It is a great weekend for sports fans with the Final Four and the culmination of the college basketball season next Monday in Superdome in New Orleans for the national championship. It is clear that it is not the teams the start the season hot, but the ones that get hot when it really matters — March and April!
Many things happen over the course of a long season. Some teams play great basketball in December and January, only to break down from injuries or run out of steam down the stretch. Missouri is a good example, starting 17-0 before stumbling in midseason. Last year Villanova won 16 of 17 to start the season, then broke down with injuries and poor play, finishing 3-10 SU, 1-12 ATS. Five years ago Clemson started 17-0, then failed to even make the Big Dance after a 4-10 SU, 5-9 ATS run. Kansas may have won the title four years ago, but seven years ago it was a very different story: The Jayhawks started 20-1, only to go 3-6 straight up and 1-8 against the spread the last nine games. They never made it to the Final Four because of a 64-63 loss to Bucknell as a 13½-point favorite.
Other times an easy early season schedule, youth, bad coaching, untimely injuries, bad luck, poor team chemistry or a combination of these can cut down a potentially great team. Youth and a loss of its best players certainly fell Florida after winning back-to-back titles and prevent a North Carolina repeat in 2010.
Duke saw its hope dashed in a stunning loss to Lehigh as 11-point chalk, but this is nothing new. Last year No. 1 seed Pitt saw its hopes crushed in a loss to Butler, 71-70 and a few years ago No. 2 seed Georgetown took itself out of the tournament, blowing a 46-29 lead by trying to stall against Davidson with far too much time left.
Five years ago Wisconsin was a No. 2 seed, but suffered a key late season loss in 6-11 Brian Butch, their leading rebounder and third-leading scorer. They weren’t the same group, getting smacked by Ohio State in the Big 10 tourney and an upset loss to UNLV in the Big Dance.
It is very easy for sports bettors to look into trends to try and predict the future. Trends can be helpful if there are reasons to support it. For example, from a betting perspective, what stands out about the last nine Finals Fours?
Score – Line
2011 Butler 70 – 3.5 VCU 62 – 133 Kentucky 55 – 131 UConn 56 – +2.5
2010 Butler 52 – 1.5
Michigan State 50 – 125 West Virginia 57 – 130 Duke 78 – -2.5
2009: Michigan State 82 – 135 UConn 73 – 4 North Carolina 83 – 7.5 Villanova 69 – 160
2008: Kansas 84 – 158 North Carolina 66 – 3 UCLA 63 – 135 Memphis 78 – 3
2007:
Georgetown 60 – 1 Ohio St. 67 – 130 UCLA 66 – 131 Florida 76 – 3
2006: G. Mason 58 – 132 Florida 73 – -6 LSU 45 – -2 UCLA 59 – 123
2005: Louisville 57 – 144 Illiniois 72 – -3
Michigan St. 71 – 153 North Carolina 87 – -2
2004: Georgia Tech 67 – 139 Oklahoma St. 65 – -4 UConn 79 – -2 Duke 78 – 144
2003: Marquette 61 – -4½ Kansas 94 – 153½ Syracuse 95 – 153
Texas 84 – -3
2002: Indiana 73 – 134 Oklahoma 64 -6½
Maryland 97 – 168 Kansas 88 – -1½
What stands out is that it has been the day of the dog. The underdog is 11-8 against the number, with ten dogs winning straight up. In addition, the games have gone 10-10 “over” the total, although the “under” is 8-4 the last six years. You can even make an argument that this would be the right time of the college hoops’ season to take a shot with the dog on the money-line. However, this is where one needs patience, because trends can also be a fool’s paradise. The last seven years the favorites are 9-5 ATS.
If you go back to the previous three Final Fours before that content analysis, 1999-01, we find Duke topping Maryland 95-84, Arizona blowing out Michigan State 80-61, Michigan State beating Wisconsin 53-41, Florida topping North Carolina 71-59, UConn beating Ohio State 64-58 and Duke surviving Michigan State 68-62. What stands out is that the favorite won and covered in five of six, for a hefty 5-1 spread record.
Even looking at totals, a similar pattern emerges. The last ten years the “over/under” has been equal, 10-10 in the Final Four. The three years before that the “under” prevailed at a 5-1 clip. All of a sudden, those who look solely at trends as the key to the sports betting kingdom are stuck at close to a .500 winning percentage ATS.
For the record, going back the last 15 years, there have been 20 “unders” and 14 “overs” in the Final Four, with 17 dogs covering while 17 favorites have gotten the money. Again, trends are worth examining, but there needs to be reasons behind them if you’re serious about putting down hard earned money on a side. Perhaps the most significant stat that stands out is that 14 of the 17 dogs that covered ended up winning the game outright, which shows how competitive and relatively evenly matched the games become when teams get this far in the season.
Come to www.aasiwins.com for all of Jim Feist’s free NCAAB winners, news, and articles.
Written by Joseph D'Amico on March 27, 2012 at 11:17 pm