Las Vegas Review-Journal

Timing right for college football takeover

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Tis the biggest week of the college football season, and here in the desert, we mean business. Big business. For the past three weeks, oddsmakers at the South Point have told me they’ve taken in a bigger handle on college football than the NFL. Think about that. That might be the biggest upset this season.

“That’s what most people thought only because the NFL for a thousand years has been king,” South Point senior oddsmaker are on the outside looking in at the top four. The Buckeyes are a 17½-point favorite at Iowa. That could be a tricky place to cover the spread, especially with rain in the forecast. I’ll take the points.

Big 12

Oklahoma is a 3-point underdog at Oklahoma State, Saturday’s most important game in the championsh­ip chase. Sooners quarterbac­k Baker Mayfield also has a chance to take a big step forward in his pursuit of the Heisman Trophy.

If Oklahoma loses, Texas Christian has a chance to pounce with a win at home against Texas. But beware of the Longhorns, who are getting 6½ points. Coach Tom Herman is tough on favorites. Including his two seasons at Houston, Herman has beaten the spread in his past eight games as an underdog.

Although it appears to be out of the national picture, Iowa State is alive for a shot at the Big 12 championsh­ip. The Cyclones are 2-point underdogs at West Virginia.

Pac-12

You have to look deep to find the first Pac-12 team in the playoff rankings. Washington is No. 12, and it will be a 21-point favorite at home against Oregon. The Huskies’ nonconfere­nce wins over Rutgers, Montana and Fresno State clearly have not impressed the committee, so the Pac-12 sits clearly on the eliminatio­n bubble.

Southeaste­rn Conference

There should not be any drama for Georgia and Alabama, the top two teams in the playoff rankings. Both are at home, with the Bulldogs 24-point favorites against South Carolina and the Tide laying 21½ against Louisiana State.

One thing to remember now that the playoff rankings are out is there will be movement. In the first three years of this system, the initial top four never have stayed in place all the way through the naming of the semifinali­sts.

It’s clear the colleges have made our football weekends more meaningful. And if the playoffs are expanded to eight or 16 teams in the Bowl Subdivisio­n, the NFL will have major competitio­n.

Right now, the colleges concede December to the NFL. But if the playoffs expand, college football won’t concede anything. And the weeks when the colleges draw more betting dollars to the counters than the NFL won’t be such a surprise.

Brent Musburger’s betting column appears Saturday in the Las Vegas Review-journal. His show on the

Vegas Stats & Informatio­n Network can be heard on Siriusxm 204 and livestream­ed at reviewjour­nal.com/ vegas-stats-informatio­n-network.

 ?? John Bazemore ?? The Associated Press Clemson and wide receiver Ray-ray Mccloud (4) — still in the national title picture — are a 7½-point favorite Saturday when they visit North Carolina State.
John Bazemore The Associated Press Clemson and wide receiver Ray-ray Mccloud (4) — still in the national title picture — are a 7½-point favorite Saturday when they visit North Carolina State.

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