Season Stats
I had a great football Sunday with my picks. I went 3-1 ATS and 4-0 SU with my best bets and currently I am hitting 66% ATS in the pros on my best bets. As for my regular pro plays they are currently hitting 100%, and you can’t ask for better than that. In college, my underdog plays are now hitting 50% (7-7) straight up and on the moneyline that’s some serious change. Below are the weekly and for the season stats for both college and pro. I will be back later this week with my weekend picks.
This week my college picks went
College Best Bets – 3-2 ATS and 4-1 SU
College Underdogs 2-1 ATS and 2-1 SU
Regular Plays 3-2 ATS and 3-2 SU
For the Season
College Best Bets 8-7 ATS and 14-1 SU
College Underdogs 10-4 ATS and 7-7 SU
I’m very happy that 50% of my underdog picks have won outright.
Regular Plays 5-6 ATS and 6-5 SU
Over/Unders 0-2 ATS
As for the NFL this week
Pro Best Bets 3-1 ATS and 4-0 SU
Pro Regular Plays 3-0 ATS and 3-0 SU
Over/Unders 0-3 ATS
For the Season
Pro Best Bets 6-3 ATS and 8-1 SU
Pro Regular Plays 3-0 ATS and 3-0 SU
Over/Unders 1-6 ATS I sure hope these stats get better












September 28th, 2009 at 12:28 pm
Liz,
I am new at this so a little help please!
What is ATS and SU?
Giant Fan in Dallas
September 28th, 2009 at 12:58 pm
Guy,
SU is the abbreviation for Straight Up, meaning the record of a team overall, without factoring in the spread. Conversely, ATS is Against the Spread, meaning the record of a team in relation to the spread. In other words, this one refers ONLY to spread numbers and not to a team’s record in the standings. That’s my take, Liz may explain it better.
Jim
September 28th, 2009 at 3:04 pm
Hi Guy,
Jim did explain it correctly but let me clarify it a little more. When you bet football you can bet a game ATS or against the spread. This means if a team is considered 7 points better than the team they are playing then in order to win your bet, the favored team must win by more than 7 points. Straight up means there is no points involved in whether your bet wins or not, BUT, it also means, and this is called betting the moneyline, that you might have to bet more to bet the favorite and less to bet the underdog. Does this help?? If not I could explain it better to you offline.
Liz