I do one thing and one thing only (in terms of prognostication; have other research projects going on): I pick every single game on the NFL slate against the spread.Reaser wrote:
That's one way to do it. Though I've always liked seasonal predictions (especially made before the preseason starts, to 'live' even more dangerously), specifically enjoy SB predictions (mine, as always documented here, was Seattle v. NE, if NE doesn't win Sunday then that'll break my streak of having at least one SB participant correct every year since 2011).
Though week-to-week is done also. I have some of my totals (if you or anyone else cares to share theirs?), since this thread has gone sideways anyways, may as well go off topic. It was slightly a down year (specifically college) for me but you are what your record says you are.
NFL straight-up (to date, including playoffs): 164-100
NFL ATS: We turn in our sheets weekly so I'd have to later add up the season total but i know 100% it's a handful of games better than above. Which is the usual for me (and opposite of most people i know who do worse ATS.)
College ATS: 170-120 (we pick Pac-12 and Top 25 games weekly)
College Bowl games (no spread): 26-15
Well, that's not quite true. I am in a mock-up of the Hilton Supercontest (now known as the Westgate supercontest) but I consider that a fun thing among friends. But in my view if you want to do this the right way you have to put your butt on the line every game.
Last year I finished 56 percent against the spread. This year I'm flirting with 57 percent, picking every game. I had been flirting with 58 percent, but the wild card round dropped me back down. The remaining three games will determine where I end out in 2015.
Horn tooting: 56 percent ATS is akin to batting .380 in baseball. I know of only one documented example of someone going 57 percent against the spread in pro football picking every game (it was Jim Barnes, actually, a dedicated handicapper and the guy who invented the Statis Pro Baseball board game). It's possible to achieve a higher ATS percentage picking less games, of course.
All my picks are documented and time stamped (otherwise anyone could claim this) on a Twitter site, but I'd rather not give out the handle on this forum at this particular time.
Picking college games is much easier because the lines are looser. The NBA is easier, also. The NFL is the toughest ATS nut to crack by far. Just love the challenge and I must say it's responsible for my dropping many sacred cows about the forces that win and lose pro football games.