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Model 22

NFL’s Elite Eight except Falcons lack respect by Ted Sevransky

With three more NFL playoff weekends still ahead of us, there are eight teams still standing; the top quartile of the league. This week, I’ll discuss all eight, but first a brief history lesson for the Divisional Round.

If you’re looking for active trends for next weekend’s round of the playoffs, you’re not going to find much when it comes to sides. Over the past 10 years, the rested team has only gone 17-23 ATS in this round, but we’ve seen some dramatic swings.

From 2006-2008, the teams coming off a bye went only 2-10 ATS in this round. In 2009, the teams coming off their bye went 3-1 ATS. In each of the last two years, it’s been a 2-2 ATS split. In other words, there’s not much of a trend.

It’s a similar story with totals. Over the last 10 years, there’s no prevailing trend to report, with 21 UNDERS compared to 19 OVERS. But the last two years, it’s 7-1 to the OVER. In the two years before that, it was 6-2 UNDER. In the two years prior to that, it was 2-2 both times. Again, there’s not much of a trend.

Now to the Elite Eight 2013 NFL teams.

Baltimore Ravens

Do we give the Ravens credit for being the only team in the NFL to win at least one playoff game in each of the last five seasons? Or do we rip the John Harbaugh/Joe Flacco combination for never even reaching a Super Bowl, let alone winning one, despite all those postseason victories?

Do we give Baltimore credit for holding the Colts to just 9 points in their Wild Card Round win and cover? Or do we rip the Ravens for allowing a rookie QB to pick them apart as the Colts finished No. 2 among the eight teams that played last weekend in total yards while holding the ball for more than 37 minutes?

Judging by the 9-point spread for their upcoming game at Denver, it’s clear that the betting markets are rather bearish on Baltimore.

Denver Broncos

Peyton Manning lost in the playoffs as the higher seed in 1999, following a first round bye week. He lost his first round playoff game as a Wild Card in 2000. He didn’t make the playoffs in 2001. In ’02, he lost in the Wild Card round. In ’03 and ’04 he lost to Tom Brady and the Patriots in the playoffs. In ’05, the Colts lost at home following their bye to the lower seeded Steelers as ten point favorites.

Following Indy’s Super Bowl title in 2006, in ’07 the Colts lost at home as the higher seeded team to San Diego, following a bye. In 2008, they lost as favorites to the Chargers again in their first playoff game as 10½ point chalk. In 2009, Manning lost as a favorite in the Super Bowl. In 2010, he lost as a home favorite as the higher seeded team in the opening round.

Head coach John Fox’s last try as a home favorite in the postseason was a 33-13 defeat at home to Arizona as 10-point chalk with the Panthers, following Carolina’s bye in 2008. And it’s surely worth noting that Denver has a losing SU and ATS record against the five playoff teams they faced during the regular season.

Green Bay Packers

The Packers lost 37-20 at home to the Giants as 8-point favorites in their first playoff game last year, following the bye week. The previous year, Green Bay won three straight postseason road games, including a blowout at Atlanta in this round, to reach (and win) the Super Bowl.

Nine of the Packers last 11 opponents have been held to 20 points or less; a defense that has improved by leaps and bounds since their Week 1 matchup against the 49ers. And with a healthy receiving corps for the first time all year, Aaron Rodgers connected with an NFL playoff record 10 different receivers in a win over Minnesota last weekend.

Prop bet players surely noticed, however, that with 10 different receiving options, every one of those wideouts that had an Over/Under for total receiving yards posted stayed UNDER the number.

San Francisco 49ers

The 49ers led the NFL with a +28 turnover margin last year. This year, San Fran was +9 TO, but led the NFL in a stat that the betting markets respect a lot more– yards per play differential. Jim Harbaugh’s squad finished the regular season with a +1.3 yards per play differential. Only one other team – Denver—finished with a better than 0.7 ypp margin. And San Fran compiled those stats despite facing a much tougher than average slate of foes.

Last year, the Niners lost out on a trip to the Super Bowl thanks to a fourth quarter special teams miscue against the Giants. Anyone who’s watched San Fran closely down the stretch this year knows full well that those special teams issues have not been fixed.

Seattle Seahawks

Any team with a rookie QB that falls down by 14 points on the road in the playoffs, loses a fumble from their star veteran running back at the one yard line and still wins the game by a double digit margin is clearly doing something right.

Atlanta Falcons

The betting markets aren’t going to respect the Falcons until Matt Ryan and Mike Smith finally gets the monkey off their backs with a playoff win or two or three. It’s surely worth noting that Atlanta was outgained on a yards per play basis for the entire season. The only other playoff team to do that? Indy.

Atlanta’s -1.1 yards per rush differential between what they gain and what they allow ranked No. 31 in the NFL this year. The No. 32 team? Those same Colts, who did not fare well in their playoff loss at Baltimore.

Houston Texans

The Texans defense was the best unit on the field in their win over Cincinnati, holding the Bengals offense to a pair of field goals. Coach Gary Kubiak has covered the spread in all three playoff games in the Texans history over the past two years, including their two wins over Marvin Lewis’s squad and a 7-point loss at Baltimore in this round last year as 7.5 point underdogs.

It’s surely worth noting that the Texans were in the +4.5 to +5.5 range when they travelled to New England for Monday Night Football in December. Since that time, the betting markets have been downgrading Houston on a near weekly basis; hence the dramatic adjustment compared to the game that was played on the same field just last month.

New England Patriots

In 2010, the Patriots finished the regular season with a +28 turnover ratio; best in the NFL by a wide margin (the No. 2 team was +17). In 2011, New England finished the regular season with a +17 turnover ratio. Nobody else in the AFC was better than +7 that year. This year, the Pats led the league with a +25 margin again. The No. 2 team in the AFC, Houston, was only +12. Turnovers are not completely random – teams with good quarterbacks are supposed to win the turnover battle more often than not.

If you’ve been expecting the Patriots’ regular season good fortune to carry over into the playoffs, you’ve been losing bets consistently. Dating back to the Pats loss to the Colts in the 2006 AFC Championship Game, New England is on a 1-8 ATS run in the postseason (the lone win coming against the Broncos last year) in large part because they haven’t been winning the turnover battle in the playoffs the same way they’ve been winning it in the regular season.

It’s also worth noting that the Patriots lost at home in their first playoff game in both 2010 and 2011 prior to last year’s Super Bowl run. The last Super Bowl loser to return to the big game the following year? C’mon, you know the answer to this one, because it happened three years in a row – the Buffalo Bills in Super Bowls XXVI, XXVII and XXVIII.

In other words, it’s been a while!

 

 

Written by Joseph D'Amico on January 9, 2013 at 10:12 am