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Books, Public draw in Week 2

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Books, Public draw in Week 2
By Micah Roberts
VegasInsider.com

There was a perfect storm brewing Sunday afternoon at Las Vegas sports books where popular Week 2 NFL favorites started out with a bang, which forced the books into a must-win situation with the final four afternoon games.

With their backs up against the wall, the books got exactly what they wished for and were bailed out from what initially looked to be a certain losing day.

"The way the morning was shaping up, we're fortunate to be where we're at," said MGM Resorts VP of race and sports Jay Rood said prior to Atlanta's 34-23 win at home ( -3) over Green Bay. "We're down a bit following the Broncos win, but if the Falcons cover we'll come out a slight winner on day."

He closed the total at 55 after being as high as 56 and lows as 53.5.

Over at Station Casinos hub office at Red Rock Station, director Jason McCormick was in a different situation where he needed "Packers or Under, but not both Falcons and Over" to hit, a scenario that has now happened the past past four times the two teams met. McCormick said they were sitting with a win of the day no matter what happened in the Sunday night game.

The two chain of books needed different outcomes to the game, but both got to that point in similar fashion with parlay risk being the cause for not having a big winning day.

"We had a lot of big money-line parlay risk on the Patriots (-270), Ravens (-360), Steelers (-400), Raiders (-1,100) and Seahawks (-1200) all payout together," Rood said. "And the regular (point spread) parlays also hit with Patriots, Steelers, Ravens and Raiders. Lots of people were betting on the Cowboys in the late game, so that was big for us, and so was Seattle not covering. If San Francisco could have won outright, we would have had a really good day."

Westgate SuperBook VP Jay Kornegay struggled with those same teams as well and his bet shop ended up a small loser on the day.

"We didn't get that big upset we needed with one of the favorites in the 5-to-9-point range, Kornegay said. "The Broncos winning outright as a small home 'dog isn't that big of a deal to the overall pitcture even though we did well to that game. This week was about the money-line parlays and teasers doing the damage. The Colts (+6.5), Bills (+6.5) or 49ers (+13.5) winning outright would have helped us out."

Kornegay also said he had a house player in town that did well Sunday which helped put the SuperBook in the red. Only three underdogs won outright on the day and the biggest spread was the Chargers -3.5 in their Los Angeles (Carson) opener, a 19-17 loss to the Dolphins where Jay Cutler looked sharp. It paid +170 on the money-line. The Redskins 27-20 win at L.A.'s other new team paid +145 and the Broncos 42-17 thrashing of Zeke Elliott (9 rushes, 8 yards) and the Cowboys win paid +135. It was easily Dak Prescott's largest loss.

The Broncos look very interesting right now at 2-0 and part of it is because of the outstanding quarterback play. Defense wins championships and Denver's D is in any conversation when discussing the NFL's best. They man-handled the NFL's top offensive-line on Sunday. Denver has eight of their next 14 games on the road, so we'll see how far this goes. The Trevor Siemian era began last season when he started 4-0, but Denver finished a ho-hum 9-7.

The Seahawks scored their first TD of the season in the fourth-quarter to win 12-9 after closing as 13.5-point home favorites. Sharp money took the 49ers at it highest (+14) earlier in the week, and proved to be much too high. Seattle ruined several large parlay payouts. The 49ers money-line would have paid out at +800. It was one four straight underdogs the sports books posted in the afternoon following the Raiders 45-20 win against the Jets. The days losses quickly shrunk as each one was posted.

The Raiders are already a favorite for bettors prior to their move to Las Vegas, and when they win and cover it hurts the books pretty good. William Hill's 108 sports book across the state reported 12 percent of their bets on the day were on the Jet-Raiders game and 91 percent of that cash was laying with Oakland. The next most wagered game was the Patriots at New Orleans (10%) and 85 percent of the tickets written is on the Patriots. That two-team parlay was cashed a lot on Sunday.

And how about the wrath of a scorned champion coming off a season-opening loss. The Patriots got embarrassed last week and the public knew to trust Tom Brady and Bill Belichick in the rebound situation and they were right in a 36-20 Pats win at New Orleans where the Saints immediately knew this was a focused Patriots squad. Brady, in his 18th year, just had the best 1st Quarter of his career with 3 TD's. The champs will be just fine, but Miami is in first-place in the AFC East at 1-0.

Overall, favorites went 8-6 ATS -- 6-2 ATS in the early games -- and the total went 7-7.

"We actually won more games than we lost," said Kornegay, "but the parlay payouts were more substantial on a few of the games."

Let's just call Sunday's NFL action a draw between the public and sports books keeping with the weekend theme.

The big Grennady Golovkin-Canelo Alvarez fight on Saturday night ended with a controversial Draw, which didn't work out so well for the house, but some in the public were absolutely loving it. "Just like most books around the city, I can't imagine the draw worked out well," said Rood. "We had it 30/1 and closed it at 15/1, and it always is a popular wager in the big bouts. We won on the rounds props, but the draw was no good."

Rood said Saturday's college football action turned out well for them with Mississippi State beating LSU being their biggest win. "We had lots of risk rolling into the LSU game," he said. MSU would win 37-7 as 8.5-point home underdogs. "It's hard to have a really big day in college football with so many games, things seem to even out more, but some of those late games really mushroom into huge risk."

 
Posted : September 18, 2017 10:46 am
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Las Vegas sportsbooks struggle in NFL Week 2
By David Purdum
ESPN.com

Sunday didn't start out well for Las Vegas sportsbooks.

The DirectTV feed crashed in the morning and prevented multiple casinos from showing the starts of the early NFL kickoffs. Satellite service was restored within an hour or so, but it only got worse for the sportsbooks from there.

Favorites went 6-2 in the first set of games, putting the books in an early hole. Some books were unable dig their way out and suffered a losing Sunday in Week 2 of the NFL season.

Station Casinos sportsbooks went 1-7 in the early games, with the Indianapolis Colts producing the only win for the house by covering the spread in a 16-13 overtime loss to the Arizona Cardinals.

The New England Patriots did the most damage to the house, covering the spread as 6.5-point favorites in a convincing 36-20 rout of the New Orleans Saints. Nearly 80 percent of the money bet on the game at William Hill's Nevada sportsbooks was on the Saints.

It was a candidate for fight of the year between Canelo Alvarez and Gennady Golovkin, but the celebration was ruined by a bad scorecard. Sadly for boxing, this is becoming business as usual for a sport that can't get out of its own way.
"It was a rough morning," said Jay Rood, vice president of MGM race and sports. "Saints were awful, the Browns were really bad. We didn't have a single win worth talking about."

"All the big parlay teams -- Patriots, Steelers and Tampa Bay -- hit," said Jason Simbal, vice president of risk for Las Vegas sportsbook operator CG Technology.

The late afternoon games were better for the books, but not by much.

The Oakland Raiders delivered another costly decision, covering as 14-point favorites in a 45-20 drubbing of the New York Jets. CG Technology took a $100,000 bet on the Raiders minus the points, and MGM reported taking a low-six-figure money-line bet on the Raiders in the second half at -340 odds. Oakland outscored the Jets 24-10 in the second half, cashing the big bet.

"The Patriots were the worst in the morning, but the Raiders ended up being the worst game of the day for us," Simbal said Sunday night.

The Denver Broncos upended the favored Dallas Cowboys, and the underdog San Francisco 49ers covered the spread in a 12-9 loss to the Seattle Seahawks. Both games helped the books, but by the time the prime-time showdown between the Atlanta Falcons and Green Bay Packers kicked off, several shops' fates had been decided.

"Looks like we're going to have a losing day no matter the outcome tonight," a sportsbook manager for Caesars Entertainment told ESPN. "It's not going to be a big loss, but the early games buried us, and we were unable to get back out of the hole."

The Sunday night game produced mixed results for books. MGM, due to parlay and teaser liability, needed the Falcons, while other books told ESPN that the best-case result would've been the Packers covering in a low-scoring game. The Falcons won 34-23, covering the spread and sending the game over the total of 55.5 or 56.

 
Posted : September 18, 2017 12:30 pm
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