Tuesday 3/17/15 service plays chatter/comps/requests & other stuff...

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Handicapped by Chatsworth Consortium at Northfield Park

Always check program numbers.
Odds shown are morning line odds.


Race 15 - Post: 10:40 - 1 mile. PACE - Class Rating: 80 - Purse:$4500 - NON WINNERS $300 PER START IN 2014-15 OR 2015. AE: N/W $2250 IN LAST 5 STARTS THAT ARE N/W $50,000 IN 2014-15. NO. 9 STARTS FROM 2ND TIER NORTHFIELD


CONSORTIUM CHOICES


Chatsworth Consortium

# 2 AMAZON ART 2/1


# 6 ANDY BARAN 3/1


# 1 BURSTING BLAZE 5/2


We've got an instinct AMAZON ART is going to get the ultimate prize. He has competitive class figures, averaging 84. Should be considered for a bet for this race. We're not going to pass on this gelding given one of the most favorable driver/handler numbers around. Merriman is racking up the wins recently. Top notch win clip makes this fine animal our selection. ANDY BARAN - His 83 avg has this gelding among the best speed ratings in this race. This horse looks tough considering the high class numbers. Not a good idea to throw out of any exotics. BURSTING BLAZE - This harness racer will be greatly helped with Wrenn steering. 29 percent winners the last 30 days. The brain trust will always toss in a fine animal from the 1 position here at Northfield Park, definite exotic possibilities.
 
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Handicapped by The Walker Group at Mahoning Valley Race Course

Always check program numbers.
Odds shown are morning line odds.


Race 8 - Maiden Claiming - 6.0f on the Dirt. Purse: $6900 Class Rating: 51

FOR MAIDENS, THREE YEARS OLD AND UPWARD. THREE YEAR OLDS, 118 LBS.; OLDER, 126 LBS. CLAIMING PRICE $5,000



RECOMMENDED CHOICES

The Walker Group Picks

# 3 TELL JOSE 7/5


# 1 LAUNDRY MAN CAN 5/1


# 6 BEAU FORTUNE 6/1


TELL JOSE looks to be the bet in here. Is worth considering and may be a wager - strong Equibase Speed Figures (50 average) at today's distance and surface as of late. He looks solid in this spot and I expect will be on the front end or close at the midpoint. With a formidable 51 speed figure last time out, will unquestionably be a factor in this contest. BEAU FORTUNE - No strangers to the winner's circle, Clouston and Houghton ought to have this gelding breaking away from the field. Jockey's recent return on investment figs make this gelding a strong wager.
 
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Handicapped by The Walker Group at Parx Racing

Always check program numbers.
Odds shown are morning line odds.


Race 9 - Claiming - 6.0f on the Dirt. Purse: $22000 Class Rating: 72

FOR THREE YEAR OLDS WHICH HAVE NEVER WON TWO RACES. WEIGHT, 121 LBS. NON-WINNERS OF A RACE SINCE FEBRUARY 17 ALLOWED 2 LBS. CLAIMING PRICE $10,000.



RECOMMENDED CHOICES

The Walker Group Picks

# 7 NOSE JOB 6/1


# 1 CHLOE'S WONDERBOY 9/2


# 9 AGENT VAN ALDEN 7/2


I lean toward NOSE JOB here. Earnings per start in dirt sprint races is sound for this animal. The average class figure alone makes this one a definite contender. Sound average Equibase Speed Figures in dirt sprint races make this racer a solid choice. CHLOE'S WONDERBOY - Is worth a close look and may be a wager - strong Equibase Speed Figures (65 average) at today's distance and surface as of late. Investors get an edge when playing this trainer in a dirt sprint race. AGENT VAN ALDEN - Is difficult not to look at based on speed figs which have been formidable - 53 avg - of late. I think having Beato ride this colt is a smart choice.
 
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Handicapped by Valuline at Gulfstream Park

Today's Most Likely Winner Is at:
Gulfstream Park, Race 3 (Tuesday March 17, 2015)
CENTELLA
(For ten of today's most likely winners, see Exotic Key Plays.)


GP-3 6f DIRT Eight Horses
"A" CLM 6,250 F/M 4YUP $15,000
P# dd ex p3 t s ML WP TVL

1 CENTELLA 9/5 36% 9/5 Strong Favorite icon
6 BLUE TEMPTATION 10/1 29% 5/2
8 TIME FOR HARLAN 8/1 13% 7/1
 
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Handicapped by The Turf Club Analysts

Bar

Mountaineer - Race #8 - Post: 9:34pm - Claiming - 8.0 furlongs on the Dirt. Purse: $6,600 Class Rating: 80

Rating: Golden DollarGolden DollarGolden Dollar

#5 GEAUX REAUX GEAUX (ML=7/2)
#6 ROYAL TAK (ML=5/2)
#4 WHISKEYONTHEROCKS (ML=9/2)


GEAUX REAUX GEAUX - This is a classic 'Lone Front-runner' scenario. If Stanley gets him out of the gate cleanly it'll likely be smooth sailing. ROYAL TAK - I think this gelding is coming into top form. I like to wager on this handicapping theory, a campaigner coming back off a nice race within the last thirty days. WHISKEYONTHEROCKS - Taking a drop in class rating points from his Feb 21st race at Oaklawn. Based on that knowledge, I will give this one the advantage. Ran a less than stellar race at Oaklawn in the last race. Racing under better track conditions puts this gelding at the top of my list of contenders. A repeat of that latest race on February 21st where he earned a speed rating of 81 looks high enough to triumph in this affair.

Vulnerable Contenders: #3 LONNIE BELL (ML=4/1), #2 STATEHOOD (ML=5/1), #7 BATTLE MOUNTAIN (ML=5/1),

LONNIE BELL - The result of sixth in the last race shows me that this horse may be getting out of condition. When checking today's class figure, she will have to earn a better rating than in the last race to be competitive in this dirt route. STATEHOOD - This gelding is always in the money, but just doesn't win. Tough to invest in him on the front end. Not probable that the speed rating he garnered on March 4th will be good enough in this event. BATTLE MOUNTAIN - The third place result in the last event was not that great.



STRAIGHT WAGERS:
Bet on #5 GEAUX REAUX GEAUX to win if we can get at least 3/1 odds

EXACTA WAGERS:
None

TRIFECTA WAGERS:
Box [4,5,6] Total Cost: $6

SUPERFECTA WAGERS:
Pass
 
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Handicapped by The Turf Club Analysts

Bar

Turf Paradise - Race #8 - Post: 4:38pm - Maiden Claiming - 6.0 furlongs on the Dirt. Purse: $6,300 Class Rating: 64

Rating: Golden DollarGolden DollarGolden DollarGolden Dollar

#2 MINING FEVER (ML=5/1)
#1 ROI SOLEIL (ML=9/2)


MINING FEVER - I like when a horse has dropped in class at least five class rating points like this one did last out and then runs against a similar field right back. Davis must've found the right level. You always have to be on the watch for money making jockey/handler tandems; we have one right here. Ranked the highest in earnings per start. Another sign that this horse has the class to win. ROI SOLEIL - Like the way this gelding's finish positions keep getting better. That's a sure sign of improving form. I like that recent outing on February 28th at Turf Paradise where he finished third. Just look at his last speed figure, 60. That one fits well in this group.

Vulnerable Contenders: #9 GO DUDE (ML=2/1), #3 MATINEE IDOL (ML=6/1), #7 DESERT KISS (ML=8/1),

GO DUDE - Difficult to wager on any entrant in a sprint event at 2/1 when he hasn't shown any on the board results in sprints in the last couple months. The speed figs are going downward. I'm not throwing a few bucks at this questionable contender off of that trend. Finished fourth in his most recent race with a run-of-the-mill fig. When I look at today's Equibase class figure, it would take an improved performance to score after that in this group. MATINEE IDOL - The absence of speed in the last one, a route event, is a bit disconcerting. DESERT KISS - A runner should have more speed at 1 mile to get me going about his likelihood of winning at 6 furlongs.



STRAIGHT WAGERS:
#2 MINING FEVER is going to be the play if we are getting 8/5 or better

EXACTA WAGERS:
Box [1,2]

TRIFECTA WAGERS:
2 with 1 with [3,4,6] Total Cost: $3

SUPERFECTA WAGERS:
Skip
 
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Yonkers: Tuesday 3/17 Analysis
By Brewster Smith

DRF HARNESS

MEET STATS: 33 - 214 / $301.90 BEST BETS: 2 - 18 / $10.00

Best Bet: SKYFUL OF LIGHTERS (10th)

Spot Play: OK GALAHAD (4th)


Race 1

(4) SAND BENELLI sharp in his last try. Very capable of making today a winning one. (5) MACHIN MONEY could get involved against these. (1) MR COOLIE might fare well from the fence.

Race 2

(1) MARQUESAS should find this group to his liking. With a golden trip, he can boss these from the rail. (7) COLUMBIA LION put in two nice tries in a row which makes him a threat. (2) SHEER ACTION might grab a share of the purse.

Race 3

(7) VICTORY AT LAST just missed the score in the 1st Leg of the Sagamore. Gelding seems to be fit and ready to get the job done. (2) ROGER MACH EM is on a roll and is seeking his fifth straight victory. (6) COMPANY MAN Even finish last time out for this pacer; factor in here.

Race 4

(2) OK GALAHAD was first over and had nothing left in the stretch drive last out. Pacing gelding is very capable if he gets a better trip. (3) MAJOR UPTREND was sent down the road last time around for all the glory. (5) FORT KNOX just held on for win honors recently.

Race 5

(1) EMERALD BLING gets a better slot to work with and she fits well against this group; primed. (2) KATNISS Clearly this sophomore is knocking at the door. (3) BRYANS ANGEL could land a share.

Race 6

(2) KINDOFABIGDEAL makes his second start here and has a cozy slot today. Can take this at his best. (6) REDISCOVERY raced well last out to nail down the place spot; main danger. (7) BLACKTREE has hit the board in his last six tries; contender.

Race 7

(3) CASSA'S IMAGE showed signs of life in his last two trips to the post; worth a shot to pull off the upset. (5) WELL CONNECTED KID is better than his latest. (1) MOVEMENT She has a good shot in here from the rail based on her last three starts.

Race 8

(4) CARRACCI HANOVER put in a nice run last time out. With a better trip, this guy can get the job done. (2) VANCE BAYAMA Sharp for the score in his last try; dangerous again. (1) BETTOREVER moves to the fence and that might help his cause.

Race 9

(4) MR JULIAN flashed speed in his last three tries. Sophomore has a chance to move forward with Brennan in the bike. (2) MISTER ACCUMULATOR is knocking at the door and was very sharp last time out. (6) ATOMIC TOM tired in the stretch drive but he fits well with these; watch out.

Race 10

(1) SKYFUL OF LIGHTERS Gelding did not fire in his latest, but the good news is he has the fence and his tactical speed can get this guy back into the winner's circle. (3) A PLUS HANOVER gets post relief and that might be what he needs to contend in here; maybe. (6) SOUTHERN WINDS could have a say in the outcome.

Race 11

(1) MUSCLESPRINCTONIAN Trotter is in very good form and should be the boss from the pole position. (8) VEGLIANTINO took the pocket route for all the glory last week. Outside post hurts, but is capable. (4) MERGATROID Two good starts puts this one in the mix; watch out.

Race 12

(7) BETTOR BELIEVE IT rallied strongly to nail down the show spot recently. Pacing gelding can mow these down in his return. (4) KEYSTONE MEMPHIS is clearly better than his last try. (5) CLASSIC ART fits well in here and is not out of this.
 
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SPOT PLAYS

For Tuesday


TRACK (RACE) HORSE, MORNING LINE


Gulfstream Park (1st) Set On Salsa, 6-1
(7th) Sportscaster, 4-1


Mahoning Valley (3rd) Canalasso, 8-1
(6th) Guilded Reward, 7-2


Mountaineer (4th) Hill's of Gold, 8-1
(8th) Whiskeyontherocks, 9-2


Parx Racing (6th) Gracie Merlot, 9-2
(8th) El Deal, 7-2


Turf Paradise (3rd) Right Trick, 7-2
(6th) Bonie's Bearcat, 5-1
 
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PGA Bracket - Part 1
By Dan Daly

The Weekly Waggle is coming to you live from the labor and delivery wing this week where my wife and I welcomed our second little girl over the weekend.

A big shout out to my wife; while she didn’t have the unenviable task of taking on “The Snake Pit” I was still very proud of her and of course my little one.

You can go ahead and chalk up a JD “leave of absence” from the PGA Tour in 3, 2, 1…

In honor of March Madness, or since I write a golf article, the WGC Match Play tournament next month, I present you with the first ever…PGA March Madness/Match Play Bracket.

The selection committee was made up of…me.

The winners and losers of each match-up were voted on by a highly select group of golf aficionado’s.

The field was of course seeded 1-16 in each bracket with the brackets consisting of the Masters, US Open, British Open and PGA Championship brackets. (Come on, it’s a golf article, plus I am extremely tired and that seems like the easiest thing to go with!)

With the Masters Bracket winner going against the PGA Championship winner and the US Open winner going against the British Open winner in the final four.

This week we will reveal the First Round Winners below.

Masters Bracket

(1) Paulina Gretzky’s Instagram account vs (16) Ian Poulter’s Twitter account
In what is the single biggest upset of round one, the 16 seed takes out the 1 seed here. Obviously Paulina’s Instagram account going from bikini pics to baby pics really didn’t sit well with the voters.

(2) Patrick Reed’s Necklace vs (15) Stevie Williams’ Chest Hair In Masters Jumpsuit
Sporting the single most talked about piece of jewelry in PGA tour history clearly counts for something. On a side note, this will most likely be the highest ranking Patrick Reed will ever receive.

(3) Greg Norman Masters Meltdown vs (14) Scott Hoch Masters Choke
This one wasn’t even close. Look at the bright side Greg, at least you finally won something Master related.

(4) John Daly’s Ex-Wives vs (113) Tiger's Mistresses (See what I did there for both seeding’s? Clever, I know)
In what was by far the closest vote in the first round, Tiger and his many infidelities just edged JD and his multiple Ex’s. At least JD was able to turn his misfortunes into a Country Music hit.

(5) “Hello Friends” vs (12) Sir Nick Faldo
Faldo may have been awarded some sort of Knighthood but it looks like Jim Nantz is still the king of the booth.

(6) Amen Corner vs (11) The Bear Trap
Please.

(7) Tiger Wood’s Chipping Yips vs (10) Tom Watson’s Putting Yips
I can’t say I’m surprised here, the dude literally putted away anywhere from 5-10 majors.

(8) Steve Stricker’s Inner 'Beast' vs (9) Rory McIlroy ‘Living In The Hall Of Fame’
The Savage Steve Stricker “cruises” to an easy victory here. And rightfully so, they can’t pull that Omega commercial off the air soon enough for me.

vs.

PGA Championship Bracket

(1) Amanda Dufner’s yoga pants vs (16) Billy Horschel’s Pants
Yoga pants…a bikini…does it really matter as long as her ass is somehow involved?

(2) Jason Dufner’s Snuff vs (15) Angel Cabrera Burning Heaters
Some may question the low Cabrera seeding here but the fact that he quit didn’t help his cause here. Dufner won in a landslide.

(3) John Daly The Musician vs (14) Luke Donald The Artist
JD’s music is on Sirius Radio (The Highway, Channel 56). What do you have to show for your “art” Luke?

(4) Tiger/Sergio Feud vs (13) McIlroy/McDowell Fallout
This one was not even close. Rory and Graeme need to step up their cat fighting skills apparently.

(5) Tin Cup vs (12) The Ryder Cup
A 62 in a major, a 12 on the last hole of the same major against what has become a bi-yearly route? Can’t say I’m surprised here.

(6) Elin With A 9-iron vs (11) Stevie William’s With A Camera
I can’t speak for all the voter’s here but I know I for one sure as hell wasn’t going to vote against her if she still has the 9-iron nearby.

(7) Augusta National Chairman vs (10) PGA of America President
One guy took on the world and said EFF YOU we run our tournament the way we want…the other picked Davis Love III again to Captain the Ryder Cup.

(8) Victor Dubuisson’s Facial Hair vs (9) Rickie Fowler’s Facial Hair
One looks like a creepy porn star, and I have to say I am a little surprised the creepy porn star lost here.


US Open Bracket

(1) Jim Furyk’s Sunday meltdowns vs (16) Lee Westwood’s Twitter Meltdown
Westwood went on a one night bender, Furyk has stretched his accomplishment out for several straight years now. This one wasn’t really close.

(2) Adam Scott’s Dating Scorecard vs (15) Bubba Watson’s Wife Finger Tattoo
The biggest landslide in the first round. In fact it was 100% to 0%. I knew I picked a smart group of people the vote.

(3) David Duval’s Sunglasses vs (14) Zach Johnson’s Sunglasses
This one was really simple, one guy made Oakley’s look cool and shot a 59 wearing them in the rain, the other guy couldn’t be cool if he was Adam Scott for a day.

(4) Dustin Johnson’s “leave of absence” vs (13) Anthony Kim’s Disappearance
Let’s just say AK was “blown” away here.

(5) Phil Mickelson’s US Open Meltdown vs. (12) Arnold Palmer’s US Open Meltdown
Hospitality tent, tree, bunker, rough, chip, putt for a smooth double bogey when par wins the US Open and bogey at least gets him a playoff. “I just can't believe that I did that. I am such an idiot.”

(6) Sergio Garcia 2002 U.S Open vs (11) Kevin Na 2012 Players Championship
It appeared as though Sergio managed to piss off the entire state of New York. While not hard to, still impressive none the less.

(7) Brandel Chamblee’s Hair vs (10) Ian Poulter’s Hair
It has its own twitter account, that’s when you know you have something special.

(8) Guan Tianlang’s Pace Of Play vs (9) Ben Crane’s Pace Of Play
We are still waiting for the results of this match-up actually so I just deferred to the higher seed.

vs.

British Open Bracket

(1) Miguel Angel Jimenez’s Cigar vs (16) Joey D Golf Exercise Program
I don’t who the one person that voted for Joey D is…but you sir are fired!

(2) Rory McIlroy's Claret Jug Filled With Jäger vs (15) Phil Mickelson’s Krispy Kreme Drive-Thru
Do I really need to explain this one?

(3) Jean Van De Velde British Open Meltdown vs (14) Adam Scott British Open Meltdown
The Claret Jug engraver was literally engraving his name in the trophy when Van De Velde teed off on 18. You will not see a bigger meltdown in professional sports in your lifetime.

(4) “Ben Hogan has officially rolled over in his grave” vs (13) “Better Than Most”
Take a bow Johnny Miller…that was by far your finest moment in broadcasting.

(5) A John Daly Cocktail vs (12) Graeme McDowell’s GolfBeer Brewing Company
Maybe if the voting was held in Ireland then McDowell may have had a chance, but this is America.

(6) Boo Weekly Math vs (11) FedEx Cup Scoring System
"I don't know nothing about the FedEx Cup." Well Boo, they are still tweaking it every year so apparently they don’t either.

(7) Rickie Fowler’s Flat Billed Hat vs (10) Hunter Mahan’s Flat Billed Hat
At least Fowler has turned his look into a brand and made millions on it. Mahan just looks like a tool.

(8) Fuzzy's Fried Chicken vs (9) Sergio’s Fried Chicken
Fuzzy threw in a side of collard greens to make himself sound extra stupid.

We will return next week with Part 2 as we count down from 32 all the way to the Final Four.
 
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Golf Tour heads to Bay Hill

Tournament: Arnold Palmer Invitational
Date: Mar. 19 - Mar. 22
Venue: Bay Hill Club and Lodge
Location: Orlando, FL

The PGA concludes its “Florida Swing” with a visit to the king of golf’s favorite course at Bay Hill this week. The par-72, 7,381-yard course has hosted this event for the tour since 1979 and has had big names such as Palmer, Trevino, Irwin, Stewart, Couples, Mickelson, Els and Woods hold the trophy at Sunday in the past. The course has been much harder to navigate in recent years with the average winning score being just over 10-under par in the past eight installments of the event with 13-under being the mark in each of the past three seasons.

It was Matt Every who was able to grab his first career PGA victory here last year when he surpassed the likes of Adam Scott, Keegan Bradley and Jason Kokrak on the final day with a score of 70. One of the big stories of the week will be the addition of world No.1 Rory McIlroy to the field as he competes in this tournament for the first time and is joined by the rest of the top-five with Bubba Watson, Henrik Stenson, Adam Scott and Jason Day all teeing it up.

The strong field continues as 10 other players from the top-30 of the Official World Golf Ranking come out to play as last week’s winner, Jordan Spieth, sits this one out. One player that will not be hitting the course is Tiger Woods who has dominated here in the past, winning eight times in his career and four times in the last seven years.

Let’s take a look at who can go out this week and hold his own at Arnold Palmer’s favorite course.

Golfers to Bet:

Henrik Stenson (8/1): Stenson takes up residency not too far from this course and has seemed at home here in each of the past three years; getting a top-15 finish each time and improving his standing in each successive visit. Last year was his best showing as he shot under 70 on three of the days and finished in a tie for fifth with a score of nine-under par behind better than 80% of GIR and fairways hit. The No. 3 player in the world is coming off consecutive fourth-place finishes in each of the past two weeks at very tough courses as he’s gained 1.13 strokes gained putting so far in three PGA events and should use that momentum to catapult him up the leaderboards come Sunday.

Keegan Bradley (28/1): Bradley has seen his game struggle somewhat due to changing his putting style from the anchored putter to the more standard grip, but has still made 6-of-7 cuts and has two top-25’s. He should improve with his short game as the season progresses and there is no better place than Bay Hill for him to do that as he placed third here in 2013 and then was the runner-up last year. He shot 11-under on the par-5s in 2014 and netted two rounds of 67 or better before shooting an even 72 on Sunday. While his putting has suffered (-0.21 strokes gained putting, 140th on tour), he still ranks in the top-15 in both driving distance (302.0 yards per, 15th on tour) and strokes gained tee-to-green (1.12, 12th on tour). Look for Bradley to get back on track this week and put up some nice numbers.

Ian Poulter (40/1): Poulter has flirted with the winner’s circle recently and despite being one of the best players in the world, has just one win on the PGA tour in stroke play. At certain points in both the Honda Classic and Valspar Championship, Poulter looked poised to grab the lead and run with it, but had trouble each time as he finished third and 24th respectively. The Englishmen has enjoyed his time at Bay Hill, doing no worse than 21st over his last four visits with a third-place back in 2012 being his best showing as he managed a score of six-under. Poulter is fantastic around the greens, and if he can avoid the little mistakes that cost him strokes he should easily net a top-10 finish.

Erik Compton (350/1): Compton may be a tough pick to swallow as the 35-year-old has failed to make the cut in each of the past five events, but he has a top-16 finish here in each of the past two seasons, including a standing of fifth last year, and has too much talent to continue at this pace. His two showings at this event are among 11 total top-25 finishes he’s carded since the start of the 2013 campaign, so he surely enjoys this course, and his solid putting (0.35 strokes gained putting, 56th on tour) should give him an outside shot at his first career victory.

S.J. Park (450/1): Park is one of many rookies on the tour that has had success in their inaugural PGA season and he’s made 7-of-11 cuts thus far on the year; including finishing second at the Humana Challenge with four straight days of 68 or better. He should also be feeling some confidence after a 69 on Sunday at the Valspar Championship, a mark that brought him up to a tie for 30th on a tough course. Park has an accurate driver (65.6%, 40th on tour) while being great around the green, ranking fifth on tour in scrambling (69%) and sixth in sand save percentage (69.5%), all important attributes on a course such as this one. The rookie is a risky selection, but is worth dropping a unit on if you want a deep sleeper.

Arnold Palmer Invitational Betting Odds

Rory McIlroy 5/1
Henrik Stenson 8/1
Bubba Watson 11/1
Jason Day 16/1
Adam Scott 17/1
Rickie Fowler 23/1
Brooks Koepka 28/1
Keegan Bradley 28/1
Hideki Matsuyama 30/1
J.B. Holmes 30/1
Harris English 35/1
Ian Poulter 40/1
Kevin Na 40/1
Brandt Snedeker 45/1
Paul Casey 45/1
Sean O'Hair 45/1
Webb Simpson 50/1
Graeme McDowell 55/1
Francesco Molinari 65/1
Graham Delaet 65/1
Jason Kokrak 65/1
Justin Thomas 65/1
Martin Laird 65/1
Russell Knox 65/1
Billy Horschel 75/1
Shane Lowry 75/1
Brendan Steele 80/1
Hunter Mahan 80/1
Louis Oosthuizen 80/1
Charles Howell III 95/1
Rory Sabbatini 95/1
Daniel Berger 100/1
Gary Woodland 100/1
Shawn Stefani 100/1
Bernd Wiesberger 120/1
Zach Johnson 120/1
Chris Kirk 130/1
Danny Willett 130/1
Matt Jones 130/1
Sang-Moon Bae 150/1
Vijay Singh 150/1
Branden Grace 160/1
Daniel Summerhays 160/1
Freddie Jacobson 160/1
Padraig Harrington 160/1
Retief Goosen 160/1
Alexander Levy 170/1
Brian Davis 80/1
Camilo Villegas 180/1
Kevin Chappell 180/1
Kevin Streelman 180/1
Lucas Glover 180/1
Marc Leishman 180/1
Boo Weekley 200/1
Robert Streb 200/1
John Senden 220/1
Seung-Yul Noh 220/1
Brian Harman 230/1
Danny Lee 230/1
Ernie Els 230/1
George McNeill 230/1
Pat Perez 230/1
Russell Henley 230/1
Scott Stallings 230/1
Tony Finau 230/1
Chris Stroud 240/1
Jason Bohn 240/1
Matt Every 240/1
William McGirt 240/1
Angel Cabrera 250/1
Chad Campbell 250/1
Chesson Hadley 250/1
K.J. Choi 250/1
Ryo Ishikawa 250/1
Sam Saunders 250/1
Carl Pettersson 300/1
Carlos Ortiz 300/1
John Huh 300/1
Zac Blair 300/1
Ben Martin 350/1
Billy Hurley III 350/1
Erik Compton 350/1
Morgan Hoffmann 350/1
Alex Prugh 400/1
Andres Gonzales 400/1
Brian Stuard 400/1
Charlie Beljan 400/1
David Lingmerth 400/1
Gonzalo Fernandez-Castano 400/1
Stewart Cink 400/1
S.J. Park 450/1
Spencer Levin 500/1
Chad Collins 550/1
Colt Knost 550/1
D.A. Points 550/1
Kyle Reifers 550/1
Ben Curtis 650/1
Hudson Swafford 650/1
Rod Pampling 650/1
Steven Bowditch 650/1
 
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Soccer CL Round of 16 Best Bets
By Toby Maxtone-Smith

With the notable exception of Chelsea’s exit at the hands of Paris Saint-Germain, last week’s batch of Champions League last 16 ties saw the favourites progressing.

FC Porto and Bayern Munich both followed up away draws with home thrashings, while Real Madrid had an almighty scare at home to Schalke 04. Having been 100/1 to qualify, Schalke won 4-3. The last five minutes was an enthralling spell of football as the great Real Madrid fought to stave off possibly the greatest Champions League comeback of all time. However, Real went through, although they have drifted to 11/4 along with Barcelona to win the tournament outright.

Bayern Munich are the 5/2 favourites in what looks to be a three-horse race.

Four more games set for this week for Tuesday Mar. 17 and Wednesday Mar. 18.

Let's handicap UEFA Champions League: Round of 16 - Second Leg.


The Banker: Atletico Madrid to beat Bayer Leverkusen at 7/10 (Tuesday)

Bayer Leverkusen won a relatively even game 1-0 in Germany in the first leg, but they still face a big challenge to qualify. Atletico’s home record in the Champions League is fearsome: eight wins and one draw in their last nine games. Despite this, however, Bayer are the slight favourites to qualify at 4/5, with Atletico available at evens (1/1).

Leverkusen came through a strange group in second place. All four teams were of very similar standard, but they did manage to score an impressive away win against Zenit St. Petersburg. Their form has been impressive in the league of late, and they thrashed an abysmal Stuttgart side 4-0 last time out. Atletico have drawn three on the bounce, but two of those were against sides around them in Valencia and Sevilla. They still look good for Champions League qualification and are worth backing at 7/10 to win on Tuesday night.

The Solid Bet: Arsenal to win at Monaco at 13/10 (Tuesday)

Arsenal’s recent revival has, most unusually for Arsène Wenger’s side, been due to an upturn in their away form. With recent wins over both Manchester clubs, there is hope among Arsenal fans that the club is finally getting into the habit of winning big away games. And they need more than just a win on Tuesday night.

Arsenal collapsed to an embarrassing 3-1 defeat at home to a Monaco side who only scored four goals in their six group games. However Monaco’s game-plan is set up perfectly to play away from home. Arsenal are as long as 6/1 to qualify - even a 2-0 win would not be good enough - but at 13/10 they look worth taking.

The Outsider: Borussia Dortmund to draw with Juventus at 12/5 (Wednesday)

Juventus have won just one Champions League knockout tie since 2006. And that was against Celtic - hardly the most taxing of opponents. However the Old Lady’s struggles against the continent’s best could well come to an end tonight. They travel to Borussia Dortmund defending a 2-1 league from the first leg. Juventus are a serious-minded, battle-hardened team and are perfectly suited to this sort of situation. They have conceded just 14 goals in 27 league games this year.

While Borussia Dortmund look set for an upper mid-table season after an unbelievably bad first half, there can be no denying that Jurgen Klopp’s team has declined, despite their Champions League results. Without Robert Lewandowski they do not have the same cutting edge, and Juventus shutting them out for a draw looks a good shout at a 12/5 price.

The First Goalscorer: Neymar for Barcelona against Manchester City at 9/2 (Wednesday)

Even at 7/1 it is hard to make a case for Manchester City being worth backing in the Nou Camp. Their display in the 2-1 home defeat in the first leg showed all the naiveness that has become the hallmark of the club’s European performances. And I’m in no rush to back a Barcelona side who would go through with a draw to win at 2/5.

This leads me to the first goalscorer market where Neymar is very attractively priced at 9/2. The Brazilian was excellent in Barcelona’s recent 3-1 win in the Copa del Rey at Villarreal. He scored twice to take his tally for the season to 28 goals. His pace and movement will trouble City’s shaky backline, and he looks better value for money than Messi (3/1) and Suarez (9/2) to break the deadlock.
 
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NBA Preview: Magic (21-47) at Rockets (44-22)

Date: March 17, 2015 8:00 PM EDT

James Harden continues to put up MVP-caliber numbers, while Terrence Jones provides an inside presence in Dwight Howard's absence for the Houston Rockets.

They're still looking to break out of a 3-point shooting slump, however, and will try to take advantage of the Orlando Magic's porous perimeter defense Tuesday night in Houston.

Harden, second in the league with 26.9 points per game, has the Rockets (44-22) on the heels of Memphis and Portland for the No. 2 and No. 3 seeds in the Western Conference. After being held to 33 points on 10-of-32 shooting over back-to-back losses to Portland and Utah, he scored 34 in a 100-98 win over the Clippers on Sunday. Harden was 3 of 5 from beyond the arc versus Los Angeles after missing all eight attempts in the previous two games.

The Rockets improved to 24-4 when he scores 30 or more.

"It was very important for us, just to go out and play well," Harden said. "The last two games we kind of struggled a little bit, but we got our pop back a little bit today and made key plays."

Jones has averaged 16.5 points and 10.2 rebounds while shooting 54.8 percent over his last 11 games. He had averaged 9.4 points with 5.4 boards while limited to 12 of the team's previous 55 games due to injury. He now looks to record a fourth straight double-double for the first time in his career.

Jones' contributions have been especially crucial with Howard missing the last 22 games because of a right knee injury, though he's expected back soon.

Houston has been cold from deep, however, going 7 for 30 against the Clippers and shooting 27.5 percent over the last five games compared to 34.8 percent previously. The Rockets get a league-high 33.5 percent of their scoring from 3-pointers and attempt 33.5 per game, but are 9-10 when making fewer than 10. Patrick Beverley is 6 for 26 (23.1 percent) over his last five games, and Trevor Ariza is 10 of 39 (25.6 percent) this month.

Orlando lets opponents shoot 36.9 percent from 3-point range, ranking 28th in the league.

The Magic (21-47) have dropped eight of 10 and are giving up 44.3 percent 3-point shooting in the last nine games. Their past five opponents have made an average of 12.2.

They surrendered 18 on 35 attempts in a 123-108 loss to Cleveland on Sunday, their most allowed since March 2011.

"Tonight was not a great defensive effort. It was probably due to Cleveland and partly our effort, our execution defensively," coach James Borrego said. "But we are a defensive team, and I'll continue to say that. Our identity is on the defensive end."

Orlando has made some strides defensively since Borrego replaced Jacque Vaughn, allowing 99.5 points and forcing 16.6 turnovers per game while going 6-10. Opponents had previously averaged 102.3 points and 13.8 turnovers.

The Magic's recent numbers on the road aren't exactly encouraging, however. They're allowing 105.9 points per game and 41.5 percent 3-point shooting during a 10-game road skid.

Victor Oladipo has shot 32.0 percent in the last six away from home.

Houston had won four straight in the series prior to a 120-113 loss Jan. 14. Oladipo scored 32 points on 12-of-19 shooting while the Rockets committed 21 turnovers.

The Rockets are 14-3 at home since Dec. 31 with the only losses coming to the West's division leaders.
 
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College Basketball Future Odds

Odds to Win 2014-15 NCAA Men's Tournament (4/6/15)

School - Odds

Kentucky 1/1

Duke 13/2

Wisconsin 13/2

Villanova 8/1

Arizona 12/1

Virginia 17/1

Gonzaga 22/1

North Carolina 25/1

Iowa State 35/1

Baylor 40/1

Kansas 40/1

Notre Dame 50/1

Utah 55/1

Maryland 60/1

Michigan State 60/1

Oklahoma 60/1

SMU 60/1

Louisville 80/1

Wichita State 80/1

Northern Iowa 90/1

West Virginia 90/1

Butler 100/1

Ohio State 100/1

Texas 100/1

Field (Any Other Team) 100/1

Georgetown 175/1

LSU 175/1

Xavier 175/1

Arkansas 200/1

VCU 200/1

Indiana 250/1

Iowa 250/1

NC State 250/1

Ole Miss 250/1

Providence 250/1

St Johns 250/1

Cincinnati 300/1

Georgia 300/1

Oklahoma State 300/1

Oregon 300/1

San Diego State 300/1

UCLA 300/1

BYU 500/1

Boise State 500/1

Davidson 500/1

Dayton 500/1

Purdue 500/1

Stephen F Austin 500/1

Eastern Washington 1000/1

Valparaiso 1000/1

How To Bet College Basketball Futures
The “Odds to Win” wager in pro baseball is also commonly referred to as a future wager. Bettors must correctly select a team to win an event that takes place a later time. The money wagered will be tied up until there is an outcome and bettors will receive fixed odds when they place the wager. The future odds are normally updated on a weekly basis and wagers can be placed throughout the season.

To figure out your Win Amount, take the odds and multiply by the amount wagered. Ex. Kentucky Wildcats (5/1) to win the NCAA Men's Basketball Championship. The Wildcats are listed as a 5/1 betting choice to win the NCAA Men's Championship. If you wager $100 on Kentucky to win the NCAA and it captures the championship, then you would win $500 (5 ÷ 1 x 100). You would collect $600, which includes your win and stake ($100).
 
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DINERO TALKS
Antony Dinero

Beefs with the NCAA Tournament selection committee

Selection Sunday feels like Festivus this year. Let’s get on with the airing of grievances.

Where is Colorado State? There have been a number of people who thought they were being ranked too high in the VegasInsider power poll, but I didn’t realize the selection committee was included in that group of naysayers.

Last year’s snubbing of SMU was pretty terrible. This is worse.

Wyoming and UAB were this year’s bid thieves, winning their conference tournaments to make the field of 65. Teams were left out because of them. Colorado State shouldn’t have been one of them. The Rams were 27-6. People may point to their non-conference schedule as a reason why, but it’s not like Larry Eustachy’s team ducked anybody. Georgia State is in the field of 65. Colorado had the talent to be a Top 25 team this year, struggling when big man Josh Scott went down. UCSB was the Big West’s preseason favorite. The same goes for UTEP in Conference USA. Those dancing fools at Mercer had a good season in the SoCon.

The Rams beat all of them.

Within their own conference, they went 14-6. The Mountain West was underrated this season. Colorado State split with San Diego State and Boise State. The Cowboys beat them twice, and ultimately, that’s probably the difference between making the field of 68 and winding up in the NIT, but that’s unfair. Everyone knows they’re better than Texas. This is certainly a case of the little guy getting picked on.

J.J. Avila, Colorado State’s top player and the heart and soul of this year’s team, turned his ankle in Thursday night’s quarterfinal against Fresno State and was unavailable for Friday’s game against San Diego State. The Rams seemed like a lock, so the First Team All-Mountain West member sat out. He had scored 53 points in their two meetings with the Aztecs this season, so it might have made a difference had he played in the 56-43 loss.

Was it the final game? The 43 points that Colorado State scored against the Aztecs were a season-low. Avila didn’t play. The selection committee really messed this up.

It’s a travesty that the Rams aren’t in. it’s an injustice. The selection committee was terribly short-sighted.

SMU went on to a second-place finish in the NIT, losing to Minnesota. That doesn’t change the fact that Larry Brown’s team shouldn’t be in their second consecutive NCAA Tournament this year. Similarly, Colorado State is likely going to dominate the National Invitation Tournament and have people scoff at it. So lame.

Among other things that we can hate about the bracket is the other slight to the Mountain West. How can you send Boise State into Dayton to play the Flyers in a First Four game. If you’re going to include Dayton in the field – and they belonged, more so than Texas or UCLA but less so than Colorado State – don’t allow them to host a game against a team that has worked all season to reach the final 68.

May I suggest that this committee was terrible? How can you include Dayton as the final team in while knowing there’s a homecourt advantage against the team you placed 45th—BYU. How is Ole Miss in the field ahead of Colorado State. How was Texas 41st?

Belmont is a 15 seed? That’s terrible.

I’ve got a lot of problems with you people.
 
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Bracket Analysis
By Brian Edwards

Kentucky is the No. 1 overall seed and even-money favorite in the 2015 NCAA Tournament. The Westgate SuperBook has Wisconsin and Duke with the next-shortest odds at 6/1. The Badgers and Blue Devils are followed by Villanova (8/1), Arizona (15/1), Virginia (15/1), Gonzaga (18/1) and North Carolina (25/1).

UK enters the Tournament with a 34-0 record after winning the SEC Tournament with Sunday's lopsided win over Arkansas. The Wildcats are trying to become the first team to go undefeated since the 1976 Indiana Hoosiers coached by Bobby Knight.

John Calipari's team will face the winner of Manhattan-Hampton in Louisville. After presumably advancing to the Round of 32, the Wildcats will face the winner of Cincinnati-Purdue. The most likely Sweet 16 opponents in Cleveland would pit UK against West Va. or Maryland.

The bottom of the Midwest Region has teams like Kansas, Notre Dame, Butler and Wichita St. as potential Elite Eight foes for the 'Cats. I would think the Irish have the best shot at preventing Kentucky from returning to the Final Four. I say that because Mike Brey's team has a great point guard and multiple players that can get hot from 3-point land.

Unlike many other pundits, I don't think of Kentucky as invincible whatsoever. With that said, for any teams outside of Virginia, Wisconsin, Villanova, Duke and Arizona to knock off UK, it will have to produce a special performance.

But that's what March is all about.

KU and Wichita St. might meet in the Round of 32. This would be an intriguing matchup because the Shockers go to great lengths to talk about how the Jayhawks refuse to play them in the regular season. The Shockers face Indiana in the opening round.

The other No. 1 seeds went to Villanova, Duke and Wisconsin. Gonzaga, Virginia, Arizona and Kansas are the No. 2 seeds.

Villanova is the top seed in the East Region and looks to be the No. 1 seed most vulnerable of going out in the first weekend. The Wildcats will have to play the winner of LSU-North Carolina St., both of whom are capable of making deep runs.

Virginia is the East's No. 2 seed and will meet Belmont in Charlotte. The winner of the Cavs and Bruins gets Michigan St. or Georgia. If the Spartans and UVA advance, they'll square off in the second round in a rematch of a hotly-contested Sweet 16 game won by the Spartans at MSG in NYC last year.

The Sweet 16 in the East Region will take place at the Carrier Dome in Syracuse. If form holds, we could see Virginia against Oklahoma in a 2/3 matchup. Villanova could be looking at No. Iowa or Louisville as an opponent in the East Region semifinals. The Panthers will face Wyoming in the first round in a game that will almost certainly have the lowest total on the board.

In the South Region, top-seeded Duke will meet the winner of North Florida-Robert Morris. The Blue Devils will face the winner of San Diego St.-St. John's in Charlotte.

I think this region has the potential for upsets galore. Georgetown, the No. 4 seed, could be in trouble against Eastern Washington, the Big Sky champs who won at Indiana and have the nation's leading scorer (Tyler Harvey, 22.9 PPG).

I think 10th-seeded Davidson, which will face Iowa, has the potential to get to the Sweet 16. Gonzaga could go down to the Hawkeyes or the Wildcats in the Round of 32. With the exception of Duke, I think the winner of a 3/6 second-round game between SMU and Iowa St. has the best chance to get to Indianapolis from out of the South.

From the West Region, I feel like Wisconsin and North Carolina will coast into a Sweet 16 showdown in Los Angeles at Staples Center. I don't see Arkansas causing any problems for the Tar Heels in a potential Round of 32 matchup in Jacksonville.

One of the better first-round games is Ohio St. against VCU in Portland. The winner of this 7/10 matchup will likely face Arizona. With that said, the Wildcats draw a tough No. 15 seed in Texas Southern. The Tigers are coached by Mike Davis, who led Indiana to the finals in 2002. They won outright at Michigan St. and at Kansas St. and played a brutal non-conference slate that also included trips to Gonzaga, Florida, Baylor, SMU, Indiana, Eastern Washington, Auburn and Tennessee.

I think form will hold in the West and we'll get UNC-Wisconsin and Baylor-Arizona in the semifinals in L.A. We'll get a rematch of last year's Elite Eight game between the Badgers and the Wildcats, who lost a nail-biter to Bo Ryan's team.

The last bid went to Dayton according to the committee's official 1-68 list. The Flyers shouldn't have to play in a First Four game, but at least they get to play at home against Boise St.

BSU head coach Leon Rice should be livid to have to play a true road game. I feel like Indiana and UCLA should be playing in Dayton rather than the Flyers and the Broncos. The other game in Dayton between bubble teams will pit Ole Miss against BYU.

The winner between Boise St. and Dayton will face sixth-seeded Providence in Columbus. The Ole Miss-BYU survivor will take on Xavier in Jacksonville.

**B.E's Bonus Nuggets**

--In his Selection Show interview on CBS, the committee's chairman revealed that Temple was the first team out of the field. Wyoming stole its bid by beating San Diego St. in the MWC Tournament finals.

--St. John's won't have starting center Chris Obekpa for the NCAA Tournament unless it gets to the Final Four. The school announced Sunday that Obekpa has been suspended for two weeks due to a violation of team rules. Obekpa is fifth in the nation in blocked shots, averaging 3.2 per game. He averages 7.0 points and 5.8 rebounds per game for the Red Storm, who will face San Diego St. in Charlotte in the first round.

-- After both players missed several games with injuries, West Va. is expecting to get Gary Browne and star guard Juwan Staten back this week.

-- Wisconsin senior point guard Traevon Jackson will return to practice Monday. Jackson hasn't played since breaking his foot in a Jan. 11 loss at Rutgers. He averages 9.4 points and 2.9 assists per game.

-- Georgia's Kenny Gaines is dealing with a sprained foot that kept him out of Saturday's SEC Tournament semifinals loss to Arkansas. Gaines (11.6 PPG) is expected to play in UGA's first-round matchup against Michigan St. This is the Bulldogs' second NCAA Tournament appearance during Mark Fox's tenure.

-- BYU is dealing with several injuries going into Tuesday's First-Four matchup against Ole Miss. Skyler Halford, who averages 8.7 points and 2.3 assists per game, suffered a lower-leg nerve contusion in a loss to Gonzaga in the WCC Tournament finals. Halford has scored in double figures in 12 of the Cougars' last 15 games. According to a tweet Sunday night from BYU beat writer Jay Drew, Halford told the Salt Lake Tribune, "I am good to go. Practiced the last couple of days, felt great." Anson Winder is listed as 'questionable' after sustaining a knee injury on March 7 that forced him to miss the team's last two games. Winder is BYU's third-leading scorer with a 13.1 PPG average.

-- Valpo has lost six straight NCAA Tournament games by double-digit margins since its 1998 run to the Sweet 16. However, we'll note that the '98 team led by Bryce Drew was a No. 13 seed like the Crusaders are this year. They'll take on fourth-seeded Maryland.

-- Double-digit seeds capable of making deep runs: Buffalo, Davidson, Boise St., Dayton, Georgia and Eastern Washington.

-- Buffalo is coached by Duke legendary point guard Bobby Hurley. The Bulls played at Kentucky and at Wisconsin during the regular season. They led the 'Cats by five at intermission at Rupp Arena and had a one-point advantage over the Badgers at halftime in Madison.

--Players capable of carrying their teams to multiple upset victories: Derrick Marks (Boise St.), Larry Nance Jr. (Wyoming), Tyler Harvey (Eastern Washington), Jack Gibbs (Davidson), R.J. Hunter and Ryan Harrow (Ga. St.).

-- Coastal Carolina is a No. 16 seed again and will meet Wisconsin. Cliff Ellis's team led top-seeded Virginia by double digits in the first half of last year's Tournament and was in front of the Cavs for nearly all of the first 30 minutes.

-- Alabama fired Anthony Grant on Sunday after six seasons. Grant took the Crimson Tide to just one NCAA Tournament, losing a nail-biter to Creighton in 2012, and a pair of NITs. The Tide will host Illinois on Tuesday in the NIT.

-- Florida isn't in the postseason for the first time since 1996-1997.
 
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NCAA Tournament Opening Betting Line Report: Oddsmakers open Oregon-Oklahoma State at pick 'em
By COLIN KELLY

OK, the NCAA Tournament bracket is out, and there’s much gnashing of teeth and wringing of hands about who got seeded where, and who got left out. But let’s get to what’s really important here:

What’s the spread?

The tourney’s round-of-64 on Thursday and Friday – 16 games per day of pure basketball bliss – will have its share of blowouts, nailbiters and shockers. Covers got a trio of oddsmakers to weigh in on the games they found most challenging to set the line on: Jason Simbal, vice president of risk management for CG
Technology; John Lester, senior lines manager ; and Mike Jerome, oddsmaker.

WEST REGION

No. 4 North Carolina (-9) vs. No. 13 Harvard

“These two teams are total polar opposites,” said Simbal, whose operation runs several Las Vegas sportsbooks, including the M, the Palms, Cosmopolitan and
the Venetian. “Harvard wants to score 45 points a game and win, and Carolina wants to score 85 points a game and win.

“The Ivy League does a good job of dictating pace in NCAA Tournament games. We tossed around 7 points (to) 10 points. We had more conversation about
this game than any other game.”

No. 5 Arkansas (-7) vs. No. 12 Wofford

It looks like a mismatch, but Simbal warns against leaping too quickly.

“We have Wofford in the top 30 in all of our defensive metrics, which historically bodes quite well for tournament teams,” he said, noting that puts the Terriers in the top-10 percentile among the 300-plus NCAA Division I teams. “I wouldn’t be surprised if that number creeps toward Wofford as the week goes on.”

No. 8 Oregon vs. No. 9 Oklahoma State, pick ‘em

“The big question is what kind of defense will show up for Okie State?” Lester said. “Because we know Joseph Young and the Ducks can put up points in bunches. The Cowboys are quite bipolar, and this could get ugly if Mr. Hyde shows up.”

Jerome chimed in on this game, too.

“If there is a game that looks like a coin toss, it’s this one,” he said. “And it makes sense, as the line is a pick 'em.”

No. 7 Virginia Commonwealth vs. No. 10 Ohio State (-2.5)

“VCU is a bit overrated in our eyes, but people recognize the Rams as a giant-killer come tourney time,” Lester said. “This is a good matchup, but the Buckeyes’ D'Angelo Russell should have his way here, and the absence of VCU’s Briante Weber (torn ACL last month) cannot be underestimated.”
Jerome isn’t counting out the Rams.

“Shaka Smart has his team playing great basketball when it matters,” he said. “The Buckeyes, on the other hand, have been a bit inconsistent, yet are a slight
2.5-point favorite.

SOUTH REGION

No. 4 Georgetown (-8) vs. No. 13 Eastern Washington

This game presents about as long a road trip as possible for the Hoyas, and about as short a trip as possible for the Eagles.

“It’s in Seattle. That’s always tricky, because it’s basically a home game for Eastern Washington,” Simbal said, noting he and his oddsmaking crew prefer the straight math of numbers, and that these quasi-home games skew that formula. “There was a similar situation two years ago when UNLV played California in San Jose. Do you treat that as a home game or not? And even if you don’t treat it as a home game, the public will treat it as a home game.”

Lester had some thoughts on this game, as well.

“It feels like a very similar matchup that Georgetown had a few years ago against Ohio,” he said. “The Eagles run and chuck up a lot of 3-pointers. The squares have no clue about Eastern Washington, but the sharps certainly know who Tyler Harvey is, so we had to be careful with the line.”

No. 5 Utah (-6) vs. No. 12 Stephen F. Austin

This could be one of those seemingly annual 12-5 upsets.

“Stephen F. Austin won a game in the NCAA Tournament last year, and they’re returning everyone,” Simbal said. “The Lumberjacks were huge favorites in all their (Southland) Conference games, and covered most of them. Utah is a team that struggled late and lost a bunch of games.”

No. 8 San Diego State (-2.5) vs. No. 9 St. John’s

“The Chris Obekpa suspension complicates things a bit for St. John's. The Red Storm will have to adjust in a big way,” Lester said. “You can't ever really trust San Diego State in this tournament, but the Aztecs will have a big advantage on the boards.”

The game has no shortage of name recognition on the bench, too.

“It’s another game with some big-name coaches: San Diego State’s Steve Fisher, St. John’s Steve Lavin, and Gene Keady, an assistant with the Red Storm,” Jerome said. “Good defense vs. good offense usually equals a win by the defensive-minded team.”

No. 11 UCLA vs No. 6 Southern Methodist (-3)

“SMU’s Larry Brown faces the team he used to coach back in the 1970s,” Jerome said. “Many ‘experts’ didn’t like how UCLA got a favorable seed. SMU will likely be one of the more popular bets on Thursday. SMU opened at -2 and moved to -3 less than an hour later.”

MIDWEST REGION

No. 6 Butler vs. No. 11 Texas, pick ‘em

Many TV analysts were growling about Texas even getting into the tournament. For oddsmakers, it created some difficulty, too.

“We knew the trickiest team was going to be Texas,” Simbal said. “By all the statistics and the math, the Longhorns are a top-20 team. But they can’t win a close game if their life depended on it. Now, they’re playing Butler, which is a similar team. They both like to grind it out.”

The implication: Grind-it-out games are close games, which don’t typically suit Texas.

No. 4 Maryland (-4) vs. No. 13 Valparaiso

Simbal said the Terrapins are the antithesis of Texas, presenting an altogether different challenge.

“The math and the statistics don’t match up, but they win every close game. They are super good in close games,” he said, noting the Terps went 9-1 in games decided by 5 points or less. “We have them at -4 as a No. 4 seed against a 13 seed. That shows how confident – or unconfident – we are in them.”

No. 7 Wichita State (-5) vs. No. 10 Indiana

“Wichita State deserved better than a No. 7 seed, and this is a tough matchup,” Lester said. “Indy will want to run, run, run, while the Shockers will try to slow everything down. We'll probably be split on this game, but the Hoosiers could easily ‘upset’ the Shockers.”

Jerome agreed with Lester.

“It seems like the Shockers got slighted a bit, while Indiana seemed to get seeded a lot higher than many thought,” Jerome said.

No. 8 Cincinnati vs. No. 9 Purdue (-1)

“This is a tough draw for Purdue, because its bigs should be offset by a Cincy squad that can also bang down low,” Lester said. “It should be a very grind-it-out type of game, and it could come down to which team can hit some shots from outside.”

No. 5 West Virginia (-4) vs. Buffalo

“Coach Bobby Hurley has got the Bulls playing bullish hoops,” Jerome said. “West Virginia is only laying 4 because Juwan Staten (knee) is questionable.”

EAST REGION

No. 5 Northern Iowa (-7.5) vs. No. 12 Wyoming

The Cowboys present a dilemma because they wouldn’t be in the field if they hadn’t won the Mountain West Conference tournament, and they wouldn’t have won the tournament if Larry Nance Jr. hadn’t returned late last month after missing a handful of games with mononucleosis.

“Nance was the Player of the Year in the Mountain West, so Wyoming will have the best player on the court,” Simbal said. “But it’s very hard to handicap because of (the time Nance missed). Who knows how good they would’ve been if he had been there all year?”

Lester keyed in on this game, as well.

“I think Wyoming is a very good squad with two high-caliber players in Larry Nance Jr. and Josh Adams. The Cowboys play defense, grind, and they are healthy,” he said. “Like Wichita State, Northern Iowa got a bad draw and may be underseeded. This could very well be a 5/12 upset.”

Jerome also weighed in on the mid-major dual.

“Two schools lock horns from two of the best mid-major conferences -- the Missouri Valley and the Mountain West,” he said. “Northern Iowa has the best player on the floor in Seth Tuttle, but he could be neutralized by Nance.”

No. 4 Louisville (-9) vs. No. 13 UC Irvine

“Rick Pitino better put together a good game plan, because this is a ripe spot for an upset,” Lester said. “Louisville is overseeded, but the betting public has no clue about UC Irvine, so this is a tough line to set.”

No. 8 North Carolina State (-1) vs. No. 9 Louisiana State

“LSU really should be ashamed of the way it lost to Auburn in its last game,” Jerome said. “There’s big injury news here, with N.C. State's Anthony Barber (head). He is listed as probable to play.”
 
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Field favored to win championship over Kentucky
Stephen Campbell

Fresh off a perfect season, the Kentucky Wildcats will seek to keep that momentum heading into March Madness.

A Sportsbook has Kentucky's odds to win the tournament come at even money, with the field's chances sitting at -130.

For the majority of the campaign, the book had Kentucky favored versus every other team in college hoops. Prior to Selection Sunday, the Wildcats' odds to win were -110 and the field's -120 at the shop.
 
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NCAA South: Duke's demons open up region
By THE SPORTS XCHANGE

SOUTH REGION

Top seeds: 1) Duke, 2) Gonzaga, 3) Iowa State, 4) Georgetown


How the South is won: Given Duke's recent one-and-done flameouts the last two years, one can make a case this is the most wide-open region. Arguably the best Gonzaga team in Mark Few's tenure and a resilient Iowa State side can be considered the Blue Devils' equals at this stage, although Georgetown as a No. 4 seed seems somewhat surprising.

One thing in Duke's favor is that none of the top four seeds have really made memorable postseason runs in recent years. Gonzaga went into the tournament as a No. 1 seed two years ago and was ousted by Wichita State in the third round, a loss which looked a bit better when the Shockers reached the Final Four. Iowa State was a Sweet 16 team last year.

While Utah slumped near season's end, the Utes appear to have gotten a reasonable draw as a No. 5 seed. Guard Delon Wright is the type of versatile player who can will a team to a win any time out, and if 7-0 freshman Jakob Poeltl can avoid foul trouble, Utah will have the inside-outside combo to give anyone trouble.

UCLA's inclusion in the field is somewhat surprising, given that it had just two wins in nine tries against ranked teams this year. But the Bruins looked like an NCAA team in Friday night's Pac-12 semifinal loss to Arizona.


Upset Watch: Look out for Eastern Washington against Georgetown in the 4-13 game. Eastern is the nation's second-ranked team offensively, and as Tom Crean's Indiana team found out in non-conference play, it is capable of beating a big boy.

The 10-12 seeds are also capable of blowing up brackets. Stephen F. Austin, which plays Utah in a 12-5 game, bumped off VCU last march in a second round contest.


Get to Know: A classic one-and-done freshman, Duke's Jahlil Okakor will be a lottery pick in June. Okafor may be a below-average defender, but he can score and rebound in concert like few in the college game. His post presence makes the Blue Devils a tough cover in the half court.

It only seems like Gonzaga's Kevin Pangos has been there for 10 years. The Zags' unquestioned floor leader may be the program's best lead guard since John Stockton.

Utah's hoops renaissance owes much to 6-foot-5 senior Delon Wright, the program's first two-time first team all-conference pick in 15 years. Wright routinely stuffs the stat sheet in three categories and provides leadership.


One to see: It's hard to imagine a matchup of more contrasting styles than San Diego State and St. John's in the second. West vs. East, old school coach (Steve Fisher) against the still-hip Steve Lavin, great defensive team against a team full of good athletes. This should go down to a last shot.


Rock, Chalk: With depth at every position, Gonzaga has never been better equipped for a Final Four run than it is this March. In a potential regional final with Duke, it has plenty of bigs to battle Okafor and the versatility to play at any pace.


Numbers Inc.:

1 -- The first-ever NCAA berth for North Florida.

3 -- The number of starters UCLA saw leave for the NBA last spring with eligibility still remaining.

8 -- The number of scholarship players Duke had at one point following a spate of injuries and the dismissal of senior guard Rasheed Sulaimon.

10 -- Davidson's seed this year. When Stephen Curry led it to an Elite Eight berth in 2008, it was as a No. 10 seed.

15 -- The number of wins by 20 or more points this season for Utah, the most in Division I.
 
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Beware of No-Name Teams
By Jim Feist

It's that time of year again: Basketball games night and day, day and night and after a few hours of sleep, we wake up the next day and go through it all over again. College tournament play is one of the most enjoyable times of the year for sports fans and bettors, with a seemingly endless stream of action and excitement.

Big name schools often end up playing for the title. The champions the last ten years have been UConn (twice), Louisville, Kentucky, Duke, North Carolina (twice), Kansas and Florida (twice). But let’s pay some respect to the smaller schools who got there, with tiny Butler of the Horizon League. going back to back in 2009-10.

We’ve seen big name programs lose the title game in Ohio State, Illinois, Kansas, UCLA and Michigan. Big names, all of them, with no surprise schools like Pacific, Winthrop, Ohio or Stony Brook ever sneaking in. Large, high profile schools have big athletic budgets and enough scholarships to attract some of the top basketball talent, which is a key to their success.

However, this doesn't mean smaller, lesser-known schools can't compete with the big boys at times, especially when you look at one 40-minute game. There are countless examples for sports bettors, including last season. Butler is one example of many the last two seasons as this is the time of year for upsets and surprises.

Think for a moment: Before winning the title in 2010 you don't remember seeing Duke much in the Big Dance the previous three years ago, did you? That's because the Blue Devils got upset in the first round, losing to VCU, 79-77. One year they nipped Belmont, 71-70, then lost to West Virginia, and in 2009 Duke survived two games before Villanova blew them out, 77-54.

Don’t forget George Mason out of the Colonial Athletic Association. The Patriots made it to the Final Four by knocking off Michigan State, North Carolina and UConn. They were 5, 6 and 8 point dogs in those games. A few years ago in the first round alone, Wisconsin-Milwaukee upset Alabama 83-73, UConn squeaked by Central Florida 77-71 as a 19-point favorite, Bucknell stunned Kansas 64-63, and Vermont took Syracuse to overtime and won 60-57.

Did you forget all those surprises? With so many games in March and the big names that usually end up in the Final Four, it is easy to forget the early rounds. How about tiny Holy Cross a few years ago? The Crusaders had to face Dwyane Wade and Marquette in the tournament opener and as a 10-point dog, Holy Cross covered in a 72-68 game. Holy Cross also gave mighty Kansas, with Drew Gooden and Nick Collison, a run for their money. At first glance, some of the games look like mismatches, but a good handicapper is skilled in the art of careful analysis and patience.

Every year one or two little known teams make memorable runs. Which brings up a good point for serious sports bettors: It is not wise to take big favorites on the money-line. The payoff is poor, and successful sports wagering is as much about money management as it is picking winners. Taking a shot with a big dog who you think might be able to hang in there is much smarter than wagering $900 to win $100, for example, on a minus-900 favorite. Surprising upsets happen all the time.

Several things are happening. One is the old NFL axiom, "On any given Sunday" one team can beat another, regardless of record or talent. Sometimes the better team simply has a bad night shooting the basketball, or the big underdog can't miss. One of the most memorable upsets came in the 1985 NCAA Finals when Villanova, a 10-point 'dog, upset mighty Georgetown, 66-64. The Wildcats hit 22-of-28 field goals, a sizzling 78%. It would be tough to beat ANY underdog that shoots 78%!

Another reason is that some smaller schools happen to have NBA-caliber talent, such as current star Stephen Curry who starred at Davidson. You never know: schools like Albany, SMU and Florida Gulf Coast just might be showcasing future NBA talent this month.

Other times a small school has a great coach or a collection of talented kids who play tough defense and believe in themselves enough to upset traditional powers. You may recall a March tourney where the Detroit Titans upset UCLA 56-53 and Weber State beat mighty North Carolina 76-74 as a +14 dog. Teams are generally motivated to play in the NCAA tournament, but this isn't always the case with the NIT. Some teams that were hoping to get to the Big Dance are disappointed at being selected for lower-seeded tournies and aren't always focused for their best effort.

Sometimes there are look-ahead spots, where a high-seeded team might be looking past an opponent it might not take seriously. That's what appeared to happen in the game I mentioned earlier, Kansas against Holy Cross. Kansas needed a second half push to top the Crusaders 70-59 as a 29-point favorite. It also wouldn't have been the first time a small school upset a big-name program. Don't take big favorites on the money-line and don't simply lay the points on the more famous conference or school without doing your homework, because tourney time is loaded with surprises.
 
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Handicapping No. 5 vs. No. 12
By ASA

Since 1990, No. 5 seeds are just 59-37 straight up (61.5%) and 44-51-1 (45.8%) against the spread vs. 12-seeds.

There have been just two years since 1990 that a No. 12 seed hasn't upset a No. 5 seed.

Three No. 12 seeds won in the 2014 NCAA Tournament as Stephen F. Austin, Harvard, and North Dakota State all captured victories.

Let's take a closer look at the candidates to continue the trend this season.

West Regional - No. 12 Wofford Terriers (+7.5) vs. No. 5 Arkansas
Date: Thursday, Mar. 19
Venue: Veterans Memorial Arena
Location: Jacksonville, Florida

The Terriers notched the regular season title in the Southern Conference and locked up a Big Dance berth for the fourth time in the past six years under coach Mike Young. Prior to breezing through the Southern Conference slate they played a gauntlet of a non-conference schedule, traveling to Stanford, NC State, West Virginia, and Duke.

That’s solid experience that they can rely on prior to this week’s matchup with Arkansas. Their top four players are upperclassmen who were around when they lost to 2nd-seeded Michigan in last year’s tournament. Defensively they rank 27th in PPG allowed and 31st in opponents three-point field goal percentage – two aspects that will be challenged by the hot shooting, high-octane offense of Arkansas. The Razorbacks have dropped three of their last six games, but two of those were against No. 1 Kentucky.

South Regional - No. 12 Stephen F. Austin Lumberjacks (+6.5) vs. No. 5 Utah
Date: Thursday, Mar. 19
Venue: Moda Center
Location: Portland, Oregon

The Lumberjacks are 26-1 in their last 27 games, easily notching the Southland Conference regular season title and cruising through the conference tournament. They’ve notched their 2nd straight NCAA Tournament appearance after defeating VCU as a 12 seed last season.

Defensively this team can be a nightmare matchup. They force 16.6 turnovers per game (6th nationally) and are able to capitalize on those turnovers (19th in KenPom’s adjusted offensive efficiency). Five players average at least 8.4 PPG, including top scorers Walkup and Parker, who led the way in the upset of VCU last year. The Lumberjacks will have their hands full with 5th-seeded Utah, who enter the tournament as one of six teams that rank in the top 20 in both offensive & defensive efficiency.

Midwest Regional - No. 12 Buffalo Bulls (+4.5) vs. No. 5 West Virginia
Date: Friday, Mar. 20
Venue: Nationwide Arena
Location: Columbus, Ohio

Many people took note of the Bulls after two strong non-conference showings. First at Kentucky (led at halftime over the Wildcats) then at Wisconsin (lost by 12 in a competitive game). This Buffalo team can score fast (25th in PPG) and efficiently (49th in adjusted offensive efficiency). They don’t turn the ball over much and they rebound well, both factors will be important against West Virginia in the round of 64.

The Mountaineers thrive when they force turnovers (1st nationally forcing 19.6 TO/G) as it leads to easy buckets off takeaways. Their aggressive play leads to a lot of silly fouls (23.2 fouls per game – first in NCAA) and they struggle to score in the half-court (41.2% from the field). WVU has dropped three of its last four games while Buffalo is riding an eight-game winning streak.

East Regional - No. 12 Wyoming Cowboys (+7) vs. No. 5 Northern Iowa
Date: Friday, Mar. 20
Venue: Key Arena
Location: Seattle, Washington

The Cowboys got to the tournament the old fashioned way: notching the automatic bid by winning the Mountain West Conference Tournament. They knocked off streaking Boise State and outlasted San Diego State in back-to-back nights. Leading scorer Larry Nance Jr. missed a string of games in February, causing Wyoming’s offense to struggle for a long stretch.

Nance appears to be back at full strength (17.8 PPG & 7.0 RPG over the last 5) and it’s no coincidence that Wyoming is playing its best ball of the year. For the first game in the tournament, Wyoming gets Northern Iowa, who many believe is under-seeded after finishing 30-3 and winning the MVC Conference Tournament.
 

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