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49ers Head Coach Mike Nolan Reads the Ferringo Report!

Nine seconds into their National Football League season, the Cleveland Browns were destined for the Super Bowl.

Their first play from scrimmage was a 74-yard touchdown from Charlie Frye to Braylon Edwards. That was it. Frye was the right guy for the job! Edwards was back! The Dawg Pound was going berserk! The Cleveland Curse was exorcised! There would be peace in the Middle East! Global warming would be no more!

But there was a flag on the play. Holding on Kevin Shaffer. Ten-yard penalty, replay first down.

The Browns wouldn't manage a first down until just before halftime. They ended up playing amazingly sloppy and uninspired ball while losing at home to a team that, well, isn't very good.

That pretty much sums up Week 1 for half of the teams in the NFL. They came in with incredible expectations and anticipations, but when they woke up this morning they had to try to get the taste of Defeat out of their mouths while they started planning for next year.

On the other hand, there are now 16 legitimate Super Bowl threats that are basking in the warm glow of Perfection.

My obvious exaggeration here is serving an important fact about the NFL after week one - teams aren't as bad as they looked in their first game, and teams aren't as good as they looked in their first game. Keep that in mind when you make your wagers this week. Remember that sharp bettors know when to go against the general public, which is just about always.

Here are the rest of my nonsensical ravings on Week 1:

Carolina rushed for just 65 yards on 16 carries, and Jake Delhomme was running for his life most of the day. Also, Dan Morgan suffered his 1,168,377th concussion and Atlanta ran roughshod for 250 yards on the ground.

Road teams went 11-5 SU and 12-4 ATS this week. Who knew? It's probably just a week one anomaly. But I also think that as the season wears on we're going to see that there is a wide gap between the top two tiers and the bottom feeders in the NFL.

The bad news is that published reports - sent to me by a friend who is a Chiefs fan - alleges that first-time K.C. offensive coordinator Mike Solari couldn't keep track of down and distance when his team had the ball. On the Chiefs first possession they drove into the red zone, only to have a third-and-five run stuffed. After the game Tony Gonzalez and another player said that Solari thought it was either second-and-five or third-and-two. In other words, the OC didn't know what the hell was going on.

I had New England (-2.5) and Arizona (-.5) in a two-team teaser. A solid play with two home favorites below any key numbers. Well, Jauron let 19 seconds run off the clock after a second-and-five play with 2:44 remaining, then let 16 seconds run off after 3rd-and-one with 2:21 to play. Also, after the two-minute warning he let 11 seconds run off the clock after the Pats converted on fourth-and-two.

Had he done the intelligent thing - used his two timeouts before the two-minute warning - I think Belichick kicks the field goal rather than go for it on fourth down with about 2:25 left on the clock. Even if he did, the Pats still would've needed another first down. Eventually they would've kicked the field goal, giving me my cover.

Thanks, Dick.

San Fran executed my theory to perfection - enraging bettors that had the Cardinals -7.5. They took the field goal on first down with 34 seconds left, then recovered the onside kick. Eventually they had two shots at the end zone from Arizona's 36. Considering they were down 10 with under a minute to play, I would say that's about the best they could hope for.

Robert is a professional handicapper for Doc's Sports Service. E-mail questions or comments for him to robert@docsports.com.

Check Doc's Sports site for daily sports betting articles, NFL Schedules, NFL Odds, and Offshore Betting information.

Article Source: Robert Ferringo