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Las Vegas Odds Setters Set to Lay Out
Lines for College Basketball Tournament
By Chris Jones, Las Vegas Review-Journal Knight Ridder/Tribune
Business News
Mar. 13 - The tip-off of March Madness -- the college basketball
version -- is still more than three days away.
But for those setting the odds for nearly 80 percent of Nevada's
sports books, the insanity of preparing for this month's National
Collegiate Athletic Association men's basketball tournament is already
under way.
"For the whole month of March, NCAA basketball is bigger than
the Super Bowl," said Kenny White, a longtime local oddsmaker
and co-owner of Las Vegas Sports Consultants, who estimates about
$100 million was wagered statewide on college basketball during
March in each of the past two years.
White added the upset potential that frequents college basketball's
premier event requires oddsmakers to devote the same attention to
games involving small-school underdogs as they would those featuring
perennial powerhouses.
"There's a little bit more work to this than for a typical
regular-season game," White said. "I put as much time
studying Hofstra as I would the University of Michigan."
If tradition holds, tens of thousands of hoop fanatics will also
spend portions of the next few weeks studying various basketball
matchups on their way to sports books' betting windows.
Last year, four March-inclusive weekends ranked among the city's
Top 25 busiest two-day periods, the only month that can claim that
distinction. Overall, more than 3 million people came to town last
March, making it the city's fifth-best tourism month of 2003, Las
Vegas Convention and Visitors Authority data show.
"From a fan's standpoint, I don't think there's a more exciting
two days than next Thursday and Friday," Art Manteris, vice
president of race and sports book operations for Station Casinos,
said of the tournament's opening rounds.
"A lot of people will come to town to watch the different
regions play. The Strip properties will be jammed, and even though
it's not as crowded for locals casinos, it's also one of our busiest
periods," he added. "People love that 'do or die' format."
Few companies play a larger role in making or breaking a bettor's
March experience than Las Vegas Sports Consultants. Since its launch
in the early 1980s under the direction of handicapping legend Michael
"Roxy" Roxborough, the company has grown its client base
so that its seven full-time oddsmakers now set the initial betting
lines for 115 of the state's approximately 150 legal sports books,
including current clients such as Manteris' Station Casinos, MGM
Mirage, Harrah's Entertainment and Boyd Gaming Corp.
And though the participants of this year's NCAA Division I basketball
tournament won't be known until Sunday, that hasn't deterred White
and company from handicapping the likely favorites in an effort
to help their casino clients stay at least one-half point ahead
of the betting public.
"We study the box scores, study the games and betting patterns
and adjust power ratings to each game," White said, generally
describing the odds-making practice for each of the 17 sports his
service tracks.
Futures odds have long-since been posted, and White said his staff
will update each team's odds once the field of 65 has been determined.
This year's NCAA men's tournament will tip off with a single game
Tuesday, followed by 32 additional first-round contests March 18-19.
Over the following two weeks, the field will be whittled down to
the Final Four, which will compete for the title April 3 and 5 in
San Antonio.
This year's tournament will be White's first go-round as co-owner
of Las Vegas Sports Consultants. In November, Fort Lauderdale, Fla.-based
SportsLine.com sold the company to a group of local investors that
included White; gaming attorney Ellen Whittemore; her husband, Jeff
Patterson; as well as relatives David and Lesa Whittemore.
Terms of the sale weren't disclosed, though the transaction attracted
national attention thanks in large part to SportsLine's relationship
with the CBS television network.
CBS holds exclusive rights to broadcast the latter rounds of the
tournament because of a $6 billion, 11-year deal that took effect
nearly two years ago. The network also uses SportsLine.com to publish
its CBS SportsLine.com Internet information service, and such close
ties between its host television network and the company setting
odds on college basketball games did not sit well with the NCAA,
which looks uneasily upon any form of sports betting.
Despite his new role, White said he's comfortable in his job and
feels no sense of added pressure marking this year's favorites.
Partner Ellen Whittemore added she's also pleased to see how clients
have responded to several changes made under new ownership, including
giving subscribers up-to-the-minute information such as recent team
trends or key player injuries.
"We're always trying to add value to what we provide our clients,"
she said.
Source: Miami Herald
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