NFL Week 7 Best Bets

October 24th, 2009 10:43 pm
by Pro Set

After enjoying my own bye weeks, it’s time to earn some money for the next vacation.

Check out my bets and remember that scores traditionally begin to tighten up during the middle of the season. Although there appearss to have been a lot of large covers this season by favourites, last week (eg OAK) saw the end of the early season blowouts.

If Arizona is less than 21 points down after one quarter on Sunday night, the Cardinals will begin to erase last year’s East Coast horror sequence (@ NYJ; @ PHI; @ NE).

Posted in Uncategorized | No Comments »

NFL 2009 Week 4 Best Bets

October 4th, 2009 7:37 am
by Pro Set

Last week was a 2-2 split. This leaves me hitting .500 which is disappointing at best.

Let’s hope that Week 4 can turn it all around. Only 3 best bets this week, to try to make it easier to get a winning record.

Check out my bets and remember to bet only where it’s legal.

Posted in Uncategorized | No Comments »

BCS Update

October 2nd, 2009 1:46 am
by Pro Set

Even though official BCS rankings only start later in the season, be sure to check for Pro Set’s Top 6 each week on www.nflgameanalysis.com.

This week’s notes:

  • UGA coach Mark Richt will be on the hot seat after LSU beats the Dawgs on Saturday (3:30pm on CBS)
  • Miaimi (Fla) QB Jacory Harris should lead the Canes to a win over the Sooners (8pm on ABC)
  • UF QB Tim Tebow can’t read due to his concussion, so he’s wearing headphones; listening to bible tapes while the Gators enjoy the bye week

Posted in Uncategorized | No Comments »

Week 2 Featured Preview

September 15th, 2007 2:21 am
by Pro Set

Dallas @ Miami 4:05pm ET on FOX

DAL -3.5

MIA +3.5

This interconference imbroglio is a tough read. Dallas comes in with an offence that had its way last Sunday night. On the road, and without injured WR Terry Glenn, the Cowboys will need to run the ball well to win. The onus will be on the interior line of Dallas to handle DT Keith Traylor and DT Vonnie Holliday. This presents a big opportunity for G Leonard Davis to provide a dominant display of run-blocking. If it is a warm day, the ageing Dolphins can be worn down quickly by the tandem of RB Julius Jones and RB Marion Barber. Clearly Miami will want to make QB Tony Romo feel pressured to force the ball to WR Terrell Owens and TE Jason Witten. Last Sunday night Romo threw a crucial, but, ultimately, not fatal, INT late in the game that allowed the Giants to close in when he simply did not see a defender dropping into the hook route. So the Dolphins will be well advised to bring LB Zach Thomas and LB Joey Porter up to fake the blitz, and drop them underneath Witten. Remember that Romo won the starting job last season because QB Drew Bledsoe was pilloried for hanging onto the ball too long and taking sacks. Romo will tend to throw under pressure instead of eating it. So if the Dolphins can get pressure with just the front four (especially DE Jason Taylor) then they must be ready for turnover opportunities.

When Miami has the ball, expect Dallas to bring overload pressure on QB Trent Green. No one fears Trent Green on the scramble. Dallas S Roy Williams is at his best close to the line of scrimmage. The best way to avoid WR Chris Chambers putting on a display similar to the last meeting of these teams is pressure on the passer. Expect Dallas CB Terence Newman to try to play, but his injured foot might cost him a step in coverage. This will further compel Dallas to minimise coverage time by blitzing. This is where Dallas has an advantage because I can’t see the Miami backs effectively picking up DeMarcus Ware. This is important because Trent Green will often fumble when sacked. If I were MIA coach Cam Cameron I would be inserting lots of screens and lead draws into this week’s playbook to slow the blitz and to exploit the absence of NT Jason Ferguson by running up the middle on the 3-4 DAL defence.

The bottom line here is that if MIA cannot run the ball well, the fate of the game will rest on the pocket presence of Trent Green. I think that MIA will come with running formations and personnel, and will try to pass on 1st down to avoid the blitz. For Dallas, this is a winnable game that will require a more disciplined approach than last week’s wild play. DAL will be hard to beat if they lead early. But DAL also has the weapons to overcome a deficit.

Prediction: DAL

Line: DAL


Posted in Cam Cameron, Chris Chambers, Dallas Cowboys, DeMarcus Ware, Drew Bledsoe, Jason Witten, Joey Porter, Julius Jones, Keith Traylor, Leonard Davis, Marion Barber, Miami Dolphins, NFL, NFL Coaches, NFL Franchises/Teams, NFL Game Previews, NFL on FOX, NFL on television, Roy Williams (DAL), Terence Newman, Terrell Owens, Terry Glenn, Tony Romo, Trent Green, Uncategorized, Vonnie Holliday, Zach Thomas | No Comments »

Going for two; preparing to lose

September 6th, 2007 2:45 am
by NFL Freak

Any serious fan of a trailling team will always be looking beyond the current drive. Issues such as how much time must still be remaining before everything is four down territory, and whether an onside kick is necessary should be lurking marginally behind the down and distance equation.

The point here is that flexibility and the calmness to depart from the predictable course is the ultimate attribute that separates a solid coach from a sideline superman. This is why it is so puzzling that the some of the most important moments in games are almost unrelentingly governed by a pre-determined formula that coaches persist in using longer than Ray Rhodes kept Brett Favre in the game when Holmgren returned for the 1999 MNF Seahawks @ Packers showdown. Rhodes was fired at season’s end.

The two point conversion is so commonly abused that it deserves an entire season’s scrutiny. The standard has been set so low by the coaches of supposed ‘university’ teams that 2007 already shapes as a vintage example of rigid card adherence. The sheer arrogance of Michigan on Saturday was a season-ending folly. One can imagine Lloyd Carr thinking what a good opportunity App St offered to test his best 2 pt conversion plays. Michigan missed on two attempts and lost 32-34 at home.

Will the NFL coaches learn?

Will the NFL coaches analyse the game situation at hand rather than adhering blindly to a printed workseet?

We always hear reverently of half-time adjustments. Let’s see some coaches really earn their money by looking ahead and asking whether they really want to hide behind some paper for, as in Michigan’s case, a season-destroying loss.

 

Posted in Uncategorized | No Comments »