angeles winning the series in six games (3-2-1 ATS). Including Sunday’s victory, the Lakers are now 4-1 SU and ATS against the Jazz this season. Also, they’re 11-4-1 ATS in the last 16 meetings with Utah overall and 9-1 ATS in the last 10 clashes in Hollywood. Finally, the home team is on a 9-1 SU roll in this rivalry (playoffs included), and the host is 14-4-1 ATS in the last 19 series battles.
For the season, the Lakers are 37-5 in their building but just 21-21 ATS. The Jazz are 15-27 on the road (17-25 ATS), including 1-13 SU and 2-12 ATS in 14 road games against Western Conference playoff teams.
L.A. has cashed in six straight first-round playoff games since 2007 and is on additional ATS streaks of 5-1 overall (all against the Western Conference), 5-0 as a favorite and 9-3 after a SU win. However, Los Angeles is only 8-16 ATS in its last 24 games when laying 11 points or more.
The Jazz are still 8-4 ATS in their last 12 first-round postseason contests, but only 1-4 ATS in the last five. Other negative pointspread trends for Utah include 2-11 overall, 1-7 on the highway (0-4 last four), 2-15 as an underdog, 2-10 versus the Western Conference, 1-5 against the Pacific Division and 3-7 on Tuesday.
Game 1 on Sunday barely went over the total, making the over 18-6 in the last 24 meetings, including 6-0 in the last six, and each of the last five battles in Los Angeles have hurdled the posted price. Additionally, Utah is on “over” runs of 9-2 overall, 8-0 on the road, 7-0 against winning teams, 8-2 versus the Western Conference, 40-19-2 as an underdog and 4-0 as a playoff underdog. For the Lakers, the over is on streaks of 5-1 overall and 5-1 against the Northwest Division.
ATS ADVANTAGE: L.A. LAKERS and OVER
NATIONAL LEAGUE
N.Y. Mets (6-6) at St. Louis (8-5)
The inconsistent Mets open a brief three-game road trip at Busch Stadium, where they’ll trot out Oliver Perez (1-1, 7.84 ERA) to oppose the Cardinals’ Todd Wellemeyer (1-1, 4.50).
New York is coming off Sunday’s 4-2 home setback to the Brewers, snapping a modest two-game winning streak. The Mets, who have yet to win or lose more than two consecutive games in 2009, started the season on the road, splitting six games, but they’re otherwise on positive streaks of 10-4 against the N.L. Central, 7-2 on Tuesday and 13-6 versus right-handed starters.
The Cardinals haven’t been on the field since Saturday, when they suffered a walk-off 7-5 loss at the Cubs in 11 innings. St. Louis, which had Sunday’s game at Chicago rained out then had a scheduled off day Monday, has followed up a 7-1 run with back-to-back losses. Tony LaRussa’s squad has won four straight home games and four straight against southpaw starters, and the Redbirds are on further upticks of 14-5 overall and 6-2 against the N.L. East.
Since St. Louis beat New York in seven games to claim the 2006 National League pennant, these teams have met 14 times, with the Mets winning nine of those contests, including taking five of seven at Busch Stadium.
Perez got blasted in his first start of the season on the road at Cincinnati (eight runs, five hits, five walks allowed in 4 1/3 innings), but he rebounded with a sterling outing at new Citi Field on Wednesday, holding the Padres to a run on three hits in six innings en route to a 7-2 victory. With Perez pitching, New York is on runs of 4-1 on the road, 7-0 in series openers and 10-3 versus winning teams, but it has lost five of Perez’s last six outings against the N.L. Central and four of his last five starts against the Cardinals.
Like Perez, Wellemeyer bounced back nicely from a poor 2009 debut, scattering seven hits and a run over seven innings in a 2-1 road win at Arizona. Despite that effort, St. Louis is just 3-6 in the right-hander’s last nine trips to the mound, even though he’s allowed three earned runs or fewer in seven of those nine contests. The Redbirds have also dropped nine of Wellemeyer’s last 13 outings at home, including four straight as a home underdog.
Perez is 2-5 with a 4.65 ERA in 12 career starts against the Cardinals, including 0-1 with a 9.00 ERA in just one outing at Busch Stadium. Wellemeyer has faced New York five times (two starts, three relief appearances), going 0-1 with a 6.89 ERA. That includes a 7-4 home loss last year when he gave up six runs and 12 hits in five innings.
The over is 9-1-2 in Perez’s last 12 starts overall and 4-0-1 in his last five on the road, but the under is 6-2 in Wellemeyer’s last eight overall.
The over is 5-0-1 in the last six meetings between these squads and 4-0-1 in the last five clashes at Busch Stadium. Additionally, the over for the Mets is on streaks of 11-5 against the N.L. Central, 5-1 on Tuesday and 12-5-4 after a day off, while St. Louis has topped the total in five straight overall and eight of its last 11 at home.
ATS ADVANTAGE: OVER
AMERICAN LEAGUE
Minnesota (7-7) at Boston (7-6)
Two teams coming off weekend sweeps meet up at Fenway Park, where the Twins’ Scott Baker (0-1, 13.50) is set to square off against veteran knuckleballer Tim Wakefield (1-1, 3.00).
Boston capped a four-game sweep of Baltimore with Monday’s 12-1 Patriots Day rout, as reigning league MVP Dustin Pedroia went 4-for-6 with three RBIs and three runs scored. The Red Sox have won five in a row by the aggregate score of 38-16 while batting .318 as a team during the streak. Terry Francona’s club is off to a 5-2 start at home and is 69-31 in its last 100 contests at Fenway Park. Additionally, Boston is on streaks of 14-4 in series openers, 40-16 against A.L. Central opponents, 20-9 on Tuesday and 4-0 against right-handed starters.
After losing seven of their first 11 games out of the gate, the Twins got healthy against the Angels over the weekend, sweeping a three-game set and scoring 23 runs in the process after mustering just 14 runs total during a 1-5 slump. Minnesota has won 16 of its last 21 contests after a day off, but is otherwise in slumps of 3-9 on the road, 3-10 as an underdog and 2-5 against the A.L. East.
The home team won six of seven meetings between these squads last year, with Boston sweeping all three contests at Fenway by scores of 1-0, 6-5 and 18-5. The Twins have lost five of their last six at Fenway.
Wakefield took a no-hitter into the eighth inning at Oakland on Wednesday and finished with a complete-game, four-hitter in an 8-2 victory that started Boston’s current five-game winning streak. The right-hander went 7-4 with a 3.10 ERA in 14 home starts last year, and he’s 13-5 with a 4.31 ERA in 25 career appearances (22 starts) against the Twins. However, in his lone outing against Minnesota last year, Wakefield was awful, allowing seven runs (six earned) in 2 2/3 innings and losing 9-8 on the road.
Baker’s 2009 debut was a disaster, as he got lit up for six runs in four innings of Wednesday’s 12-2 home loss to Toronto. It was in sharp contrast to the way the young right-hander finished last season, when he had seven quality starts in his last eight outings and posted a 2.39 ERA during that stretch. Baker was 6-3 with a 3.95 ERA in 16 road efforts in 2008, and in his first-ever start against the Red Sox last July at Fenway, he pitched seven scoreless innings, but got a no-decision in his team’s 1-0 loss.
With Wakefield pitching, the Sox are on streaks of 35-17 at home, 23-10 as a favorite and 8-3 against the A.L. Central. Meanwhile, the Twins are 4-10 in Baker’s last 14 Tuesday outings.
The over is 6-1 in Baker’s last seven starts overall and 7-2 in his last nine on the road, while the over is 4-0-1 in Wakefield’s last five overall, 15-6-1 in his last 22 at home and 8-3-1 in his last 12 when facing A.L. Central squads.
Four of the last five Twins-Red Sox battles have topped the total. Also, the “over” is on streaks for Boston of 8-1 overall, 7-3 at home and 8-2-1 on Tuesday, while the Twins sport “over” trends of 4-1 overall 10-3-1 as an underdog and 10-3-2 on Tuesday.
ATS ADVANTAGE: BOSTON and OVER