It is bracket buster weekend and I'm going to give you two angles to look at, but please, don't post this anywhere else. I don't want the whole world to know about these angles. And if you are going to bet these, please don't make max bets of $2k per side or $500 per total and move the numbers until Saturday morning...after I've had the chance to get my plays in.
I figured these out a few years ago and have been playing them with my partner in Vegas. This has been our secret for a few years and I want to keep it that way. I'm not promising this is going to be profitable tomorrow, but I'm confident enough in them and their win rates over the last few years to share them with you. I'm going to be hitting them all tomorrow.
I have had some computer issues over the last year and don't have all my historical data on the winning % of these two angles with me now, but I hope to get that data from my partner and post it tonight.
1) Take any bracketbuster game with a total under 125 to go OVER the total. Here is the logic: Games with totals under 125 typically involve grinder-style teams that play slow, deliberate or have good defenses. All these teams have been playing conference games in which the opponents know each others' stuff very well. Conference games in many conferences skew more to lower scores as the season wears on. However, on these special bracketbuster games, the offensive efficiency of these teams is going to be higher going against teams that haven't faced their offensive sets before. This angle doesn't apply early in the season before conference play because it's so early in the season and many teams simply don't have their offenses in gear yet. And while it could apply in the post-season tourneys, it usually doesn't because the tourney pressure slows many teams down. But these bracketbuster matchups are one game opportunities in which teams are in gear offensively with no postseason pressure and they get to face teams that don't know their sets.
2) Take any road underdog that is +3.5 or less. Logic: Linesmakers use a standard 4 point home court advantage in setting the lines for most games this weekend. Thus, a team that is a dog of less than 4 points is actually the "better" team with the higher power rating. These "better teams" have historically covered these games at a high rate.