84°F
weather icon Clear

Griffin injury is weekend’s final twist

It's tempting to fast forward to next weekend, because what we just witnessed was not easy on the eyes. Tom Brady and Peyton Manning can't come back soon enough.

The opening act of the NFL postseason is memorable for what didn't happen.

Three lame games were in the books, three favorites had covered, and it all came down to Robert Griffin III on one good knee. When his bad knee buckled in the wrong direction - something that was tough to watch - the Washington Redskins folded, too.

The last shot for underdog bettors went down with Griffin, who collapsed in agony late in the Redskins' 24-14 loss to the Seattle Seahawks on Sunday.

"With four favorites winning, you would think it would be a disaster," MGM Resorts sports book director Jay Rood said.

The weekend was a disaster neither for the books nor the bettors, but it was a total loss for the Redskins, who blew a 14-0 first-quarter lead by continuing to play an obviously lame rookie quarterback.

Jimmy Vaccaro, director of public relations for William Hill sports books, called it a "major factor" in the game, not to mention a major mistake by Washington coach Mike Shanahan.

Griffin said he was hurt, not injured, and wanted to stay on the field. I commend him for that, because Jay Cutler never would have done it.

But the coach's job is to determine what's best for the team, and it never occurred to Shanahan to make a change until he had no choice and it was too late. By the time backup Kirk Cousins was called into emergency relief, the game was lost.

"I think Cousins would have done much better than Griffin with one leg," Vaccaro said. "If he would have come in with the lead, they probably had a better chance to win, you never know."

Griffin's injury, and the Redskins' eventual demise, will be the soap-opera topic of the week for columnists and talk-show hosts. What did not happen - Shanahan pulling Griffin from the game - was the most memorable event of the weekend.

"They should have pulled him after the first quarter and put in Cousins, I think," Rood said. "The guy couldn't run, and he couldn't throw because he couldn't plant on his leg. I guess maybe they thought he would make it happen out of thin air and be Houdini out there."

The Seahawks, laying 3 points, finished off a 4-0 wild-card weekend for the favorites, a weekend that was anything but wild and hardly entertaining. Football bettors expect a lot more, especially this time of year. We got a lot less.

The Cincinnati Bengals were eliminated, and nobody cared. The Green Bay Packers beat a team with a backup quarterback. The Baltimore Ravens grinded out an ugly win, as usual.

On a weekend when all four favorites covered, you'd think the betting public cleaned house. But the books avoided disaster mainly because of the totals - four low-scoring games went under.

Four favorites and four "unders" basically led to break-even results for the books. "It's pretty much a sister kisser," Rood said.

Vaccaro, referring to all of the favorite-and-over parlay tickets that went straight to the trash, said, "Obviously, the favorites covering was no good. But we got saved by the totals going under. I've never seen anything like it. That was the bailout of the weekend."

Andrew Luck did not survive the weekend, because three field goals just won't cut it. The Indianapolis Colts, 24-9 losers to the Ravens, were a good story but a mediocre playoff team.

So, now, let's fast forward to the next round. Russell Wilson is the last rookie quarterback standing, and the Seahawks will strike fear into the Atlanta Falcons, 2-point home favorites on Sunday.

"I'm impressed by Seattle, I know that," Vaccaro said. "I'm rooting for Atlanta for a lot of reasons. There is absolutely no money on them in the futures. I think we'll pay out two tickets if the Falcons win the Super Bowl."

In the first NFC matchup Saturday, the Packers are 3-point underdogs at San Francisco. It's Aaron Rodgers and Colin Kaepernick, and 49ers coach Jim Harbaugh has to be sweating, even if he won't show it.

Brady and Manning appear headed for a super-sized showdown in the AFC. Manning and the Denver Broncos are 9-point favorites over the Ravens, and Brady and the New England Patriots are 9½-point favorites over the Houston Texans.

Something good is about to happen next weekend, when all four favorites are unlikely to sweep the board and the games won't be so boring.

Contact sports betting columnist Matt Youmans at myoumans@reviewjournal.com or 702-387-2907. He co-hosts "The Las Vegas Sportsline" weekdays at 2 p.m. on ESPN Radio (1100 AM, 98.9 FM). Follow him on Twitter: @mattyoumans247.

THE LATEST
Packers can run table behind red-hot Aaron Rodgers

After five consecutive wins, the Green Bay Packers (9-6) are headed for Detroit to knock on the door in search of the NFC North title.

Anti-Alabama action surprises oddsmakers

It’s seldom wise to bet against Nick Saban in a big game. But the line on the Peach Bowl has dipped to Alabama minus-13½ against Washington.

Cowboys rookie Ezekiel Elliott in running for MVP

Dallas (12-2) has clinched the top seed in the NFC. Detroit (9-5) can lock up at least a wild-card spot by beating the Cowboys on Monday night.

NBA betting: Warriors, Cavaliers reunited on Christmas Day

A rematch of the past two NBA Finals highlights Sunday’s five-game schedule. Kevin Durant and the Golden State Warriors are 2½-point favorites at Cleveland.

Future brighter for Steve Alford, UCLA basketball

UCLA, 13-0 and ranked No. 2, represents the biggest surprise of the college basketball season. The Bruins’ odds to win the national championship were posted at 50-1 in early November.

Patriots help punch Las Vegas books for another loss

Three popular favorites (New England, Oakland and Pittsburgh) and one trendy underdog (Tampa Bay) paid off the betting public in NFL Week 15.

Most factors favor Derek Carr, Raiders in Relocation Bowl

The Raiders, 10-3 and smelling a playoff spot for the first time in 14 years, are 3-point favorites at San Diego. Philip Rivers and the Chargers (5-8) are fading again.

Baltimore defense will be tough test for Tom Brady

Joe Flacco and the Ravens are 7-point underdogs at New England on Monday. Baltimore has won and covered four of its past five games.