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Big Al's Daily Angle: NCAAF, MLB, CFL and EPL Previews and Odds - 09/28/2024

by Big Al Staff

Saturday, Sep 28, 2024

The Saturday sports card features NCAAF, MLB, CFL, and EPL action.Week 4 in NCAAF college football continues with 50 games between FBS opponents. Thirteen of these NCAAF games kick off in the opening window between noon ET and 3:00 p.m. ET, with three games starting on major national television at noon ET. Michigan hosts Minnesota on Fox as a 10.5-point favorite, with the total set at 34.5 (all odds from DraftKings unless indicated otherwise). Mississippi plays at home against Kentucky on ABC as a 16-point favorite with an over/under of 52. Kansas State is home against Oklahoma State on ESPN as a 5-point favorite with a total of 57.5. Twenty NCAAF games between FBS opponents start in the 3:30 p.m. ET to 6:00 p.m. ET window. Four college football games on major national television at 3:30 p.m. ET. Texas A&M hosts Arkansas on ESPN as a 5.5-point favorite with an over/under of 51. USC plays at home against Wisconsin on CBS as a 14-point favorite with a total of 50. Auburn is home against Oklahoma on ABC as a 1-point favorite with a total of 44. Central Florida hosts Colorado on Fox as a 14.5-point favorite with an over/under of 62.Seventeen NCAAF games between FBS opponents begin at 7:00 p.m. ET or later to complete the Saturday football card. Clemson plays at home against Stanford on ESPN as a 22.5-point favorite with a total of 57. Two more NCAAF games on national television begin at 7:30 p.m. ET. Georgia travels to Alabama on ABC as a 1-point road favorite with an over/under of 49.5. Penn State is home against Illinois on NBC as an 18-point favorite with a total of 47.5. Utah hosts Arizona on ESPN at 10:15 p.m. ET as a 9-point favorite with an over/under of 47. Oregon plays at UCLA on Fox at 11:00 p.m. ET as a 25.5-point road favorite with a total of 55. Major League Baseball has 15 games on its schedule. The New York Yankees play at home against the Pittsburgh Pirates at 1:05 p.m. ET as a -125 money-line favorite with an over/under of 7.5. The Detroit Tigers are home against the Chicago White Sox at 1:10 p.m. ET. The Chicago Cubs host the Cincinnati Reds at 2:20 p.m. ET as a -130 money-line favorite with a total of 6.5. The Toronto Blue Jays play at home against the Minnesota Twins at 3:07 p.m. ET as a -166 money-line favorite with an over/under of 8.5. Two MLB games throw out the first pitch at 4:05 p.m. ET. The San Francisco Giants are home against the St. Louis Cardinals as a -170 money-line favorite with a total of 7. The Philadelphia Phillies are in Washington to play the Nationals as a -218 money-line road favorite with an over/under of 7.5. The Boston Red Sox host the Tampa Bay Rays at 4:10 p.m. ET as a -125 money-line favorite with a total of 7.5. The Cleveland Guardians play at home against the Houston Astros at 6:10 p.m. ET as a -118 money-line favorite with an over/under of 8. Two more MLB games start at 7:15 p.m. ET. The Minnesota Twins are home against the Baltimore Orioles. The Milwaukee Brewers host the New York Mets as a -120 money-line favorite with a total of 8. The Atlanta Braves play at home against the Kansas City Royals at 7:20 p.m. ET as a -148 money-line favorite with an over/under of 7.5. Two MLB games begin at 8:10 p.m. ET. The Arizona Diamondbacks are home against the San Diego Padres. The Los Angeles Dodgers visit Colorado to play the Rockies as a -278 money-line road favorite with a total of 11. The Texas Rangers play in Los Angeles against the Angels at 9:38 p.m. ET as a -148 money-line road favorite with an over/under of 8.5. The Seattle Mariners are home against the Oakland A’s at 9:40 p.m. ET as a -162 money-line favorite with a total of 7.Week 16 in the Canadian Football League concludes with two games. The Saskatchewan Roughriders host the Ottawa Redblacks at 3:00 p.m. ET as a 3.5-point favorite with an over/under of 51. The Montreal Alouettes are in Toronto to play the Argonauts at 7:00 p.m. ET as a 1.5-point road favorite with a total of 52. Matchweek 6 in the English Premier League begins with seven matches. Manchester travels to Newcastle United on the USA Network at 7:30 a.m. ET as a -0.5 goal-line road favorite with an over/under of 3.5. Five more EPL matches start at 10:00 a.m. ET. Arsenal play at home against Leicester City as a -1.5 goal-line favorite with a total of 2.5. Brentford is home against  West Ham United on the USA Network as a -0.5 goal-line favorite with an over/under of 2.5. Nottingham Forest hosts Fulham as a -0.5 goal-line favorite with a total of 2.5. Chelsea plays at home against Brighton and Hove Albion as a -0.5 goal-line favorite with an over/under of 3.5. Everton is home against Crystal Palace as a -0.5 goal-line favorite with a total of 2.5. Liverpool plays at Wolverhampton on the USA Network at 12:30 p.m. ET as a -1.5 goal-line road favorite with an over/under of 3.5. 

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5 NHL Future Bets to Make Before the Season Begins:

by William Burns

Friday, Sep 27, 2024

With the NHL season less than a couple of weeks away now, fans are getting very excited. That being said, it's time to start looking at "Future Bets" to make for the course of this season. Here are five NHL Future Bets to make prior to the beginning of the 2024-25 campaign. *All Odds via. DraftKings Sportsbook.---------------- 1.) Sergei Bobrovsky OVER 32.5 Wins (-115) Nicknamed "Bob," Florida's net-minder is one of the best goaltenders in the National Hockey League. Coming off a year with 36 saves, Bobrovsky is back as the top option in net for the Panthers. He'll be expected to play at least 50 games again this season (most likely closer to 60 or more,) and I believe that he can get to this number without much trouble. Florida are once again cup contenders after winning it all last year. They've got a lot of their team back from last season as well which should help tremendously. Although many teams will want to beat Florida this year considering that they are the defending champs, I expect Bob to reach 33+ wins for the sixth time in his career in the 2024-25 season. 2.) Cale Makar to Win the Norris Trophy (+200) Although there are some other very strong defensemen in this league like Adam Fox, Quinn Hughes, Miro Heiskanen, Evan Bouchard & even Roman Josi who could win this award, Cale Maker stands alone at the top in my opinion. As one of the quickest skaters in all of hockey, he's able to use his speed to help him create for himself and score goals, as well as create for other players around the net. Makar is coming off a solid campaign where he had 21 goals and 69 assists in 77 games (90 points.) This year, he'll look to be even better. Playing on a team with Nathan MacKinnon should help him as well as the two work tremendously off each other. Last year's winner Quinn Hughes probably has everyone's eyes on him again. But, he played every single game last year and that helped him very much. Look for Makar to improve and get the second Norris Trophy of his career this season. 3.) Columbus Blue Jackets UNDER 67.5 Points (-115)  After another disappointing season last year, the Blue Jackets are in full rebuild mode now. They traded Patrick Laine away this offseason and lost Johnny Gaudreau in a tragic incident that nobody could have predicted. Having said that, they don't really have much left for this year. San Jose had just 47 points last season and were dead last in the NHL overall standings. While the Blue Jackets weren't that bad (66 points,) they still went "under" this year's expected total. I expect Columbus to be closer to the Sharks total from last year here this season. They really don't have much left and are a very young team compared to most in the league. Look for another down campaign for Columbus.   4.) Dallas Stars to Win the Western Conference (+550) While the Dallas Stars failed to beat the Edmonton Oilers in the Western Conference Finals last season, I expect them to be back there and ready to win it this season. Last year, they still had a very young team that didn't have much postseason experience. They say you've got to experience it, before you win it. Well, Dallas has now done that. The Stars still have a stacked roster and their goaltenders are back and ready to go this season. I say goaltenders because the Stars picked up Casey DeSmith this offseason to backup young star Jake Oettinger. That should be a massive help if injuries happen or even fatigue throughout the season. Dallas is once again one of the favorites to be in contention for the cup as well as the President's Trophy. There's plenty of value here on playing them to win the WCF this season.  5.) Vegas Golden Knights to Make the Playoffs (-300)  Yes, I know this is quite expensive. However, you're still going to want to play on this one. The Golden Knights are back stronger than ever this season. They've got a healthy Adin Hill back who's been awesome ever since coming to the NHL. In fact, he owns a career 2.68 GAA which includes his first couple of seasons with the Coyotes & Sharks. The Golden Knight have been competitive every season they've been a team in the National Hockey League and have made the playoffs in six out of seven years so far with two Stanley Cup appearances. Considering I've got some heavy "underdog" selections in this list, consider laying the juice on the Golden Knights to make the playoffs.----------------While I'm expecting to have a massive hockey season this year, it's never too early to jump on board and grab a season long subscription. Good luck this season!

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Big Al's Daily Angle: NCAAF, MLB and CFL Previews and Odds - 09/27/2024

by Big Al Staff

Friday, Sep 27, 2024

The Friday sports card features NCAAF, MLB, and CFL action. Week 4 in NCAAF college football continues with two games between FBS opponents. Miami (FL) hosts Virginia Tech on ESPN at 7:30 p.m. ET. The Hurricanes are unbeaten in their first four games after their 50-15 victory at South Florida as a 16.5-point favorite last Saturday. The Hokies had won two games in a row before a 26-23 upset loss at home to Rutgers as a 3-point favorite on Saturday. Miami (FL) is a 17.5-point favorite, with the total set at 54 (all odds from DraftKings unless indicated otherwise). Rutgers plays at home against Washington on Fox at 8 p.m. ET. The Scarlet Knights have won their first three games of the season after their upset victory against Virginia Tech last week. The Huskies raised their record to 3-1 after a 24-5 win at home against Northwestern as a 12-point favorite on Saturday. Rutgers is a 1.5-point favorite with an over/under of 44.5.Major League Baseball has 15 games on its schedule. The Chicago Cubs are home against the Cincinnati Reds at 2:20 p.m. ET. The Detroit Tigers host the Chicago White Sox at 6:40 p.m. ET. The Philadelphia Phillies travel to Washington to play the Nationals at 6:45 p.m. ET as a -185 money-line road favorite with a total of 8.5. The New York Yankees play at home against the Pittsburgh Pirates at 7:05 p.m. ET as a -185 money-line favorite at BetMGM with an over/under of 8. The Toronto Blue Jays are home against the Miami Marlins at 7:07 p.m. ET as a -192 money-line favorite with a total of 8. Two more MLB games throw out the first pitch at 7:07 p.m. ET. The Boston Red Sox host the Tampa Bay Rays. The Cleveland Guardians play at home against the Houston Astros as a -125 money-line favorite with an over/under of 8. The Atlanta Braves are home against the Kansas City Royals at 7:20 p.m. ET as a -205 money-line favorite with a total of 7.5. Three MLB games start at 8:10 p.m. ET. The Minnesota Twins host the Baltimore Orioles as a -175 money-line favorite with an over/under of 8.5. The New Mets travel to Milwaukee to play the Brewers as a -125 money-line road favorite with a total of 7.5. The Los Angeles Dodgers play in Colorado against the Rockies. The Texas Rangers are in Los Angeles to play the Angels at 9:38 p.m. ET as a -166 money-line road favorite with an over/under of 7.5. The Arizona Diamondbacks play at home against the San Diego Padres at 9:40 p.m. ET as a -130 money-line favorite with a total of 9. The Seattle Mariners are at home against the Oakland A’s at 10:10 p.m. ET. The San Francisco Giants host the St. Louis Cardinals at 10:15 p.m. ET as a -125 money-line favorite with an over/under of 7.5. Week 17 in the Canadian Football League kicks off with two games. The Winnipeg Blue Bombers are home against the Edmonton Elks on the CBS Sports Network at 8:00 p.m. ET as a 5-point favorite with a total of 49.5. The British Columbia Lions host the Hamilton Tiger-Cats at 10:30 p.m. ET as a 7-point favorite with an over/under of 53.5.   

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NFL 2024-25 Preview, Part Two -- 16 Questions and Thoughts for 16 AFC Teams

by Hollywood Sports

Thursday, Sep 26, 2024

For the 14th straight summer, I invested time researching each NFL team to serve as the foundation for my handicapping in the fall and winter. What initially began as basic notetaking on some fundamental details for each team has become an arduous and detailed process for each team that derives from the reading and studying of multiple sources. Each NFL team now takes about two hours of preparation time as I add sources to my foundational work. To help document this work while crystallizing my thoughts for each team, I am providing a summary of each team highlighted by a critical question that will go a long way in their success or failure. Here are my NFC teams (and I will add more of the writeups as the weeks move on).BALTIMORE RAVENS: The philosophical change on offense under new offensive coordinator Todd Monken was (mostly) wildly successful. While the Ravens led the NFL in run/pass ratio, Monken’s aggressive and creative play-calling opened up their passing attack with quarterback Lamar Jackson setting career highs by completing 67.2% of his passes for 3678 passing yards. The Baltimore offense ranked third in Expected Points Added (EPA) per rush attempt and sixth in EPA per dropback. They were also seventh with 132 Explosive Plays. But after a dominant 13-4 regular season where they outscored their opponents by +12.1 Points-Per-Game and then blowing out Houston by a 34-10 score in the AFC Divisional playoff round, the struggles in the playoffs reared its ugly head again for Jackson. Despite hosting the AFC Championship Game and holding Patrick Mahomes scoreless in the second half, Baltimore still suffered a 17-10 loss to Kansas City. What is there to take from that disappointment? On the one hand, perhaps there would have been a different outcome if Zay Flowers did not get the football spiked out of his hands as he was approaching the goal line. Later, Jackson threw an ill-advised pass into the endzone that was picked off from the triple coverage. On the other hand, why was it that the Ravens only handed the ball off to a running back eight times in that game despite a good offensive line that helped them lead the league in rushing? Chiefs defensive coordinator Steve Spagnuolo took away the run and dared Baltimore to win the game behind Jackson’s arm — and they couldn’t do it. Again. Jackson has a 58-19 record as a starter but is just 2-4 in the postseason. And then there were the losses in the offseason. Three starters are gone on the offensive line — and none of them were 30-year-old left tackle Ronnie Stanley who is regressing quickly from his 2019 All-Pro season after battling injuries for years. The defense returns nine starters from a group that led the league by holding their opponents to 16.5 PPG — but that unit will miss linebacker Patrick Queen who signed with their arch-rival Pittsburgh. The bigger concern on that side of the brain drain from the coaching staff with whiz-kid defensive coordinator Matt Macdonald taking the head coaching job in Seattle along with assistant coaches Anthony Walker and Dennard Wilson getting promoted to coordinator jobs at Miami and Tennessee. Former Baltimore Pro Bowler and linebacker coach Zachary Orr takes over defense — but the 32-year-old has never called plays. This defense was highly dependent on Macdonald’s schemes last year. They ranked seventh in disguised coverage schemes out of their base two-high safety shell — and despite relying on four or fewer rushers nearly 80% of the time, MacDonald’s disguised pass rush plays generated a league-leading 60 sacks. General manager signed the 30-year-old Derrick Henry to a two-year deal — but he is coming off a career-low 4.2 Yards-Per-Carry and has plenty of tread on the tires. Perhaps the second half mistakes against the Chiefs were just part of the journey this franchise needs to take under Jackson before climbing the mountain. But it sure seems like a missed opportunity, in hindsight. BUFFALO BILLS: The conventional wisdom is that the Bills began running the ball more when Ken Dorsey was fired and replaced by Joe Brady as offensive coordinator on November 14th — but I witnessed the seeds of this transformation earlier in the second half of their game against the New York Giants on Sunday Night Football after going into halftime trailing by a 6-0 score. Buffalo patiently leaned on their running game to grind out a 14-9 victory in what I saw as a foreshadowing of what this team will become moving forward. I can only imagine the verbal lashing head coach Sean McDermott unleashed on Dorsey at halftime of that game. Dorsey was fired about a month later. Wide receivers Stefon Diggs and Gabriel Davis are now gone — but I am encouraged by these moves. Sure, these changes can be evaluated as “addition via subtraction.” Diggs was inefficient and a diva wanting the ball — and Allen froze him out in the second half of the season. Davis perpetually underachieved. As someone who does not think highly of the Establish the Run Mockery Crew, I applaud McDermott’s new stubbornness to lean on his ground game. The complaint about his defense is that they underachieve in the postseason — so fewer snaps during the regular season could have this unit fresher for playoff football. Relying less on quarterback Josh Allen’s arm may reduce his league-leading 47 interceptions in the last three seasons. I think a passing attack that relies on free agent wideout Curtis Samuel, rookie Keon Coleman, slot receiver Khalil Shakir, the two-headed monster at tight end with Dalton Kinkaid and Dawson Knox (and 12 personnel), and James Cook catching balls out of the backfield create some intriguing set of options for the passing attack in the post-Diggs world. I do worry about the deep ball threat. And I worry about a defense that is replacing their All-Pro safety tandem of Jordan Poyer and Micah Hyde along with linebacker Leonard Floyd who had 10.5 sacks last year. But, I like the shift in direction of this team as it better synchs with McDermott’s defensive tendencies. Buffalo faces a tough schedule, but I like the philosophical changes. CINCINNATI BENGALS: At first glance, I want to consider the Bengals on the short list of teams to overtake Kansas City to win the Super Bowl. Quarterback Joe Burrow was slowed by a calf injury suffered early in last year’s training camp that helps explain Cincinnati’s 1-3 start where they generated only 12.3 Points-Per-Game. Burrow only completed 576% of his passes for 728 yards during that stretch. But after recovering, he completed 72.5% of his passes with 13 touchdown passes and just four interceptions in his next seven games before suffering his season-ending wrist injury. I remain concerned about an inconsistent offensive line with many criticizing the lack of fundamentals taught by offensive line coach Frank Pollack. And while running back Joe Mixon was probably past his prime, do the Bengals have enough talent at that position with free agent signee Zack Moss and second-year pro Chase Brown who only had 44 carries last season? Then there is the defense that ranked 31st in the league by allowing 374.6 Yards-Per-Game. In hindsight, losing safeties Jessie Bates III and Vonn Bell took away too much leadership (and play-calling) for an inexperienced defensive backfield that was starting rookies or second-year players by the end of the season. Covering for their mistakes could explain the down seasons for linebackers Logan Wilson and Germaine Pratt. After committing only 76 missed tackles in 2022-23, the Bengals missed 124 tackles last year, the second-highest jump in the NFL. Cincinnati has spent eight of their last ten draft picks in the first three rounds on the defensive side of the ball — so perhaps a growth spurt is coming from this investment in talent. Defensive coordinator Lou Anarumo is as good as it gets. They brought back Bell in free agency while adding former Baltimore free safety Geno Stone to fortify the group with veterans. And while the Bengals faced 11 of 17 teams that ranked in the top 12 in the Football Outsiders DVOA rankings, they still got outscored by 1.1 PPG and outgained by -55.7 net YPG. Can they count on a +10 net turnover margin again? Will team cohesion take a hit with both wide receiver Tee Higgins and defensive end Trey Hendrickson wanting new deals? If the young defensive players take the next step, then Cincinnati can certainly compete for a Super Bowl — assuming Burrow fully recovers. But the seeds are certainly in place for why this team once again sputters. CLEVELAND BROWNS: The good news is that the Browns made the playoffs for just the fourth time since 1999. Despite ranking fourth in the NFL in adjusted games lost to injury and using five different players at quarterback, Cleveland discovered lightning in a bottle when they signed Joe Flacco off the street in late November and he would then lead them to four straight victories in December to win make the playoffs. The defense led the league by giving up just 270.2 total Yards-Per-Game — and they led the NFL in Expected Points per Play Allowed. But everything fell apart in the AFC Wildcard round against Houston when Flacco threw a pair of pick-sixes and the Browns’ aggressive defense got burned over and over again from big plays in a 45-14 loss. That dream is over — and they now return to the nightmare which is Deshaun Watson and the $230 million contract with three years left on the deal. Watson only played in six games before suffering a season-ending shoulder injury that required surgery in late November. The Browns went 5-1 in his six starts — but he only generated 186 passing Yards-Per-Game. He has been available in only 12 of the 35 games Cleveland has played since his NFL suspension for being a sex offender ended. But because the organization is pot-committed to his contract due to the salary cap hit they would endure by cutting him now, he will be their starting quarterback once again this season as they did not attempt to resign Flacco in the offseason. I wrote last year that there was a significant concern he lost his X-factor which was his elite speed. There are also the nagging concerns that he made his living off taking advantage of the lesser teams in the NFL. In his 34 career starts against non-playoff teams, he has a 24-10 record. But in his 25 career starts against teams who would make the playoffs, he has just a 7-18 record. Will Watson work harder this year? Can he overcome the immense off-the-field distractions and the tremendous pressure he is under to validate the Browns' decision to pay him so much money? And even if he can answer both those questions, has his time away from football simply led to the deterioration of the skills that made him so special? Now with every underwhelming performance comes more and more people inside the building and across the fanbase who treat him like the one who blew wind in church. I almost feel sorry for him — until I remember that he is a sex offender who signed a $230 million contract in guaranteed money. While inflation has seen QB contracts rise since he inked his deal, only Joe Burrow has signed a contract with over $200 million in guaranteed money. Maybe this year will be different, but the external pressure on Watson is only getting worse. Fresh off winning his second Coach of the Year award in his tenure with Cleveland, head coach Kevin Stefanski fired offensive coordinator Alex Van Pelt and brought in Ken Dorsey who was last seen getting fired by the Buffalo Bills before they went on their late-season run. In theory, Dorsey brings experience with mobile quarterbacks given his previous time with Cam Newton and Josh Allen. Even if Watson is still as fast as those guys, there were plenty of question marks regarding Dorsey’s play-calling. The defense should still remain very good given their outstanding pass defense that led the league by allowing only 164.7 passing YPG. With cornerbacks Denzel Ward, Greg Newsome II, and Martin Emerson, Jr., defensive coordinator Jim Schwartz can rely on man-to-man pass coverage and send blitzes to help defensive ends Myles Garrett and Za-Darius Smith rush the quarterback. But Schwartz's aggressive schemes continually got gashed by misdirection and trick plays that used the aggressiveness against themselves — and he failed to adapt to the offensive game plan the Texans cooked up in the postseason. The Browns had a 6-2 in games decided by four points or less. It is hard to expect that level of success in winning close games this year as it is the defense will be quite that stout. All this regression — and they remain dependent on Watson as the answer at quarterback. It’s not difficult to see how things fall apart. DENVER BRONCOS: If head coach Sean Payton shares only one thing in common with former quarterback Russell Wilson, it’s this: they both saw a mark in Broncos CEO and owner Greg Penner. To be fair, maybe all three of these multimillionaires share the same affinity since Penner married into the WalMart family and is now the chairman of the company. All that Walmart money is now paying Wilson $85 million for the next two years to not wear the Denver colors in a decision made by Payton who is getting paid $18 million per year. What better way to get close to completing that five-year contract than by making the difficult (and convenient) decision that the entire edifice must be torn down? It would be foolish to look too much into the team’s 7-4 finish that resulted in a respectable 8-9 record last season. Four of their wins were by three points or fewer (and eight combined points) with a midseason five-game winning streak fueled by forcing 16 turnovers). The Broncos led the NFL with 15 fumble recoveries which is some turnover good fortune reminiscent of Payton’s Super Bowl run with New Orleans in 2010. That level of turnover success — nor a trip back to the Super Bowl — occurred again for Payton in the Big Easy. Denver got outscored by -3.3 Points-Per-Game and outgained by -71.net Yards-Per-Game. There is a fundamental talent problem for this team. When eating $55 million in dead cap money this season from the Wilson contract, the immediate results were that All-Pro safety Justin Simmons along with linebacker Josey Jewell and center Lloyd Cushenberry were lost in free agency. Payton and fourth-year general manager George Paton tried to fill holes with retreads in the free agency market including several of the players on the Saints who played for Payton in his final waning years. But Payton inherited a roster last season that only had four remaining players drafted in Day One of Day Two from 2018-2020 — and only wide receiver Marvin Mims, Jr. made any sort of impact from the rookie class last season. The hope is that Payton found his next Drew Brees in rookie quarterback Bo Nix, so no pressure on anybody not making $18 mill a year. Nix is praised for football lQ and the operation of a rhythm-and-timing offense with the Ducks that relied on his great accuracy. That may be another way of saying he lacks a big arm (and neither did Brees when compared to Dan Marino). But 152 of Nix’s passes last year were at or behind the line of scrimmage and another 128 pass attempts were no more than five air yards. That kinda sounds like the guy last year but whose strong-armed moon shots to Courtland Sutton could make the final raw numbers look better by the end of the game. After the humiliating 70-20 loss to Miami when they surrendered 726 yards of offense, Denver did play better on defense. Benching some aging veterans helped. But Payton game-managed the rest of the way with the offense burning time off the clock with his old Taysom Hill playbook. All those defensive takeaways made chicken salad out of you-know-what — and that was with Simmons and Jewell! Perhaps with Payton the clear alpha dog now, his impact on the culture continues to pull out close games with a roster getting closer and closer to his vision. But he needs Nix to make an immediate positive impact given the rest of the roster. HOUSTON TEXANS: I found it hard to be optimistic about the Texans going into last year after a three-year run where they had an 11-38-1 record. But rookie head coach DeMeco Ryans had an immediate impact on this team — and C.J. Stroud enjoyed one of the best rookie seasons in the history of the NFL. Several indicators suggest that the Texans were fortunate to win seven more regular season games than they did in 2022-23. They only outgained their opponents by +11.7 net Yards-Per-Game. They had a 7-3 record in games decided by one scoring possession. They were outclassed in the AFC Divisional Playoff round in a 34-10 loss to Baltimore. But, on the other hand, general manager Nick Caserio was very aggressive in the offseason to upgrade the talent level of this roster. He traded for wide receiver Stefon Diggs and running back Joe Mixon to offer more weapons for Stroud. He signed 14 free agents and drafted another five players for a defense that ranked 14th in the NFL by allowing 330.7 total YPG. Defensive ends Danielle Hunter and Denico Autry upgrade Houston’s pass rush after they combined for 28 sacks last season. Linebacker Azeez Al-Shaair comes over from Tennessee and will be the signal caller for the defense. Caserio picked cornerback Kamari Lassiter from Georgia in the second round as his first pick in the NFL draft. The nickel cornerback in their 4-2-5 base defense remains a question but Caserio did bring in former first-round picks C.J. Henderson and Jeff Okudah as potential reclamation projects. Linebacker Christian Harris and cornerback Derek Stingley, Jr. both thrived under the new coaching staff last year — and rookie defensive end Willie Anderson, Jr. justified the haul Caserio spent to move up in the draft to select him as the third pick. There may be too much talent in the locker room with Stroud that can push away the Regression Gods.INDIANAPOLIS COLTS: The easy question regarding the Colts is how good second-year quarterback Anthony Richardson can be — and can he stay healthy? I think the real question is how good the supporting cast is for him or the 39-year-old Joe Flacco beyond the quarterback position. General manager Chris Ballard’s priorities in the offseason were resigning wide receiver Michael Pittman, defensive tackles DeForest Buckner and Grover Stewart, and linebacker Zaire Franklin — but those were lateral moves for a team that got outgained by -13.0 net Yards-Per-Game and benefitted from winning six of their nine games decided by one scoring possession. Indianapolis ranked 24th in the NFL by allowing 349.8 Yards-Per-Game —  and they were in the bottom half of the league in both run defense and pass defense. Is the talent level better on this team? Maybe Richardson is a generational talent — but he has only started 17 games in college and professional football and his opponents had four games in the NFL to break down all the supposed “revolutionary” ways first-year head coach Shane Steichen was deploying his talents. JACKSONVILLE JAGUARS: My biggest question regarding this team last year was if they were closer to the team that lost by only a touchdown on the road to the eventual Super Bowl champion Kansas City Chiefs or the one that only outgained their opponents by +4.1 net YPG while spotting the Los Angeles Chargers a 27-0 halftime lead in the wildcard round of the playoffs. I concluded: “It seems as if the ‘plan’ is to draw an inside straight where quarterback Trevor Lawrence takes another big lead in his second season working with head coach Doug Pederson, wide receiver Calvin Ridley does not miss a beat in his return to the field after playing only five games since 2021, the offensive line somehow hangs in there, and that linebackers Travon Walker, Josh Allen, and Devin Lloyd stop underachieving and begin developing into the defensive stars that the organization hoped they would as former first-round draft picks.” With the benefit of 20/20 hindsight vision, some conclusions can be drawn. Lawrence did not take a step forward: in his last seven games, he had seven touchdown passes by seven interceptions. His defenders will remind everyone of the four various injuries he tried to play through down the stretch. Yet, he led the NFL with 21 turnovers — 14 giveaways from interceptions and another seven from lost fumbles. He has 60 career turnovers in his first three years in the league. Ridley was better than I expected with 76 receptions for 1016 yards and eight touchdowns — but he was not resigned perhaps given the compensation package that would have been due Atlanta in the language of the original deal worked out by general manager Trent Baalke. More on him in a moment. In regards the underachieving linebackers, the results were mixed. Josh Allen validated himself completely with 17.5 sacks last year. Walker added 10 sacks but still seems to be underachieving his #1 pick in the 2022 draft given his size and mobility. Lloyd pass defense improved. Yet this was a team that got outgained by -3.3 net Yards-Per-Game. The first-level analytics suggest this remains just a .500 team rather than one that reached another level two years ago. Win six of their last seven in 2022-23, lose of six in to close out 2023-24 — that’s the noise of a .500 team. But I want to take a step back to consider Baalke, the former San Francisco 49ers general manager who got into an internal fight with Jim Harbaugh which led to Harbaugh getting fired and replaced by Jim Tomasula. After Tomasula’s 5-11 campaign, the Niners sacked him for Chip Kelly who promptly oversaw a 2-15 season that got both Baalke and him fired. What if Baalke’s 2011 Executive of the Year Award had more to do with the wizardry of Harbaugh as a head coach than Baalke’s general manager acumen? What if Baalke has been living off those Harbaugh vapors for years? After being hired as the Director of Player Personnel by Jacksonville — not exactly the model franchise of organization competence under owner Shahid Khan (father of Tony Khan, founder and co-owner of AEW, the professional wrestling company where as the booker he has his bloated fan-boy stable of wrestlers flip from heel to face as often as Lawrence was injured last year, which actually may explain a lot) — he was soon promoted to general manager nine months later. Perhaps seeing Baalke as the NFL’s version of former WCW honcho Eric Bischoff is the appropriate comparison to keep this wrestling analogy alive. Bischoff’s MO was to poach talent from the WWF and rework their storylines. Baalke isn’t working off scripts — but he does draft NFL talent as if wakes up at 3 PM ET just in time for the national CBS-TV game featuring the SEC. Baalke had nine draft picks last April — and seven of those players came from SEC programs (three from LSU!). The non-SEC players came from the Big 12 which may be a result of commercial breaks when he turned on a random game on ABC-TV or ESPN. I got curious, and this is not an aberration. In 2023, 12 of Baalke’s 13 draft picks came from Power Five conference teams with the exception of the offensive tackle he drafted from Appalachian State may be resulting from a Thursday Night ESPN viewing. In 2022, five of his seven picks were from Power Five Conferences. In 2021 in his inaugural season with new head coach Urban Meyer who was going to tear up the NFL like he did the SEC and Big Ten, he drafted another eight of nine players from Power Five conference schools. And, sure, I get it: the better athletes play at Power Five conference schools. But so do the other 31 teams in the NFL get that too. It’s not a secret. In an NFL where players like  Maxx Crosby and Bobby Wagner came from non-Power Five conference schools, not taking more chancing on those players seems like missing opportunities for high-end returns. Of course, if Baalke’s reliance on simply banking on the 29 SEC players he has drafted in his career was producing great results, then why mess with the formula (that everyone already knows about). Instead, this remains a .500 team. My question in 2021 was whether Harbaugh or Baalke deserved more of the credit for the 49ers’ Super Bowl appearance. Three years later, Harbaugh won a National Championship at Michigan while Baalke’s Jaguars teams have gone 22-31 with one playoff appearance. Baalke drafts like he’s former Raiders’ general manager Mike Mayock, albeit with the cover-his-ass political skills. KANSAS CITY CHIEFS: Last year was supposed to be a transition season for the defending champions. The Chiefs cemented their dynasty legacy by winning the Super Bowl for the second time in the last four seasons after outlasting the Philadelphia Eagles. They lost eight veterans from that team including five starters. The wide receiver room was in a full-rebuild one year removed from the decision to not sign Tyreek Hill to an expensive second contract. Two starters were lost on the offensive line. Yet Kansas City still managed to play two games on the road in the postseason — at Buffalo and at Baltimore — en route to winning their third Super Bowl in five seasons by beating San Francisco in overtime by a 25-22 score. Now Andy Reid, Steve Spagnuolo, Patrick Mahomes, Travis Kelce, and the rest of the team look to make NFL history by winning three straight Super Bowls. The Chiefs won the title last year on the strength of their defense that ranked second in the league by allowing only 17.3 Points-Per-Game and 289.9 total Yards-Per-Game. They held their four playoff opponents to just 15.8 PPG. Spags lost cornerback L’Jarius Sneed and linebacker Wille Gay in the offseason but replacements exist from the great work general manager Brett Veach has done stocking the roster with talent — especially from his spectacular draft two seasons ago. The scary aspect of this team is that they are not likely to score only 21.8 PPG this season, ranking 15th in the league. They also are not likely to be saddled by a -11 net turnover margin, ranking tied for 28th worst in the NFL. Kansas City’s rebuilt wide receiver group was responsible for a league-leading 44 dropped passes that accounted for 386 yards lost in the air (even before potential Yards after the Catch). The wide receivers also lost nine fumbles. That explains why the Chiefs scored -7.4 fewer PPG last year. Veach addressed this unit in the offseason by signing Marquise Brown from Arizona and trading up to draft Xavier Worthy from Texas in the first round. Both those additions offer Mahomes speed and the deep threat he has missed since Hill departed for Miami. After posting 48 touchdowns to just 12 interceptions in his first four seasons on passes of 20 or more air yards, Mahomes has just four touchdown passes and six interceptions on passes of 20 or more air yards in the last two seasons with Hill. This renewed downfield threat should open things up for Kelce and second-year pro Rashee Rice who developed into Mahomes’ most trusted wide receiver option in the second half of the season. And while Rice has a likely suspension looming for off-the-field issues and Brown suffered a shoulder injury in the preseason that will keep him out four-to-six weeks, both will likely be available when it is time for the Chiefs to rev things up in the postseason to make NFL history with a third straight Super Bowl title.  LAS VEGAS RAIDERS: Last year in the offseason, I was concerned about head coach Josh McDaniels’ inability to address the culture issues that plagued his time in Denver. It turns out he learned little from his mistakes. The Raiders celebrated like it was 1999 when he was fired on Halloween — and proceeded to go 5-4 under their last nine games under interim head coach Antonio Pierce. Now the Raiders will proceed with their their third head coach and third general manager since 2022 with the interim tag removed from Pierce’s title and owner Mark Davis tapping former Los Angeles Chargers general manager Tom Telesco as the new GM. At least Tedesco’s past draft history puts him at least at replacement level — a clear step up from Dave Ziegler and the NFL Network’s Mike Mayock (the latter who drafted like he woke up at noon Vegas time to watch Saturday college football to account for his deep scouting). Perhaps Davis concluded that since Circus Circus is on the north end of the strip, there was room for a second circus on the strip south of Tropicana Boulevard. The drafting and free agency mayhem under the previous two regimes leaves many positions thin. The good news is that the Las Vegas defense could be quite good. Defensive end Maxx Crosby is the coronated heart and soul of this team with his endorsement of Pierce helping him retain the gig. With the free agent signing of defensive tackle Christian Wilkins from Miami, opposing front lines face a blocking dilemma from the likely mismatches based on those choices. Since Pierce took over as head coach, the Raiders allowed only 16.0 Points-Per-Game in those final nine games — and that side of the ball is one of the few areas with continuity with defensive coordinator Patrick Graham back for his third season running the defense. The biggest question is the offense. I like Telesco’s decision to not pay running back Josh Jacobs a big second contract after he averaged only 3.5 Yards-Per-Carry. But while Samir White led the NFL in rushing yards the final four weeks of the season, the former Georgia Bulldog has never been a bell cow even going back to college. Alexander Mattison was signed from Minnesota but only after he failed in the bell cow role for the Vikings after they decided to move on from Dalvin Cook. The wide receiver room is intriguing with Davante Adams and Jakobi Meyers alongside second-year tight end Michael Mayer and the latest transformational tight end prospect in Brock Bowers. I would love to see a commitment to 12 personnel with both tight ends on the field with Bowers taking on a Travis Kelce role. But is first-year offensive coordinator Luke Getsy that guy? His time in Chicago devolved quickly into a “who to blame” battle between QB Jalen Hurts and himself. His previous stop was as the quarterback coach in Green Bay in the who-to-blame/who-to-credit shit show between Aaron Rodgers, Matt LeFluer, Nathaniel Hackett, and himself. And then there is the quarterback issue. Rookie Aidan O’Connell was solid in his time on the field as a rookie last year and had eight touchdown passes without an interception in his final four stars — but the quality of competition was not top-notch. Gardner Minshew was brought in as a free agent from Indianapolis. I applaud Telesco for not overpaying for someone like Kirk Cousins, something the past regimes may have done to bide time in their showcase on the Strip. Pierce is a players’ coach who deserves credit for some subtle tactical changes on offense like more play-action and more emphasis on getting the ball to their damn play-makers over supposed schematic flare. I can see the Raiders having a very good defense. I can see the offense being very interesting in 12 personnel with Adams and Meyers offsetting those two tight ends (even with either quarterback under center). But Getsy calling the plays for this vision? I am in a holding pattern, on that front. LOS ANGELES CHARGERS: After more missteps by third-year head coach Brandon Staley that culminated in a humiliating 63-21 loss in Las Vegas on the Raiders in front of a national television audience for Thursday Night Football, the Chargers finally ended his tenure. The team would finish the season with a 5-12 record. But they hired a legitimate professional football coach in Jim Harbaugh coming off winning a National Championship at Michigan. In his four seasons as the head coach of the San Francisco 49ers, he posted a 44-19-1 record in the regular season and a 5-3 record in the postseason with two trips to the NFC championship game and one trip to the Super Bowl. He will establish a winning culture immediately. The biggest initial challenge was the salary cap crunch as the previous general manager, Tom Telesco, had the roster $45 million over the cap heading into this season. Harbaugh and new general manager Joe Hortiz got to work by choosing to move on from running back Austin Ekeler, wide receivers Keenan Allen and Mike Williams, and linebackers Eric Kendricks and Kenneth Murray. They restructured the contracts of star linebackers Khalil Mack and Joey Bosa. The Chargers are going to run the ball more often as it is a staple of Harbaugh’s philosophy on football — and they signed J.K. Dobbins and Gus Edwards away from Baltimore to help with that endeavor. The wide receiver room is probably the least talented in the league — but Harbaugh loves to rely on 12 personnel with two tight ends. The offense will operate much differently for quarterback Justin Herbert. The professionalization of operations under Harbaugh should make them a contender for a wildcard spot in the AFC — although it may take another year of reshuffling the roster and getting out of salary cap jail for the rebuild to really begin to take shape.  MIAMI DOLPHINS: The biggest priority in the offseason last year seemed to be figuring out how to keep quarterback Tua Tagovailoa healthy after he suffered what was probably three concussions during the season. He is the essential point guard that makes head coach Mike McDaniels’ offense go. McDaniels tweaked the playbook away from some of the concepts Kyle Shanahan deploys as injuries at QB appear endemic to his system. Tagovailoa bulked up and took jiu-jitsu classes to train his body how to fall. Whatever it was, it worked as Tagovailoa played an entire season for the first time since 2018. But will that lead to some complacency concerning the ever-lingering concern of a professional athlete who has had multiple concussions? Tagovailoa slimmed down in the offseason — is he planning on running more? It is fair to say the offense is limited at times since McDaniels and Tagovailoa are highly reluctant to attempt to gain yards from QB run plays. And while the media proclaimed McDaniels an offensive genius by his second game as head coach of the Dolphins, the dirty little secret is that his play-calling tends to get predictable in short-yardage, on third downs, and in the red zone. I wonder if the urgency to keep his quarterback safe limits his flexibility in these moments. Miami loves to emphasize their speed — but perhaps their league-leading 401.3 Yards-Per-Game last season is more a reflection of them being Flat Track Bullies than the genius of McDaniels? The Dolphins won 10 of their 11 games against sub-.500 teams last year — but they lost six of their seven games against teams with a winning record including a 28-point loss to Buffalo, a 37-point loss to Baltimore, and then their 26-7 loss at Kansas City in the playoffs. The problems Miami has in cold weather are well-documented with those conditions neutralizing their speed advantage. But good teams tend to have speed too — so maybe this offense simply hits a wall when facing similar talent? And good teams tend to expose the Dolphins' defense which was supposed to significantly improve under defensive coordinator Vic Fangio. While Miami gave up -0.5 fewer Points-Per-Game and -19.5 YPG, their defense ranked just 19th in Defensive DVOA — and there was speculation that Fangio clashed with players inside the building. I wonder if Fangio’s frustration was a by-product of the culture McDaniel has fostered. Fangio is now gone — and McDaniels’ third defensive coordinator in three seasons is Baltimore defensive line coach Anthony Weaver. Gone is star defensive tackle Christian Wilkins who signed for a big payday in Las Vegas. Cornerback Xavien Howard was a salary cap casualty. The unit was not helped late in the season when both Jean Phillips and Bradley Chubb suffered season-ending injuries. The hope is that both linebackers are ready by the start of the season — but this unit will take a big hit if they cannot return to form. General manager Chris Grier signed at least nine free agents likely to make the team to bolster the unit led by Buffalo safety Jordan Poyer — and he drafted another three rookies featuring Penn State linebacker Chop Robinson in the first round. But it is not hard to imagine things unraveling on that side of the football.NEW ENGLAND PATRIOTS: After 24 years, the Patriots move on to Year One of the post-Bill Belichick era after they bottomed out with a 4-13 record last season. The offense stagnated without Tom Brady under center — they tied for last in the league by scoring only 13.9 Points-Per-Game. Why did this happen? (1) Poor coaching? (2) Mac Jones was not the answer at quarterback? (3) Lack of talent at wide receiver? I tend to think the blame on the coaching staff — even when Matt Patricia and Joe Judge were moonlighting as offensive coaches two years ago — was overblown. In hindsight, Jones looks like a head case. Certainly, it is fair to say that Belichick did not put him in a position to succeed with skill position talent — especially at wide receiver. Jones’ lack of mobility compounded that problem. Jones is gone — and rookie Drake May is the future at quarterback. Former Cleveland offensive coordinator Alex Van Pelt is the new offensive coordinator — and with the hiring of special assistant Ben McAdoo, the offense looks to be adopting the West Coast principles of the Green Bay offense before Matt LaFleur arrived. McAdoo was the previous Packers' offensive coordinator with Van Pelt the Quarterbacks Coach. Van Pelt is likely to deploy a run-first approach that will set up play-action passes and, hopefully, more explosive plays. The team did sign Jacoby Brissett as a veteran placeholder at QB who enjoyed his best professional season in 2022 under Van Pelt’s guidance. New general manager Eliot Wolf drafted Ja’Lynn Polk and Javon Baker in the second and fourth rounds, but it remains a question of whether either is a future WR1. The offensive line should be solid, albeit with questions at left tackle. However, there is continuity and cohesion on the other side of the ball with a defense that returns 14 of the top 18 players from a group that finished in the top ten in total defense for the fourth time in the last five seasons after holding their opponents to just 301.6 Yards-Per-Game, ranking seventh in the NFL. The Patriots accomplished that despite edge rusher Matthew Judon and cornerbacks Christian Gonzalez and Marcus Jones missing most of the season. Linebackers coach (and former star player for Belichick) Jared Mayo takes over as head coach in this new era — and his player-friendly approach should provide an immediate breath of fresh air in the locker room. But even Belichick’s harshest critics would be foolish to suggest he was not still a defensive guru. Will the defense take a step back now without Belichick’s touch that ensured the tackling fundamentals were always sound (seven straight seasons top five in fewest broken tackles) and took away their opponents' top weapon (New England was third in Defensive DVOA against WR1s last year)? Wolf did not add any significant pieces on that side of the ball. The hope is that getting healthy again can keep the momentum going on defense. Better play at quarterback with at least some upgrade at the skill positions along with another tough defense could have the Patriots fighting for a playoff spot (remember, they made the playoffs three years ago and were still mathematically alive going into Week 17 two seasons ago). On the other hand, if the defense takes a step back without Belichick and the offensive problems continue, it could be a very long season in Foxboro. NEW YORK JETS: In last year’s offseason in the first year with Aaron Rodgers under center, I questioned how the locker room would deal with all the distractions that have become part of the package of having the former MVP at quarterback. General manager Joe Douglass and head coach Robert Saleh were on the hot seat and seemingly going all-in on the Rodgers gamble. I also wondered if the Rodgers reconnection with Nathaniel Hackett, his offensive coordinator during some of his best seasons in Green Bay, would be fruitful or was Hackett simply his “yes man” who got exposed as a coach out of his element in his one season as the Denver head coach. A year later, we lack answers to those questions since Rodgers lasted only four snaps before he suffered his season-ending Achilles injury. Douglass, Saleh, and even Hackett were given mulligans after that injury on Monday Night Football. But now the seats are even hotter with everything banking on Rodgers successfully recovering from a serious leg injury at 41 years old. And the distractions keep marching on. Rodgers kept teasing that his recovery was ahead of schedule and that he could make a near-miraculous return late in the season. While less than a fourth-month recovery from a torn Achilles is rare, Rodgers claimed his innovative training and healing techniques (including listening to dolphin sounds) would have him ready. But inevitably in a scene reminiscent of NBA players begging to “hold me back” from on-the-court fights that no one ever planned to initiate, Rodgers’ services were never required in late December with the Jets limping to another 7-10 record. Since then, some of Rodgers’ antics include a few days where he was being considered to be the Vice Presidential candidate for Robert F. Kennedy’s vanity presidential bid before later blowing off mandatory training camp sessions for his “previously scheduled” trip to Egypt. It is hard not to consider Rodgers simply a carnival barker at this point of his career when he keeps on sounding like a carnival barker. He plans to be just the 16th quarterback in NFL history to play after turning 40. Father Time is undefeated — and when he comes knocking, the end comes quickly as Drew Brees and Brett Favre demonstrated in the final year of their careers. Both of those players were 41 years old when they experienced their sudden decline — but neither was coming off a major injury either when still playing at a high level at 40 years old. Maybe Rodgers’ statistical decline two years ago with the Packers was mostly a result of the departure of wide receiver Davante Adams. Maybe he replicates what Warren Moon once did and return from a major injury at 40 years old and plays at a high level. New York’s offensive line could be much better after left tackle Tyron Smith, left guard John Simpson, and right tackle Morgan Moses were signed as free agents, and then Penn State left tackle Olu Fashanu was drafted in the first round. The Jets have intriguing talent at the skill positions. The defense should remain elite with defensive tackle Quinnen Williams, linebacker Quincy Williams, and cornerback Sauce Gardner giving them All-Pros at all three levels. Peyton Manning was able to win a Super Bowl in Denver behind an outstanding defense despite being past his prime. This team does not need another MVP season from Rodgers to make a deep run. But the pressure cooker is tight for teams that are in Super Bowl or bust mode  — especially ones that have not even made the playoffs since 2010. If Rodgers can’t walk the walk (even after dolphin sound therapy) — or gets injured again — things could implode very quickly.PITTSBURGH STEELERS: The Steelers made the playoffs for the 11th time in head coach Mike Tomlin’s 17 years as their head coach — and the team has never had a losing season under his leadership. But Pittsburgh was still not a very good team before they lost at Buffalo by a 31-17 score in the AFC Wildcard round of the playoffs. They were outscored by 1.2 Points-Per-Game and outgained -38.8 net Yards-Per-Game in the regular season. While they had a 10-7 regular season record, their Pythagorean win total was just 7.9. They won nine of their 11 games decided by one scoring possession — and while Tomlin’s effective game management deserves some of the credit, they had several fluky victories. They scored two defensive touchdowns in their opening-week win against Cleveland before beating Baltimore later in the season from a blocked punt safety. They were outgained in 12 of their 17 regular season games but somehow still won six of those games. A silver lining is that after getting outgained in all ten of their games under the immensely underqualified offensive coordinator Matt Canada, Pittsburgh won the yardage battle in five of their last seven regular season games after he was fired. The offense has since been completely retooled with all three quarterbacks now gone. General manager Omar Khan brought in Russell Wilson and Justin Fields as inexpensive reclamation projects. Many observers will be bullish on Wilson finding new life with the Steelers — these are the folks who tend to think that “Russ Can’t Fail — he can only be failed!” The “Let Russ Cook” brigade can point to his 26:8 touchdown-to-interception ratio to advance that he was pretty, pretty good after all last season. Maybe … but that analysis gets refuted by Sean Payton’s decision to not only give up on Wilson after one year by also eat $85 million in dead cap money. Payton eventually deployed the Taysom Hill gameplans with Wilson in the second half of the season with the offense usually not throwing the ball even 30 times a game. Wilson seems to have paid close attention to Aaron Rodgers' seminar on Stat padding. Yes, Wilson completed 66.4% of his passes and threw just eight interceptions — but he held on to the ball too long with the third-highest seconds per pass attempt rate and taking 45 sacks. Wilson’s depth of targets continues to decline as well — his 6.9 Yards-Per-Attempt rate last year was the lowest of his career. And then there is Fields who led the NFL in seconds per pass attempt. Former Atlanta head coach Arthur Smith has his hands full as the new offensive coordinator. His schemes with the Falcons and previously as the OC for Tennessee are run-first with plenty of motion and play-action. Smith likes to use the middle of the field in the passing game, especially with his tight ends. But will this be a good fit with the risk-averse Wilson in the twilight of his career (and working for the veteran minimum this year? Only 13% of his passes last season were in the middle of the field. By the way, how much cognitive dissonance is required for Wilson dead-enders to be optimistic about his upcoming season in a run-heavy approach like the one in Seattle that initially spawned the “Let Russ Cook” fanaticism? Finally, there are the underlying cultural issues with this franchise. The players still love Tomlin — but in finishing 28th in the NFLPA’s postseason report card, the organization received Ds in Nutrition and in Travel while getting Fs in Ownership and the Locker room and an F- in Treatment of Families. The Seahawks Legion of Boom found Wilson to be phony before Payton concluded paying him $85 mill to play elsewhere was the preferred solution. How is he going to fit into this environment while issuing NDAs to teammates before they can socialize with him? And what if he loses the starting QB job to Fields? Then what? Maybe the Tomlin magic and a good defense will be enough for this team to overachieve once again now that a professional offensive coach is calling plays. On the other hand, the brewing situations underneath Tomlin’s management might finally boil over.TENNESSEE TITANS: The Titans appeared to be in a transition season with potential backups to quarterback Ryan Tannehill and running back Derrick Henry being selected in the second and third rounds of the NFL draft last April. After a 6-11 season, the overhaul has been completed with the team firing head coach Mike Vrabel and moving on from quarterback Ryan Tannehill and running back Derrick Henry. Owner Amy Adams Strunk’s dismissal of Vrabel is interesting because she resides in Houston and reportedly likes to wear Houston Oilers jerseys to those games as a reminder that her Texans were their previous franchise. Losing twice to Houston last year certainly did not sit well with her. She hired Ran Carthon as her new general manager two years ago after several disastrous drafts under Jon Robinson — but the whispers were that Vrabel and him were not on the same page and that the rookie GM often caved under Vrabel’s directives. Now Vrabel is gone and the buzzword amongst the organization regards the importance of “collaboration.”  The new head coach is Brian Callahan who has served as the offensive coordinator at Cincinnati the last five seasons but did not call plays. He does bring his father with him who leaves Cleveland to take over the same role as coaching the offensive line. The offensive coordinator is Nic Holz who will be calling plays for the first time after serving as the passing game coordinator for Jacksonville last season. The defensive coordinator is Dennard Wilson who was the defensive backs coach for Baltimore last year. It is concerning that the head coach, offensive, and defensive coordinators are all rookies at their new responsibilities. The focus of the team will be on developing second-year quarterback Will Levis who took over under center after Tannehill got injured in the sixth game of the season. He has a strong arm and a good release — but accuracy, decison-making are concerns as well as his tendency to hold on to the ball too long. Best of luck -- Frank.

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College Football 2024-25 Preview, Part 3 -- 134 Questions and Thoughts for 134 FBS Teams

by Hollywood Sports

Thursday, Sep 26, 2024

For the 14th straight summer, I invested time researching each FBS college football team to serve as the foundation for my college football handicapping in the fall and winter. What initially began as basic note-taking on some fundamental details for each team has become an arduous and detailed process for each team that derives from reading and studying multiple sources. Each FBS team now takes about 45 minutes to an hour of preparation time. To help document this work while crystallizing my thoughts for each team, I am providing a summary of each team highlighted by a critical question that will go a long way in their success or failure.ARIZONA: The Wildcats were one of the biggest surprises in college football last season. After junior quarterback Jayden de Laura got injured in their fourth game at Stanford, freshman Noah Fifita came off the bench to lead Arizona to the victory. Fifita then nearly pulled off upset victories against Washington and USC in his next two starts. At that point, the Wildcats were 3-3 — but Fifita would lead the team to win their final seven games, including their first bowl game since 2017 in a 38-24 victory against Oklahoma. Fifita completed 72.4% of his passes for 2869 yards with 25 touchdown passes and only six interceptions. He established a great rapport with wide receiver Tetairoa McMillan, who caught 90 passes for 1402 yards and 10 touchdowns. Yet the improvement of the defense was even more profound. After ranking 125th and 124th in the nation by giving up 36.5 Points-Per-Game and 467.7 total YPG, Arizona only gave up 21.1 PPG and 357.9 total YPG last season — representing 14.5 PPG and 109.8 YPG improvements. But a month after the season ended, head coach Jed Fisch took the head coaching job at Washington and took most of the coaching staff along with running back Jonah Coleman and three defensive linemen with him. The Wildcats responded well by hiring the well-respected Brent Brennan from San Jose State to take over the program. While Brennan started late, he convinced Fifita and McMillan to stay in the program and brought in 11 transfers on defense to complement the five returning starters. In their first year in the Big 12, Arizona will be a threat as long as Fifita is still slinging it under center.  ARMY WEST POINT: My biggest offseason question for this team last year regarded how successful the Black Knights' transition to a zone option offensive attack out of the shotgun formation would be. Head coach Jeff Monken decided to abandon the triple option formation that has defined the offensive identity of the service academies after the NCAA implemented new rules restricting cut-blocking rules that were often deployed with the schemes. It took Monken on the eight games to conclude that this decision was ill-advised. He promoted quarterbacks coach and run-game coordinator Cody Worley to offensive coordinator at that point with the directive to get the quarterback back under center and run the ball more from their traditional flexbone option attack that his players were more familiar with. After averaging 16.6 pass attempts per game in their first eight contests, they dropped to 7.5 pass attempts per game in their final four games. Doing a better job of controlling the time of possession, the Army defense forced 11 turnovers in those final four games. The Black Knights won their final four games to push their record up to 6-6. Army has 11 starters returning for now their first season in the American Athletic Conference. Worley remains the offensive coordinator with the offense likely to continue to operate under center with their unique offense (although conference rivals have been facing Navy’s similar scheme for years). The defense only has three starters back with 10 of the 13 players who played at least 300 snaps no longer on the team. But fifth-year defensive coordinator Nate Woody consistently develops an overachieving defense — and this group is strong up the middle. AUBURN: After two straight losing seasons, the Tigers got back to a bowl game in the first season under new head coach Hugh Freeze. After a 31-13 loss to Maryland in the Music City Bowl, Auburn settled for their third straight losing campaign with a 6-7 record. Auburn has 11 starters back from that team — and Freeze was aggressive in the transfer portal on both sides of the ball. Quarterback Payton Thorne returns for his senior season — and while he offers a dual threat with his legs, his inconsistency in the passing game may make him the weak link to this offense. The former Michigan State transfer led an offense that ranked 121st in the nation by averaging just 162.2 passing Yards-Per-Game. Freeze massively upgraded the wide receiver room with two five-star freshmen and a transfer class that may have been the best in the nation for that unit. The defense has five starters back — but that side of the ball lost 10 of the 17 players who logged in at least 250 snaps, including five players who got drafted into the NFL. Freeze has two new coordinators. He replaced former Tulsa head coach Philip Montgomery with 16-year Ole Miss assistant Derrick Nix, who was on Freeze’s staff with the Rebels for five years. After defensive coordinator Ron Roberts left for the same position at Florida, Freeze turned to former Texas A&M defensive coordinator D.J. Durkin to run his defense. BYU: After playing only five Power-Five conference opponents in 2022, I was concerned about how the Cougars would handle their move to the Big 12 with ten Power-Five opponents on their schedule. BYU started fast with a 5-2 record — but their three upset victories against Arkansas, Cincinnati, and Texas Tech were in games where they got outgained in yardage. The Regression Gods made their presence felt in the second half of the season with the Cougars surrendering 38 Points-Per-Game in their final five games — all losses — to finish the season with a 5-7 record. This team ran out of steam lacking the depth of their conference rivals. They were outgained by -141 Yards-Per-Game against Big 12 opponents. BYU ranked 118th in the FBS by generating only 309.8 YPG — and they ranked 106th by giving up 417.7 YPG. Head coach Kalani Sitake returns 14 starters in his ninth year with the program. There are reasons for optimism with 13 of the players on defense who logged in at least 100 snaps including seven who were freshman or sophomore last year. But line play is the final step that this program needs to improve to become more competitive against the (now) Power Four programs. Their offensive line was a weak link last season prompting Sitake to hire T.J. Woods from Georgia Southern to coach that unit. Junior college transfers join two returning starters on the defensive line — but they only have one player per 300 pounds in that group. The Cougars ranked 109th by allowing 177.7 rushing YPG — and their 11 sacks were the fewest in the country. BYU should be better this season — but the gap was very wide between them and the best teams in the Big 12.  DUKE: The Blue Devils were mostly dismissed as an afterthought in the offseason last year since only two of their nine victories were against FBS programs with a winning record and they benefited from a +16 net turnover margin. But I suspected that analysis was perhaps too simple and shortsighted for a rising star in the head coaching ranks, Mike Elko, and a potential future NFL quarterback, Riley Leonard. A year later, Elko is now the head coach at Texas A&M and Leonard is the starting quarterback for Notre Dame after Duke completed an 8-5 season with a 17-10 win against Troy in the Birmingham Bowl. The program stuck with a defensive-minded head coach by luring Manny Diaz away from Penn State where he has been their defensive coordinator the last two seasons to be their next head coach. Diaz had previously been the head coach at Miami (FL). The defense was very good under Elko last season — five starters return from the group that ranked 28th in the FBS in Yards-Per-Play allowed and tied for 16th by holding their opponents to 19.0 Points-Per-Game. The offense returns five starters with former five-star recruit Maalik Murphy leading the unit after getting two starts at quarterback late in the season. Duke did get outgained by -81 YPG against ACC opponents. Will Diaz be able to get this program to overachieve relative to expectations as they often did under former head coach David Cutcliffe and in the last two years under Elko?KANSAS: Lance Leipold has miraculously transformed the Jayhawks into a College Football Playoff contender with the expanded field coinciding with his fourth year with the program. Thirteen starters return from the group that finished 9-4 after their 49-36 victory against UNLV in the Guaranteed Rate Bowl. He now has a veteran roster with 30 seniors including up to 15 who will be starters. Three of their four losses were decided by just one scoring possession. But how far this team can go will likely be determined by the health of quarterback Jalon Daniels who only played in three games last season. The dual-threat junior ranked third in the nation in Total QBR in his nine games played two seasons ago which was good enough for him to be named to the second All-Big 12 squad. Last year, he completed 74.7% of his passes for 705 yards with five touchdowns and only one interception before going down with an injury. On the other side of the ball, Kansas gave up -9.0 fewer Points-Per-Game and -91.2 fewer Yards-Per-Game than their previous season with defensive coordinator Brian Borland more comfortable in varying his schemes given his talent base. The front seven remains small with only one player weighing over 300 pounds, but more improvement with this unit will make things easier for an explosive offense that ranked fourth and third in the nation by scoring 41.7 PPG and generating 507.0 YPG. KENTUCKY: The Wildcats come off yet another winning season under head coach Mark Stoops, entering his 12th year running the program. Kentucky finished 7-6 for the second straight year after their 38-35 loss to Clemson in the Gator Bowl. Stoops has led his team to a bowl game in eight straight seasons. They have finished in ESPN’s Bill Connelly’s SP+ top 25 in five of the last six campaigns. If the Wildcats were in the Big 12, they would be perennial contenders to win and reach the championship game, and, thus, be considered playoff contenders. Yet in the brutal SEC, they rarely, if ever, enter into that conversation. Kentucky did get outgained by -59 net Yards-Per-Game. Stoops has 15 starters back from that group and added a top 20 high school recruiting class. After offensive coordinator Liam Coen left (again) to take the same job in the NFL (again), this time with the Tampa Bay Buccaneers. Stoops turned to Boise State offensive coordinator Bush Hamdan to take over the offense with the hopes that he would offer some stability after he had made changes at that position for four straight seasons. The biggest question is whether Georgia transfer Brock Vandagriff can find success leading the offense. The redshirt junior is a former five-star recruit, but he lacks much in-game experience after serving as a backup for three years. Hamdan will keep Kentucky’s pro-style offense, but an uptick in tempo is expected. Nine starters are back on defense from a unit that ranked 17th in the nation by holding their opponents to 353.5 total Yards-Per-Game. The unit lost two players who got drafted in the third round of the NFL draft: linebacker Trevin Wallace and cornerback Andru Phillips. But there are at least two future NFLers on this team with defensive tackle Deone Walker and linebacker J.J. Weaver — and Stoops brought in former All-American Jamon Dumas-Johnson from Georgia to bolster the linebacker corps. IOWA STATE: The Cyclones rebounded from a 4-8 campaign two years ago to go 7-6 in a season that ended with a 36-26 loss at Memphis in the Liberty Bowl. With 18 starters back and the most returning production in the country, there are plenty of reasons for optimism for this year in Matt Campbell’s ninth year as head coach. Iowa State won five of their last seven games to close out the season with big contributions from a trio of dynamic freshmen. Running back Abu Sam III rushed for 544 yards in the last six games. Benjamin Brahmer is a 6’7 sophomore who caught 28 balls for 352 yards. Quarterback Rocco Becht was elevated to first-string last fall after the internal gambling scandal caused incumbent starter Hunter Dekkers to be suspended for the season. The Big 12 Offensive Freshman of the Year threw for 3120 yards with 23 touchdowns and eight interceptions — and in his last four games, he threw ten touchdown passes and just one interception. He will be protected by five returning starters on the offensive line that average 6’6 in height and 323 pounds. The defense returns nine starters along with 12 freshmen and sophomores who played at least 200 snaps last year. Campbell was a little more active in the transfer portal to target some holes on both sides of the ball — but the lack of much of an NIL program is a lingering concern. The Cyclones have had winning seasons in six of the last seven years despite losing 13 of their last 16 games decided by one possession. To address that problem, Campbell attempted to manufacture adversity in what he described as his hardest spring practice in his tenure. MEMPHIS: The Tigers come off their best season under head coach Ryan Silverfield in his four seasons with the program after a 10-3 campaign that culminated with a 36-26 victory against Iowa State at home in the Liberty Bowl. With 17 starters back led by four-year starting quarterback Seth Henigan, Memphis is a trendy pick to represent the Group of Five programs in the expanded College Football Playoffs. The Tigers are just one of eight FBS programs that have been bowl-eligible for at least ten straight seasons. But while the offense was prolific with Henigan under center — ranking 14th in the nation generating 458.5 total Yards-Per-Game, the defense allowed too many big plays en route to surrendering 423.2 YPG, ranking 111th in the nation. A new NIL deal with FedEx helped Henigan become very aggressive in the transfer portal. He brought in 29 players featuring 11 who were previous starters at FBS programs along with another five from the junior college ranks. Nine transfers add depth to the offense headlined by senior running back Mario Anderson from South Carolina. Silverfield added another 20 transfers to help improve the defense while promoting linebackers coach Jordan Hawkins to defensive coordinator to address the woes on that side of the ball. But with all these new additions to what had been a stable program, there is the question regarding the chemistry between the old guard and new players with everyone dealing with higher expectations. Despite going 6-2 in conference play last year, the Tigers got outscored by American Athletic Conference opponents by -6.0 YPG. I have worried about the underlying culture of this program under Silverfield in the past. They began last season having lost eight of their last ten games decided by one-scoring possession before winning four of their six games decided by a touchdown or less last year. Perhaps, as the analytics community preaches, the Regression Gods were simply due to even out that record in games decided by one scoring possession. On the other hand, if losing close games under Silverfield in the past had anything to do with underlying positive culture and cohesion issues, then the influx of all these new players and the expectations surrounding it could become a volatile mix that has not even played in an American Athletic Conference Championship Game in the Silverfield era. MICHIGAN: After two straight losses in the college football playoff semifinals, the Wolverines finally climbed the mountain and won the national championship in the ninth season under head coach Jim Harbaugh. But the losses from the team are enormous. Harbaugh bolted to the NFL to become the head coach of the Los Angeles Chargers — and he took defensive coordinator Jesse Minter with him. Seventeen starters are gone from that squad, including ten on offense, including quarterback J.J. McCarthy, running back Blake Corum, two wide receivers drafted into the NFL, and all five starting offensive linemen. The defense lost eight starters, including five players to the NFL, headlined by defensive tackle Kris Jenkins and nickel back Mike Sainristil. In all, Michigan lost 13 players to the NFL, the second most in the nation. But talent remains. The defense still has three potential first-round draft picks in defensive tackles Mason Graham and Kenneth Grant, along with cornerback Will Johnson. Colston Loveland may be the best tight end in the country. Running back Donovan Edwards is a former five-star recruit who now gets the chance to be the bell cow in the backfield. The team was 4-0 with now head coach Sherrone Moore serving as the interim head coach, including a crucial victory at Penn State when the Wolverines abandoned their passing game to rely solely on their rushing attack with the supreme confidence they would control the line of scrimmage and grind that game out. But the question is at quarterback, where the team did not hit the transfer portal to bring in a more proven commodity. They did bring in Jack Tuttle as a transfer from Indiana a year ago — the former blue-chip recruit for Utah is now in his seventh season after several years of injury. He is battling junior Alex Orji, who is a Cam Newton clone at 6’3 and 236 pounds as a powerful runner, but remains a big question with his passing accuracy. Michigan’s defense will remain very good — and the offense has talent. How far this team will go depends on how good of play they will get at quarterback. NAVY: The Midshipmen have been one of the hardest hit programs given events outside of their control the last few seasons. Spring practices are crucial to the service academies since talent development is vital to replace what are typically starting lineups that feature seniors. Conducting zero practices in the spring of 2020 because of COVID coming off an 11-2 campaign set this program back. Even during their 2020 fall season, they experienced a 28-day midseason hiatus because of the ongoing pandemic that fall which completely disrupted their progress. The new era of the transfer portal or even the waived season of eligibility in 2020 are two areas that service academy programs can not utilize given the military service obligations. And then the NCAA’s cut block rule change two years ago took away one of the secret advantages for this program with their spread triple option attack. First-year head coach Brian Newberry hired former Kennesaw State offensive coordinator Grant Chestnut to modernize the offense with more passing and they ditched the triple option. However, the experiment failed as Navy only generated 300.3 total Yards-Per-Game which resulted in just 17.7 Points-Per-Game, ranking 123rd and 122nd in the FBS. Newberry did not retain Chestnut and replaced him with Mercer head coach Drew Cronic who led the Tigers to the FCS playoffs last season. Cronic’s specialty is a hybrid wing-T formation that emphasizes misdirections from the run or pass — the plan in Annapolis is to return to the triple-option but with spread principles. Seven starters return on both sides of the ball with the defense also seeing six reserves on defense who got plenty of action in the two-deep last year. The Midshipmen’s defense remained the strength of the team last season by ranking 44th in the nation by allowing just 353.7 total YPG. There is stability on that side of the ball after Newberry had been the defensive coordinator for four seasons before taking over as head coach. Navy has had four straight losing seasons — and that 2019 season with 11 wins is their only winning season in the last six seasons. But their five victories last year were the most they have had since that 2019 campaign — so Newberry may have this program moving in the right direction again. NORTHWESTERN: What David Braun pulled off as an interim head coach last season was a near-miracle. In his first year as the team’s defensive coordinator after coming over from North Dakota State in the same position, he was elevated to the interim head coach in mid-July after the hazing scandal prompted the university to fire Pat Fitzgerald after 17 seasons as the team’s head coach. The program had hit rock bottom with 17 losses in their last 18 games heading into the season. After starting 1-2, Braun kept the team together and the Wildcats won seven of their last 10 games, including a 14-7 upset victory against Utah in the Las Vegas Bowl. Braun got Northwestern back to playing smart and tough on the defensive side of the ball, where they only allowed 22.5 Points-Per-Game and ranked 35th in the nation by surrendering just 340.8 total Yards-Per-Game. The Wildcats ranked 15th in the FBS by giving up only 182.9 passing YPG. Braun has 14 of the 19 players back who logged in at least 240 snaps last year. Thirteen starters return, including 12 who are either seniors or graduate students. But a lot went right for this team last year that will be very difficult to replicate. After posting a -19 net turnover margin in 2022, which was the worst mark in the nation, Northwestern completely flipped that script with a +13 net turnover margin, ranking third in the FBS. A +32 turnaround in turnovers from one season to the next is unheard of. This turnover margin helped the Wildcats pull off five upset victories last season. They also posted a 6-2 record in games decided by one scoring possession. Yet they were outgained by -36.9 net YPG. Still, what Braun accomplished was remarkable. The Wildcats’ defense should be good once again. The question at quarterback remained very unsettled heading into fall camp. Northwestern only scored 22.1 PPG and generated 303.9 YPG, ranking 104th and 121st in the FBS. SOUTH CAROLINA: After two straight winning seasons to begin the Shane Beamer tenure, the Gamecocks took a step back last year with a losing 5-7 record and no bowl game appearance. Beamer responded by hitting the transfer portal hard and bringing in more than 20 new players. The offense added 14 players from the portal, including four running backs and three offensive linemen. Beamer also added two transfer quarterbacks, although redshirt freshman LaNorris Sellers is the likely starting quarterback. The dual threat is 6’3 and 240 pounds. The defense returns seven starters, and the defensive line added six new players in the portal. South Carolina surrendered 31 Points-Per-Game in their first nine games — but a shift from a 4-2-5 to a 3-3-5 helped them hold their final three opponents to just 12 PPG. Beamer has had consistently good special teams in his three seasons with the Gamecocks — but losing his excellent special teams coordinator, Pete Lembo, is a tough loss. TEXAS STATE: Those optimistic that 34-year-old Incarnate Word head coach G.J. Kinne could turn around this program were immediately rewarded with the Bobcats’ first bowl game in school history along with their first winning record since 2014. Texas State finished with an 8-5 record in a season that culminated with a 45-21 victory against Rice in the First Responder Bowl. Kinne hit the transfer portal hard last year by bringing in more than 40 players — and he was very active once again in the transfer window. Nineteen players transferred to other programs including quarterback T.J. Finley who left for Western Kentucky. But Kinne may be winning the transfer portal game overall by bringing in at least 18 new players including several impactful players on both sides of the ball. Running backs Deon Hankins and Torrance Burgess, Jr. come in from UTEP to join All-American Ismail Mahdi who rushed for 1331 yards last season. Sun Belt Player of the Year Jordan McCloud will be the new quarterback after passing for 3657 yards with 35 touchdown passes while leading James Madison to an 11-2 record. Kinne is an attractive head coach to play for after his up-tempo innovative offense ranks 15th in the nation by generating 457.6 total Yards-Per-Game. Nine starters return on that side of the ball -- and another nine starters return on defense that still needs work after ranking 112th by allowing 32.8 Points-Per-Game. Kinne brought in several players on that side of the ball to improve the talent level of that group. The Bobcats finished 4-4 in conference play — but they outgained their Sun Belt opponents by +50 YPG. UNLV: My fundamental question regarding the Rebels last season was whether first-year head coach Barry Odom could instill some life in what is now the afterthought football team in Las Vegas. The answer was a resounding “Yes!” UNLV won nine of their first 11 games with their two losses being to eventual National Champion Michigan (in Ann Arbor) and at Fresno State. They reached the Mountain West Conference Championship Game where they lost at Boise State by a 44-20 score. They then lost to Kansas by a 49-36 score in the Guaranteed Rate Bowl (their first bowl game since 2013) to finish the season with a 9-5 record. Odom is a professional football coach who had a successful four-year run as the head coach at Missouri before serving as the defensive coordinator at Arkansas. Eleven starters return — and Odom is doing a nice job of using the transfer portal to poach offensive skill position talent from the FCS level and former blue-chip defensive backs who are looking for second chances after struggling at Power Four schools. The Rebels have returning talent. Wide receiver Ricky White III is an All-American candidate. Linebacker Jackson Woodard and defensive end Jalen Dixon made the All-Mountain West Conference defensive team last year. And offensive coordinator Brennan Marion is a rising star with his “Go-Go” up-tempo run-first offense that is heavy on pre-snap motion and flexible formations. The front seven was solid — UNLV ranked 33rd in Expected Points Allowed per opponent rushing attempt and 42nd in Opponent Rush Success Rate Allowed. But the Rebels ranked 103rd in the nation by allowing 415.5 total Yards-Per-Game because of their pass defense that ranked 111st by surrendering 253.7 passing YPG. Odom added size and athleticism to the defensive backs room by bringing in seven transfers to compete with three returning starters. The biggest loss in the offseason was sophomore quarterback Jayden Maiava transferring to USC after being named the MWC Freshman of the Year. Odom dipped into the FCS ranks to bring in two transfer quarterbacks with dual-threat skills — and Patriot League Player of the Year Matthew Sluka seized the starting job in the fall. Marion oversaw an offense that scored 34.4 PPG which ranked 22nd in the FBS. With depth at the skill positions and an experienced offensive line, UNLV should flirt with that scoring number again. A second year under Odom and defensive coordinator Mike Scherer could see a significant improvement on the defensive side of the ball. But let’s also remember that the Rebels lost their last three games of the season and only beat two of the seven teams who played in bowl games last year. They were 6-2 in conference play — but they only outgained MWC opponents by just 31 YPG. Best of luck -- Frank.

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Big Al's Daily Angle: NFL, NCAAF, and MLB Previews and Odds - 09/26/2024

by Big Al Staff

Thursday, Sep 26, 2024

The Thursday sports card features NFL, NCAAF, and MLB action. Week 4 in the National Football League kicks off with one game. The Dallas Cowboys travel to New York to play the Giants on Amazon Prime at 8:15 p.m. ET. The Cowboys have lost two games in a row after their 28-25 loss at Baltimore as a 1-point underdog on Sunday. The Giants ended their two-game losing streak with a 21-15 upset victory at Cleveland as a 6.5-point underdog last week. Dallas is a 6-point road favorite with the total set at 45 (all odds from DraftKings).Week 5 in NCAAF college football starts with one game between FBS opponents. Army West Point plays at Temple on ESPN at 7:30 p.m. ET. The Black Knights are unbeaten after their first three games after their 37-14 victory against Rice as a 7.5-point favorite last Saturday. The Owls ended their three-game losing streak to win their first game of the season with a 45-29 upset victory at home against Utah State as a 6.5-point underdog on Saturday. Army West Point is a 13-point road favorite with an over/under of 46.Major League Baseball has nine games on its schedule. The Milwaukee Brewers are in Pittsburgh against the Pirates at 12:35 p.m. ET. Aaron Civale gets the ball for the Brewers to pitch against Mitch Keller for the Pirates. Milwaukee is a -122 money-line road favorite with a total of 8. The Kansas City Royals visit Washington to play the Nationals at 1:05 p.m. ET. The Royals tap Michael Wacha to face the Nationals’ Patrick Corbin. Kansas City is a -175 money-line road favorite with an over/under of 8. The Detroit Tigers host the Tampa Bay Rays at 1:10 p.m. ET. Reese Olson takes the mound for the Tigers to go against Tyler Alexander for the Rays. Detroit is a -166 money-line favorite with a total of 7.5. The Los Angeles Angels play in Chicago against the White Sox at 2:10 p.m. ET. The Angels turn to Tyler Anderson to challenge the White Sox’s Chris Flexen. Los Angeles is a -122 money-line road favorite with an over/under of 7.5. The St. Louis Cardinals are in Colorado to play the Rockies at 3:10 p.m. ET. Kyle Gibson takes the ball for the Cardinals to battle Kyle Freeland for the Rockies. St. Louis is a -125 money-line road favorite with a total of 10.5. The Texas Rangers travel to Oakland to play the A’s at 3:37 p.m. ET. The Rangers send out Kumar Rocker to duel against the A’s J.T. Ginn. Texas is a -115 money-line road favorite with an over/under of 8.5. The New York Yankees play at home against the Baltimore Orioles at 7:05 p.m. ET. Gerrit Cole takes the hill for the Yankees to face Corbin Burnes for the Orioles. New York is a -148 money-line favorite with a total of 7.5. The Minnesota Twins are at home against the Miami Marlins at 7:40 p.m. ET. The Twins turn to David Festa to pitch against the Marlins’ Valente Bellozo. Minnesota is a -250 money-line favorite with an over/under of 8.5.  The Los Angeles Dodgers host the San Diego Padres at 10:10 p.m. ET. Walker Buehler gets tapped by the Dodgers to challenge Joe Musgrove for the Padres. Los Angeles is a -125 money-line favorite with a total of 8.5.

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Big Al's Daily Angle: MLB Previews and Odds - 09/25/2024

by Big Al Staff

Wednesday, Sep 25, 2024

The Wednesday sports card features MLB action. Major League Baseball has 15 games on its schedule. The Seattle Mariners travel to Houston to play the Astros at 2:10 p.m. ET. Yusei Kikuchi takes the ball for the Astros to face George Kirby for the Astros. Seattle is a -135 money-line road favorite with the total set at 7 (all odds from DraftKings). The Philadelphia Phillies host the Chicago Cubs at 6:05 p.m. ET. The Phillies tap Cristopher Sanchez to take the mound to pitch against the Cubs’ Javier Assad. Philadelphia is a -192 money-line favorite with an over/under of 8. Three more MLB games throw out the first pitch at 6:40 p.m. ET. Detroit plays at home against Tampa Bay with Keider Montero getting sent to the mound by the Tigers to challenge Zack Littel for the Rays. The Tigers are a -118 money-line favorite with a total of 7.5. Cleveland is home against Cincinnati with the Guardians turning to Joey Cantillo to go against the Reds’ Jakob Junis. The Guardians are a -148 money-line favorite with an over/under of 8. Milwaukee plays in Pittsburgh with Freddy Peralta taking the hill for the Brewers to battle against Luis L. Ortiz for the Pirates. The Brewers are a -155 money-line road favorite with a total of 7.5. The Kansas City Royals are in Washington to play the Nationals at 6:45 p.m. ET. The Royals send out Michael Lorenzen to duel against the Nationals’ D.J. Herz. Kansas City is a -120 money-line road favorite with an over/under of 7.5. The New York Yankees hosts the Baltimore Orioles at 7:05 p.m. ET. Nestor Cortes, Jr. gets the ball for the Yankees to pitch against Zach Eflin for the Orioles. New York is a -155 money-line favorite with a total of 7.5. The Toronto Blue Jays play at home against the Boston Red Sox at 7:07 p.m. ET. The Blue Jays send out Kevin Gausman to pitch against the Red Sox’s Richard Fitts. Toronto is a -142 money-line favorite with an over/under of 8. The Atlanta Braves are at home against the New York Mets at 7:20 p.m. ET. Chris Sale gets the start for the Braves to go against David Peterson for the Mets. Atlanta is a -185 money-line favorite with a total of 7.5. Two more MLB games start at 7:40 p.m. ET. Minnesota hosts Miami with the Twins tapping Simeon Woods Richardson to challenge the Marlins’ Edward Cabrera. The Twins are a -185 money-line favorite with an over/under of 8. Los Angeles visits Chicago with Jose Suarez taking the mound for the Angels to duel against Davis Martin for the White Sox. The Angels are a -118 money-line road favorite with a total of 8.5. The St. Louis Cardinals play in Colorado against the Rockies at 8:40 p.m. ET. The Cardinals tap Erick Fedde to battle against the Rockies’ Austin Gomber. St. Louis is a -135 money-line road favorite with an over/under of 10.5. Two MLB games begin at 9:40 p.m. ET. Arizona plays at home against San Francisco with Zac Gallen getting the ball for the Diamondbacks to pitch against Mason Black for the Giants. The Diamondbacks are a -225 money-line favorite with a total of 8.5. Texas is in Oakland with the Rangers turning to Cody Bradford to face the A’s' Brady Basso. The Rangers are a -118 money-line road favorite with an over/under of 7.5. The Los Angeles Dodgers are at home against the San Diego Padres at 10:10 p.m. ET. Jack Flaherty takes the mound for the Dodgers to challenge Dylan Cease for the Padres. Los Angeles is a -135 money-line favorite with a total of 7.5.

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NCAA Football: Early Season Hype vs Reality

by Wayne Root

Tuesday, Sep 24, 2024

Here’s some matchups that has a lot of hype leading into the weekend. Oklahoma St vs Kansas StLouisville vs Notre Dame Arkansas vs Texas A&MGeorgia vs Alabama Illinois vs Penn StThese are just a few big games set for Saturday, September 28. How do you separate the hype from the past reputation to new players from the portal?We’re at the time of year in college football where hype is out of control surrounding some teams. Football teams that have gotten out to hot starts – whether expected or not – can do no wrong in the eyes of the media and the betting public. I love to note teams I think are good but started the season 2-1 or 1-2 and the oddsmakers will over adjust the lines in October. But the public will have it in their mind to bet against them from what they have seen. Look at what Texas did to Michigan. Then Michigan turned around the following week and defeated USC. As you know if you have spent any time at all watching sports, though, not all teams live up to their early season hype. Some don’t live up to it in truly spectacular fashion. Our job as sports bettors is to try to tell the difference between the teams that are as good as advertised, and the ones that have sucked people in only to eventually break their hearts.Here are five questions to ask yourself as a football bettor as you try to determine which teams are which:1. Who have they played? This is the biggest trap that sports bettors fall into. They get all excited because a team gets off to a hot 3-0 start and pile up a bunch of points or play stellar defense, but they forget to consider who the opponents were. I try to throw out stats of the one sided games from week one and week two so I have a clear picture for the rest of the year. Maybe those wins came against a hopelessly outmatched opponent. Or maybe they were against good teams, but ones that don’t play well on the road. Or maybe the opponents were suffering from injuries to key players, or were adjusting to new football coaches or new schemes. The actual final score in a game tells very little of the story of what has gone on, and until you plunge deeper and get a sense of what has actually happened you just aren’t working with enough information to know if a team should be hyped or not.2. Were the matchups particularly favorable? Further to the last point, what you really need to look at is the matchups in the early games. Is the hyped team a pass-heavy team that was facing a team with a defective pass rush or an inexperienced secondary. Are they a football team with a large defensive line that was able to contain and control the opposing undersized offensive line and running backs? Do they have a relentless blitzing approach that rattled a young opposing quarterback? If there is a matchup issue that clearly contributed to the hot start and therefore the hype then it is crucial that you identify it. If the mismatch is one that is likely to continue then the team might be worthy of the attention. If it’s just a quirk of scheduling that positioned the game or games that best suit their style early in the schedule, though, then you might have spotted a situation where the sports betting public’s affection is unwarranted.3. Has the hype been fueled by one player performing extraordinarily well? Be sure to check out the play of a Heisman hopeful. Did he carry the team or did the coach help pad his stats. The less a hot start is built around one player, or even just a couple, the more likely that it is sustainable. Look at Colorado’s QB,  Shedeur Sanders. He’s a prime example of the public betting on him and the excitement his dad, the coach, brings to the media. 4. What’s the coaching status? There is always new optimism around a new hire, so that combined with a hot start can get hype running at high levels. More often than not, though, that hot start can’t be sustained. Changing systems and approachss isn’t easy and growing pains are inevitable. If the hype is surrounding a team with a new coach I am always skeptical, and my skepticism is rarely unfounded.5. How do they differ now from preseason perception? Every so often a team in College goes from worst to first in a single year. Or a semi-miraculous climb in the standings. the media and the public love those stories – so much so that they want to see them happening all the time. The problem, though, is that a majority of the time a football team that was bad last year and hasn’t done much about it isn’t likely to be great this year – no matter how they do in their first couple of games. If a team was pretty universally viewed to be an also-ran before the season but then they pick up a couple of impressive early wins you need to be especially sure in your football handicapping that the current reality differs in a meaningful way form the preseason perception of the team before you get too excited and buy into them. Because UNLV was good last year, especially versus the spread at 9-2, their 3-0 start may show that they are really good and a team the oddsmakers or public haven’t caught up with. And they’re ranked #23 in the Coaches poll. Unprecedented. 

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NFL Week 3 Observations

by Vegas Writer

Tuesday, Sep 24, 2024

Week 3 is in the books, and here are some NFL observations from Week 2:Six teams – the Baltimore Ravens, Carolina Panthers, Denver Broncos, Indianapolis Colts, Los Angeles Rams and New York Giants – earned their first win of the season in Week 3. Only two teams remain winless, both of Monday's losing squads: Cincinnati and Jacksonville. Not good considering only six teams since 1979 have made the playoffs after starting 0-3, including just one since 2000, and none have won a Super Bowl.Five teams – the Minnesota Vikings, Pittsburgh Steelers, Seattle Seahawks, Kansas City Chiefs and Buffalo Bills – improved to 3-0.The Vikings are 3-0 for the first time since 2016 after a balanced effort on both sides of the ball in their 34-7 win over Houston, getting five sacks from the defense while wide receivers Justin Jefferson and Jalen Nailor recorded a touchdown reception.The Vikings registered five sacks in Week 1, six sacks in Week 2 and five sacks in Week 3. They're the third team since 1990 with at least five sacks in each of their first three games of a season.The Steelers are 3-0 for the first time since 2020, and appear to have regenerated the days of their Steel Curtain on defense. They allowed 10 points in Week 1, six points in Week 2 and 10 points in Week 3. They're the fifth team since 2000 to win each of their first three games and allow 10 or fewer points in each wins.The Green Bay Packers went into Nashville and routed the Tennessee Titans, 30-14, as quarterback Malik Willis was brilliant against his former team, totaling 275 yards (202 passing, 73 rushing) and two touchdowns (one passing, one rushing) with a 120.9 rating, Packers safety Xavier McKinney registered his third-consecutive game with an interception to begin the season.On the ground, the Packers have 612 rushing yards to become the fifth team with at least 600 yards rushing in their first three games of a season since 1990.Philadelphia running back Saquon Barkley totaled 156  yards on offense (147 rushing, nine receiving) and two rushing touchdowns while tight end Dallas Goedert hauled in 10 passes for 170 yards in the Eagles' 15-12 win at New Orleans.New York Giants rookie wide receiver Malik Nabers continued the impressive start to his career as he recorded eight receptions for 78 yards and two touchdowns in the team’s 21-15 win at Cleveland. Nabers has 23 receptions for 271 yards and three touchdowns this season. He is the first player in NFL history with at least 20 receptions and three touchdown catches in his first three career games.Veteran running back Derrick Henry totaled 174 scrimmage yards (151 rushing, 23 receiving) and two rushing touchdowns in the Baltimore Ravens' 28-25 win over Dallas. Henry now has 12 career games with at least 150 rushing yards and two rushing touchdowns.San Francisco quarterback Brock Purdy passed for 292 yards with three touchdowns and a 137.1 rating in Week 3. On Monday, it was revealed Purdy will undergo an MRI for a sore back.Carolina wide receiver Adam Thielen registered his 60th career touchdown reception and became the third undrafted player in the common-draft era with at least 60 career touchdown receptions.Dallas kicker Brandon Aubrey continued to delight Fantasy owners, as he booted a 65-yard field goal in the first quarter, the second-longest made field goal in NFL history. After a preseason game in Las Vegas, Aubrey told media members that he's kicked 70 yard field goals at practices.

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2024-25 NHL Preview: Metropolitan Division

by Sean Murphy

Tuesday, Sep 24, 2024

The puck drops on the 2024-25 NHL season in less than two weeks as the Sabres and Devils play a two-game set at O2 Arena in Prague. Here's a preview of the eight teams that reside in the Metropolitan Division, in no particular order.Pittsburgh PenguinsThere were whispers regarding Sidney Crosby's future in Pittsburgh leading up to the trade deadline last March. Crosby doesn't seem to have any interest in playing anywhere other than Pittsburgh, however, as he re-upped with the Penguins during the offseason. A rebuild never seems far off in the Steel City even if pieces of the original core (Crosby, Evgeni Malkin and Kris Letang) remain on board. There weren't a ton of big offseason moves, although the draft day deal to acquire Kevin Hayes and signing of Matt Grzelcyk could pay dividends. A time-share isn't off the board in goal with the capable duo of Tristan Jarry and Alex Nedeljkovic. Depth remains thin across the board for the Pens and another campaign on the edge of postseason play is the most likely outcome.New York RangersThe Blueshirts fell two wins away from the Stanley Cup Final last Spring, bowing out at the hands of the eventual champion Panthers. As expected, the Rangers more or less stood pat during the offseason, feeling that keeping the core together was the best path forward to another run at the Cup. Alexis Lafreniere took a big step forward last season and especially in the playoffs and New York is hoping Kaapo Kakko is next in line to blossom in 24-25. You'd be hard-pressed to find many holes in this roster and with all-world goaltender Igor Shesterkin once again serving as the last line of defense, the Rangers should be top of conversation when it comes to Stanley Cup contenders.Columbus Blue Jackets Perhaps no team will be playing with heavier hearts than the Blue Jackets following the tragic death of Johnny Gaudreau and his brother Matthew in late-August. The hockey community as a whole is hurting. Columbus had a fairly productive offseason, dealing away troubled veteran Patrik Laine to Montreal in exchange for blue-line prospect Jordan Harris. Sean Monahan and James van Riemsdyk were added to provide some veteran leadership. This is still a very young team with the hope being that Adam Fantilli, who had his rookie campaign cut short by a freak injury, and Kent Johnson take another step forward. The Jackets boast an underrated defensive corps led by Zach Werenski and fast-improving David Jiricek. It's going to be difficult for Columbus to gain much ground in the ultra-competitive Metropolitan but any move northward from last place would be considered a positive.Carolina HurricanesThe Hurricanes seem to be stuck in a bit of a 'groundhog day' cycle, re-living the same season (and playoff exit) over and over again. Changes were needed in the offseason and as a result, this is a new-look team entering 24-25. Gone are the likes of Brady Skjei, Brett Pesce, Jake Guentzel, Teuvo Teravainen, Stefan Noesen and Antti Raanta. While big name signings weren't in the cards, the Canes did add quality depth pieces including William Carrier, Jack Roslovic, Tyson Jost and Shayne Gostisbehere among others. Few teams are deeper than Carolina - a big reason it was able to let so many players walk in the offseason. In goal, the Canes are depending on the healthy of Frederik Andersen who is likely to be pushed by backup Pyotr Kochetkov. New Jersey DevilsThe Devils were a massive disappointment last season after making such great strides the year previous. Shoring up their goaltending situation was job one over the Summer and New Jersey did just that by acquiring Jacob Markstrom in a trade with Calgary. The Devils are hoping some of the Hurricanes past success can rub off with the arrival of Brett Pesce and Stefan Noesen. However, Pesce will start the season on the shelf, as will young blue line standout Luke Hughes. There's no question New Jersey is still counting on plenty of young players to lead the charge but that has worked in the past. The injury bug bit the Devils hard last season but if their key cogs, particularly up front, can stay healthy they could turn out to be a Metropolitan Division sleeper. New York IslandersPatrick Roy will get his first full season behind the bench with the Islanders following a third-place finish in the Metropolitan last season. The offseason losses were minimal, but so were the additions. New York did do some tinkering, most notably adding Anthony Duclair, who it hopes can provide a scoring boost. Many of the familiar faces including Mat Barzal, Bo Horvat, Anders Lee and Brock Nelson will be asked to shoulder the load offensively. The blue line is solid led by the terrific Noah Dobson. In goal, a bounce-back campaign should be in order for Ilya Sorokin who was once thought to be one of the best in the NHL but had a down 23-24 season. He did undergo offseason back surgery so we'll see if he's ready for puck drop in October. Semyon Varlamov serves as a capable veteran backup.Philadelphia FlyersPhiladelphia isn't exactly known for having a patient fan base so it's understandable that the Flyers are in win-now mode under the guidance of head coach John Tortorella. If nothing else, the Flyers should be exciting to watch with Matvei Michkov coming over from Russia after being drafted in June 2023. There's plenty of talent behind Michkov, at least in the top-six. After that, offensive production wanes. Last season's big move was the trade of Cutter Gauthier to Anaheim in exchange for Jamie Drysdale. Drysdale will be asked to take on a more prominent role on the blue line this season, likely eating 20-25 minutes per game. Philadelphia has a crowded crease with no fewer than four goaltenders capable of earning time. The duo of Samuel Ersson and Ivan Fedotov are most likely to stay on with the big club come October.Washington CapitalsThe Capitals were one of the biggest surprises to reach the postseason last Spring and much like the Penguins, made moves to bolster their roster rather than begin a rebuild in the offseason. Veterans T.J. Oshie and Nicklas Backstrom won't be on the ice any time soon and could miss the entire season. That makes the acquisition of guys like Pierre-Luc Dubois and Andrew Mangiapane all the more important. In a quiet trade that could pay big dividends, Washington added Jakob Chychrun from Ottawa after the defenseman struggled to fit in north of the border. In goal, Darcy Kuemper was dealt while Logan Thompson was added by way of Las Vegas. Thompson could earn a time-share with Charlie Lindgren, who put forth a terrific 23-24 campaign. The main reason to watch the Caps this season will be to see if Alex Ovechkin can hunt down Wayne Gretzky's all-time goal-scoring record but don't be surprised if they earn playoff-viewing as well. 

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Big Al's Daily Angle: MLB Previews and Odds - 09/24/2024

by Big Al Staff

Tuesday, Sep 24, 2024

The Tuesday sports card features MLB action. Major League Baseball has 15 games on its schedule. The Detroit Tigers host the Tampa Bay Rays at 1:10 p.m. ET. The Tigers tap Tarik Skubal to take the ball to face the Rays’ Ryan Pepiot. Detroit is a -185 money-line favorite with the total set at 7 (all odds from DraftKings). Three MLB games throw out the first pitch at 6:40 p.m. ET. Milwaukee travels to Pittsburgh with Tobias Myers taking the mound for the Brewers to pitch against Bailey Falter for the Pirates. The Brewers are a -142 money-line road favorite with an over/under of 8. Cleveland plays at home against Cincinnati with the Guardians turning to Tanner Bibee to go against the Reds’ Jakob Junis. The Guardians are a -166 money-line favorite with a total of 8. Chicago plays at Philadelphia with Justin Steele getting the ball for the Cubs to challenge Tanner Banks for the Phillies. The Cubs are a -120 money-line road favorite with an over/under of 8.5. The Kansas City Royals are in Washington against the Nationals at 6:45 p.m. ET. The Royals send out Cole Ragans to battle against the Nationals’ Mitchell Parker. Kansas City is a -170 money-line road favorite with a total of 8. The New York Yankees are at home against the Baltimore Orioles at 7:05 p.m. ET. Clarke Schmidt takes the mound for the Yankees to duel against Dean Kremer for the Orioles. New York is a -162 money-line favorite with an over/under of 8.5. The Toronto Blue Jays host the Boston Red Sox at 7:07 p.m. ET. The Blue Jays tap Bowden Francis to pitch against the Red Sox’s Brayan Bello. Toronto is a -135 money-line favorite with a total of 8. The Atlanta Braves play at home against the New York Mets at 7:20 p.m. ET. Spencer Schwellenbach gets the ball for the Braves to face Luis Severino for the Mets. Atlanta is a -148 money-line favorite with an over/under of 8. Two more games start at 7:40 p.m. ET. Los Angeles visits Chicago with the Angels sending out Jack Kochanowicz to challenge the White Sox’s Jonathan Cannon. The Angels are a -122 money-line road favorite with a total of 8.5. Minnesota is at home against Miami with Bailey Ober getting the ball for the Twins to go against Ryan Weathers for the Marlins. The Twins are a -245 money-line favorite with an over/under of 8.The Houston Astros host the Seattle Mariners at 8:10 p.m. ET. The Astros turn to Framber Valdez to duel against the Mariners’ Logan Gilbert. Houston is a -135 money-line favorite with a total of 7. The St. Louis Cardinals play in Colorado against the Rockies at 8:40 p.m. ET. Michael McGreevy takes the mound for the Cardinals to battle against Ryan Feltner for the Rockies. St. Louis is a -122 money-line road favorite with an over/under of 10.5. Two MLB games begin at 9:40 p.m. ET. Texas is in Oakland with the Rangers sending out Nathan Eovaldi to face the A’s Mitchell Spence. The Rangers are a -120 money-line road favorite with a total of 7.5. Arizona plays at home against San Francisco with Brandon Pfaadt getting the ball for the Diamondbacks to go against Logan Webb for the Giants. The Diamondbacks are a -135 money-line favorite with an over/under of 8. The Los Angeles Dodgers are at home against the San Diego Padres at 10:10 p.m. ET. The Dodgers turn to Landon Knack to challenge the Padres’ Michael King. Los Angeles is a -115 money-line favorite with a total of 8.

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5 NBA Teams Who Will Go Under The Posted Win Total

by AAA Sports

Monday, Sep 23, 2024

The NBA regular season starts on October 22nd. That's less than a month away! A couple of weeks ago, we looked at five teams which we felt were set to outperform expectations. Now, we will take a look at five NBA teams which may have trouble hitting their projected win total. We're not making wagers on these plays yet, just getting the conversation started. We understand that these are some good teams but these are also some high totals. If you do play on any of them to go under their respective totals, if possible, make sure to shop around for the best lines. These can vary quite a lot from book to book. The lines can also move quickly. The ones we are using were taken from Draft Kings on September 23rd. BOSTON CELTICS (58.5) So much went right for the Celtics last season. Jayson Tatum gave up some scoring and became an undisputed top 8 player in the league. Jaylen Brown showed that he could play despite the expectations that come with being the league’s highest-paid player. Newcomers Kristaps Porzingis and Jrue Holiday were perfect fits. Even the maligned bench wasn’t a drain. All good. But the injury-prone Porzingis will be on the bench for several months and is no cinch to STAY healthy.  The veteran backcourt of Holiday and Derrick White put some miles on their odometers playing in the Olympics (Tatum, not so much). To get to 59 wins the Celtics will need to keep Al Horford healthy and monitor his minutes, plus get improvement from one of their other emerging bigs – Neemius Queta or Xavier Tillman. Toss in improvement from Eastern rivals, and it looks like an under play is warranted.DENVER NUGGETS (51.5) What you see is what you get from the Nuggets, whose core of Nikola Jokic, Jamal Murray, Aaron Gordon, and Michael Porter Jr. will basically determine, again, how high they finish this season. The only significant moves the team made in the off-season were allowing Kentavius Caldwell-Pope to walk (to Orlando) and bringing on Russell Westbrook, and that means that the Nuggets will remain talented but not deep – and in the uber-talented Western Conference that’s a huge red flag for totals players. It’s not hard to see the Nuggets going into Heat Mode, kissing off the regular season, and resting the Core Four to keep them ready and healthy for the playoffs. Oddsmakers have already baked a six-game slide into the cake, but if Jokic gets dinged or Murray doesn’t emerge from whatever it was that caused him to stink out the joint in the Olympics, the decline could be even greater.PHOENIX SUNS (47.5) OK, an under play could go sideways really fast if Bradley Beal somehow manages to stay healthy and competes in the neighborhood of 65 to 70 games. The Suns would then finally have the Big Three that new ownership had to have – and handsomely paid for. What team wouldn’t want Beal, Devin Booker, and Kevin Durant on the court at the same time? Last season, with Beal on the sidelines most of the time, Booker and Durant combined for nearly 55 points a game. The problem was, that head coach Frank Vogel could never quite get the boys to buy in on the defensive end, so he was replaced by former Bucks HC Mike Budenholzer – who was fired in Milwaukee for pretty much the same reason. Durant, Beal, and Booker are a combined 93 years old, and it will be interesting to see where Phoenix is come mid-March and how important it is for the Suns to finish with a top 4 or 5 seed.LOS ANGELES CLIPPERS (40.5) Either Kawhi Leonard finally enjoyed good health or the NBA’s decision to make players take the court 65 times out of 82 in order to qualify for post-season awards had a huge effect. At any rate, Leonard played in more games (68, just above the minimum) than in any season since he started to play his way out of San Antonio in 2016-17. Same with James Harden, who suited up 72 times – the most since 2018-19 with Houston. This year? Who knows? But they’ll have to stay on the court as much, or even more, since running-mate Paul George has flown to coop to Philadelphia. The Clippers chose financial flexibility over star power as they move into their new arena in Los Angeles. The ifs and buts are stacked up like cordwood, and a .500 season that would cover the winning title could be quite a reach.MILWAUKEE BUCKS (50.5) They won’t admit it, of course, but if the Bucks could turn back the clock it’s debatable whether they would do the Jrue Holiday-to-Portland-for-Damian Lillard trade all over again. Lillard and Giannis Antetokounmpo never really got things together, but they’ll have to do it all over again this season. The Bucks are hoping against hope that Doc Rivers can figure things out with a full training camp after a disastrous 17-19 record as Adrian Griffin’s replacement. For the record, under Griffin the Bucks were on a pace to win 57 games; they ended up with 49. So much of this season depends on the health of Khris Middleton, who hasn’t played as many as 70 games in a season since 2018-19. The title window appears to be closing on Milwaukee, with Lillard in his mid-30s, Antetokounmpo hitting the Big 3-0 in a few months, and Middleton 33.

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