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English Championship TODAY 19:45
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KEY STAT: Derby have lost just one of their last 17 home league matches

EXPERT VERDICT: Confidence has returned to the Derby dressing room after the 4-0 victory at Birmingham and the high-flying Rams should follow up with a win at home to struggling Leeds. However, they may be restricted to a narrow margin of victory by a Leeds side who have been playing better than recent results suggest.

RECOMMENDATION: Derby to win 2-1
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NHL Grand Salami - December

The Grand Salami in pro hockey is decided by adding up all the goals scored in every game scheduled for that particular day. You can wager on 'over' or 'under' the Grand Salami total. The total is set by adding up all listed 'over/under' odds for each game on that particular day.

Note: The Grand Salami will have no action if any game is suspended or cancelled before the regulation time of three twenty minute periods. Also, regardless of the number of goals scored during the shoot out portion of the overtime, the final scored recorded for the game will give the winning team on more goal than its opponent based on the score at the end of regulation time.

*The majority of sportsbooks do not put out a total on the Grand Salami when there is only one game on the card. For tracking purposes, we will continue to show the 'over/under' for goals and combined goals scored on days with just one game.

NHL GRAND SALAMI

Date No. of Games Total Goals Combined Goals Scored Result
12/1 5 26.5 31 OVER
12/2 10 55.5 45 UNDER
12/3 4 21 22 OVER
12/4 11 60.5 65 OVER
12/5 3 15.5 24 OVER
12/6 12 64 65 OVER
12/7 4 21.5 21 UNDER
12/8 3 15.5 16 OVER
12/9 10 55.5 54 UNDER
12/10 2 11.5 6 UNDER
12/11 10 54.5 58 OVER
12/12 4 21 23 OVER
12/13 13 69 73 OVER
12/14 3 16.5 12 UNDER
12/15 3 16 20 OVER
12/16 11 58 57 UNDER
12/17 3 16.5 9 UNDER
12/18 7 38.5 38 UNDER
12/19 5 27 22 UNDER
12/20 12 63.5 71 OVER
12/21 6 31.5 32 OVER
12/22 6 31.5 36 OVER
12/23 11 60.5 65 OVER
12/24 No games scheduled
12/25 No games scheduled
12/26 No games scheduled
12/27 13 69.5 68 UNDER
12/28 2 11 13 OVER
12/29 12 64 65 OVER
12/30 4 - - -
12/31 11 - - -
 
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NHL Preview: Canucks (20-11) at Sharks (19-12)

Date: December 30, 2014 10:00 PM EDT

The San Jose Sharks have spent much of December on home ice, and the success has been constant.

They'll try to complete a perfect home month Tuesday night against the Vancouver Canucks while matching their top single-season home winning streak in more than six years.

San Jose (19-12-5) is 7-0-0 at home this month and has won eight straight at the Shark Tank while scoring 3.88 goals per game. It's in a position to match a nine-game home winning streak that began the 2008-09 season and totaled 14 games with five wins from the end of the previous regular season.

The success hasn't traveled in the occasional December road games as the Sharks have gone 1-2-1 away from San Jose, including Saturday's 3-1 loss in Los Angeles.

The Sharks preceded it with a 3-2 overtime loss in Anaheim on Dec. 22, and the date with Vancouver (20-11-3) is their third in a four-game stretch against the top teams in the Pacific Division. They close 2014 with another trip to Anaheim on Wednesday.

"When the games are intense like this, you want to be at your best, and we weren't tonight," center Joe Pavelski said after the loss to the Kings. "We weren't very disciplined in a lot of areas. We gave up a lot of odd-man rushes and took a lot of penalties, things we haven't been doing lately when we were winning."

Pavelski has scored in consecutive games, though he's been limited to two goals in his last 15 against Vancouver.

The Canucks have been a strong road team this season, going 11-6-2, but they've dropped four straight (0-2-2) away from Vancouver after Sunday's 2-1 overtime loss in Anaheim.

They had a season-low 14 shots and have totaled 30 and two goals in their last two road games.

"Not good enough," Canucks coach Willie Desjardins told the team's official website. "If we want to win in this league, we've got to take the puck to the net. We can't rely on our goaltender. If we're just going to sit back, rely and hope we get points, we're not going to get points. As a group we know we have to get better."

If the offense doesn't come around, the penalty kill and strong goaltending could keep them close. The Canucks are 30 for 32 on the kill in 10 games this month and went 4 for 4 last week against the Ducks.

Ryan Miller made 29 saves and has a 1.64 goals-against average over a 2-0-1 stretch. He was similarly strong with 34 saves in a 3-2 win in San Jose on Nov. 6 to open the season series and give the Canucks a second straight road win over the Sharks.

Miller has won his last six starts against the Sharks with a 1.64 GAA and a pair of shutouts in his last four visits.

Antti Niemi, meanwhile, has been in goal for six of the Sharks' games on the home streak, but he suffered the loss last month to Vancouver after allowing three goals on 19 shots. He has been mediocre versus the Canucks with an 8-6-2 record and 2.67 GAA since joining the Sharks.

The San Jose penalty kill has also been strong lately with a 13-for-15 mark over seven games, but both goals came in Los Angeles the last time out.

Vancouver's power play is 4 for 11 in its last three games.

San Jose forward Patrick Marleau is in danger of going without a point in seven straight games for the first time since Nov. 28-Dec. 11, 2011.
 
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NBA Preview: 76ers (4-25) at Warriors (24-5)


Date: December 30, 2014 10:30 PM EDT

The Golden State Warriors encountered some hiccups on the road recently, but they remain nearly unbeatable at home.

That figures to continue Tuesday night against the Philadelphia 76ers in a matchup between the league's best and worst teams.

The Warriors (24-5) have split their last six games with all three losses coming on the road, including two in a row last week against both Los Angeles clubs. They avoided a third straight defeat with Saturday's 110-97 win over Minnesota, opening a six-game homestand. It marked their ninth straight home victory, their longest streak since winning 10 in a row Feb. 15-March 24, 1994.

While Golden State is an impressive 13-4 away from home, it is 11-1 in Oakland with an average plus-12.6 scoring differential - both the best marks in the NBA. The Warriors largely beat themselves in their lone home loss, a 113-100 defeat to San Antonio on Nov. 11 in which they committed 20 turnovers to the Spurs' eight.

Golden State's 12 home games are the fewest in the league at this point.

"Obviously we love our home court. It's been great for us all season long," forward David Lee said. "To get home for six straight home games is very important."

Klay Thompson has been particularly good at home, averaging 23.2 points and shooting 51.3 percent from 3-point range compared to 19.9 points and 37.3 percent on the road. Harrison Barnes has also been much better at Oracle Arena, scoring 13.3 per game - 5.8 more than he averages away from home.

The Warriors followed their first pair of consecutive losses to Phoenix and San Antonio with a club-record 16-game winning streak. It remains to be seen if they will respond in similar fashion this time, though Saturday's win was a good start.

"We have really good players. So if we lose a couple, they're a really competitive bunch," coach Steve Kerr said. "So it's a good combination when you've got good talent and you compete. Both times we've lost two in a row it's angered us and we've got more locked in and focused."

Philadelphia (4-25) is making its fifth stop on a seven-game trip. It started with back-to-back wins over Orlando and Miami, but the 76ers have since dropped games in Portland and Utah by a combined 38 points.

They were outrebounded 55-44 and shot 32.4 percent - their third-lowest mark of the season - in Saturday's 88-71 loss to the Jazz. Michael Carter-Williams was 2 for 20 from the field with eight points, tying five other players for the fewest field goals made on at least 20 attempts going back to at least 1963-64.

"It's tough," he said. "I just need to bounce back from it. I can't dwell on it. It's going to definitely push me to get better - I won't forget moments like this."

Carter-Williams totaled 42 points in last season's two meetings with Golden State, but the 76ers lost them by a combined 63 points.
 
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No Kawhi and Tony makes Grizz 2-point faves vs. Spurs
Stephen Campbell

The San Antonio Spurs will once again be without a few key players when they take on the Memphis Grizzlies Tuesday.

With the injured Tony Parker and Kawhi Leonard ruled out for the game, The Greek has opened the Grizz as -2 faves. The reigning champs have been battling the injury bug all season long and sit in 7th place in the tough Western Conference as of Monday.

The book set a total of 194.5 for the affair.
 
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'Raptors in tough spot'

Eastern Conference leading Raptors sitting at 24-7 (19-12 ATS) have got the current five game road swing against the Western Conference off to a smart 2-0 SU/ATS start defeating Clippers and most recently Nuggets giving Purple Dino's a 9-2 SU record vs the WC this season, 6-5 against the betting line including a sparkling 4-1 ATS on the road. Before pouncing on Raptors a few betting nuggets to ponder. Blazers at 25-7 (19-12-1 ATS) defeating Knicks last time out have feasted on Eastern Conference opponents this campaign winning 14-of-15 matchups (9-6 ATS). Blazers a blistering 14-2 on home court (10-5-1 ATS) have also won 6-of-7 meetings in this series cashing 5-of-7 against the betting line.
 
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NCAAB Bracketology Update
By Bruce Marshall

We're still early enough in the college hoops season that "St. Joe's" Lunardi's name has yet to surface in the discussion. Once beyond new year's, however, rest assured we will start hearing about Lunardi and "bracketology" on a more-frequent basis as March Madness begins to loom on the horizon.

December is a bit early to make prognostications for the NCAA Tournament, but this time of year can be a barometer regarding where teams stand as we hit the holidays and prepare for the commencement of conference play. Obviously, our many "bracketology" updates will have a different look as we move into 2015, but as a measuring stick for the first month-and-a-half of the season, we believe it to be a worthwhile exercise in late December.

We will continue to provide our own Big Dance forecasts periodically into March. But we will wait until our January updates before including each team's "RPI" (Ratings Percentage index) number, a calculation that begins to become more illuminating as we get deeper into conference action. For now, we just offer our "seeding" as of December 24, along with straight-up records thru Christmas Eve.

Remember, for all of our "Bracketology" updates, the term "protected seed" refers to seeds 1 thru 4 in each region, and generally favorable geographic placement in the sub-regional round.

As usual, we break down the projected matchups by each region, beginning with the sub-regionals, which this season will begin on Thursday, March 19, with the Dayton "First Four" games played on March 17 and 18. Remember, Selection Sunday is less than 12 weeks away!

EAST REGIONAL (Syracuse)

At Charlotte...

1 Duke (SUR 10-0) vs. 16 Army (8-2)...At the moment, the Dookies are a pretty easy call for a regional top seed; and Blue Devil backers are already making plans for the Charlotte sub-regional. There will be several challenges awaiting Coach K's troops in the ACC, but right now Duke appears the best of that lot, especially with the likelihood that monster frosh C Jahlil Okafor will continue to improve as the season progresses. How neat would it be for Coach K to have to go up against alma mater Army, where he was head coach before taking the Blue Devil job in 1979? It's the best West Point team in decades, and looks the team to beat in the Patriot League. Duke has already beaten the Black Knights by a 93-73 count on Nov. 20, an honorable result for HC Zach Spiker's team. Who would Bob Knight be pulling for in this matchup?

8 Penn State (12-1) vs. 9 LSU (9-2)...Some Big Ten observers believe Penn State will fall back to earth once conference play commences, but to this point Patrick Chambers is in the running for league Coach of the Year honors as the Nittany Lions have turned heads, even without graduated G Tim Frazier. Senior G D.J. Newbill (21.4 ppg) could be on his way to Big Ten MVP honors. The most eye-opening Penn State win to date was a dominant 64-51 hammering of a good George Washington team on Dec. 14. As for Johnny Jones' LSU, it served notice as a team to watch with a recent win at West Virginia. Although Jones will want to get electric juco PG Josh Gray (ankle sprain; missed last two games) back in the lineup ASAP. There is room for a team to emerge behind Kentucky in the number two spot in the SEC, and the Tigers appear a good candidate.

At Seattle...

4 Utah (9-2) vs. 13 Wofford (9-3)...Larry Krystowiak's Utah served notice with a recent win over Wichita State that it means business this season. Losses to ranked San Diego State and Kansas should not hurt the Utes' profile all that much, and we foresee a top-three Pac-12 finish for Krystowiak's team. Wofford has picked up where it left off late last season when it swooped to the SoCon Tourney crown and Big Dance bid and looks the team to beat in the loop once more behind sr. G Karl Cochran. The best Terrier win thus far is a 55-54 success vs. 10-3 NC State that suggests Mike Young's team could pose problems for "major" opposition in the Dance.

5 Kansas (9-2) vs. 12 Davidson (9-1)/Wyoming (11-2)...Kansas' lopsided losses to Kentucky and Temple have pushed the Jayhawks out of our protected seed category, at least for the time being. And Bill Self's team is also going to have plenty of tough dates upcoming when Big 12 play commences, so a high seed is no guarantee for Kansas, which also somewhat disappointed a year ago. For one of the play-in games, we currently reward two of the surprise teams in the early going, who do it different ways. Bob McKillop's go-go Davidson has moved from the SoCon to the A-10, but has been scoring close to 90 ppg in pre-league play. We'll see how the Wildcats adapt to moderately-upgraded competition in their new league. Larry Shyatt's Wyo is a surprising 11-2, and doing it, as usual, with defense. The Cowboys have suffered injuries that have derailed each of the last two campaigns, so keeping star F Larry Nance, Jr. healthy will be a key if Wyo is to sustain its Big Dance hopes into Mountain West play.

At Pittsburgh...

2 Villanova (12-0) vs. 15 Coastal Carolina (9-3)...Jay Wright has taken a team to the Final Four before (2009), so when Big East observers say that the current 'Nova edition could be the best in Wright's tenure, it means the Cats are a serious contender and the team to beat in the Big East. Wily old fox Cliff Ellis steered Coastal Carolina to the Dance last March and proceeded to scare the daylights out of top seed Virginia in an honorable loss. The Chants look to be the best bet to emerge from the Big South, with Scott Cherry's High Point and Tim Craft's Gardner-Webb (from Boiling Springs, NC), a recent upset winner over Purdue, appearing to be the top challengers.

7 Colorado State (12-0) vs. 10 George Washington (8-3)...Larry Eustachy has done a quick reload at CSU, with a bevy of transfers having hit the ground running in Fort Collins and emerging as solid contributors alongside holdovers F J.J. Avila and Daniel Bejarano. Mountain West observers like this Rams team as much as Eustachy's bunch that reached the third round of the Dance two years ago. As for GW, it has advanced to the finals of the Diamond Head Classic, where it will meet Wichita State on Christmas Day, with a chance to secure a valuable chip to be cashed on Selection Sunday. Mike Lonergan's Colonials also advanced to the Dance a year ago.

At Jacksonville...

3 Maryland (11-1) vs. 14 Iona (7-4)...Mark Turgeon's Maryland has already served notice that it should be able to handle the jump from the ACC to the Big Ten without too much difficulty. The Terps' recent win at Oklahoma State minus star F Dez Wells (due back from injury in time for Big Ten play to commence) was a warning shot to rest of their new league. Frosh G Melo Trimble looks like one of the breakout starts in the loop. No shame in the Terps' only loss to date (vs. Virginia). The Metro-Atlantic appears to have no clear favorite at this stage, with the overall quality of play in the loop perhaps a tick down after many star players graduated after last season. Tim Cluess' Iona always remains a safe bet to emerge; the Gaels and Canisius are the only MAAC reps sitting above .500 at Christmas.

6 Baylor (10-1) vs. 11 NC State (10-3)...With only one loss (vs. Illinois at a Thanksgiving week tourney in Las Vegas) entering the end of December, Baylor again has a satisfactory pre-league profile to impress the Selection Committee. As mentioned earlier, however, the Big 12 is loaded this term, so the Bears and other loop contenders could easily slip down the seeding scale as we get deeper into league play. Mark Gottfried's NC State has been a mild surprise in the ACC, not missing departed gunner T.J. Warren. Gottfried's all-SEC transfer backcourt of ex-LSU G Ralston Turner and ex-Bama G Trevor Lacey are among the best perimeter tandems in the ACC.

SOUTH REGIONAL (Houston)

At Louisville...

1 Kentucky (12-0) vs. 16 Alabama State (3-5)/Stony Brook (7-6)...No surprise to see Coach Cal's UK at the top of a region. Already there is talk about the Cats going through the season undefeated (though a tough test awaits this Saturday at Louisville). Big Blue backers are already making plans for the Louisville sub-regional. The Cats will likely be facing a winner of one of the 16 vs. 16 play-in games. Almost assuredly, the SWAC winner will be involved; at the moment we project that to be Alabama State, whose 3-5 non-league mark is by far the best in that loop. The America East is often at risk of a 16 vs. 16 play-in, too, and no team has stood out in pre-conference play. A measured December vote for the home team of Strat-o-Matic headquarters on Long Island, Stony Brook.

8 Minnesota (10-2) vs. 9 Seton Hall (9-2)...Richard Pitino's first season in the Twin Cities was a success as the Golden Gophers won the NIT last spring. With much of the same lineup back in tow, it would be no surprise for Pitino and the Gophers to proceed to the next step and qualify for the Dance this term. An early surprise package in the Big East has been Kevin Willard's Seton Hall, which won the Virgin Islands Tourney in November. Though a recent loss at Georgia might indicate that tougher times are ahead in the Big East.

At Jacksonville...

4 Texas (10-2) vs. 13 Murray State (9-4)...Texas drooped a notch after its midweek home OT loss vs. Stanford, but the Longhorns still land in protected seed territory. The Longhorns also look like one of the few teams likely able to stand up to Kentucky, which the Horns did pretty well a few weeks ago in Lexington before losing by 12. Regional observers are mostly taking await-and-see attitude in the Ohio Valley, but the majority of onlookers believe that Murray State is likely to be one of the teams involved in the race for the league's automatic Big Dance bid.

5 North Carolina vs. 12 SMU (8-3)...We were not planning on moving the Tar Heels as high as a 5 seed until last Saturday's win over Ohio State, which signaled that Roy Williams' team might finally be ready to come together. There's too much talent on the roster for UNC to continue to flounder. What a delicious matchup this would be in the sub-regional vs. SMU, with Mustang HC Larry Brown a long-ago Tar Heel alum. The Ponies were probably the highest-profile snub on the last Selection Sunday, and with PF Markus Kennedy having recently regained eligibility, expect SMU to make it into the field of 68 this coming March.

At Seattle...

2 Gonzaga (11-1) vs. 15 FGCU (9-3)...Insiders on the Pacific coast almost all believe that this is Mark Few's best Gonzaga edition and one of the few teams with a possible shot at Kentucky in March. The Zags will threaten for a number one seed in the West if they can march through the WCC. The last vestiges of Andy Enfield's "Dunk City" still remain at FGCU from the Sweet 16 run of two years ago. Now, the Eagles no longer surprise anyone, but they do appear to be the team to beat in the Atlantic Sun.

7 Northern Iowa (10-1) vs. 10 Stanford (7-3)...The Missouri Valley looks to be a multi-bid league again this season thanks to UNI, with all five starters back in the fold for HC Ben Jacobson. The Panthers' only setback has been in double OT at VCU, and a very impressive recent win vs. Iowa has solidified UNI's at-large status heading into January. Speaking of solidifying status, Stanford's rousing midweek upset win at Texas was a huge win for the Cardinal that could pay dividends on Selection Sunday. With some of last season's Pac-12 contenders such as UCLA, Arizona State, and Oregon down from a year ago, there is room for Stanford to emerge as a top-three team in the Pac-12.

At Columbus...

3 Notre Dame (12-1) vs. 14 Northeastern (7-4)...On the way back appears to be Notre Dame, as the Irish are now finding out how important it would have been for G Jerian Grant to stay eligible the entirety of last season. Now back in the fold, Grant is likely to make All-American teams at the end of this campaign. The Colonial has lost some luster in recent years with onetime flagship programs VCU, ODU, and George Mason leaving the league. The best of the rest this season might be Bill Coen's Northeastern.

6 Michigan State (9-4) vs. 11 Green Bay (9-3)...We admit that MSU's body of work to date might not warrant a No. 6 seed, especially after last weekend's shock loss to unheralded Texas Southern. But Tom Izzo's Spartans routinely peak in the second half of the season, and we allow ourselves to project a little in the case of MSU. The Horizon race could easily come down to a two-team dogfight between Brian Wardle's Green Bay and Bryce Drew's Valparaiso. For the moment, a measured vote for the Fighting Phoenix and their highlight-reel, mighty-mite guard, Keifer Sykes.

MIDWEST REGIONAL (Cleveland)

At Columbus...

1 Louisville (11-0) vs. 16 St. Francis, Pa. (6-4)/Norfolk State (9-5)...Unfortunately for the Cardinals, the sub-regional at their home KFC Yum! Center is off limits due to NCAA rules, so Rick Pitino's team will be on the road, perhaps to the next-closest site, Columbus. We're curious to see how the 'Ville reacts to its new surroundings in the ACC, though we're also as interested to see how the new conference foes deal with the Cards. Another of the 16 vs. 16 play-in games could feature the Northeast Conference, where Maurice Stokes' alma mater St. Francis (Pa.) is one of the few teams above .500 in pre-league play. As always, be aware of the home team of the Pittsburgh Airport, Robert Morris, as well as Clair Bee's former Long Island U. Blackbirds. The MEAC is often involved in 16 vs. 16 play-in games, too, and Norfolk State is a familiar Big Dance rep from that league in recent years.

8 Old Dominion (10-1) vs. 9 Miami-Fla. (9-3)...Pre-league play has suggested that Jeff Jones' resurgent ODU could be the team to beat in Conference USA, though some observers still believe La Tech, saddled with a tough early slate, or Tim Floyd's UTEP might eventually emerge. The league was competitive at the top last season, with Tulsa (now in the American) the surprise conference tourney winner. We are very tempted to drop Miami out of the field entirely after recent losses to Eastern Kentucky and Providence. For the moment, early-season work was good enough to keep Jim Larranaga's Canes in the field, but Miami risks banishment to the NIT with more efforts like the last two losses.

At Portland...

4 Washington (11-0) vs. 13 Central Michigan (9-1)...Perhaps the surprise team in the country has been U-Dub, as Lorenzo Romar appears ready to return to the Dance after a three-year hiatus. Fresno State transfer Robert Upshaw has provided a fierce defensive presence in the paint, while G Nigel Goss-Williams has emerged as one of the Pac-12's stars. In the MAC, many are alerting to dramatic improvements from Keno Davis' CMU, with all five starters back from last season and only one loss (at Bradley) entering January.

5 West Virginia (11-1) vs. 12 Georgetown (7-3)...We suppose that West Virginia would have a case (at the moment) for a protected seed. Whatever. It looks as if Bob Huggins is back with a legit national contender, fortified with players who were ineligible last season such as F Jonathan Holton, and with G Juwan Staten the Big 12 scoring champ from a year ago. Admittedly, it got a bit dicey for us with the last teams to put in the field, so this is only a provisional recommendation for Georgetown, with the Hoyas getting the benefit of the doubt (for the moment) due to "good losses" to Wisconsin, Butler, and Kansas. We like the "old" Big East matchup between these sides.

At Omaha...

2 Wisconsin (11-1) vs. 15 South Dakota State (9-4)...Figure on Bo Ryan's Wisconsin being in the hunt for a top regional seed all of the way to Selection Sunday. If the Badgers end up winning the Big Ten, and the conference tourney, there's a good shot they'll be rewarded accordingly. In the sub-regional, Wiscy likely runs into a foe like South Dakota State, which is our early pick to emerge from the Summit under 19th-year HC Scott Nagy, who has been dancing before with the Jackrabbits. Scott Sutton's Oral Roberts, back in the league after a short stint in the Southland, is another Summit team to watch.

7 Butler (9-3) vs. 10 Cincinnati (8-3)...Butler endured a bumpy beginning to the season, as HC Brandon Miller took a medical leave of absence before fall practice, but interim HC Chris Holtmann has had the Bulldogs running, and effectively so. Though recent losses to Tennessee and Indiana have us wondering if we have seeded the Bulldogs too high. Cincinnati is another team with coaching health issues, as Mick Cronin has been sidelined due to aneurysm concerns. Prior to last Saturday's loss to VCU (Cronin's first missed game), the reconfigured Bearcats, minus graduated top scorer G Sean Kilpatrick, looked to be coming around. Watch this situation closely.

At Omaha...

3 Wichita State (10-1) vs. 14 Stephen F. Austin (9-3)...Wichita doesn't have the burden of staying unbeaten for the entire regular season as it did a year ago, as Utah has already dented the Shockers, but Gregg Marshall's team has not lost much, if anything, from a year ago and is still the heavy favorite in the Missouri Valley with vet Gs Ron Baker and Fred VanVleet leading the way. SFA scored one of the shockers of the Dance last March when toppling VCU in the sub-regionals, and HC Brad Underwood is back with three starters from a year ago. Expect Sam Houston to give chase in the league race. Note that another Southland rep, San Antonio-based Incarnate Word, which made news with a recent upset over Nebraska, is still in transition phase to D-I and will be ineligible for the postseason this term.

6 Oklahoma (8-3) vs. 11 Dayton (9-2)...Big 12 insiders believe this is Lon Kruger's best chance to advance beyond the sub-regionals with Oklahoma, which has been a "one and done" in the Big Dance hurdle the past two seasons. Houston transfer F TaShawn Thomas has added a new dimension to the Sooner attack. Dayton will not sneak up on anyone after last year's Elite Eight run, but Archie Miller's Flyers seem poised for another Big Dance bid. Though we do not much like the new "D" logo for the Flyers, much preferring the more-streamlined logo of recent years.

WEST REGIONAL (Los Angeles)

at Portland...

1 Arizona (12-1) vs. 16 New Mexico State (5-8)...Zona was knocked from the ranks of the unbeatens last Wednesday when stunned at UNLV, so we suppose this top seed should be under review. But an earlier win over Gonzaga would give the nod to the Cats over the Zags, at least for the time being. Sean Miller's team would not rather draw a 16 seed like New Mexico State, which is going to look a lot more menacing when star G, skywalker Daniel Mullings, returns from injury. When the Aggies get healthy, they should dominate the WAC.

8 TCU (12-0) vs. 9 Arkansas (9-2)...Maybe TCU deserves a better seed than 8, as the Frogs appear to be the top candidate for surprise team in the country with their rabbit-fast start from the gate. Trent Johnson's collection of transfers have quickly meshed around holdover PG Kyan Anderson to form an irresistible combination in Fort Worth...and make the Big 12 that much tougher. Mike Anderson's Arkansas has lost a couple of times, but would appear to be jockeying with LSU for the honor to be number two in the SEC behind Kentucky.

At Pittsburgh...

4 St. John's (10-1) vs. 13 Harvard (7-2)...St. John's is looking like a special sort of team this season, especially after rallying from 15 down at halftime to beat a good Saint Mary's team last week. Steve Lavin gets back to the Dance, as we rate only Villanova over the Red Storm in the Big East entering conference play. Despite being rudely dumped by Virginia last weekend (the Cavs led 39-8 at the break before coasting to a 76-27 win!), Tommy Amaker's Harvard, with wins in each of the last two Big Dances, still appears the team to beat in the Ivy League. Though Yale and Columbia might have something to say about the race. (Check out our Ivy retrospective, and preview of the current Ivy race, on these pages from two weeks ago).

5 Ohio State (10-2) vs. 12 Alabama (8-3)/Oregon (9-3)...We've got 75% of the football "Final Four" in this 5-12 group which includes one of the at-large play-in games. For the moment, we project Pac-12 Oregon and SEC Alabama to perhaps settle a school-vs.-school score that might have an earlier act in the CF Playoff title game. Stay tuned for those developments. We do think Ohio State will safely make the field of 68, as Thad Matta's collection of shooters should do just fine in the Big Ten. The Buckeyes were in the running for a protected seed prior to their loss last Saturday vs. North Carolina.

At Charlotte...

2 Virginia (11-0) vs. 15 UC Davis (9-1)...Tony Bennett's Virginia was a No. 1 regional seed last season after winning the ACC Tourney, and will be in the frame to do so again. Arguably the best defensive team in the country, we rate the Cavs as a co-favorite with Duke to win the loop, and cannot project anything lower than a 2 seed for the Wahoos. The Big West race could go in a variety of directions; remember that Cal Poly won the conference tourney last year with a losing overall mark. Dan Monson's Long Beach State might be the best team, although the 49ers are again taking their lumps with a brutal non-conference slate. UC Irvine is also a contender, though 7-6 C Mamamdou Ndiaye is currently out with injury. Also impressing early is Kimberly Guilfoyle's alma mater UC Davis, which (like Irvine) is looking for its first-ever Big Dance bid and spearheaded by former Arizona State G Corey Hawkins (20.1 ppg).

7 San Diego State (9-3) vs. 10 Providence (10-3)...While SDSU was in the frame for a protected seed a year ago, we don't project the Aztecs quite as highly this season. A series of unwatchable games has confirmed shooting concerns on Steve Fisher's squad, which still might be the team to beat in the Mountain West. But at the moment, we can't seed SDSU any higher than a 7. Providence, the surprise winner of the Big East Tourney last season, is hinting that it might be ready for back-to-back Dance visits under shrewd HC Ed Cooley. As of yet, the Friars do not miss departed star Bryce Cotton, with F LeDontae Henton taking over go-to scoring duties, and recent wins over UMass and Miami-Fla. have opened more eyes in the region.

At Louisville...

3 Iowa State (9-1) vs. 14 Eastern Washington (9-4)...Fred Hoiberg's ISU has become a Big Dance regular, and even a few graduation losses from last year's Sweet 16 team do not look to have slowed down the Cyclones, whose recent thumping win at state rival Iowa confirmed that ISU is more than ready to hold its own in the tough Big 12. Keep an eye on Jim Hayford's EWU, which appears to be the class of the Big Sky and owns a win at Indiana and a near-miss at Washington. The Eagles own the best 1-2 scoring punch in the Sky with G Tyler Harvey & PF Venky Jois.

6 VCU (9-3) vs. 11 BYU (10-3)...Give Shaka Smart and VCU some credit for tough pre-league scheduling; once the slate eased in the past two weeks, the Rams started to run up scores over decent opposition. We have no doubt "Shaka Ball" fares well again in the A-10 and gets the Rams on the safe side of the cut line well before Selection Sunday. As for BYU, it might not have an easy ride through the WCC, which has few soft spots this season, but enough firepower exists on Dave Rose's roster (especially with G Tyler Haws beyond his recent ankle injury) to avoid the banana peels and make it back to the Dance.

Last four in: Davidson, Wyoming, Oregon, Alabama.

Last four out: Xavier, Illinois, Ole Miss, Cal.

Next four out: UTEP, Iowa, Oklahoma State, Saint Mary's.
 
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College Football Bowl Betting Bible: Book I - Capping Thy Coaches
By JASON LOGAN

The names are different but the situations stay the same.

Each college football bowl season, select teams pack their bags and head off for their postseason matchup, giving sports bettors a fresh set of intriguing non-conference competitions. While there is an aura of the unknown when it comes to bowl teams – these programs don’t know much about each other – football bettors can find familiarity – and value – looking for teams in these certain situations.

We break down some of the important factors to figure into your bowl betting this December with our Bowl Betting Bible.

BOOK I: CAPPING THY COACHES

One of the biggest differences between wagering on college and professional sports is the impact of the coaching. In the college ranks, these coaches are the molders of young men and build a program from the bottom up, having a bigger influence on how the game is played. Oddsmakers factor coaching into the lines in college sports more than any other option.

That’s why it’s such a big deal when coaches are swapped out just before bowl season. Whether it be a coach taking a new job and leaving his former team in the hands of his assistants or a team firing its coach just before the postseason and pretty much hoping for the best in the bowl game. Bettors can find added value when handicapping the turnover on the sidelines.

“Teams and players often rally behind a new coach or departing coach, while other times players and teams are disappointed and provide a weak effort,” says Steve Merril.

Wisconsin is one team undergoing a transformation in the coaching department. The Badgers were stunned when Gary Andersen decided to leave Madison for Oregon State, putting the team and its Outback Bowl battle with Auburn (Wisconsin is a 6.5-point underdog) in the hands of Barry Alvarez.

This is familiar territory for Alvarez, who stepped in for the departed Bret Bielema in 2012 and coached Wisconsin to a loss versus Stanford in the Rose Bowl. The Badgers are coming off a terrible loss to Ohio State in the Big Ten title game and are dealing with another punch to the stomach following Anderson’s departure. These letdowns could be a lot for Wisconsin to overcome as a program.

Another school swapping out head coaches is Florida, which canned Will Muschamp after another disappointing season. The Gators fired Muschamp following a Week 12 loss to South Carolina and left the team in the hands of defensive coordinator D.J. Durkin.

The team rallied around Durkin, going 1-1 SU and 2-0 ATS including a near upset of Florida State in the finale. Programs are courting Durkin and a solid performance versus East Carolina in the Birmingham Bowl on Jan. 3 could help him land a new gig. The Gators are touchdown favorites over the Pirates.

The situation is a little different for another Florida program bowling after a down year. The Miami Hurricanes, coming off a 6-6 campaign, are 3-point favorites over South Carolina in the Independence Bowl on Dec, 27.

Head coach Al Golden has been the target of animosity from the Coral Gables faithful heading into bowl season, but the athletics department has given Golden the vote of confidence. Players have also come to Golden’s aid, and could hold his job in their hands this postseason. The ax may not fall right away but if push comes to shove, one of the first things an AD will do is size up a coach’s bowl record. Golden lost to Louisville in the 2013 Russell Athletic Bowl, 36-9, as a 5.5-point underdog. He’s only been to two bowls in four years at Miami despite being eligible each season.

Here are teams undergoing changes at head coach this bowl season: Colorado State, Florida, Houston, Nebraska, Wisconsin.
 
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College Football Bowl Betting Bible: Book II - Motivation
By JASON LOGAN

BOOK 2: DO NOT PLACE MONEY WITHOUT KNOWING MOTIVATION

Bowl season is many things to many teams.

To some, it’s the culmination of a hard-fought season. To others, it’s a relief from years of losing. And to a few programs, it’s a reminder of missed opportunities and wasted potential. Understanding the mindset of a bowl team is paramount before placing any bets.

“Which teams are just happy to be playing in a bowl and which ones are serious about winning?,” says Sean Murphy. “It is important not to write off teams that are disappointed by the bowl game they've drawn, as sometimes that perceived snub can result in a team playing with a big chip on their shoulder and can serve as a motivating factor.”

No bigger snub was dished out this bowl season than that of the Big 12 when it came to the Final Four teams for the first ever College Football Playoff. Baylor and TCU (which was ranked third in the CFB rankings heading into the final game of the season) were left out of the playoffs and handed big-name bowl matchups instead.

Baylor, which has only one loss to West Virginia and a win over TCU, settled for a showdown with Michigan State in the Cotton Bowl (BU -3). The Horned Frogs aren’t even playing on New Year’s Day, facing 9-3 Ole Miss in the Peach Bowl on Dec. 31 (TCU -3).

Bettors must determine whether or not these Big 12 programs try to prove the playoff committee wrong by rolling their bowl opponents or if they'll come out flat, disappointed with a season gone sour based on the opinion of a bunch of NCAA suits.

Alabama suffered from a major letdown in bowl season last year. The Crimson Tide were booked into the national title game until the stunning upset to Auburn in the Iron Bowl. Alabama never overcame that loss or the disappointment, and was rolled by Oklahoma 45-31 as a 17-point favorite in the Sugar Bowl.

Motivation just isn’t reserved for the big boys, though. Programs that barely qualified for bowl eligibility and still earned a berth in a postseason game can often times feel a sense of accomplishment. Art Aronson calls these “Just glad to be there” teams, and has his eye on one program in particular this bowl season.

“This might take some digging, but there are teams which are just happy to be aboard the gravy train,” says Aronson. “Coaches get a little more job security and players get to brag when they go home for semester break. With dozens of games, it’s a win-win for everyone.”

He points to the UL Lafayette Ragin’ Cajuns and their bowl matchup with Nevada in the New Orleans Bowl, with oddmakers setting them as 1-point favorites. The Ragin’ Cajuns went 8-4 SU on the season but don’t have any notable wins on their resume and recently lost to FCS Appalachian State, 35-16 at home as 8-point favorites.

Bettors must also measure the motivation of teams that are ending an extended bowl drought, and determine whether they're feeling a false sense of accomplishment – bound for a letdown – or using that big stage to push the program even further up the food chain.

The Memphis Tigers earned a postseason showcase for the first time since 2008 after going 9-3 this season, and are 1-point favorites against BYU in the Miami Beach Bowl. The Cougars, however, have been bowling for 10 straight years, going 6-3 SU in the previous nine postseason games, and are used to the bright lights of bowl season.

South Alabama is another program that is in unfamiliar territory. The Jaguars have cracked a bowl game for first time since jumping from the FCS to FBS six years ago, and are tagged as 2.5-point favorites versus Bowling Green in the inaugural Camellia Bowl. While they could be ripe for a letdown, South Alabama is making the two-hour drive to Montgomery and should have a strong home-field edge at the Cramton Bowl.

One of the most underlying motivational capping tools is finding a team playing in the same bowl as it did last season. The 2013-14 bowl schedule finds Arkansas State back in the GoDaddy Bowl, set as a 3-point underdog to Toledo. The Red Wolves will have played in four straight GoDaddy Bowls in Mobile, Alabama, including last season’s on Jan. 5, edging Ball State 23-20 as 6.5-point underdogs. They’re 2-1 SU and ATS in their three GoDaddy Bowl appearances.

“Teams returning to the same minor bowl game they played in last year tend to become dis-interested,” notes Marc Lawrence.

Another program that may not be all that excited for its bowl matchup is San Diego State, which is set to appear in the Poinsettia Bowl for the third time in five years. The Aztecs, who are 3-point favorites versus Navy, are pretty much playing a home game in Qualcomm Stadium. These teams played in the 2010 Poinsettia Bowl, with SDSU winning 35-14 as a field-goal favorite.
 
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College Football Bowl Betting Bible: Book III - The Waiting Game
By JASON LOGAN

BOOK III: TIME BETWEEN BOWLS GIVETH AND TAKETH AWAY

The Ravages of time. Idle hands do the Devil’s work. Time, time time… is my on my side - yes it is!

All three phrases have everything to do with the time between a college football team’s final game of the regular season and it postseason bowl appearance.

Some programs are thrust right into the bowl schedule with a small break between the finale, finals and the bowl game. Other teams are collecting dust for almost a month while they prepare for their year-end showcase.

“The long layoff - several weeks - before the game is played can often lead to bizarre over or under-performance by teams involved,” says Steve Merril.

A team that gained momentum late in the year may not have that same mojo working for them in bowl season, thanks to the extended hiatus. Depending on the break between games, programs could be completely different come game day and that opens up a lot of value to go against with oddsmakers setting these lines based on their past accomplishments.

The gap between the end of the regular season to the bowl game can be more than a month, so what difference does it make if a team won its last six in a row?” asks Art Aronson.

He points to the Central Florida Knights as an example. They closed the regular season with four straight victories, going 4-0 ATS in that span, but have now been sitting idle for more than three weeks (last game on Dec. 4) before facing North Carolina State as 2-point favorites in the St. Petersburg Bowl on Dec. 26.

“Central Florida, which somehow managed to lose to Connecticut, gives two points to N.C. State, which played a much tougher schedule and still won three of its last four,” notes Aronson.

The gap between season finale and bowl game, however, can also work in a team’s favor. A late-season swoon or a rash of injuries toward the end of the year can be remedied by a few weeks off.

One program that is relishing the bowl break is Penn State. The Nittany Lions dropped their final two games of the schedule – losing to Illinois and Michigan State – and finished with 2-6 SU and 2-5-1 ATS in the last eight games.

Penn State is slated to face Boston College in the Pinstripe Bowl on Dec. 27, giving head coach James Franklin plenty of time to study his opponent and get his players in the right frame of mind for what will be the program’s first bowl appearance since the Sandusky scandal. Not only is PSU anxious to turn the page on that ugly chapter but the time off will allow LB Brandon Bell to return from a shoulder injury. He missed the final two games of the season and is an important cog to the Nittany Lions’ running defense.

Some other programs returning key players thanks to the time off are Oklahoma and QB Trevor Knight, as well as Marshall and RB Devon Johnson.

Knight suffered a neck injury versus Baylor on Nov. 8 but with the Sooners not taking the field against Clemson in the Russell Athletic Bowl until Dec. 29 – and Knight cleared to play – OU’s offense could be back in top form by then. He passed for 2,197 yards and 14 touchdowns before getting hurt.

The Thundering Herd should have their biggest weapon back at full strength after running back Devon Johnson was limited down the home stretch. Johnson, who rushed for 1,636 yards and 18 touchdowns, was nursing a bum shoulder and saw his workload trimmed significantly in the final two games of the year. Marshall is a 10-point favorite against Northern Illinois in the Boca Raton Bowl on Dec. 23.

But while the bowl break has allowed those teams – and many others – to heal up, other programs are wishing the postseason game would just get here already. Every bowl season is plagued with news of player suspensions, from either academics or off-field issues, as well as player injuries suffered in the limited practices allowed during bowl prep.

Arkansas threw the book at two important members of its secondary last week, suspending corner Carroll Washington and safety Rohan Gaines for violating team policy. Both were regular rotation players for the Razorbacks defense. Arkansas is a 6-point favorite facing Texas in the Texas Bowl on Dec. 29.

These will likely not be the only suspensions handed out between now and the end of bowl season. With finals over and classes done, as well as practices limited by NCAA rules, players don’t have the same structured schedule to keep them busy and out of trouble. And trips home over the holidays have been the catalyst for many suspensions with players getting into fights and violating team rules while visiting with friends and family.

Last season, Oregon’s top tight end Pharaoh Brown was suspended for the Alamo Bowl for his role in a snowball fight on campus. An online video captured the hijinks, which included pelting cars with snow as well as hitting a professor with snowballs and dumping snow through the car window.

On the injury front, Tennessee lost one of its top targets in wide receiver Jason Croom, who injured his knee in practice last Sunday. Croom caught 21 balls for 305 yards and was tied for the team lead with four receiving touchdowns. This injury is especially tough for the Volunteers, who have already lost four members of the receiving corps to injury this season. Tennessee is a 3.5-point favorite over Iowa in the TaxSlayer Bowl on Jan. 2.

Local media are usually the first sources to report on these issues, so keeping a close ear to the ground and anticipating either injury or disciplinary news is the best way to stay ahead of the bookmakers during the bowl break.
 
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College Football Bowl Betting Bible: Book IV - Tackling Travels
By JASON LOGAN

The names are different but the situations stay the same.

Each college football bowl season, select teams pack their bags and head off for their postseason matchup, giving sports bettors a fresh set of intriguing non-conference competitions. While there is an aura of the unknown when it comes to bowl teams – these programs don’t know much about each other – football bettors can find familiarity – and value – looking for teams in these certain situations.

We break down some of the important factors to figure into your bowl betting this December with our Bowl Betting Bible.

BOOK IV: BE MINDFUL OF MILES BURNED DURING BOWL SEASON

Earning a spot on the college football bowl calendar is not only rewarding for the money poured into the program or the chance to play in a nationally showcased game.

For many players, a bowl games means a chance to get outside of the norm – to get off campus and travel to far-off exotic places. For some teams, though, bowl season can often mean a two-hour bus trip down the highway, which has its positives and negatives.

“Some teams, or at least their fan bases, have the benefit of staying close to home, leading to a home-field advantage,” says Sean Murphy. “With that being said, not getting to travel can hurt the motivation of the players taking the field. It really is a double-edged sword.”

There are a number of programs staying close to home this bowl season, none more than San Diego State. The Aztecs went 7-5 SU and 6-5-1 ATS in the regular season and were rewarded with a home game against Navy at Qualcomm Stadium on Dec. 23. While having the home-field edge is big – and oddsmakers have set SDSU as a 2.5-point chalk for the Poinsettia Bowl – there could be some letdown from the Aztecs, who are home for the holidays for the third time in five years.

Another bowl competitor making a short trip this postseason is Stanford, which could pretty much hold a half marathon and be at its bowl game in Santa Clara – a mere 13 miles (22-minute drive) from Palo Alto. In fact, that seems like a brilliant conditioning/bounding exercise for the Cardinal (Oh, how’d you guys get here? We ran…).

Books have Stanford pegged as a two-touchdown Foster Farms Bowl favorite versus Maryland, which actually makes the longest trip this bowl season. The Terrapins, at 7-5 SU and 6-6 ATS, cross the country on a 2,425-mile hike. It’s safe to say the Terrapins, who have a 31-day layoff between games, will be in enemy territory on Dec. 30.

Other teams putting some miles on the frequent-flyer card in the next month are Navy (2,302-mile trip to San Diego for Poinsettia Bowl), BYU (2,066-mile trip to Miami for the Miami Beach Bowl), and Nevada (1,805-mile trip to New Orleans for New Orleans Bowl).

Florida State has to jump the country for its showdown with Oregon (-9.5) in the Rose Bowl – a 1,986-mile leap – but the Seminoles are used to these types of challenges and have a rapid fan base that travels extremely well, especially for a New Year’s Day bowl game.

Measuring how much of a home-field edge teams will have for the true neutral-site games is tough. Looking back at road records is a good indicator of how a program performs out of its element but if you want to gauge how the percentage of school colors in the stands you should keep a close eye on ticket sales.

Every bowl team is allotted a certain number of tickets to sell to its faithful. Often times, location (is it a vacation destination like Florida or California?), opponent (is it even worth going to see?), and time of the month (close to Christmas or New Year’s?) have a huge impact on whether fans will travel to the game or not.

Heading into the first weekend of bowl action, Air Force is having a tough time selling its share of tickets for the Idaho Potato Bowl. The Falcons play Western Michigan (-1) – not a marquee team by any means – and are asking fans to leave Colorado Springs to come to Boise on short notice. Not even the “Smurf Turf” of Albertsons Stadium can get Air Force butts in the seats.

Even the lure of the Sunshine State isn’t enough to get football fans on the move this bowl season. Iowa is reporting “sluggish” tickets sales for the Hawkeyes’ showdown with Tennessee (-3.5) in the TaxSlayer Bowl in Jacksonville, Florida on Jan. 2. According to the school, Iowa hasn’t even sold half of its 8,000-ticket allotment while the Volunteers, who have a proximity edge, sold out their 8,000 tickets a few days after the bowl matchup was announced.

Some friendly faces can go a long way when these programs hit the highway for their bowl games. That home-field feel may just before the difference when spreads get tight this postseason.
 
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55 need-to-know betting notes for 55 college football bowl teams
By KEVIN CAUSEY

With the holidays heating up, you might not have time to handicap all the college football bowl action you'd like this month. Enjoy!

Franklin American Music City Bowl - Tuesday Dec. 30

LSU Tigers vs. Notre Dame Fighting Irish (+7, 52.5)

* LSU is 0-5 O/U in its last five games and has averaged just 17.4 ppg in those games. In those five games, the Tigers’ QBs have completed just 47 percent of their passes and have thrown four TDs vs five INTs.

* After giving up just 50 yards rushing in a loss to Florida State, the Irish have given up an average of 244 rushing ypg in their last five games. They've gone 1-4 SU/0-5 ATS in those games.

Belk Bowl - Tuesday Dec. 30

Louisville Cardinals vs. Georgia Bulldogs (-6.5, 56.5)

* Georgia has been favored to win every game it’s played in this season and in two of its losses, UGA was a double-digit favorite.

* Louisville has allowed opponents to convert on just 28.25 percent of third downs. When Louisville DC Todd Grantham was at Georgia last year, his defense allowed a 39.49 third-down percentage.

Foster Farms Bowl- Tuesday Dec. 30

Stanford Cardinal vs. Maryland Terrapins (+14, 48)

* As a double-digit favorite this year, Stanford is 4-1 with the lone loss coming at the hands of Utah.

* The Terrapins have beaten just one team with a winning record this season (7-5 Iowa). Against teams with winning records they are just 1-5 ATS (with that one win coming against the Hawkeyes).

Chick-fil-A Peach Bowl - Wednesday Dec. 31

Mississippi Rebels vs. TCU Horned Frogs (-3, 56.5)

* Ole Miss OL Aaron Morris will not play in the Chick-Fil-A Bowl after tearing the ACL in his left knee. The Rebels are 20-2 SU under Huge Freeze when they rush for 150 yards or more.

* Gary Patterson is 7-5 SU/4-8 ATS in bowl games. Texas Christian has failed to cover in its past five bowl matchups.

VIZIO Fiesta Bowl - Wednesday Dec. 31

Boise State Broncos vs. Arizona Wildcats (-3.5, 69.5)

* The Broncos have been held to under 20 points just twice this season (vs. Ole Miss and Air Force) and lost (and failed to cover) both games.

* The Wildcats O/U record was 1-5 away from home this season. They scored 9.6 less ppg on the road.

Capital One Orange Bowl - Wednesday Dec. 31

Mississippi State Bulldogs vs. Georgia Tech Yellow Jackets (+6.5, 61)

* Georgia Tech is 5-1 ATS as an underdog this season and has won four of those games SU.

* Mississippi State completed seven third-down conversions per game, with Dak Prescott posting a QB rating of 179.7 and throwing for 10 touchdowns on those third-down snaps. He rushed for 27 first downs on third down – tops in the SEC.

Outback Bowl - Thurs Jan. 1

Wisconsin Badgers vs. Auburn Tigers (-6.5, 62)

* Wisconsin has only been an underdog once this year and lost that game to LSU in the opener. They were favored by 4 points versus Ohio State in the Big Ten Championship and got walloped 59-0.

* The Auburn Tigers fired DC Ellis Johnson after giving up 30 points in each of their last six games against FBS opponents.

Cotton Bowl Classic - Thurs Jan. 1

Baylor Bears vs. Michigan State Spartans (+3, 71)

* Baylor head coach Art Briles is the owner of an 89-61 career collegiate record, but is just 2-5 SU and ATS lifetime in bowl games.

* The Spartans set school single-season records for points (517), total offense (5,958 yards), offensive touchdowns (64), rushing touchdowns (40) and made point-after attempts (66).

Buffalo Wild Wings Citrus Bowl - Thurs Jan. 1

Missouri Tigers vs. Minnesota Golden Gophers (+5, 48)

* Despite winning the SEC East and playing in the SEC Championship, Missouri was only favored in six of its games this season. As a favorite the Tigers went 5-1 SU and 3-3 ATS.

* The Gophers went 7-2 ATS in their last nine games. They were the best red-zone team in the Big Ten scoring TDs on 73.33 percent of their trips inside the 20-yard line.

Rose Bowl (Playoff semifinal) - Thurs Jan. 1

Oregon Ducks vs. Florida State Seminoles (+9.5, 71)

* This is the first time since their 2011 matchup with Clemson that Florida State comes into a game as an underdog. The Seminoles are 8-1-1 ATS in their last 10 bowl games.

* Marcus Mariota threw five interceptions in his first seven games. Since then he's thrown just seven in his last 33 games. Heisman winners are 5-0 SU and 4-1 ATS during bowl season since 2009.

Allstate Sugar Bowl (Playoff semifinal) - Thurs Jan. 1

Alabama Crimson Tide vs. Ohio State Buckeyes (+9.5, 58.5)

* Ohio State has been an underdog just twice this season (Michigan State and Wisconsin) and have won both SU.

* Alabama has been a single-digit favorite four time this year and in those four games the Tide have a 1-3 O/U record. Alabama is 0-7-1 ATS in its last eight non-conference clashes.

Lockheed Martin Armed Forces Bowl - Friday Jan. 2

Houston Cougars vs. Pittsburgh Panthers (-3, 53.5)

* After signing a five-year contract earlier this year, the Cougars fired head coach Tony Levine and defensive coordinator David Gibbs will be the interim coach for the bowl game.

* If Paul Chryst takes the Wisconsin job, as rumored, you have to wonder how the team will respond. Pitt has had four head coaches since 2012. If Chryst leaves it will make five.

TaxSlayer Bowl - Friday Jan. 2

Tennessee Volunteers vs. Iowa Hawkeyes (+3.5, 51.5)

* The Vols lead the SEC in sacks allowed (42) and tackles for loss allowed (97). The inability to get their offense going due to negative plays is a big reason for their 6-6 SU and ATS records.

* Teams are completing 14.1 passes per game and boast a 52.7 completion percentage against Iowa. The defense has not been as strong against run, allowing 158.8 rushing yards a game on 4.3 yards per carry.

Valero Alamo Bowl - Friday Jan. 2

Kansas State Wildcats vs. UCLA Bruins (Pick, 59)

* The Wildcats have only turned the ball over 11 times this year and have only lost the turnover battle in three games. They lost two of those games (vs. Auburn and TCU).

* UCLA is just 4-8 ATS this year. One of the reasons is that the Bruins have played in seven games that have been decided by 10 or less points.

TicketCity Cactus Bowl - Friday Jan. 2

Oklahoma State Cowboys vs. Washington Huskies (-5.5, 56)

* Oklahoma State head coach Mike Gundy is making his ninth straight bowl appearance, going 5-3 SU and 4-4 ATS in those previous postseason games.

* In Chris Petersen's debut season at Washington, the Huskies didn't beat a single FBS team that finished with a winning record.

Birmingham Bowl - Saturday Jan. 3

Florida Gators vs. East Carolina Pirates (+7, 57)

* Since inserting QB Treon Harris into the starting lineup the Gators are 4-1 ATS. The offense averaged 32.6 ppg with Harris under center and 28.6 ppg without him - and that includes a 65-point explosion against EMU in their opener.

* Through their first four games, the Pirates had outscored opponents by an average of 18.5 points per game, but since then the team only has a plus-6.5 scoring margin.

GoDaddy Bowl - Sunday, Jan. 4

Arkansas State Red Wolves vs. Toledo Rockets (-3, 67)

* Arkansas State is a tough team to finish off with nine of its last 14 wins coming when tied or trailing in the third quarter.

* Toledo QB Logan Woodside came back from injury for the last two games of the season, including a five-touchdown performance against Eastern Michigan. At one point this season, the Rockets were down to their fourth-string QB.
 
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Big Ten Bowl Report - Part 1
By ASA

Big Ten Bowl Game scheduled Dec. 30

Maryland (+14, 48) vs. Stanford
Foster Farms Bowl
Tuesday, Dec. 30 - 10:00 p.m. ET (ESPN)
Levi’s Stadium, Santa Clara, CA

Here we have another B1G team that didn’t exactly end the season with a bang. After starting 4-1 this year, the Terps limped to a 3-4 finish that included losses of 28 points (Ohio State), 45 points (Maryland), 22 points (Michigan State), and 3 points to “rival” Rutgers to end the season. Offensively this team lacked explosiveness all season long. QB CJ Brown finished with just 13 TD and 9 INT while completing 53.2% while also leading the team in rushing with a measly 569 yards (3.8 YPC) and 7 rush TD. Leading WR Stefon Diggs missed the final three games of the season with a lacerated kidney, but reports indicate that he will be ready for this game against Stanford.

Maryland will need all the help it can get on offense against this Cardinal defense that ranked 5th in yards allowed, 7th against the pass, 11th against the rush, and 2nd in scoring defense despite playing some of the most explosive Pac-12 offenses week-to-week. Only two opponents exceeded 20 points against Stanford this season (Oregon & Arizona State) as Stanford held the likes of USC, Notre Dame, Washington State, Cal, and UCLA to just 14.8 PPG. With that defensive prowess, it’s a bit of a surprise that Stanford finished 7-5. The main problem, obviously, was an inept offense. Much like Maryland, the Cardinal struggled to find explosive plays. QB Hogan finished with just 17 TD and 8 INT on the season while the leading rusher, RB Remound Wright, finished with just 552 yards (4.3 YPC) and 8 TD. They were able to find their stride a bit, notching 418 yards and 38 points against Cal and 436 yards and 31 points against UCLA over the final two weeks.

Looks like the oddsmakers expect Stanford’s offense to continue to roll here against a Terrapin defense that ranks 97th in YPG allowed and 83rd in PPG allowed; favoring the Cardinals by 14 points – making Maryland the largest underdog of the bowl season. Maryland has not fared well against other top defenses this season, scoring just 7 points against Wisconsin (4th in total defense) and 15 points against MSU (6th in total defense). Maryland is 4-2 ATS in their last six as a double-digit underdog.

This is just the third bowl appearance since 2008 for the Terps. They lost to Marshall as a 2-point underdog in the Military Bowl last year, 20-31. Stanford is 16-8 ATS in their last 24 as a double-digit underdog, including a 4-1 ATS mark this year. Motivation for the Cardinals is a discussion, considering Stanford has been to four straight BCS Bowls. They lost to Michigan State by four points in the Rose Bowl last year.
 
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Big Ten Bowl Report - Part 2
By ASA

Big Ten Bowl Games scheduled between Jan. 1 and Jan. 2

Wisconsin (+6, 62) vs. Auburn
Outback Bowl
Thursday, Jan. 1 - 12:00 p.m. ET (ESPN2)
Raymond James Stadium, Tampa, FL

It’s difficult to determine the motivation level for each side here in the Outback Bowl. Wisconsin is off of one of the worst losses in program history, and it came on one of the biggest stages – a 59-0 loss in the B1G Championship – and it lost head coach Gary Anderson after that game (former head coach and current AD Barry Alvarez will coach the team in the bowl game). Auburn, on the other hand, had hopes of making a trip to the playoffs after losing the National Championship last year. Instead, the Tigers suffered losses in three of its last four games of the season and didn’t even get a chance to defend its SEC Title. Regardless of motivation, we will see two of the best rush-offenses in the nation go head-to-head. Auburn, led by RB Artis-Payne and QB Marshall, ranked 12th nationally in rush YPG. Artis-Payne and Marshall combined for 2,267 rush yards and 22 rush TD. Marshall, while always a rushing threat, proved his worth as a passer this season as well, finishing with 2,315 pass yards (60.1%) with 18 TD and 7 INT. WR’s D’haquille Williams and Sammie Coates proved to be two of the better deep-play threats in the country, combining to catch 75 passes for 1,447 yards (19.3 YPC) and 9 TD.

Few teams had success slowing this Auburn offense this year, but Wisconsin’s 4th-ranked defense will have a shot on January 1st. The Badgers ranked 5th against the pass, 17th against the rush, and 14th in PPG allowed. Aside from the Ohio State Buckeyes in the B1G Championship, no offense could move the ball with consistency against Wisconsin. For Wisconsin, their offense revolves around RB Melvin Gordon. Gordon amassed an astonishing 2,336 rush yards and 29 total touchdowns this year. Running behind one of the best offensive lines in football, Gordon was too much for most defenses, even when those defenses gameplan was built around stopping the run. One thing that has hampered this offense is the inconsistent play of QB Joel Stave. Stave finished the regular season with 8 TD and 7 INT with just 53.6% completions, culminated by a terrible performance against Ohio State (17-of-43 passing for 187 yards, 0 TD, and 3 INT). Auburn has been vulnerable to the run this season. In their last six games against FBS opponents, the Tigers have allowed 197.5 rush YPG with 13 rush TD over that span (allowed 39 PPG to those six opponents). It’s a solid bet that Auburn will do its best to limit Gordon and this rushing attack to force Stave into some bad decisions.

Wisconsin has dropped four straight bowl games, including three straight Rose Bowls and last year’s Capital One Bowl to South Carolina (last win was in 2009 in the Champ Sports Bowl). Auburn is 8-2 SU & 7-3 ATS in their last 10 bowl appearances. One of the losses was last year in the BCS Championship game to Florida State and the other was the 2006 Capital One Bowl to Wisconsin.

Michigan State (+3, 72) vs. Baylor
Goodyear Cotton Bowl
Thursday, Jan. 1 - 12:30 p.m. ET (ESPN)
AT&T Stadium, Arlington, TX

The 2014 Cotton Bowl is one of the top matchups of the non-playoff version as both Michigan State and Baylor have resume’s worthy of one of the nation’s top teams, but found themselves on the outside looking in on selection day. The Spartans took care of everyone on their schedule save for Oregon and Ohio State, the No. 2 and No. 4 teams in the rankings, respectively. The loss to Ohio State on November 8th knocked them out of contention for a B1G title, but the Spartans continued playing hard and won their final three games of the season by a combined score of 116-28. The offense is led by QB Connor Cook, who had a fantastic season with 2,900 pass yards, 22 TD, and 6 INT. All B1G WR Tony Lippett caught 60 passes for 1,124 yards and 11 touchdowns while RB Jeremy Langford continued to be one of the most reliable ‘backs in the nation, finishing with 1,360 rush yards and 19 TD (nine consecutive games with 100+ rush yards). This offense, specifically QB Cook, should see success moving the football against a suspect Baylor defense. The Bears ranked 104th against the pass this season, surrendering 260 pass YPG with 22 pass TD allowed. Against Texas Tech on November 29th, Baylor allowed 609 pass yards and 6 pass TD in a narrow 48-46 victory.

Baylor was able to hide a lot of its defensive issues with a stout offense. The Bears ranked 1st nationally in yards per game, 5th in passing, 23rd in rushing, and 1st in points per game. QB Bryce Petty should be at full strength for this matchup after tossing for 26 TD, 6 INT, and 3,305 yards (62.1% completions). He’s flanked by RB Shock Linwood, who rushed for 1,226 yards and 16 scores this year as well as a host of capable pass-catchers. Three different receivers finished with 50+ receptions and four finished with 6+ TD receptions. Baylor’s offense is a tough matchup for any team, but Michigan State is as well-equipped as any team to slow them down. Sparty’s defense ranked 6th nationally in yards allowed this season, 6th against the rush and 27th against the pass. Eight of 12 opponents were held to 14 points or fewer as the Spartans also ranked 13th in points per game allowed.

The Spartans have won three straight bowl games, winning outright as the underdog in each of those three games – including the Rose Bowl last season. Baylor is 2-1 SU & ATS in its last three bowl games after its loss to UCF in the Fiesta Bowl last year. Art Briles’ offense has averaged 52.7 PPG in its last three bowl games, but the defense has surrendered 45 PPG in those games as well.

Minnesota (+5.5, 48) vs. Missouri
Buffalo Wild Wings Citrus Bowl
Thursday, Jan. 1 - 1:00 p.m. ET (ABC)
Florida Citrus Bowl, Orlando, FL

Minnesota followed up last year’s successful 8-5 campaign with an 8-4 record here in 2014. Still it feels like a bit of a letdown considering the Gophers started 6-1 before limping to a 2-3 finished that included an upset loss to Illinois. A loss to rival Wisconsin in the season’s final game sent the Badgers to Indianapolis and the Gophers home, although after we saw what happened to Wisconsin against Ohio State, maybe it was good that the Gophers didn’t participate in that game. Minnesota will be playing a New Year’s Day bowl game for the first time since the 1962 Rose Bowl, so there will be no shortage of motivation for the Gophers here. Minnesota is led by a rushing attack led by bruising RB David Cobb, who broke the school record for rushing yards in a season with 1,548 and 13 rush TD, and QB Mitch Leidner, who tallied 462 rush yards and 10 TD. Minnesota will try to establish its rushing attack to try and neutralize Missouri’s strong pass-rush, which ranked 6th nationally with 40 sacks this season. Also because Leidner isn’t much of a threat in the passing game. He finished with 1,540 passing yards on 49% completions with 10 TD and 8 INT.

Missouri represented the SEC East in the conference championship game for the 2nd consecutive year after a 10-2 finish in the regular season, and for the 2nd consecutive year, they lost in blowout fashion – this time in a 13-42 loss to Alabama. Credit the Tigers for another 10-win campaign, but there aren’t many notable wins on the resume. Six of their seven conference wins were by 10 points or fewer and their “best” win was against a disappointing 7-5 Texas A&M team. That was the lone victory of the season against a team that finished better than .500. Maty Mauk pilots this offense, and he finished with a solid 23-TD, 11-INT campaign. Mauk gets a lot of help from a great receiving corps, led by WR Bud Sasser, who tallied 70 receptions for 935 yards and 10 TD. The backfield consists of Russell Hansbrough and Marcus Murphy sharing carries, as they both combined for 1,737 rush yards and 13 rush TD. Minnesota’s ‘D’ has been susceptible to strong rushing attacks this year; the Gophers allowed 232 rush YPG (5.7 YPC) over the last three weeks against Ohio State, Nebraska, and Wisconsin. Missouri will try to replicate that success here. Minnesota was 5-1 ATS as an underdog this year and covered four straight to end the season as a ‘dog.

The Gophers have dropped six straight bowl games including back-to-back years against Texas Tech (2012) and Syracuse (2013) and are 2-4 ATS in those games. Missouri lost to fellow B1G member, Indiana, at home on September 20th. The Tigers have won two straight bowl games, including a 10-point win over No. 13 Oklahoma State in the Cotton Bowl last year.

Ohio State (+9.5, 58.5) vs. Alabama
Allstate Sugar Bowl
Thursday, Jan. 1 - 8:30 p.m. ET (ESPN)
Mercedes-Benz Superdome, New Orleans, LA

With its 59-0 dominating win over Wisconsin in the B1G Championship, the Buckeyes convinced the playoff committee that they were worthy of a spot in the final four. The offense has been absolutely unstoppable for much of the season as OSU has averaged 48.5 PPG in 11 games since scoring a season-low 21 points in the lone loss to Virginia Tech on September 6th. Many expected this offense to take a step back when QB J.T. Barrett broke his ankle in the regular season finale against Michigan, but third-string QB Cardale Jones stepped in for the B1G Championship and didn’t miss a beat, tossing for 257 yards, 3 TD, and 0 INT in his first career start against a good Wisconsin defense. It helps Jones’ cause that he’s surrounded by one of the most talented rosters in the nation. RB Elliott is a burner in the backfield as he averaged 6.5 YPC on 1,402 rushing yards with 12 TD and there’s a bevy of talented receivers to throw to. WR Devin Smith is the big-play target as he caught 30 balls for 799 yards and 11 TD for an average of 26.6 yards per reception.

With all that said, Ohio State will face its toughest test of the season against an Alabama defense that is riddled with future NFL-ers. Defensively Alabama ranks 11st in total yards allowed, 2nd against the run, and 4th in points per game allowed. Auburn was the only team that exceeded 23 points against this Tide defense and seven of 13 opponents were held to 14 points or fewer. Alabama’s offense has been just as good as its defense. QB Blake Sims had a breakout campaign in which he tossed for 3,236 yards (64.7%) with 25 TD and just 7 INT. The “Thunder & Lightning” RB combo of Henry & Yeldon combined for 1,827 rush yards and 20 TD. The biggest threat on this offense – and that’s saying something – is WR Amari Cooper, whose 115 catches, 1,656 receiving yards, and 14 touchdowns earned him a trip to New York as a finalist for the Heisman trophy. OSU does a good job of getting after the quarterback (40 sacks to lead the B1G), thus limiting big-play potential and increasing turnover potential (21 INT’s led the B1G). OSU’s defense hasn’t been tested a whole lot this season, but a similar matchup would be its showdown with Michigan State. The Spartans gained 536 total yards, including 178 rushing yards (5.2 YPC) and 358 passing yards. Overall the Buckeyes rank 15th in yards per game allowed, 17th against the pass, and 23rd in points allowed.

Alabama head coach Nick Saban is one of four coaches in the nation to have beaten OSU coach Urban Meyer more than once. Saban went 2-1 SU & ATS against Meyer’s Florida Gators from 2008-2010. The last meeting, in 2010, was a convincing win for the Tide that sent Alabama to the BCS Championship. Alabama is 4-1 SU & ATS in its last five bowl games, but lost last year’s Sugar Bowl against Oklahoma as a 15-point favorite. Ohio State has dropped its last two bowl games, including last year’s Orange Bowl against Clemson as a 2-point favorite.

Iowa (+3.5, 51) vs. Tennessee
TaxSlayer Bowl
Friday, Jan. 2 - 3:20 p.m ET (ESPN)
Everbank Field, Jacksonville, FL

Iowa lost back-to-back heartbreakers at home to close out the season. First, with the B1G West title still within reach, the Hawkeyes fell by two points to Wisconsin. Then they hosted Nebraska in the new end-of-season rivalry game and lost by three points in overtime despite holding a 17-point lead late in the 3rd quarter. Motivation, or lack thereof, will be a factor here as the Hawkeyes were a trendy underdog pick to win the division and a fourth place finish seems like a major letdown. We’re not even sure how “good” Iowa is this year. Their wins came against teams with a combined 29-43 record – none with a record above .500. Offensively this team is limited. Jake Rudock finished with a solid 16 pass TD and just 5 INT, which is a major accomplishment considering his lack of receiving weapons. Leading rusher Mark Weisman had 14 rush TD, but had only 802 yards on 3.9 yards per carry.

This offense won’t have many easy yards against a Tennessee defensive unit that improved greatly as the year progressed. The Vols finished 35th in YPG allowed, 29th against the pass, and 40th in PPG allowed. Tennessee isn’t nearly as bad as the 6-6 record indicates. They played a brutal schedule where only two of 11 FBS opponents didn’t qualify for a bowl. Their six losses came against teams with a combined 54-19 record and three of the losses – three-point loss to Georgia, one-point loss to Florida, and eight-point loss to Missouri – could’ve easily gone in Tennessee’s favor. The offense was inconsistent as the Vols had to replace five starters on the offensive line from last year and integrate QB Joshua Dobbs midway through the season after Justin Worley’s injury. Dobbs showed flashes of brilliance but also made too many mistakes. He finished with 8 TD passes and 5 INT and proved he’s a dual threat with 393 rush yards and 6 rush TD. Freshman RB Jalen Hurd led the team in rushing with 777 yards on 4.5 YPC with 3 TD, but the Vols have little rushing threat to speak of, and rushing yards won’t come easy against this Hawkeyes defense that ranks 19th in YPG allowed.

Iowa has now dropped back-to-back bowl games after losing last year’s Outback Bowl to LSU, 14-21, but the Hawks are 8-3 ATS in their last 11 bowl appearances. This will be Tennessee’s first bowl appearance since 2010, so most players will be playing in their first ever postseason game.
 
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Six teams that have the sportsbooks sweating this bowl season
By JASON LOGAN

You don’t always get everything you want for Christmas (still waiting on that Ninja Turtle blimp, Santa…) and if you check the bookmakers’ wish list, you’ll find losses for these six college football programs this bowl season.

Be it sharp money, public action or both, books are looking at a big stocking full of coal (if they’re lucky) if these high-liability teams come through. Here are the teams sportsbooks are cheering against the loudest this bowl season:

Miami Hurricanes

Independence Bowl: -3.5 vs. South Carolina

This bowl opened as low as a pick’em and sharps took the Hurricanes up to as high as -4 before buy back came on the Gamecocks for this Dec. 27 ACC-versus-SEC matchup.

“The wiseguys are looking for a motivated Miami team against a South Carolina squad that hasn't shown much focus all season,” says John Lester, “We've been forced to move the spread as much as four points, even though we are seeing some public money on the Gamecocks. Hopefully the Ol' Ball Coach can work some magic for us.”

Auburn Tigers

Outback Bowl: -6.5 vs. Wisconsin

The betting market soured on the Badgers after they took an ass waxing at the hands of Ohio State in the Big Ten title game, and this line has grown in favor of Auburn since opening as low as 5.5. Books are trying everything they can not to cross over the key number of a touchdown despite an overwhelming amount of action on Auburn.

“Auburn is shaping up like it's going to be a very one-sided game,” Peter Childs. “For every 10 bets we're taking on Auburn, we're getting only one bet on Wisconsin. Basically everyone remembers the last games these two teams played… plus, Auburn has been a public team the past two years.”

Oklahoma Sooners

Russell Athletic Bowl: -3.5 vs. Clemson

Books added an extra half point to the opening field goal spread with money piling on the Sooners in this Dec. 29 bowl game, from public and professional bettors.

“Oklahoma has been getting hammered by both betting parties,” says Lester. "More than 80 percent of our wagers for that game are on the Sooners so we'd like Clemson to come up with an upset."

USC Trojans

Holiday Bowl: -7 vs. Nebraska

The Trojans take on a Huskers program in turmoil after cutting ties with head coach Bo Pelini. Southern Cal is a touchdown favorite after opening as low as -5.5 with zero interest in Nebraska. The Trojans should also have a strong home field edge with the game being played in Qualcomm Stadium in San Diego.

“Big site advantage for USC as this game is being played 90 minutes from their campus,” says Childs. “Expect a heavy partisan USC crowd there on Saturday night. This is a standalone primetime game and we will book a ton of action come game day, and with all that action being on USC I can only see us getting to 7.5 at some point.”

Arkansas Razorbacks

Texas Bowl: -6 vs. Texas

You know there’s some heavy action when the team not named “Texas” is a 6-point favorite in the Texas Bowl. Money on the Hogs has hit hot and heavy since opening this game at Arkansas -5.

“We'd love to see Texas get one for the Gipper,” says Childs. “Casual bettors are still caught up in the Longhorns' frustrating year and some sharps aren't ready to jump off Arkansas, which ended the season strong. For this renewed rivalry, a large portion of our handle is on the Hogs.”

Florida State Seminoles

Rose Bowl: -9 vs. Oregon

The defending national champs are getting no love. Books opening Jameis & Co. as low as 7.5-point underdogs to Oregon and that has been bet up as high as Ducks -10 – for just a second at select spots – before buyback showed on the Noles.

But while that drastic move sets the books up for a crap-ton of bad situations – middles and teasers – the biggest liability on the Rose Bowl is FSU’s moneyline. Big bets are taking a flyer on the Seminoles to win outright and it could be a bad start to 2015 for books if FSU can come through, as big as +290 moneyline dogs right now.

“The moneyline is a major concern and we're still a good week away from that game going,” says Lester. “If we're exposed now, by game time you can figure that the exposure will double or triple by then. No question, it's our biggest bowl game liability.”
 
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Bowl Breakdown - Part 4
By Mike Rose

Below is a quick look at the six bowl games of the postseason scheduled from Tuesday Dec. 30 through Wednesday Dec. 31.

Music City Bowl - Notre Dame vs. LSU
Tuesday, Dec. 30, 3:00 p.m. ET
Music City Bowl Betting Line: LSU -7

It was only two months ago that Notre Dame was ranked fifth in America and was on the verge of being ranked first in the land if not for an offensive pass interference call that cost it a game against Florida State. LSU of course, also had the No. 1 team in the land on the ropes earlier this year, as it could have beaten Alabama in the Bayou. That said, both of these teams finished the year with unacceptable records by their own standards, and the Music City Bowl is no consolation for either one.

Belk Bowl - Georgia vs. Louisville
Tuesday, Dec. 30, 6:30 p.m. ET
Belk Bowl Betting Line: Georgia -6.5

The nation is going to find out just how good Louisville really is in this game, even with Reggie Bonnafon playing under center instead of the injured Will Gardner. Georgia has already split games with ACC teams this year, beating Clemson in the opening week and losing to Georgia Tech in the final game.

Foster Farms Bowl - Maryland vs. Stanford
Tuesday, Dec. 30, 10:00 p.m. ET
Foster Farms Bowl Betting Line: Stanford -14

The Cardinal are the biggest favorites of the bowl season for a good reason. They're essentially playing a home game, and most believe that their 7-5 record was really a farce, knowing what a great schedule they played. Maryland's first year in the Big Ten was a success to get to a bowl game, but just competing here at the Foster Farms Bowl would be a triumph.

Peach Bowl - Ole Miss vs. TCU
Wednesday, Dec. 31, 12:30 p.m. ET
Peach Bowl Betting Line: TCU -3

The first of the New Year's Six bowl games takes place in Atlanta, where Ole Miss couldn't quite get to for the SEC Championship Game. Bo Wallace and Trevone Boykin were both Heisman candidates once upon a time this year, and if both are on their game, this could be a heck of a battle. TCU's psyche must be analyzed here though, after it was left out of the playoff.

Fiesta Bowl - Boise State vs. Arizona
Wednesday, Dec. 31, 4:00 p.m. ET
Fiesta Bowl Betting Line: Arizona -3

Boise State cracked into the New Year's Six lineup to go to the Fiesta Bowl for the third time in its history. The Wildcats were good enough to stun Oregon once this year, but when push came to shove for the second matchup, they couldn't hang in there. For our money, this is the best of the New Year's Six bowls outside of the two playoff games.

Orange Bowl - Mississippi State vs. Georgia Tech
Wednesday, Dec. 31, 8:00 p.m. ET
Orange Bowl Betting Line: Mississippi State -7

The ACC dominated the SEC at the end of the season this year, and this is another chance for the boys from the ACC to prove their worth. Georgia Tech's triple option attack tends to get slowed down in these bowl games, and MSU has a defense which is legit enough to do the job. QB Dak Prescott probably lost the Heisman Trophy when he played against Alabama in a game which feels like forever ago, but he has a chance to rekindle some of that fire in the last game of the season in Miami.
 
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Tuesday's Tip Sheet
By Brian Edwards

**Notre Dame vs. Louisiana State**

-- I often talk about location and motivation as key factors in handicapping bowl games. In this instance, I would normally be concerned about LSU's motivation because it is accustomed to playing in more important bowl games during Les Miles's 10-year tenure. However, I don't think we have that here because even though Notre Dame's star doesn't shine as bright as it once did, it is still one of college football's most storied programs. Therefore, I think the Tigers will be plenty motivated to face the Fighting Irish.

-- These schools will collide Tuesday afternoon in Nashville at the Music City Bowl. As of Monday afternoon, most books had LSU (8-4 straight up, 8-4 against the spread) installed as a 7.5-point 'chalk' with a total of 52.5. The Irish are +240 on the money line (risk $100 to win $240). For first-half bets, LSU is favored by 4.5 with a total of 27.

-- Notre Dame (7-5 SU, 5-7 ATS) has been an underdog four times this season, going 2-2 ATS with one outright win over Stanford (17-14) at home on Oct. 4.

-- LSU has been a single-digit favorite four times, posting a 3-1 record both SU and ATS. -- LSU went 4-4 both SU and ATS against bowl-bound competition, besting Wisconsin (28-24), Florida (30-27), Ole Miss (10-7) and Texas A&M (23-17).

-- LSU is third in the nation in scoring defense, allowing only 16.4 points per game. The offense has proven to be one-dimensional, however, really struggling to pass the ball. Starting quarterback Anthony Jennings has completed just 48.8 percent of his passes for 1,460 yards with a 10/7 touchdown-to-interception ratio. When Jennings does throw, he's usually trying to find WR Travin Duval, who had 37 receptions for 758 yards and seven TDs during the regular season.

-- LSU true freshman RB Leonard Fournette has rushed for a team-high 891 yards and eight TDs while averaging 5.1 yards per carry. Terrence Magee has run for 545 yards and three scores, averaging 5.2 YPC. Senior RB Kenny Hilliard was believed to be out for the season with a shoulder injury, but Miles has declared him 100-percent healthy. Hilliard has rushed for 431 yards and six TDs while averaging 5.0 YPC.

-- Brian Kelly's team won its first six games, only to lose five of its last six. Notre Dame brings a four-game losing streak to Nashville. Two of those defeats came at home vs. Northwestern and Louisville. The Irish have failed to cover the number in five consecutive contests.

-- In its regular-season finale, Notre Dame got smashed by a 49-14 count at Southern Cal as a 4.5-point underdog. Junior quarterback Everett Golson was benched after throwing an interception, which was his 21st turnover committed in the last nine games. In relief of Golson, Malik Zaire completed 9-of-20 passes for 170 yards and had a rushed TD. Zaire will get his first career start against LSU, though Golson is expected to play as well. Golson threw for 3,355 yards during the regular season, posting a 29/14 touchdown-to-interception ratio. But his TD-INT ratio was 7/7 during the four-game losing streak.

-- Notre Dame went 4-4 straight up against eight bowl-bound opponents.

-- Notre Dame's defense has been hit hard by injuries. This unit has given up 30 points or more in seven straight games.

-- The 'over' is just 7-5 overall for Notre Dame, but it has cashed in five straight games and six of its last seven.

-- The 'under' is 8-4 overall for LSU, cashing in five consecutive games.

-- Kickoff is scheduled for 3:00 p.m. Eastern on ESPN.

**Georgia vs. Louisville**

-- Georgia and Louisville are set to collide Tuesday at the Belk Bowl in Charlotte. As of Monday night, most books had Georgia (9-3 SU, 7-5 ATS) listed as a seven-point favorite with a total of 57. The Cardinals are +230 on the money line. For first -half bets, UGA is favored by four with a total of 28.5.

-- Georgia will be without its offensive coordinator Mike Bobo, who took the head-coaching gig at Colorado State last week. Mark Richt will call the offensive plays in this game.

-- Where is UGA's psyche for this game? No one can know for sure. Until Missouri rallied to beat Arkansas on Nov. 28, the Bulldogs were hoping to be in the SEC Championship Game and they maintained hopes of making the College Football Playoff. When those factors were taken out of the equation, Georgia lost at home to Georgia Tech 24 hours later. The Yellow Jackets went into Athens and won a 30-24 decision in overtime, hooking up their backers as 10.5-point road underdogs. A pair of fumbles inside the red zone during regulation proved to be UGA's undoing. Nick Chubb rushed for 129 yards and one TD in the losing effort.

-- Chubb enjoyed a breakout freshman campaign. With Todd Gurley missing six games due to a suspension and an injury, Chubb rushed for a team-high 1,281 yards and 12 TDs while averaging 6.9 YPC.

-- Georgia senior QB Hutson Mason completed 67.9 percent of his passes for 2,019 yards with a 20/4 TD-INT ratio.

-- UGA went 3-1 both SU and ATS in four games this season as a single-digit 'chalk.'

-- Georgia has lost in three of its four previous postseason appearances, including a 24-19 setback against Nebraska in last year's Gator Bowl.

-- Louisville (9-3 SU, 7-5 ATS) has won three in a row, including a 44-40 win over Kentucky as a 13.5-point home favorite in the regular-season finale for both schools. This game featured seven lead changes, the last of which came when U of L running back Brandon Radcliff scored on a four-yard TD run with 2:47 remaining. Kyle Bolin, a redshirt freshman who began the season as the team's third-string QB, saw the first significant playing time of his career. He was outstanding, throwing for 381 yards and three TDs with one interception.

-- Although Bobby Petrino has been non-committal, it appears that Bolin will get his first career start against the Bulldogs. Will Gardner, the starting QB, was lost for the season with a knee injury in mid-November. The job was left to true freshman Reggie Bonnafon, who has 850 passing yards and a 5/3 TD-INT ratio. He's also a major threat with his legs, rushing for 173 yards and five TDs. Bonnafon left the win over UK with a knee injury, but he's been upgraded to 'probable' and will probably get the bulk of the snaps under center.

-- Radcliff has rushed for a team-best 648 yards and 11 TDs, averaging 5.2 YPC. The best playmaker on the U of L offense is WR DaVante Parker, who had 35 receptions for 735 yards and five TDs despite missing the first seven games. Parker had at least 132 receiving yards in four of the five games he played in. He had eight catches for 214 yards against Florida State and in the win over UK, the senior had six catches for 180 yards and three TDs.

-- Louisville has been an underdog three times this year, going 2-1 ATS with one outright win at Notre Dame.

-- Louisville's defense is run by first-year coordinator Todd Grantham, who spent the four previous years as Richt's DC at UGA. U of L ranks sixth nationally in total defense and third against the run. This unit gives up just 20.5 PPG. This 'D' is led by All-American Gerod Holliman, who led the country in interceptions with 14.

-- U of L senior running back Michael Dyer has been ruled academically ineligible and won't play vs. UGA. This ends a long career filled with many ups and downs. Dyer was the Most Valuable Player of the BCS Championship Game as true freshman when Auburn beat Oregon. He was booted from the AU program before playing another snap, however, and then got dismissed from the Arkansas State program before ever playing a down. He has been with the Cardinals the last two years, but injuries were a major issue in 2013. This season Dyer rushed for 481 yards and five TDs while averaging 4.4 YPC.

-- Georgia will be without LB Leonard Floyd after he underwent shoulder surgery earlier this month. Floyd led UGA in sacks with six.

-- The 'under' is 6-5-1 overall for U of L, but it has seen the 'over' cash in four consecutive games.

-- The 'over' is 9-3 overall for UGA, but the 'under' has cashed in two of its last three games.

-- ESPN will provide television coverage at 6:30 p.m. Eastern.

**Maryland vs. Stanford**

-- The Big Ten and Pac-12 will be represented in the Foster Farms Bowl at Levi's Stadium in Santa Clara, where Stanford and Maryland will do battle Tuesday night. As of Monday night, most betting shops had Stanford (7-5 SU, 6-6 ATS) listed as a 14-point favorite with a total of 48. Gamblers can go for a huge +450 payout by backing the Terrapins to win outright (risk $100 to win $450). For first-half wagers, the Cardinal is favored by 7.5 with a total of 24.

-- Maryland (7-5 SU, 6-6 ATS) is going bowling for a second straight season after winning seven games in its Big Ten debut. The Terrapins went 4-4 in league play, but they dropped their regular-season finale to Rutgers by a 41-38 score as 7.5-point home favorites.

-- Randy Edsall's team went 4-3 both SU and ATS in seven games as an underdog. This is Maryland's biggest underdog situation of the year. The Terps were only double-digit 'dogs once, losing to Michigan State 37-15 as 10.5-point home puppies.

-- Maryland is getting its best player back for the bowl game. Junior WR Stefon Diggs missed the last three games of the regular season due to a lacerated kidney. In nine games, Diggs had 52 catches for 654 yards and five TDs.

-- Maryland senior QB C.J. Brown has been able to stay healthy this season. Brown completed 53.2 percent of his passes for 2,083 yards with a 13/9 TD-INT ratio. Brown has rushed for a team-high 569 yards and seven TDs.

-- Stanford will be without its best offensive playmaker Ty Montgomery, who is dealing with a shoulder injury. Montgomery had a team-high 61 receptions for 604 yards and three TDs. He also rushed for 128 yards and one score. Montgomery had 1,400 all-purpose yards during the regular season.

-- Stanford QB Kevin Hogan has completed 65.5 percent of his throws for 2,603 yards with a 17/8 TD-INT ratio.

-- Stanford is second in the nation in scoring defense, giving up just 16.0 PPG. The Cardinal ranks fourth in total defense.

-- David Shaw's squad has been a double-digit favorite five times, producing a stellar 4-1 spread record.

-- The 'under' has been a monster money maker in Stanford games, cashing at a 9-2 overall clip.

-- The 'over' is 6-5-1 overall for Maryland, but the 'under' has been a winner in three of its last four games.

-- Kickoff is slated for 10:00 p.m. Eastern on ESPN.
 
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Belk Bowl betting preview: Georgia vs. Louisville

Georgia Bulldogs vs. Louisville Cardinals (+6.5, 56.6)

Game to be played at Bank of America Stadium, Charlotte, North Carolina

The 13th annual Belk Bowl will play host to two top 20 teams for the first time in its history when No. 13 Georgia and No. 20 Louisville meet for the first time. The Bulldogs, who are the first SEC team to be invited to Charlotte, N.C., enter the 50th bowl game in their proud history after winning eight of their final 10 contests. The Cardinals also finished the regular season strong by going 7-2 down the stretch, with the only losses coming to No. 2 Florida State and No. 18 Clemson.

In a season marked with a number of highs (routs of SEC East champion Missouri and Auburn) and lows (losses to six-win teams in South Carolina and Florida), Georgia running back Nick Chubb was one of the few constants. After losing Heisman Trophy hopeful Todd Gurley to a season-ending knee injury on Oct. 11, the SEC Freshman of the Year closed the year out by running for at least 100 yards and a touchdown in each of his seven starts. With another 100-yard performance against Louisville, Chubb can tie Bulldog legend Herschel Walker for the most such efforts by a Georgia freshman.

The Cardinals’ sixth-ranked total defense could enjoy a significant advantage considering defensive coordinator Todd Grantham served in the same role for the Bulldogs under Georgia coach Mark Richt from 2010-13. Louisville also boasts the third-best rushing defense in the country (93.7 yards) and has yielded only nine scores on the ground. The Cardinals are slightly less accomplished against the pass (31st, 199.6), but finished the regular season tied for first in FBS with 25 interceptions.

TV: 6:30 p.m. ET, ESPN.

LINE HISTORY: Georgia opened as 6.5-point favorites and were bet to -7, before coming back down to the opening number. The total has held steady at 56.5

INJURY REPORT: Georgia - RB A.J. Turman (questionable Tuesday, toe), RB Keith Marshall (questionable Tuesday, ankle), WR Isaiah McKenzie (out Tuesday, suspension), LB Leonard Floyd (out, Tuesday). Louisville - QB Reggie Bonnafon (probable Tuesday, knee), RB Michael Dyer (out Tuesday, academics).

WEATHER REPORT: It will be partly cloudy with temperatures in the low 40's for the game. There will be a 10 percent chance of rain with a five mile per hour wind blowing across the field from north to south.

WHAT BOOKS SAY: "Most thought this line would've moved in Georgia's favor at some point but most of our bets on are Louisville. The wiseguys really like the dog - we've taken less than 10 percent of our moneyline bets on Georgia. You cannot ignore the coaching factor that Todd Grantham knows this Bulldogs team well. He should have a pretty good game plan as to how to limit that running game. These teams cashed a lot of Overs during the season but there might be some value with the Under here." John Lester.

ABOUT GEORGIA (9-3, 7-5 ATS, 9-3 O/U): Thanks in large part to Chubb (12) and Gurley (nine), Georgia ran for a conference-leading 35 rushing touchdowns – a total that trails only the 1971 Bulldog team that finished with 39. Hutson Mason, who was one of three Georgia quarterbacks to combine for a completion percentage of 68.1, saw his six-game streak without throwing an interception snapped on his final attempt in the Nov. 29 overtime loss to Georgia Tech. The Bulldogs finished the regular season with a plus-15 turnover differential – tied for fourth in FBS – and scored 104 points off their 26 takeaways.

ABOUT LOUISVILLE (9-3, 7-5 ATS, 5-6-1 O/U): Sophomore All-American safety Gerod Holliman emerged as the country’s best ball hawk in 2014 with 14 interceptions, matching the NCAA single-season record held by Al Worley of Washington in 1968 and becoming only the 11th player in NCAA history to record 12 or more in a season. The Cardinals’ offense also finished the season on a roll, scoring 30 or more points in five straight games. That streak coincided with the return of receiver DeVante Parker, who posted team-high totals of 35 catches, 735 yards and five touchdowns despite missing seven contests with a left toe injury.

TRENDS:

* Georgia is 4-1 ATS in their last five games following an ATS loss.
* Louisville is 4-1 ATS in their last five Bowl games.
* Over is 12-3 in Georgia's last 15 games following a SU loss.
* Over is 4-0-1 in Louisville's last five games overall.

CONSENSUS: The majority of bettors are backing Georgia, with 63 percent of wagers on the Bulldogs -6.5.
 
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NCAAF

NOTRE DAME (7 - 5) vs. LSU (8 - 4) - 12/30/2014, 3:00 PM

Top Trends for this game.
LSU is 7-1 ATS (+5.9 Units) as a favorite this season.

Head-to-Head Series History
There were no past matchups in this series during this time period.
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LOUISVILLE (9 - 3) vs. GEORGIA (9 - 3) - 12/30/2014, 6:30 PM

Top Trends for this game.
GEORGIA is 23-10 ATS (+12.0 Units) against ACC opponents since 1992.
GEORGIA is 25-12 ATS (+11.8 Units) in road games in non-conference games since 1992.
GEORGIA is 59-39 ATS (+16.1 Units) in road games when playing against a team with a winning record since 1992.
LOUISVILLE is 7-0 ATS (+7.0 Units) in road games when playing against a team with a winning record over the last 3 seasons.

Head-to-Head Series History
There were no past matchups in this series during this time period.
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MARYLAND (7 - 5) vs. STANFORD (7 - 5) - 12/30/2014, 10:00 PM

There are no Top Trends with records of significance that apply to this game.

Head-to-Head Series History
There were no past matchups in this series during this time period.
 

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