Las Vegas Review-Journal

First-timer Moser longs for help from long-ago mentor

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A big believer in asking for advice, Loyola-chicago coach Porter Moser is in the process of tapping into his friends and associates in search of Final Four advice.

Moser did not want to reveal to whom he was turning for tips. He did mention one person he would have liked to have been able to connect with during the last phase of the Ramblers’ NCAA Tournament run.

“I wish Coach (Rick) Majerus was around,” Moser said. “Obviously I was so close to him, and, ironically, it was 20 years ago almost to the date that he was in San Antonio with his Utah team. I wish I could tap into that.”

Moser will be the lone coach in the national semifinals this weekend who has not previously taken his team to a Final Four. the Golden Nugget sports book that will pay $1 million if Michigan wins the NCAA championsh­ip.

The Wolverines beat Florida State 58-54 on Saturday to advance to the Final Four, where they’re 5-point favorites over Loyola-chicago in the national semifinals.

Twitter poll split

Stevens posted a poll Sunday on Twitter asking if he should hedge his bet or let it roll. As of Monday afternoon, more than 3,400 votes were evenly split and Stevens said he still wasn’t sure if he’d hedge or not.

“It is interestin­g that the public is 50-50 on which way to go. I’m intrigued by some of the ideas,” Stevens said. “I’m kind of weighing it out this week. It’s still a long time to tipoff.”

Stevens hedged in a similar situation in 2015, when he bet $20,000 on Michigan State at 50-1 odds to win $1 million. The Spartans were 5-point underdogs to Duke in the Final Four and Stevens wisely placed a $49,000 money-line wager to win $20,000 on the Blue Devils, who won by 20.

“I did hedge on Michigan State but that was a little bit different, because Michigan State was a pretty good underdog going into the Final Four,” he said. “I have the option of doing nothing or taking Loyola on the money line (2-1) or taking Loyola plus the points. The bracket couldn’t have played out better.”

Stevens is having fun with his wager as he invited Golden Nugget sports book director Tony Miller and manager Aaron Kessler to watch the NBA championsh­ip Golden State Warriors Field (all others)

Golden State Warriors Houston Rockets Cleveland Cavaliers Toronto Raptors

Boston Celtics Philadelph­ia 76ers Oklahoma City Thunder San Antonio Spurs Portland Trail Blazers Michigan-florida State game with him at D Las Vegas. Kessler showed up dressed in Seminoles colors and wearing a Florida State hat and Miller posted on Twitter afterward: “Well, Aaron and I tried like hell to bring home FSU.”

Field favored over Warriors

Golden State guard Steph Curry suffered an MCL sprain Friday and Warriors coach Steve Kerr said Sunday that “there’s no way he’s playing in the first round” of the NBA playoffs.

Money has since poured into the Westgate sports book on the field versus the Warriors prop to win the NBA title. The field has been moved to a minus-130 favorite and Golden State to a plus-110 underdog.

“It’s the first time this year that we have the Warriors at plus money to win the title,” Westgate sports book manager Jeff Sherman said. “I don’t think there will be any issue getting out of the first round. The whole thing comes down to when he gets back and how long it takes him to get acclimated.”

Rockets on rise

The Houston Rockets opened at 30-1 odds to win the NBA title but are now the plus-125 second choice. The Rockets (60-14) will most likely have home-court advantage over the Warriors (54-19) in a potential Western Conference finals series.

“I don’t discount Houston at all from that series. I think that whole series will be a tough battle,” Sherman said. “I’m somewhat overlookin­g the other teams. But any of the other six teams are going to have to go through both (the Warriors and Rockets) to get to the finals. It just seems like an arduous task.

“(Houston’s) defense has improved and it has so many weapons. The Warriors have four guys but I don’t like their bench. The Rockets have depth and come at you in waves.”

Contact reporter Todd Dewey at tdewey@reviewjour­nal.com. Follow @tdewey33 on Twitter.

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