Joseph D'Amico
Joe D'Amico owns and operates All American Sports in Las Vegas, Nevada. A third generation Race and Sports personality, his father and grandfather are revered in horse racing industry.


Mark Franco

Mark Franco helped start Vegas Insider in 1997 and worked under some of the most well respected handicappers in the Nation.


Jimmy Boyd

Jimmy Boyd of Locksmith Sports is the most consistent handicapper across all major sports that the industry has to offer.


Craig Trapp

Craig has been handicapping for 10 years. Over that 10 years he learned how to study games and the lines and developed a winning strategy.


Ray Monohan

What you see is what you get. No Game of the month, game of the year, game of the decade mumbojumbo, just winning selections.
Model 83

Super Bowl Betting With Jim Feist

Welcome to Brother Bowl I! Both the Ravens and 49ers lost in the conference championship games a year ago, but won this season to set up a fascinating Super Bowl of Harbaugh brothers coaching against each other. Back in August the Ravens were 8-to-1 and the 49ers 4-to-1 to win the Super Bowl.

We had been in a golden age for the AFC for a while, almost as if the pendulum had swung. During the 1980s and much of the 90s, the NFC dominated, winning 15 of 16 Super Bowls, including 13 in a row. That changed in 1998 when Denver upset Green Bay, 31-24. Since then, the AFC has won 9 of the last 15, though the Saints, Packers and Giants have won the last three.

These are two fierce defensive teams, which is quiet a triumph as since 2004 the rules have been changed by the NFL to favor offense. That includes enforcing the 5-yard rule to help wide receivers get down field with less hindrance and the Tom Brady rule, which protects quarterbacks. When the top-ranked offenses met three years ago, following the pass-happy Arizona Cardinals surprising run to the Super Bowl the previous season, many wondered if offense was now they way to build a championship team.

But let’s face it: Defense is still King. The Giants won two titles with great defense, topping the pass-happy Patriots, and now the Ravens and 49ers got here with physical, punishing defenses, topping finesse teams in the conference championships. Remember that when the Packers and Steelers squared off two years ago they were ranked No. 1 and No. 2 in points allowed, so defense is still very much alive and dominating!

The Ravens hope to continue a trend: The underdog is 8-3 ATS the last 11 Super Bowls, winning five times. Here’s a look at what to expect this weekend as America’s unofficial national holiday, the Super Bowl, kicks off.

What the Raven want to do: They would prefer a balanced offense with RB Ray Rice, but the fact is QB Joe Flacco has carried this offense in the playoffs with 8 TDs and no interceptions. He’s in a contract year, a free agent after this game, and is now 8-4 as a playoff quarterback. The offense wasn’t that impressive during the regular season, 15th in passing with 233.7 yards per game, 11th in rushing (118.8), which prompted the firing of OC Cam Cameron in favor of Jim Caldwell. The air attack will probably have to lead the way again with WR Anquan Boldin (112 catches, 921 yds) and speedy WR Torrey Smith (855 yds).

The defense has a punishing, physical style that forced two second half turnovers against the Patriots in the AFC title game. Run stuffer Holati Nata is joined by veterans Ray Lewis and DE Terrell Suggs, but the key will be figuring out a way to stop the 49ers read option. For the final three quarters, the Falcons were at a complete loss responding to Colin Kaepernick’s read-option fakes. The Ravens are 4-0 ATS in their last four playoff games, a 4-1 run under the total in the postseason.

What the 49ers want to do: What haven’t they done this postseason? They hung 45 on the Packers, then trailed 17-0 at Atlanta but didn’t panic, rallying for a 28-24 win. The San Francisco offense is fourth in rushing (155.7 yds pg) behind second-year QB Colin Kaepernick (10 TDs, 3 INTs, 62.4%, 415 yards rushing, 6.6 ypc) and RB Frank Gore (1,214 yds, 4.7 ypc). But don’t ignore the passing game with WR Mike Crabtree (1,105 yards), TE Vernon Davis (548) and WR Randy Moss (434, 15.5 ypc).

Then there is the defense, 4th in pass yards allowed (200 yds pg), 4th against the run (94.2) where six of their nine Pro Bowlers reside. The over is 5-0 in 49ers last 5 against a team with a winning record and the team is on a 25-11-1 ATS run. Over the last 36 years, the “over” has gone 21-16 in Super Bowl play, though the under is 6-2 the last eight years. Enjoy the big game!

Super Bowl Total Over/Under 46 Giants 21, Patriots 17 51 Under 45 Packers 31, Steelers 25 46 Over 44 Saints 31, Colts 17 56 Under 43 Steelers 27, Cardinals 23 47 Over 42 Giants 17, Patriots 14 52 Under 41 Colts 29, Bears 17 49 Under 40 Steelers 21, Seahawks 10 48 Under 39 Patriots 24, Eagles 21 47 Under 38 Patriots 32, Panthers 29 38 Over 37 Bucs 48, Raiders 21 43- Over 36 Patriots 20, Rams 17 53 Under 35 Ravens 34, Giants 7 33 Over 34 Rams 23, Titans 16 48 Under 33 Broncos 34, Falcons 19 51 Over 32 Broncos 31, Packers 24 49 Over 31 Packers 35, Patriots 21 52 Over 30 Cowboys 27, Steelers 17 52 Under 29 49ers 49, Chargers 26 53 Over 28 Cowboys 30, Bills 13 50 Under 27 Cowboys 52, Bills 17 44- Over 26 Redskins 37, Bills 24 49 Over 25 Giants 20, Bills 19 40- Under 24 49ers 55, Broncos 10 48 Over 23 49ers 20, Bengals 16 48 Under 22 Redskins 42, Broncos 10 47 Over 21 Giants 39, Broncos 20 40 Over 20 Bears 46, Patriots 10 37- Over 19 49ers 39, Dolphins 16 53- Over 18 Raiders 38, Redskins 9 48 Under 17 Redskins 27, Dolphins 17 36- Over 16 49ers 26, Bengals 21 48 Under 15 Raiders 27, Eagles 10 37- Under 14 Steelers 31, Rams 19 36 Over 13 Steelers 35, Cowboys 31 37 Over 12 Cowboys 27, Broncos 10 39 Under 11 Raiders 32, Vikings 14 38 Over 10 Steelers 21, Cowboys 17 36 Over 9 Steelers 16, Vikings 6 33 Under 8 Dolphins 24, Vikings 7 33 Under 7 Dolphins 14, Redskins 7 33 Under 6 Cowboys 24, Dolphins 3 34 Under 5 Colts 16, Cowboys 13 36 Under 4 Chiefs 23, Vikings 7 39 Under 3 Jets 16, Colts 7 40 Under 2 Packers 33, Raiders 14 40 Over 1 Packers 35, KC 13 NL NL

Written by Joseph D'Amico on January 31, 2013 at 2:54 am