In agree here and think Daivd had Bulger much to high. I Have Bulger and Hasselbeck and will start Hass. I like playing my MNF guys but the Rams may impode against the Indy D. I just dont see how Bulger goes off agaisnt that D(Freeney may kill him)Just got the prelim Cheatsheets and Bulger is ranked number 2 overall...
I can't help but think he might be held in check. The Over/Under is a high 51, but the Colts are favored by 13.5.
I try to play by two rules...
ALWAYS start your studs.
ALWAYS trust the Vegas Odds Makers.
In this case, since they are at odds, I think the Odds Makers win. I think Bulger has a sub-par game. I think there are a number of better plays than Bulger. Bledsoe against that horendus Giants D. Collins against that soft SD D. Maybe even Delhomme against Detroit and Hasslebeck against Houston. Bledsoe and Collins have favorable Over/Unders (Around 50 points), so those two stand out...And Detroit and Houston SUCK, so Delhomme and Hasslebeck stand-out.
Personally, I've got Manning ranked as number one this week (Although they might try to run the ball a lot to keep Bulger off the field.) and then Bledsoe and Collins. Followed by Delhomme and Hasslebeck.
If you have one of those guys, especially Bledsoe and Collins, because their Over/unders are SO favorable, do you bench the "Stud" Bulger (Who has an unfavorable Over/Under)?
I think so.![]()
CBSIn agree here and think Daivd had Bulger much to high. I Have Bulger and Hasselbeck and will start Hass. I like playing my MNF guys but the Rams may impode against the Indy D. I just dont see how Bulger goes off agaisnt that D(Freeney may kill him)Just got the prelim Cheatsheets and Bulger is ranked number 2 overall...
I can't help but think he might be held in check. The Over/Under is a high 51, but the Colts are favored by 13.5.
I try to play by two rules...
ALWAYS start your studs.
ALWAYS trust the Vegas Odds Makers.
In this case, since they are at odds, I think the Odds Makers win. I think Bulger has a sub-par game. I think there are a number of better plays than Bulger. Bledsoe against that horendus Giants D. Collins against that soft SD D. Maybe even Delhomme against Detroit and Hasslebeck against Houston. Bledsoe and Collins have favorable Over/Unders (Around 50 points), so those two stand out...And Detroit and Houston SUCK, so Delhomme and Hasslebeck stand-out.
Personally, I've got Manning ranked as number one this week (Although they might try to run the ball a lot to keep Bulger off the field.) and then Bledsoe and Collins. Followed by Delhomme and Hasslebeck.
If you have one of those guys, especially Bledsoe and Collins, because their Over/unders are SO favorable, do you bench the "Stud" Bulger (Who has an unfavorable Over/Under)?
I think so.![]()
LATEST NEWS
Seattle's Matt Hasselbeck's a nice quarterback, but sit him against Houston unless your Fantasy league awards points for successful handoffs.
(Updated 10/13/2005).
FANTASY ANALYSIS
The Seahawks could put the winless Texans away early, which could spell trouble for Hasselbeck in Fantasy leagues in Week 6. Make sure your other option at the position has a better matchup.

That's an illusion, my man. People always comment on how sharp the linesmakers are when a game with a 3 point spread ends 27-24, or a game with a 7 point spread ends 21-14. When you push a game, or win/lose a game by a half point, you notice those games. But you tend to forget about the other 11 or 12 games that weekend which had a final score that landed nowhere NEAR the closing line.Correct...But!Like I posted...The Colts are favored by 13.5. Bledsoe and Collins are both in games that have Over/Unders of 50 points too, but not getting nearly as many points.The O/U for the Rams-Colts game is at 51 right now. That's very high for a NFL game. If you're going to go with the trust Vegas theory, then play Bulger. Unless you think the Colts are winning this game 41-10.
I think it will be closer to 41-10 than 26-25.
The Odds Makers are FREAKY correct. Personally, I always trust them.
I'd start Bulger. Either the Colts D is a mirage and he gets his stats, or the Colts D is very good but the Rams fall behind early and he gets his stats.
I'll be at the game and hope to see some fireworks. However, I don't see this happening.I never said the Vegas line is the prediction of what the final score will be. It's the "expected value" of the final score. As you said, it will balance the wagers on both sides. And usually they succeed in evening out the wagers on both sides so that's why they are right. So the expected value score of the Rams is 18 pts. This is much lower than the expected score of other teams like the Seahawks, etc. If we use the Hawks as an expected, their expected score is 9 pts more. As I said before, they run more, so the expected number of TDs in the air is less than 1 apart, not a full 1 TD as the difference in expected score (27 vs 18) seem to indicate.I would think this is common sense, but since it seems to be getting ignored here....Vegas doesn't set lines to accurately "predict" the scores of games. They set lines to get equal money wagered on both ends.35-21 is 56 not 51. So the expected number of points based on Vegas is 32.5-18.5 for the Colts. On the other hand, a guy like Hasselbeck has a much better line. The Seahawks are expected to win 27.5-18.5.The O/U for the Rams-Colts game is at 51 right now. That's very high for a NFL game. If you're going to go with the trust Vegas theory, then play Bulger. Unless you think the Colts are winning this game 41-10. The spread is at 13.5-14 points. So using that spread and the total, the score should be somewhere along the lines of 35-21 or something like that. There's more then enough room for Bulger to have a decent fantasy day.
27.5 for the Hawks and 18.5 for the Rams is a big difference when talking about Vegas lines.
The Seahawks might score more on the ground than the Rams. But even looking at the FBG game predictor, the Seahawks passing game will score more TDs than the Rams and throw fewer INTs.
I see all kinds of holes in the logic of this thread, even if you want to agree that the outcome of the game will be 32-18 because oddsmakers are "freaky right" (or whatever that line was).
Even if they only score 2 TDs, odds are pretty good that they will both be through the air. The Rams don't run a whole lot.
Odds are also pretty good that they will be playing from behind, pushing the focus even further toward the passing game. I'd be very surprised if Bulger didn't top 300 this week.
As mentioned earlier, although Indy's D has been pretty stout so far, they haven't played a team with a better than mediocre offense yet. If I owned their D in a league where team D's are worth enough to get good trade value, I'd be shopping them all over the place right now (or maybe after the Houston game next week). They won't be any more valuable than they are right now.
Comparing this game to the Seattle game doesn't do anything for me either. Seattle is FAR more likely to be scoring on the ground. They are also almost a lock to be up big and working the clock, meaning Hass won't need to throw the ball as much. I don't personally care if the game predictor says Sea will throw for more TDs. I don't buy it.
There are only a couple of QBs I would consider over Bulger this week: Peyton & Bledsoe (and I'd really have a hard time convincing myself on the latter).
If the line is -3, that does not mean they think the final score will be favorite team wins by 3. It means they think they will get an equal amount bet on each side so they are guaranteed to make money. It is a very good number to use as the expected number of points scored by each team because there are as many bettors who think the team will score more than X than the number of bettors who think the team will score less than X. It proves accurate very often. If you look at the results over a long period of time, ~50% of the time it's over, ~50% of the time it's under, therefore a good predictor.That's an illusion, my man. People always comment on how sharp the linesmakers are when a game with a 3 point spread ends 27-24, or a game with a 7 point spread ends 21-14. When you push a game, or win/lose a game by a half point, you notice those games. But you tend to forget about the other 11 or 12 games that weekend which had a final score that landed nowhere NEAR the closing line.Correct...But!Like I posted...The Colts are favored by 13.5. Bledsoe and Collins are both in games that have Over/Unders of 50 points too, but not getting nearly as many points.The O/U for the Rams-Colts game is at 51 right now. That's very high for a NFL game. If you're going to go with the trust Vegas theory, then play Bulger. Unless you think the Colts are winning this game 41-10.
I think it will be closer to 41-10 than 26-25.
The Odds Makers are FREAKY correct. Personally, I always trust them.
I don't know about that...I don't bet, but used to have two roomates that were addicts...And that's when I learned the Odds Makers are FREAKY correct.That's an illusion, my man. People always comment on how sharp the linesmakers are when a game with a 3 point spread ends 27-24, or a game with a 7 point spread ends 21-14. When you push a game, or win/lose a game by a half point, you notice those games. But you tend to forget about the other 11 or 12 games that weekend which had a final score that landed nowhere NEAR the closing line.Correct...But!Like I posted...The Colts are favored by 13.5. Bledsoe and Collins are both in games that have Over/Unders of 50 points too, but not getting nearly as many points.The O/U for the Rams-Colts game is at 51 right now. That's very high for a NFL game. If you're going to go with the trust Vegas theory, then play Bulger. Unless you think the Colts are winning this game 41-10.
I think it will be closer to 41-10 than 26-25.
The Odds Makers are FREAKY correct. Personally, I always trust them.
Agreed!As a matter of fact, if I was a betting man, I'd bet the under here.Even with my crystal ball is in the shop, I can see this playing out a number of ways. But if trends are what we go by, I can see a number of QBs having a better day than Bulger or Manning.
When one team is heavily favorite, taking the dog & under is called a correlated parlay. In college football, when there are enormous underdogs, those bets are not taken because the book is getting ripped due to the correlation. I think in the NFL it's fine however. If you bet on the 2 separately, both are $1100 to win $1000.Agreed!As a matter of fact, if I was a betting man, I'd bet the under here.Even with my crystal ball is in the shop, I can see this playing out a number of ways. But if trends are what we go by, I can see a number of QBs having a better day than Bulger or Manning.
And, just for fun, I'll go on the record...I now bet $1000.00 FBGs Money on the Under.
Anyone else??
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(And you Betters can tell me if I'm wrong, but if I'm confident on the Under here, I should probably be confident the Colts won't cover 13.5 points either? And if that's the case, betting the Under AND taking the Rams and the points in one of those "Double Bets" or whatever they are, that raise your chance at winning more than even money, would also be a good bet?)
And if that's the case...I'll bet the Under and Take the Rams for $1000.00 FBGs Money apeice. Now, can anyone tell me what I stand to win? I know I stand to lose up to $2200.00...
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So, by betting the parlay at $1000.00 each, I stand to win $5290.00 on the $2000.00 bet??I like that!! And that's my FBGs Money bet for the weekend...When one team is heavily favorite, taking the dog & under is called a correlated parlay. In college football, when there are enormous underdogs, those bets are not taken because the book is getting ripped due to the correlation. I think in the NFL it's fine however. If you bet on the 2 separately, both are $1100 to win $1000.Agreed!As a matter of fact, if I was a betting man, I'd bet the under here.Even with my crystal ball is in the shop, I can see this playing out a number of ways. But if trends are what we go by, I can see a number of QBs having a better day than Bulger or Manning.
And, just for fun, I'll go on the record...I now bet $1000.00 FBGs Money on the Under.
Anyone else??
![]()
(And you Betters can tell me if I'm wrong, but if I'm confident on the Under here, I should probably be confident the Colts won't cover 13.5 points either? And if that's the case, betting the Under AND taking the Rams and the points in one of those "Double Bets" or whatever they are, that raise your chance at winning more than even money, would also be a good bet?)
And if that's the case...I'll bet the Under and Take the Rams for $1000.00 FBGs Money apeice. Now, can anyone tell me what I stand to win? I know I stand to lose up to $2200.00...
![]()
If you take them in a parlay, you have $1000 to win $2645.
Yes, if it's Rams & under, you win $5290. If it's Colts & under, Colts & over, or Rams & over, you lose $2000. Good luckSo, by betting the parlay at $1000.00 each, I stand to win $5290.00 on the $2000.00 bet??I like that!! And that's my FBGs Money bet for the weekend...When one team is heavily favorite, taking the dog & under is called a correlated parlay. In college football, when there are enormous underdogs, those bets are not taken because the book is getting ripped due to the correlation. I think in the NFL it's fine however. If you bet on the 2 separately, both are $1100 to win $1000.Agreed!As a matter of fact, if I was a betting man, I'd bet the under here.Even with my crystal ball is in the shop, I can see this playing out a number of ways. But if trends are what we go by, I can see a number of QBs having a better day than Bulger or Manning.
And, just for fun, I'll go on the record...I now bet $1000.00 FBGs Money on the Under.
Anyone else??
![]()
(And you Betters can tell me if I'm wrong, but if I'm confident on the Under here, I should probably be confident the Colts won't cover 13.5 points either? And if that's the case, betting the Under AND taking the Rams and the points in one of those "Double Bets" or whatever they are, that raise your chance at winning more than even money, would also be a good bet?)
And if that's the case...I'll bet the Under and Take the Rams for $1000.00 FBGs Money apeice. Now, can anyone tell me what I stand to win? I know I stand to lose up to $2200.00...
![]()
If you take them in a parlay, you have $1000 to win $2645.
![]()
back to the question at hand...Not to pick nits, but actually it's $2200.00 I lose. But hey...It's FBGs Money!!Yes, if it's Rams & under, you win $5290. If it's Colts & under, Colts & over, or Rams & over, you lose $2000. Good luckSo, by betting the parlay at $1000.00 each, I stand to win $5290.00 on the $2000.00 bet??I like that!! And that's my FBGs Money bet for the weekend...When one team is heavily favorite, taking the dog & under is called a correlated parlay. In college football, when there are enormous underdogs, those bets are not taken because the book is getting ripped due to the correlation. I think in the NFL it's fine however. If you bet on the 2 separately, both are $1100 to win $1000.Agreed!As a matter of fact, if I was a betting man, I'd bet the under here.Even with my crystal ball is in the shop, I can see this playing out a number of ways. But if trends are what we go by, I can see a number of QBs having a better day than Bulger or Manning.
And, just for fun, I'll go on the record...I now bet $1000.00 FBGs Money on the Under.
Anyone else??
![]()
(And you Betters can tell me if I'm wrong, but if I'm confident on the Under here, I should probably be confident the Colts won't cover 13.5 points either? And if that's the case, betting the Under AND taking the Rams and the points in one of those "Double Bets" or whatever they are, that raise your chance at winning more than even money, would also be a good bet?)
And if that's the case...I'll bet the Under and Take the Rams for $1000.00 FBGs Money apeice. Now, can anyone tell me what I stand to win? I know I stand to lose up to $2200.00...
![]()
If you take them in a parlay, you have $1000 to win $2645.
![]()
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Hey. We have a new Mr. Monday night! I'd bet boatloads of $$ if I were youYes, if it's Rams & under, you win $5290. If it's Colts & under, Colts & over, or Rams & over, you lose $2000. Good luckSo, by betting the parlay at $1000.00 each, I stand to win $5290.00 on the $2000.00 bet??I like that!! And that's my FBGs Money bet for the weekend...When one team is heavily favorite, taking the dog & under is called a correlated parlay. In college football, when there are enormous underdogs, those bets are not taken because the book is getting ripped due to the correlation. I think in the NFL it's fine however. If you bet on the 2 separately, both are $1100 to win $1000.Agreed!As a matter of fact, if I was a betting man, I'd bet the under here.Even with my crystal ball is in the shop, I can see this playing out a number of ways. But if trends are what we go by, I can see a number of QBs having a better day than Bulger or Manning.
And, just for fun, I'll go on the record...I now bet $1000.00 FBGs Money on the Under.
Anyone else??
![]()
(And you Betters can tell me if I'm wrong, but if I'm confident on the Under here, I should probably be confident the Colts won't cover 13.5 points either? And if that's the case, betting the Under AND taking the Rams and the points in one of those "Double Bets" or whatever they are, that raise your chance at winning more than even money, would also be a good bet?)
And if that's the case...I'll bet the Under and Take the Rams for $1000.00 FBGs Money apeice. Now, can anyone tell me what I stand to win? I know I stand to lose up to $2200.00...
![]()
If you take them in a parlay, you have $1000 to win $2645.
![]()
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No, it's a 2-team parlay so the line is not -110 like for a single game. If you bet $2200, you can win $5819 not $5290.Not to pick nits, but actually it's $2200.00 I lose. But hey...It's FBGs Money!!Yes, if it's Rams & under, you win $5290. If it's Colts & under, Colts & over, or Rams & over, you lose $2000. Good luckSo, by betting the parlay at $1000.00 each, I stand to win $5290.00 on the $2000.00 bet??I like that!! And that's my FBGs Money bet for the weekend...When one team is heavily favorite, taking the dog & under is called a correlated parlay. In college football, when there are enormous underdogs, those bets are not taken because the book is getting ripped due to the correlation. I think in the NFL it's fine however. If you bet on the 2 separately, both are $1100 to win $1000.Agreed!As a matter of fact, if I was a betting man, I'd bet the under here.Even with my crystal ball is in the shop, I can see this playing out a number of ways. But if trends are what we go by, I can see a number of QBs having a better day than Bulger or Manning.
And, just for fun, I'll go on the record...I now bet $1000.00 FBGs Money on the Under.
Anyone else??
![]()
(And you Betters can tell me if I'm wrong, but if I'm confident on the Under here, I should probably be confident the Colts won't cover 13.5 points either? And if that's the case, betting the Under AND taking the Rams and the points in one of those "Double Bets" or whatever they are, that raise your chance at winning more than even money, would also be a good bet?)
And if that's the case...I'll bet the Under and Take the Rams for $1000.00 FBGs Money apeice. Now, can anyone tell me what I stand to win? I know I stand to lose up to $2200.00...
![]()
If you take them in a parlay, you have $1000 to win $2645.
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I only betHey. We have a new Mr. Monday night! I'd bet boatloads of $$ if I were you.
when I know I will winExample:
From 1995-2003 it was just awesome
I never said the Vegas line is the prediction of what the final score will be. It's the "expected value" of the final score. As you said, it will balance the wagers on both sides. And usually they succeed in evening out the wagers on both sides so that's why they are right. So the expected value score of the Rams is 18 pts. This is much lower than the expected score of other teams like the Seahawks, etc.
I agree with much of what you are saying here, but I still don't see the logic. Referring to the bolded sections...If the line is -3, that does not mean they think the final score will be favorite team wins by 3. It means they think they will get an equal amount bet on each side so they are guaranteed to make money.
It is a very good number to use as the expected number of points scored by each team because there are as many bettors who think the team will score more than X than the number of bettors who think the team will score less than X. It proves accurate very often. If you look at the results over a long period of time, ~50% of the time it's over, ~50% of the time it's under, therefore a good predictor.
So you don't have to pay the juice on a parlay if you lose??No, it's a 2-team parlay so the line is not -110 like for a single game. If you bet $2200, you can win $5819 not $5290.Not to pick nits, but actually it's $2200.00 I lose. But hey...It's FBGs Money!!Yes, if it's Rams & under, you win $5290. If it's Colts & under, Colts & over, or Rams & over, you lose $2000. Good luckSo, by betting the parlay at $1000.00 each, I stand to win $5290.00 on the $2000.00 bet??I like that!! And that's my FBGs Money bet for the weekend...When one team is heavily favorite, taking the dog & under is called a correlated parlay. In college football, when there are enormous underdogs, those bets are not taken because the book is getting ripped due to the correlation. I think in the NFL it's fine however. If you bet on the 2 separately, both are $1100 to win $1000.Agreed!As a matter of fact, if I was a betting man, I'd bet the under here.Even with my crystal ball is in the shop, I can see this playing out a number of ways. But if trends are what we go by, I can see a number of QBs having a better day than Bulger or Manning.
And, just for fun, I'll go on the record...I now bet $1000.00 FBGs Money on the Under.
Anyone else??
![]()
(And you Betters can tell me if I'm wrong, but if I'm confident on the Under here, I should probably be confident the Colts won't cover 13.5 points either? And if that's the case, betting the Under AND taking the Rams and the points in one of those "Double Bets" or whatever they are, that raise your chance at winning more than even money, would also be a good bet?)
And if that's the case...I'll bet the Under and Take the Rams for $1000.00 FBGs Money apeice. Now, can anyone tell me what I stand to win? I know I stand to lose up to $2200.00...
![]()
If you take them in a parlay, you have $1000 to win $2645.
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I'dd admit, I don't understand what I edited out of your response, but I use the Over/Under each week. I use it as much as anyone's Cheetsheet or Start Em' and Sit Em' list.If my one of my QBs is in a game that has an Over/Under of 34 and the other in a game that has an Over/Under of 51, all else being fairly equal, I'm jumping ALL OVER the QB in the high scoring game.Not trying to break anyone's balls about this, but I just don't think using point spreads and over/unders to chose FF starters is necessarily a wise course of action.
Well this is EXACTLY where we disagree I guess. If every week you give me totals like this for each game, I will compare your line to the Vegas line. I will take the over/under depending on what Vegas tells me to take. I guarantee you that in the long run I will beat you handily, especially with some of these lines before off of the Vegas line by more than a TD - my chance of winning those is more than 75%. Nowhere close to 50%. On the Colts game, 51 is the line that gives me about 50/50 chance. I cannot prove it mathematically since the 51 pt total line is not a prediction of the final score, as it has been said before. It's a number that will even out wagers on both sides. But it proves to be outstandingly accurate. It produces a probability of about 50% of under and over. If you give me 43 day in day out on games like this, you will be busted.I agree with much of what you are saying here, but I still don't see the logic.
Referring to the bolded sections...
The fact that they usually succeed in evening out the wagers on both sides does mean that they were right---with the line. It has nothing to do with being right about the final score, or who won the game.
If they even out wagering on the line, it is in fact the opposite of some amazing Vegas guru perfectly predicting the outcome. The only thing they perfectly predicted is what Average Wagerer Joe thought about the game.
In the last quoted section, you more or less reinforce this point, and since most football games finish within a relatively small range of total points, it's not that difficult to imagine them being over 50% and under 50%.
I would venture a guess that I could come up with 16 over/under scores (between say 33 & 51, with the majority closer to the middle of that range), and randomly apply them to the games each week (paying no attention to the actual teams playing), and at the end of large sample (like the full season) wind up pretty close to 50/50 over/under.
Obviously, taking into account the teams that are playing would give you a better chance to be close to the actual totals, but being 50/50 high & low is just the law of averages.
Just for kicks, I wrote down 14 random over/under numbers and blindly applied them to this weeks games. You'll have to trust me that I didn't peek. Here's how it worked out:
atl v no 37
bal v cle 33
buf v nyj 39
car v det 45
chi v min 40
cin v ten 45
jax v pit 49
dal v nyg 51
was v kc 46
tb v mia 44
ne v den 42.5
oak v sd 34
hou v sea 41.5
stl v ind 43
Not being a gambler, the only over/unders I know about this week are the ones mentioned in the thread above. I'll be interested to see how this list works out. Just off the top of my head, from my takes on the games, I would say that a few seem high, a few low, and a few pretty close to what I would expect.
Not trying to break anyone's balls about this, but I just don't think using point spreads and over/unders to chose FF starters is necessarily a wise course of action.
Yes you pay the juice. If there was no juice, it would be $2000 to win $6000 instead of $2000 to win $5290.$6000 = 3 times $2000. Because you have 25% chance of winning (theoretically) and 75% chance of losing. 3/1 if no juice. 2.645/1 with the juice.So you don't have to pay the juice on a parlay if you lose??![]()
I'm a bit confused...So on a regular bet, you pay the juice if you lose. But on a parlay you pay the juice if you win??Yes you pay the juice. If there was no juice, it would be $2000 to win $6000 instead of $2000 to win $5290.$6000 = 3 times $2000. Because you have 25% chance of winning (theoretically) and 75% chance of losing. 3/1 if no juice. 2.645/1 with the juice.So you don't have to pay the juice on a parlay if you lose??![]()
If you pick 0 as the total for 50% of the games and 1000 pts for 50% of the games, of course you will have 50% overs and 50% unders. That does not make your lines accurate. Every time you make a line of 0 I will bet over and win. Every time you make a line of 1000 I will be under and win. So your lines are totally inaccurate. With inaccurate lines, it does not help you at all predict whether the Rams or Hawks will score more points.Again, I'm not saying that someone couldn't take the random over/unders I just came up with and win a large percentage betting them. They are completely random and have nothing to do with the actual games and teams.
My point is that if I did this all year long, I would probably wind up about 50/50 high/low on my completely random over/unders. You were saying that since Vegas winds up 50 high/50 low over the course of time, they are "accurate." My point is that it has nothing to do with accuracy, it has to do with the law of averages.
Clemenza's point of using the over/unders to look for games that are expected to be high scoring is valid. Talent being equal, obviously you want to start players in games that are expected to be shootouts. I think just about everybody does this to some extent, though many (myself included) may not use the actual Vegas over/unders to figure out which games we expect to fit the bill.
I just think taking the over/unders, spreads & game predictions all together and expecting to come up with a definitive "who to start" is a bit of a reach considering the inputs.
You pay the juice every time you bet. It depends how you look at it. You may think you pay the juice on a regular bet only when you win - you think that way because the amount you wager is greater than the amount you lose. But in reality you pay the juice on all bets because you have a 50% chance of winning but you need a 52.4% success rate to break even. That's the juice. Another example is if you bet on an underdog straight up (not with a spread) and it's $100 to win $150, where's the juice? The juice is in the fact that if you take the favorite it's probably $170 to win $100. So the true probability of winning is like 38% but you need a 40% sucess rate on that bet to break even.I'm a bit confused...
So on a regular bet, you pay the juice if you lose. But on a parlay you pay the juice if you win??
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So Holt is dinged up, Bruce is out, Bulger has Freeney in his face all game...does he still have success?Rams | Holt Misses Practice, Expects to Play Week 6Fri, 14 Oct 2005 14:49:25 -0700St. Louis Rams WR Torry Holt (knee) missed practice Friday, Oct. 14, but expects to play in Week 6, describing his health to be "60 percent". Holt is officially listed as questionable this week.
Yes. God how the hell did this thread end up going to vegas- lets stick to the topic here. And yes he still does have success. Orlando Pace is more than enough to keep him out of the backfield often, the Rams are seemingly fine without Bruce, Holt is probably going to be back (see previous thread). What they should be scared of is the Barron-Mathis matchup. That could have Bulger seeing turf all day. My guess is that they use the TE to help contain Mathis so a hopefulSo Holt is dinged up, Bruce is out, Bulger has Freeney in his face all game...does he still have success?
You still seem to be missing my point. You said....If you pick 0 as the total for 50% of the games and 1000 pts for 50% of the games, of course you will have 50% overs and 50% unders. That does not make your lines accurate. Every time you make a line of 0 I will bet over and win. Every time you make a line of 1000 I will be under and win. So your lines are totally inaccurate. With inaccurate lines, it does not help you at all predict whether the Rams or Hawks will score more points.Again, I'm not saying that someone couldn't take the random over/unders I just came up with and win a large percentage betting them. They are completely random and have nothing to do with the actual games and teams.
My point is that if I did this all year long, I would probably wind up about 50/50 high/low on my completely random over/unders. You were saying that since Vegas winds up 50 high/50 low over the course of time, they are "accurate." My point is that it has nothing to do with accuracy, it has to do with the law of averages.
Clemenza's point of using the over/unders to look for games that are expected to be high scoring is valid. Talent being equal, obviously you want to start players in games that are expected to be shootouts. I think just about everybody does this to some extent, though many (myself included) may not use the actual Vegas over/unders to figure out which games we expect to fit the bill.
I just think taking the over/unders, spreads & game predictions all together and expecting to come up with a definitive "who to start" is a bit of a reach considering the inputs.
However, with Vegas lines, they are so accurate that there is 50% chance that it will be over, and 50% chance it will be under FOR EACH GAME (not for all of them in total like if you picked lines of 0 or 1000). When you make a line of 0, there is 100% chance of over and 0% chance of under.
So if Vegas says the Rams will score 18 and Hawks 27, it is very meaningful. It means there is a probability significantly over 50% that the Rams will score fewer points than the Hawks. That's why their line is accurate.
All that being said, the Vegas lines do not give you 100% information about whether to start Bulger or Hasselbeck for example. The Hawks run more, yardage potential may be different, etc. But Clemenza did say that all else being equal, you have to consider the Vegas lines because they are very good info. It's not the only thing you consider, but don't ignore it. If you go against it, that's fine, but make sure you have a good reason.
I said that being over 50% & under 50% doesn't make the Vegas line a good predictor. I tried to illiustrate this by showing that I could apply random (though feasable) over/unders to random games, and over the long term be 50/50 as well.If you look at the results over a long period of time, ~50% of the time it's over, ~50% of the time it's under, therefore a good predictor.
They still have a TE, right?Yes. God how the hell did this thread end up going to vegas- lets stick to the topic here. And yes he still does have success. Orlando Pace is more than enough to keep him out of the backfield often, the Rams are seemingly fine without Bruce, Holt is probably going to be back (see previous thread). What they should be scared of is the Barron-Mathis matchup. That could have Bulger seeing turf all day. My guess is that they use the TE to help contain Mathis so a hopefulSo Holt is dinged up, Bruce is out, Bulger has Freeney in his face all game...does he still have success?to all of you starting Bulger this weekend- as I am.

No that method would not be a 50/50 thing. That is the point. That method would fail 100% of the time. Just try to beat the Vegas line, in other words try to be right against the Vegas line more than 50% of the time. You can't, because it's an accurate line. If you could, you would be rich. Don't use the Vegas line if you think it's not accurate. Back to the topic, Holt is one more reason to stay away from Bulger if you have another decent option.You only reinforce that point with your 0 & 1000 comment, as that method would also be 50/50, though obviously far from a "good predictor."
Because that's where it started.Yes. God how the hell did this thread end up going to vegas-

I would not focus too much on the 60% much. When Holt says he is 60%, some other player may say he is 95%. That is just a subjective self-evaluation.OK, so Holt says he's at 60% now. That's pretty big news, I can't remember the last time a player admitted being in such a condition then played well.
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With Bruce out, Holt hurting at best and playing on the road at Indy, I'm strongly considering benching Bulger this week. My other option is Brunell at KC, who is actually reasonably tough at home, but he's playing pretty well.
Thoughts?
I think this is a reading comprehension issue. (or maybe you aren't even reading my posts at all)I am not talking about BETTING on "bad" lines. Forget about betting the individual lines. I am talking about the results of the lines being high 50% of the time and low 50% of the time.I give up. My last shot at explaining this to you.
If you make "bad" odds of 0 or 1000, I will always show that it's a bad projection. I will beat your odds of 0/1000 by always picking the right thing: over or under. Because the 0/1000 odds are not accurate. Betting against those odds is not a 50/50 thing.
No that method would not be a 50/50 thing. That is the point. That method would fail 100% of the time. Just try to beat the Vegas line, in other words try to be right against the Vegas line more than 50% of the time. You can't, because it's an accurate line. If you could, you would be rich.You only reinforce that point with your 0 & 1000 comment, as that method would also be 50/50, though obviously far from a "good predictor."
Don't use the Vegas line if you think it's not accurate.
Back to the topic, Holt is one more reason to stay away from Bulger if you have another decent option.
That is exactly the problem. Don't forget about individual lines - we are judging the accuracy of individual lines. Vegas individual lines are accurate and each of them has a 50%/50% chance of over/under. Your 0/1000 lines would be 50%/50% over/under in aggregate but you have to look at them individually, not in aggregate. Each of your lines results in 100% over or 0% over.Forget about betting the individual lines.
If each individual line has 50/50 chance of being over/under, yes they are accurate. I am not talking about 50/50 for all lines combined.Another way to explain this: each game has a distribution of possible outcomes for the total. Simplified example:Being 50/50 does not equal accuracy. That was my point.
Stuck with Bulger, we'll see how it goes. Brunell with a good game so far.OK, so Holt says he's at 60% now. That's pretty big news, I can't remember the last time a player admitted being in such a condition then played well.
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With Bruce out, Holt hurting at best and playing on the road at Indy, I'm strongly considering benching Bulger this week. My other option is Brunell at KC, who is actually reasonably tough at home, but he's playing pretty well.
Thoughts?
I'm going with Hasselbeck at home this week. Besides the other reasons already listed in this thread, Indy also have playmakers on D and turnovers are always a concern with him, but I think its safe to say he'll still post solid numbers.Updated FBG projections this week:
Bulger down to QB9: 258-1.5-1.4
Hasselbeck up to QB3: 263-1.7-0.5
He's got Bulger beat in every category according to Doods![]()
(even rushing if you ask)![]()
Did the same thing and I'm sure regretting it now.Screw you Shaun Alexander. :(I'm going with Hasselbeck at home this week. Besides the other reasons already listed in this thread, Indy also have playmakers on D and turnovers are always a concern with him, but I think its safe to say he'll still post solid numbers.Updated FBG projections this week:
Bulger down to QB9: 258-1.5-1.4
Hasselbeck up to QB3: 263-1.7-0.5
He's got Bulger beat in every category according to Doods![]()
(even rushing if you ask)![]()