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(Random Thoughts)
The 2005 NFL season has completed six of its
17 weeks, roughly one-third of its year. Here's
some random thoughts (my therapist prefers the
phrase "thoughtful commentary!) on the season-to-date.
Who'da thunk that the New York Giants would
be the league's highest scoring team at 29.8
PPG or that the Indianapolis Colts would be
the league's stingiest team, allowing 9.5 PPG.
However, I wouldn't expect those 'numbers' to
last, as the Giants are only 12th in total offense,
while the Colts are 11th in total defense. Expect
that old term "regression to the mean"
to come into play and for these two teams to
fall back to the pack.
Al Davis made the phrase "Just win baby" popular
back in the days when the Raiders were a competitive
team. The phrase also applies to handicapping
the NFL, as teams that win SU, regularly win
ATS. The SU winners of the NFL's first 88 games
have gone 72-13-3 ATS, or 84.7 percent ATS.
Do you think that's high or low? Actually, it's
just about the norm.
Long time Las Vegas handicapper and good friend
Andy Iskoe (The Logical Approach), has done
an exhaustive 17-year study on NFL pointspreads
that covers every NFL regular season and playoff
game from 1988 through 2004 (a total of 4,223
games). I'll cut to the recap.
Favorites won and 'covered' 46.1 percent of
the time, underdogs won SU (naturally covering)
32.8 percent of the time and favorites won SU
but failed to cover 16.5 percent of the time.
Ties, pushes and pick'ems accounted for 4.5
percent of the games played. Andy's study concluded
that, eliminating the 4.5 percent of ties, pushes
and pick'ems, that in 82.7 percent of
all games, the SU winner of the game also covers
the pointspread.
How are home teams doing? Actually, pretty good.
Home teams have gone 57-31 SU and 49-36-3 ATS.
Home dogs are just 9-12 SU but 13-8 ATS. Since
home teams are 57-31, the formative years I
spent at Ohio U allowed me to conclude that
conversely, road teams must be 31-57. That's
a winning percentage of just .352 and that seemed
low, so I checked on it.
In fact, it's very low. Road teams went 111-145
in 2004, a winning percentage of .434. Visiting
teams have topped .400 in FIVE of the
last six seasons, falling below the .400-mark
in just 2003 (.387). There is a long way to
go yet in 2005, but I'll keep an eye on this.
The worst winning percentage for road teams
in any year since the 1970 merger was the 1985
season, when visiting teams went 80-144 (.357).
Here's a few notes from one of my NFL preview
articles.
The 2004 season may be best remembered as the
year Peyton Manning re-wrote the record book
with his passing exploits (he threw a record
49 TD passes while compiling a single-season
record 121.1 passer rating). However, running
the football effectively was still the key
factor when it came to winning games, both SU
and ATS.
Teams that outrushed their opponents in a game
last year finished 183-72 SU (.718) and 171-78-6
ATS (that's a winning percentage of 68.7 percent).
Teams with the most rushing attempts in a game
'covered' at a better than 70 percent rate!
There were 179 100-yard rushing games in the
2004 season. The previous single-season high
was 151 such games in 2003. Teams that featured
a 100-yard rusher went 134-45 SU and 127-49-3
ATS. That's winning percenatges of 74.9 SU and
72.2 ATS. A quick comparison shows that teams
with 300-yard pasing efforts went 36-45 SU in
2004 and a pathetic 29-50-2 ATS (36.7 percent)!
How are things going in 2005? Teams with the
most rushing yards in a game are 69-18, a winning
percentage of .793. They are 61-23-3 ATS, or
72.6 percent. Teams with the most rushing attempts
in a game are 76-10, a winning percentage of
.884. They are 66-17-3 ATS, or 79.5 percent.
Those are some pretty impressive numbers.
However, after a record 179 100-yard rushing
games in 2004, there have been just 43
through the season's first six weeks. At that
rate, there would be just 122 on the
year, a significant drop-off. That being said,
the SU and ATS records of teams with 100-yard
rushers are even better than they were last
year. Teams featuring 100-yard rushers have
gone 37-6 SU (.860) and 31-11-1 ATS (73.8 percent).
As far as the passing game goes, it seems as
if the entire league has followed Peyton Manning's
declining passing numbers. Manning passed for
4,557 yards in 2004 with 49 TD passes. Through
six games in 2005, he has 1,314 yards and nine
TD passes. At this rate he'd finish with 3,504
yards and 24 TD passes. There were 13
individual 400-yard passing games in 2004 but
the 2005 season has seen just ONE, Marc
Bulger's 442-yard effort versus the Giants in
Week 4.
There have been just 24 300-yard pasing games
through the season's first six weeks, a rate
that would keep this year's total well below
last year's 81 300-yard efforts. However, teams
are winning at a much better rate when their
QBs pass for 300 yards. They are 14-10 SU (.583)
and 12-11-1 ATS (52.2 percent). Remember, last
year's numbers were 36-45 SU (.444) and 29-50-2
ATS (36.7 percent).
Larry Ness is a documented member of The Professional
Handicappers League.
Read more of his articles and get his premium
plays here.
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