jeff benton friday
1-0 yesterday for 30 dimes.. 25-25-1 PLUS 45 dimes since i started posting..he is on fire now, and is on one of his incredible streaks..i've witnessed several of these over the years. anyway here are the plays for friday.
Friday's Action
20 Dime selection for Fridayon the Utah Jazz minus the points at home. in Game 3 of their best of 7 opening-rouad series against the Nuggets. As I post this play live at approximately 11:45 a.m. Eastersn, the Jazz are giving a solid 2 1/2 poines in Las Vegas and offshore.
10 Dime selection for Fridayon the Boston Celtics plus the points on the road. in Game 3 of their best of 7 opening-rouad series against the Heat. As I post this play live at approximately 11:45 a.m. Eastersn, the Celtics are catching a solid 4 poines in Las Vegas and offshore.
Jazz
If not for one poor quarter (the fourth quarter of Game 1), the Utah Jazz would’ve escaped Denver with a 2-0 series lead. Still, the Jazz were more than happy to get the split in the first two games, especially playing without center Mehmet Okur (who suffered a season-ending Achilles injury in Game 1) and scoring forward Andre Kirilenko (who remains sidelined with a calf injury).
Now the Jazz take home-court advantage back to Salt Lake City for this all-important Game 3, and I’m loving Utah here, especially at this ridiculous near pick-em price. Just compare the numbers: The Jazz went 32-9 SU in Salt Lake this year, and their 26-13-2 ATS mark at home was the best in the NBA. Meanwhile, Denver was a sub-.500 road team at 19-22 SU and 15-21-5 ATS. Down the stretch, playing without coach George Karl on the bench (more on that shortly), the Nuggets lost six of their last eight road games, going 1-6-1 ATS.
In the regular-season finale, with the #2 overall seed in the Western Conference still up for grabs, the Nuggets went to Phoenix and laid a big old egg, losing 123-101 as a five-point underdog. And Denver ended March with road losses to the Knicks, Celtics (by 14 points), Magic and Mavericks (by 16 points). The Nuggets’ only road victories since March 15 came at Toronto (on a last-second, buzzer-beating shot by Carmelo Anthony, which led to a 97-96 win), and a four-point victory at Oklahoma City (and in that one, Denver was coming off three days of rest while the Thunder were coming off a heartbreaking 140-139 overtime loss at Utah – think altitude! – the previous night).
Back to George Karl. You may recall that I backed the Jazz in Game 2, and a BIG reason was because I trusted Jerry Sloan to make the necessary Game 1-to-Game 2 adjustments a LOT more than I trusted Adrian Dantley, who is filling in as Denver’s coach while Karl goes through cancer treatment. Sure enough, the Jazz raced out to a 12-point halftime lead, and when things got tight down the stretch, it was Sloan (drawing on 198 games of playoff coaching) experience and not Dantley (coaching his second playoff game EVER) who pushed the right buttons.
Now Sloan is back in his familiar environs (he’s been Utah’s coach for 19 years), and Dantley is coaching his first road playoff game. Don’t kid yourself: This is an ENORMOUS edge for the Jazz. Guys, I said it prior to Game 2 of this series: You may think coaching doesn’t matter in the NBA, and for the most part in the regular season, it doesn’t. But in the playoffs, coaches play a HUGE role, especially since most of the games are tight in the fourth quarter. And once again tonight, I look for Sloan to coach circles around Dantley.
Finally, chew on these facts: These teams now have identical 54-30 records on the season, but as noted above, the home/road discrepancy favors Utah tonight big time. So does the fact that the Jazz have one of the best pointspread records in the NBA (50-31-3), while Denver is among the worst (36-42-6). Additionally, the Jazz are on ATS runs of 32-15-3 overall, 34-15-2 as a favorite, 21-7-1 as a favorite of less than five points, 22-5-2 as a home favorite of less than five points and 6-1-1 as a playoff chalk of less than five points. On the flip side, Denver is 5-12-1 ATS in its last 18 overall, 1-6-1 ATS in its last eight on the road (as mentioned above) and 1-4-2 ATS in its last seven as an underdog.
Bottom line: The oddsmakers undervalued the Jazz in the first two games of this series (and that includes Game 1, when the Nuggets covered easily but only after that big fourth-quarter run broke open a tie game). And they’ve undervalued Utah again tonight. With the steady hand of Sloan on the bench mapping out strategy and Jazz stars Deron Williams (33 points, 14 assists in Game 2) and Carlos Boozer (20 points, 15 rebounds in Game 2) leading the charge, the Jazz win this game and win it comfortably.
Celtics
Logic says the Heat are the smart play here, being down 2-0 and in the ultimate must-win spot, while the Celtics may be feeling a little too good about themselves and are in a prime letdown spot. And that’s all true. But here’s what else is true: It’s become painfully obvious that Boston is just a bad, bad matchup for the Heat.
Going back to last March, the Celtics have won seven straight against Miami, going 5-1 ATS in the last six. Granted, five of those seven victories came in Beantown, with just two in South Beach (a 92-85 win in November and a 112-106 overtime win in January). But here’s the thing: If the Heat can’t hold a 14-point third-quarter lead on the road (as happened in Game 1, when they lost by nine) and if the Heat get outscored 44-8 with Kevin Garnett in a suit on the sidelines serving a suspension (as happened in Game 2, when they got embarrassed 106-77), then how in the world can they be laying points in ANY kind of situation against Boston?
Simply put, this is a value play on the Celtics. And while I acknowledge the possibility of a letdown here with Boston, it’s also just as likely that they’ll come out fully focused and determined to put their foot on the Heat’s neck. Don’t forget: A team with Garnett, Paul Pierce and Ray Allen is a team with a LOT of miles on their tires, and the faster they can get a playoff series over, the better. So don’t be surprised if the Celtics play with just as much urgency as Miami.
Keep this in mind, too: For some reason, Boston was actually better on the road this year (26-15) than at home (24-17). Also, the Celtics have been money in the bank as a road underdog – we’re talking 53-26-2 in their last 81 when catching points on the highway, including 8-2-1 ATS in their last 11 as a playoff pup. Meanwhile, the Heat are in ATS slumps of 1-5-1 at home, 1-4-1 as a home chalk and 2-5 when laying points in the playoffs. Miami also hasn’t been a very good bounce-back team (0-4 ATS last four after a double-digit defeat).
Take the points with Boston, but I truly believe the points will be meaningless, as I see an outright upset.