Weekly NCAA College Football Predictions

May 28, 2008

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Before you make your weekly college football picks, check out Dave Price’s weekly college football predictions. So you think that the oddsmakers don’t give away any clues? Dave Price uses the point spreads and totals to compute the scores that the books foresee to occur in every college football matchup each week.

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Here’s an example to help you have a better understanding of what Dave is doing. Let’s say Ohio is seven point favorites over Iowa and the books have set the total at 45. Subtract the spread from the total and you will arrive at the number 38. Divide that number by two and you will have the projected score for Iowain this case. That score would be 19 in this scenario. Then add the spread back to that number to arrive at what the score will be for the favorite. In this case, Ohio’s projected score is 26.

Dave does the same thing in the NFL with his weekly NFL predictions article. Now that you know how to figure these out for yourself, you can go ahead and do them if you are getting feisty waiting for Dave’s to come out on Thursday.

These predictions articles are going to help you pick more straight up winners in your office pools and they are going to help you with your own plays. Dave has found that this little tool works particularly well for totals. Seeing the projected score visually makes it easier to gage where the books are off the mark.

These predictions will help you with your football selections. This is just another way for you to interpret the weekly college football lines to get a glimpse inside the head of your bookmaker.

This is just one of many tools that Dave Price uses. It sounds simple, but there is a big difference when picking total winners when you actually break things down into two teams individually instead of looking at things collectively. If you have each team individually chalked up to beat their projected numbers, then you have a nice overs situation. If both teams are projected under, you’ll want to go the other way. If you have one team over and the other under, you may want to leave it alone unless there is a huge discrepancy somewhere with what the oddsmkers think.

Get ready to crush your book on the college gridiron all season long using Dave’s expertise as your guide.

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