The Dish: Olympic (Hockey) Fever!
We interview the best 'cappers and books here at the Dish, so
we'd be remiss if we didn't weigh in on this whole Wayne Gretzky
thing. So here goes:
For an older gal, that Janet Jones is hot.
There.
See, we're not interested in bashing the Great One just yet,
because he's kind of a hero of ours. So instead, we'll expend
this week's energies on Gretz's erstwhile mission over the next
couple weeks: Olympic ice hockey. While this tournament doesn't
have quite the sex appeal that Salt Lake did in 2002, compared
to the World Baseball Classic it's friggin' Heidi Klum. There
will be so many stars on so many different teams, it's going to
be hard not to find a great game from the quarterfinals on.
Let's take a brief tour around our favorite squads:
Canada: Duh. The '02 champs boast a fourth line that would make
the Pittsburgh Penguins weep. And we hear that Brodeur guy might
amount to something someday.
Sweden: If Peter Forsberg is really out, the Swedes are probably
done, though Daniel Alfredsson and Mats Sundin aren't bad (along
with some guy named Nicklas Lidstrom). Forsberg may sit out the
prelims to try to get his groin healthy for the medal round.
Czech Republic: If Dominik Hasek stands on his head as he did in
Nagano, they'll have a chance, and Jaromir Jagr is having a
terrific year for the Rangers. Plus this team won the world
championship in '05. Not as much brawn on the back line for the
Czechs as normal, though, so you can forecheck against them.
Slovakia: Oh, the forwards. They will score goals. Marian Hossa
is one of the NHL's best-kept secrets, and Pavol Demitra and
Marek Svatos are very good as well. Their problems come down to
stopping the other team.
Russia: Hard to know what to expect from a team that didn't have
a GM until early last year. Alexander The Great (Mr. Ovechkin to
you) is a stud, and watching him and Ilya Kovalchuk patrol the
left wing is unbelievable. Alex Kovalev, Pavel Datsyuk...boy,
they'll fly around. Goal Evgeni Nabokov is having a sub-.900
save percentage season for the Sharks.
United States: The big problem here isn't that guys like Brian
Leetch aren't coming, it's that guys like Bill Guerin are. As
indifferent as Nabokov has been in net, Rick DiPietro has been
worse. Brian Gionta (and his 33 goals) is our fave player on
this team.
Finland: Teemu Selanne has 26 goals and is +20 for the Ducks,
and Saku Koivu continues to be one of the best combinations of
grit and skill in the NHL, but who plays net? Some guy named
Antero Nittymaki.
In the end, it's hard not to like Canada to take gold, but it
sure will be fun watching the rest of the world trying to knock
off these prohibitive favorites. We'll take Russia for silver
(because we're scared off by Forsberg's groin), and Czech for
the bronze. But really, just about everyone we list above will
contend. Have fun!
Lasting impressions of Super Bowl XL?
Greg Jorssen, BoDog.com: Definitely was not an exciting game,
and some of the calls were brutal and most probably took the
life out of the Seahawks. The offensive pass interference call
on Jackson was weak, and the reviewed Roethlisberger touchdown
should have been overturned due to the football clearly not
crossing the line. Even the Hasselback penalty for blocking
below the waist after the interception had me scratching my
head. All that said, the Seahawks lost the game due to a really
poor performance on the field. Stevens dropped easy catches all
game long and Seattle punter Tom Rouen seems to have forgotten
all about the coffin corner. I think he had six punts in the
game, most of which went into the end zone for a touchback. This
game was theirs for the taking as I don't believe the Steelers'
performance was all that great either. Just look at
Roethlisberger's numbers. His QB rating was 135.7 points lower
than Randle El's! A disappointing 22.6 rating on the biggest day
of his life! And don't get me started on the Rolling Stones.
Time to put a fork in them I think. Aretha, however, brought
chills down my spine during the anthem, I must admit.
In retrospect, what was the overall handicapping landscape like
for the big game? Did the books do well? Were there any
particular bets that you saw that made a few select bettors
extremely happy?
GJ, BoDog.com: I think all books did pretty well, mostly due to
the total falling well out of teaser range, as well as the
spread knocking out most teasers. The spread itself made us big
Seattle fans, however we were big fans of the Steelers on the
moneyline. The perfect outcome would have been a last-second
Seattle touchdown and two-point conversion, but in the end was a
nice finish to a roller coaster of an NFL season. Our
bookmanagers down south did a masterful job of balancing the
action for this game, thus ensuring any losses on the day would
be minimal. Bettors betting on the Steelers obviously were the
happy ones, thus the number of late wagers coming in on Seattle
helped balance the action quite nicely.
What happens now that football is over? What do 'cappers and
books turn their attention to?
GJ, BoDog.com: One thing, and one thing only: March Madness. The
final three games of the Tournament equal the Super Bowl in
terms of hype and handle, thus there is no rest for the
sportsbooks at all after the Super Bowl. We do everything we can
to convince football bettors to keep a little in their accounts
and throw some money down on college basketball action.
Do you have any interest (gambling or otherwise) in the Winter
Olympics?
GJ, BoDog.com: Zzzzzzzzzzzzz. Aside from the hockey, I can't
think of anything that will generate interest with me or with
our bettors. We will have a few lines up, particularly on some
of the American athletes, but aside from that this should be a
non-event.