By Andrew Iskoe of Logical
Approach
Several millennia ago, according to
theological scholars, an event took place that has shaped
mankind up
to this very day. It seems one of the leaders of the people
in that long ago time was summoned to the summit of a mountain
where he was miraculously handed some tablets from an unknown
source. There was no videotaping equipment in that day,
nor other technologically advanced tools, to permanently
record exactly how this all occurred and what exactly was
on those tablets but there have been rumors that there
may have been more than one set of what have been come
to be known as the Ten Commandments. Though in the minority,
some scholars do suggest that there may have been another
less publicized tablet that contained thoughts directed
at endeavors other than spiritual. Painstaking research
has been conducted over many years and we have what we
now believe to be the divine words and wisdom, preserved
through countless generations, directed towards college
football. We present the Ten Commandments for betting and
beating the College Bowls.
I. Thou shalt look to pick the straight up
winner of the game.
This may seem obvious but let's examine,
for a moment, why this statement is so important. It's
very common
for handicappers and players to become overly preoccupied
with the pointspread. But how often does the line matter?
Actually, the line only matters when the Favorite wins
the game but fails to cover the pointspread. The line
does not matter when the Favorite wins and covers and
when the Underdog wins outright. Since 1991, the team
that won the game also covered the pointspread 73.5%
of the time. That's almost 3 games in four over more
than 5,200 games. But the percentage is even higher
in Bowl games. Since the 1991 season almost 150 Bowl
games have been played and the line has come into play
barely 11% of the time. That is, in 88.7% of all Bowl
games played over the past eight Bowl seasons, the
winner of the game has also covered the pointspread.
So your first objective is to not be obsessed by the
line. Rather, look for the team you think will win
the game straight up.
When playing an Underdog you should also consider the
Money Line under certain conditions. Money Line wagers
do not involve points but rather require your team
to win the game straight up. When playing an Underdog
on the Money Line you receive odds such as +140 or
plus 2 to 1, etc. Here are some statistics to guide
you. Double digit underdogs (those getting 10 points
or more) win straight up only 25% of the time. Thus
if you can get at least 3 to 1 on your double digit
dog you are getting a fair shake. Keep in mind that
the average line for Bowl Underdogs is roughly +6 so
the number of double digit dogs is not great (about
one Bowl game in six features a double digit line).
Surprisingly Underdogs from + 7 to + 9 ? win at about
the same one in four rate and you occasionally will
get 3-1 or better in that price range. About one Bowl
in seven falls within this pointspread range. An acceptable
Money Line range appears to be from + 3 ? to + 6 ?,
or greater than a field goal but less than a touchdown.
Underdogs in this range win about one game in three
so getting at least 2-1 on these Underdogs can provide
value. About one Bowl game in three falls within this
pointspread range. Finally the small underdog, up to
+ 3. These puppies win only about two games in five
so you would need at least 3-2 (+ 150) odds to consider
these small Underdogs for a money line play. It is
extremely important to shop around for money lines
since prices can and do vary widely, much more so than
straight pointspreads.
II. Thou shalt honor the Underdog in December,
but favor the Favorite in the New Year.
A common misconception amongst many handicappers is that
you can profit over the long term simply by blindly
playing the Underdog. After all, when you play the
Underdog three things can happen and two of them are
good. The Underdog can win the game outright and obviously
cover the pointspread or the Underdog can lose the
game straight up but by less than the pointspread.
As we saw in Commandment I, this has not occurred often
during the past eight Bowl seasons. Of course the bad
thing that happen is when the Underdog loses by more
than the pointspread. Yet our research has uncovered
a very interesting phenomenon during the past eight
seasons. Underdogs have slightly outperformed Favorites
in Bowl games played in December, compiling a mark
of 54% Against the Spread (ATS). That produces only
a very small profit but still beats betting the Favorite.
Yet once the New Year is ushered in, Favorites have
been awesome. Over the past eight seasons January Favorites
have gone 41-22-1 ATS, or 65%. Usually these games
are on New Year's Day and feature the best teams from
the regular season just completed. In years past these
have been referred to as the Major Bowl games (Rose,
Orange, Sugar, Cotton and Fiesta) and the almost-major
Bowls (such as the Gator and Citrus Bowls). In most
cases the lines are very competitive and the teams
will have generally won 8 or more games during the
regular season, usually 9 or more. The teams are excited
about playing on New Year's Day (or a day or two later)
and are more likely to play true to form.
III. Thou shalt strongly consider Underdogs
seeking redemption.
Bowl games afford a team an opportunity to
share the national athletic spotlight for a few hours
during
the holiday season. Often, especially in the minor
Bowls, football fans are tuned in to only one game.
In the case of New Year's Day, the starting times of
games are staggered so even then certain Bowls will
have the spotlight to themselves for at least some
period of time.
Teams like to make the best of their time in the spotlight
- to put their best foot forward one might say. In
the case of a team that lost the previous year in a
Bowl game the opportunity to erase the bitter taste
of a Bowl defeat that has lasted a year can be a powerful
motivator for a good effort. Especially when the team
seeking to reverse a defeat is made the Underdog. Historically,
such teams have covered the spread at a 60% rate. Several
teams meet this condition in 1999. Arkansas, BYU, Mississippi
State, Oregon, Syracuse, Texas A&M and Washington
are all Underdogs that lost in a Bowl game last year.
IV. Thou shalt respect the running game.
Despite the many changes in the game of football,
the ability to control the line of scrimmage has always
had a strong correlation to success both straight up
and Against the Spread. Controlling the line of scrimmage
is best evidenced by the ability to run the ball on
offense and to stop the run on defense. Historically,
teams that outrush their opponents cover the pointspread
in excess of 60%. There are many reasons why such a
strong correlation exists, including the obvious one
that a team that has the lead is more likely to run
the ball in the end stages of a game than to prolong
the game by attempting passes.
There has been a tendency in recent years
for Bowls to be high scoring, especially the minor Bowls.
A part
of the reason why this is so is because one or both
teams lack a strong running game to be able to control
the clock and protect leads late in games. Often that's
the difference between a 9-2 record and a major Bowl
bid and a 7-4 log and a minor Bowl appearance.
One indicator that has been successful over
the long term has been simply average yards per rush
on offense.
The team having the better rushing average has covered
over 55% of the time in all Bowl games dating back
to the mid 1980s. In recent years the success rate
has faltered a bit but it is still a good indicator
of pointspread success in general, not just in Bowl
games.
How important is the rushing game in Bowls?
Consider that in the more than 140 Bowl games played
since 1991
the team gaining more rushing yards in a Bowl game
has covered at better than a 79% clip. Compare that
to the 51% ATS success rate enjoyed by the team gaining
more passing yards. The team that has the better average
yards per rush in a Bowl game (not necessarily the
same team that gains the most rushing yards) has covered
at slightly under a 75% rate. THAT's how strong the
rushing game is!
V. Thou shalt avoid the disinterested or
disappointed favorite.
Not every team that goes to a Bowl is excited about
the opportunity. Whereas in days gone by a trip to
a Bowl
game was a reward for a very successful season, times
have changed. Years ago there were many less Bowl games.
In order to be invited to a Bowl game a team pretty
much needed to win a minimum of 7 and often 8 games.
Nowadays it takes only a 6-5 record for a team to become "Bowl
eligible." Mediocrity is hardly worth rewarding
but with 23 Bowl games there are now 46 slots to fill.
40% of all Division I-A teams will be going to Bowl
games this season. Interestingly, perennial powers
Notre Dame, Ohio State, UCLA and USC are all staying
home because of disappointing seasons. Yet there are
always teams that do go Bowling that may not look upon
the experience as a reward and often give a very lackluster
effort. Such teams, especially when favored, present
outstanding opportunities to play against. A pair of
Bowls from last season serve to illustrate this point
very well.
Kansas State, undefeated for most of the season and
eyeing a BCS Bowl before losing in the Big 12 title
game to
Texas A&M was overlooked by the BCS and invited
instead to the Alamo Bowl. This was clearly a snub
after the Wildcats had played in the Fiesta and Cotton
Bowls the two previous seasons. Their lack of interest
was obviously ignored by the bettors who drove KSU
from an 11 ? point opening favorite to a 13 ? point
choice. Their opponent was Purdue, themselves perhaps
disappointed by a repeat trip to the Alamo Bowl (which
they had won the year before) accepted their fate as
an 8-4 team and one that was just getting used to being
in a Bowl (their Alamo Bowl visit the year before was
the program's first Bowl game in over a decade). Purdue
not only covered the generous double digits but won
the game outright, 37-34.
USC was another team that was not enthused
about playing in their Bowl game, even despite a two
season absence
from any Bowl. They were favored by 16 points over
TCU, a program that had been to just two Bowl games
in the past twenty years. The program was on the upswing
under new coach Dennis Franchione and was excited to
be in the Sun Bowl, even though it was being held in
their home state. Of course, TCU pulled the upset,
totally outplaying USC and winning 28-19.
Almost always these will be in the pre-January
games, but every so often a New Year's Day participant
might
be disinterested. Perhaps this Bowl season the Florida
Gators will not be enthused about playing Michigan
State in the Gator Bowl. For most of the season the
Gators were on track for a possible berth in the National
Championship game. Losses to Florida State and Alabama
(in the SEC title game) may have dampened their enthusiasm
for playing in what they may well consider 'just another
Bowl game.'
VI. Thou shalt recognize negative momentum.
Teams that go to Bowl games have generally
had pretty good seasons. It can be argued that a 6-5
season is
hardly 'pretty good' but such teams nevertheless are
needed to fill Bowl berths. But what about teams that
have ended their 'good' regular seasons on a sour note?
Or two? Or more? Consider teams that have lost two
or more consecutive games at the end of the regular
season. Our research revealed some very interesting
results that differed depending upon whether the team
with that negative momentum was made the favorite or
the underdog in their Bowl game.
It can be argued that a team that has lost
two or more games can look at its Bowl game in one of
two ways
- either it's a chance to end the season on a positive
note and make amends for a disappointing finish to
what had been a very good season (after all, even a
6-5 team was 6-3 or better before their end of season
losing streak). Or, such a team might not be interested
in continuing what had been a promising season but
which had turned sour down the stretch. Often such
a team that is made the Underdog in this situation
is a team that had overachieved during the regular
season and looks upon this Bowl game as a reward and
chance to show they really are an improved team. A
Favorite in this spot is more apt to be a team that
had higher aspirations but whose late season collapse
relegated that team to a much lesser Bowl than had
looked likely before the losing streak set in. The
results over the past couple of decades seem to support
these contentions.
Favorites entering their Bowl game off of
two or more consecutive losses are a paltry 5-14 Against
the Spread
over the past 20+ years. That's just 26% ATS. Underdogs
have fared better, although they've not excelled. Underdogs
off of two or more straight losses have gone 20-15
ATS (57%) over the past 20+ years.
For the current Bowl season note that these
Favorites have lost two or more consecutive games to
end the
regular season: Penn State, Texas and Florida and would
qualify as 'Play Againsts' under this theory. These
Underdogs have lost two or more straight games to end
the regular season: BYU, Syracuse and Mississippi.
That trio would be teams that have historically fared
well when playing 'on' in their Bowl game. With six
teams having lost two or more games prior to their
Bowl game this season has the greatest number of Bowl
teams with negative momentum in more than twenty years!
VII. Thou shalt honor the history of the
opposing coaches
There are coaches and there are Big Game coaches and
Bowl games are certainly Big Games. Penn State's Joe
Paterno and Florida State's Bobby Bowden have fashioned
outstanding Bowl game records over the years. Lou Holtz,
while at Arkansas and Notre Dame, did likewise. On
the other side of the ledger West Virginia's Don Nehlan
and former Michigan State coach Nick Saban (now at
LSU) have compiled poor Bowl records over the years.
It is important to study the records of both a team
and its head coach in recent Bowl appearances to perhaps
uncover some edges not readily visible. Some coaches
place great emphasis on winning a Bowl game once the
bid is accepted. Other coaches look at a Bowl as an
opportunity to prepare for next season, especially
if it is a minor Bowl without any national ranking
implications. Surfing the Internet during the four
to five week period following the end of the regular
season and the Bowl game can provide the insights into
how a coach is approaching their upcoming Bowl. And
don't assume that a coaching change following the end
of the regular season is a negative. Recent history
suggests otherwise. Often a new coach can use a Bowl
game, often his first game as head coach, as a motivational
and recruiting tool. What appears to be a disadvantage
- a coaching staff in partial or full disarray - is
often the opposite. Most coaches are aware, especially
in the minor Bowls which are more spread out than the
many Bowls all being played on New Year's Day, that
their Bowl game is the center of attention in the athletic
world for several hours. Every Bowl game is telecast
on cable or network television. That's a powerful recruiting
tool. But not all coaches see it that way. The preference
is to look to back a team whose coach is more interested
in winning THIS game than in using the game as an extra
practice session for next fall.
VIII. Thou shalt consider Conference strength
Conference strength seems to go in cycles. Last Bowl
season saw the Big Ten conference excel in Bowl games,
winning all five Bowl games in which conference members
participated. They covered in four of those games and
had two upset wins by Underdogs (Purdue and Wisconsin).
Perhaps that Bowl performance signaled the re-emergence
of the Big Ten as college football's best conference.
With 7 of their 11 teams headed to Bowls this season
it's hard to argue the point. Three of those teams
are Underdogs this Bowl season - Illinois, Michigan
and Michigan State. Contrast the performance of the
Big Ten to that of the Pac Ten. In last year's Bowl
season Pac Ten teams were 1-4 both straight up and
Against the Spread, including three straight up losses
as Favorites (Oregon, UCLA and USC). Perhaps the conference's
dismal Bowl showing was a foreshadowing of the significant
decline in the Pac Ten's fortunes during the 1999 regular
season in which the conference was abysmal. Amongst
the lowlights in 1999 included several losses by Pac
Ten teams to members of the WAC, Mountain West and
Big West conferences. Pay attention to conference results
in the early Bowl games as often they are accurate
barometers of how the better teams will do in later
Bowls. Also, make a note of strong or weak performances
by a conference during the Bowls. Those results might
give you an added edge next season when interconference
play takes place in September.
IX. Thou shalt review games against common
opponents
It's quite common for both teams in a given
Bowl to have faced one or more foes during the regular
season. By
examining those games against a common foe, or foes,
conclusions can be drawn as to whether or not the right
team is favored. More than just the final score should
be compared. Look closely at the rushing and passing
statistics to see if one team struggled while the other
team succeeded in the same aspect of the game against
the same opponent. In the very first Bowl game, for
example, the Las Vegas Bowl, both Utah and Fresno State
faced Colorado State this season. Fresno State won
at home 44-13 while Utah lost on the road 31-24. Fresno
State managed just 11 first downs against CSU and was
outgained by 39 yards but committed 5 turnovers to
just 1 by CSU. Utah outgained Colorado State by over
100 yards in a game in which neither team lost a turnover.
Fresno State was successful in running the ball against
Colorado State. Utah was not. The offshore line has
Utah favored by 6 ? points. Perhaps that is a bit too
many based upon their respective performances against
their one common foe.
X. Thou shalt consider experience and other
intangible factors
Experience is a positive factor when handicapping
the Bowls for many of the reasons previously discussed.
Especially having an edge in experience over your opponent.
Historically, Underdogs with more recent Bowl experience
than their favored opponents have cashed at better
than 60%. Experience is often related to the current
strength of a program. Additionally, experienced teams
are better able to handle to off-the-field activities
that surround Bowl games and are more likely to be
able to 'get down to business' once the practice sessions
begin and the game gets underway.
That's what makes this year's Sugar Bowl,
the game for the mythical National Championship, so intriguing
from
a handicapping perspective. Virginia Tech has the edge
in most of the key stats and has performed significantly
better against the three foes both the Hokies and Florida
State have faced - Clemson, Virginia and Miami. If
Bowls were decided simply on the basis of stats then
a strong argument can be made that Virginia Tech should
be the Favorite. But the experience factor is clearly
on the side of Florida State. The Seminoles have already
won a National Championship this decade and lost to
Tennessee in last year's National Championship game.
Florida State is making their 18th consecutive Bowl
appearance. They've won 14 of those games and tied
another. They are 10-6-1 ATS in those games. But Florida
State's two Bowl losses have come in the past three
seasons. Virginia Tech has built a solid program during
the 1990s but will be starting a freshman QB, Michael
Vick. They are making their seventh straight Bowl appearance
and have had mixed results when stepping up in class
as they are here.
We've covered quite a bit of ground in deciphering
these Commandments and there will be games in which there
will be conflicts. There is still no hard and fast
rule that covers sound judgement but if you pay attention
to these Commandments, and heed their advice and warnings,
you should have a profitable Bowl season.
Perhaps by reviewing these Commandments very
carefully you will be on the right side of this year's
National
Championship game. Hopefully that game will cap a very
successful Bowl season for you. At the very least you
will be armed with some facts and concepts that should
serve you well into the next millennium. For now, best
wishes for a Happy Holiday season and a prosperous
and enjoyable Bowl season. Let the Bowls begin!
Source: www.thelogicalapproach.com