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College Bowl Games: Five Bowl Game Betting Angles to Consider

College Bowl Games: Five Bowl Game Betting Angles to Consider

December 27, 2019 – by Jason Lisk

Jalen Hurts and Oklahoma are big underdogs to LSU. We cover that and other bowl game betting angles.

Jalen Hurts wants to remind you that big underdogs have made a big splash in bowl season (Photo by William Purnell/Icon Sportswire)

College Bowl Season is here, along with the excitement and bragging rights that goes with it. It’s also an opportunity for those that like to participate in bowl pools or just have a little skin in the game when there is a game on the television. Today, we are going to focus on some interesting bowl game betting angles to consider as you look at matchups.

We’ll note that some trends have smaller sample sizes, given the nature of looking at around 40 games per year, so you can judge what you think is relevant versus what you think is not. If you want to look through all the bowl results, you can do your own research with our custom trends tool.

You can see all the 2019-2020 bowl game odds here, including point spreads, money lines, and point totals.

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Now to the bowl game betting angles. (All of these are for bowl games played through the 2018-2019 season and do not include any games from this bowl season).

Big Bowl Upsets

Bowl games have a reputation for being unpredictable. Motivations for playing in a game can vary, players can be suspended or sit out the game, and some teams are just more excited to be there.

Does the data support that bowl games have some big upsets? Well, in the games with the biggest point spreads, and longest money line odds for the underdog, the answer is yes.

Two of the four largest underdogs since 2008 have won outright (Oklahoma +613 vs. Alabama, and Texas Tech +644 vs. Arizona State, both in 2013). If you had wagered an equal amount on every bowl game underdog with a money line of +300 or more, you would be up +22.8 units since 2008. Those results come from just 17 wins by big underdogs across 65 games in 11 years.

This is a strategy, though, that will result in a lot of smaller losses in exchange for a few big hits. As the past results show, the favorites have won these games nearly 75% of the time.

Here is every game with a money line of +300 or more in a bowl game from 2008 to 2018:

Year Bowl Game Underdog Favorite Spread O/U Total Money Line Result ATS Result
2014 New Mexico TX El Paso Utah State 10 45 302 Loss No Cover
2018 Liberty Oklahoma St Missouri 10 71.5 302 Win Cover
2008 Capital One Michigan St Georgia 9 57 305 Loss No Cover
2011 Texas Northwestern Texas A&M 9.5 69 305 Loss No Cover
2011 Poinsettia LA Tech TX Christian 10 55.5 305 Loss Cover
2016 Holiday Minnesota Wash State 8.5 61 308 Win Cover
2015 Outback Northwestern Tennessee 9.5 48.5 308 Loss No Cover
2014 Music City Notre Dame LSU 8.5 50.5 310 Win Cover
2017 Outback S Carolina Michigan 9 41.5 310 Win Cover
2016 Military Wake Forest Temple 10.5 41.5 310 Win Cover
2012 BCS Championship Notre Dame Alabama 10 39.5 311 Loss No Cover
2010 New Mexico TX El Paso BYU 10.5 51 314 Loss No Cover
2019 Famous Idaho Potato Nevada Ohio 10 62 315 Loss Cover
2017 Cotton USC Ohio State 10 65 321 Loss No Cover
2016 Birmingham S Carolina S Florida 10 58 321 Loss Cover
2012 Capital One Nebraska Georgia 9.5 62 322 Loss No Cover
2009 New Mexico Wyoming Fresno St 10 54.5 326 Win Cover
2012 Famous Idaho Potato Toledo Utah State 10 59.5 330 Loss No Cover
2008 St. Petersburg Memphis S Florida 10.5 57 330 Loss No Cover
2018 Cotton Notre Dame Clemson 10.5 58 330 Loss No Cover
2016 New Mexico TX-San Ant New Mexico 9 54 336 Loss Cover
2016 Music City Nebraska Tennessee 9.5 59 336 Loss No Cover
2015 Cotton Michigan St Alabama 10 45.5 336 Loss No Cover
2013 BCS Championship Auburn Florida St 11.5 67 336 Loss Cover
2008 Sugar Utah Alabama 9.5 45 340 Win Cover
2008 Emerald Miami (FL) California 10 50.5 340 Loss Cover
2016 Heart of Dallas North Texas Army 10.5 47 340 Loss Cover
2009 Sun Stanford Oklahoma 10 53.5 346 Loss Cover
2018 Famous Idaho Potato W Michigan BYU 10 52 346 Loss No Cover
2008 Rose Penn State USC 10 44.5 355 Loss No Cover
2010 Holiday Washington Nebraska 11.5 54.5 358 Win Cover
2009 Hawaii S Methodist Nevada 10.5 69.5 361 Win Cover
2017 Peach Central FL Auburn 10.5 66 367 Win Cover
2009 Sugar Cincinnati Florida 12 59.5 377 Loss No Cover
2019 Motor City Eastern Michigan Pittsburgh 12 50.5 380 Loss Cover
2019 Peach Oklahoma LSU 12.5 75 385 Loss No Cover
2012 Fight Hunger Navy Arizona St 13 54.5 385 Loss No Cover
2017 Independence S Mississippi Florida St 13 48.5 393 Loss No Cover
2016 Peach Washington Alabama 12.5 50.5 396 Loss No Cover
2012 Texas Minnesota Texas Tech 13 55 400 Loss Cover
2013 Chick-Fil-A Duke Texas A&M 13.5 75.5 403 Loss Cover
2015 Liberty Kansas St Arkansas 13.5 56.5 418 Loss No Cover
2015 Independence Tulsa VA Tech 14 62 422 Loss Cover
2012 Hawaii S Methodist Fresno St 13 62.5 423 Win Cover
2011 Insight Iowa Oklahoma 13.5 58 431 Loss No Cover
2011 Maaco Las Vegas Arizona St Boise State 14 65 439 Loss No Cover
2016 St. Petersburg Miami (OH) Miss State 14.5 57.5 439 Loss Cover
2019 Gasparilla Marshall Central Florida 15.5 59.5 440 Loss No Cover
2008 Alamo Northwestern Missouri 14 66 445 Loss Cover
2018 Sugar Texas Georgia 12.5 59.5 450 Win Cover
2012 Sugar Louisville Florida 14 47 454 Win Cover
2014 Foster Farms Maryland Stanford 14 44.5 457 Loss No Cover
2012 Orange N Illinois Florida St 14.5 58 461 Loss No Cover
2016 Miami Beach Central Mich Tulsa 13 67.5 464 Loss No Cover
2013 Beef’O’Brady’s Ohio E Carolina 14.5 63 471 Loss No Cover
2013 Alamo Texas Oregon 14.5 67 481 Loss No Cover
2016 Famous Idaho Potato Idaho Colorado St 16 64.5 481 Win Cover
2013 Pinstripe Rutgers Notre Dame 14.5 53 519 Loss Cover
2016 Arizona S Alabama Air Force 14.5 54 519 Loss No Cover
2013 Fiesta Central FL Baylor 17 74 519 Win Cover
2019 LendingTree Miami-OH Louisiana 16 55 525 Loss Cover
2019 Orange Virginia Florida 16.5 55 525 Loss Cover
2018 Orange Oklahoma Alabama 14.5 80.5 526 Loss Cover
2010 Fiesta Connecticut Oklahoma 14.5 53.5 548 Loss No Cover
2010 Maaco Las Vegas Utah Boise State 15.5 57 562 Loss No Cover
2013 Sugar Oklahoma Alabama 17 51.5 613 Win Cover
2019 New Orleans UAB Appalachian State 17 48 625 Loss Cover
2013 Holiday Texas Tech Arizona St 17 72 644 Win Cover
2012 Heart of Dallas Purdue Oklahoma St 18 68 671 Loss No Cover
2017 Boca Raton Akron Fla Atlantic 23 65 1211 Loss No Cover

Goodbye, Coach

Is there any disadvantage when a coach leaves a program (either by taking a new job or getting fired) before a bowl game is played? The evidence suggests that there is no such systematic disadvantage. Or at least, to the extent it exists, it is accounted for in the point spread.

Going back over the last decade, there have been 46 times prior to this season that a coach left a program and the school had a different head coach for a bowl game than they had all season. The teams playing with a different head coach are 26-20 straight up, and 25-20-1 against the spread.

That’s not enough for us to say that you should actively play on a team with a new coach. It does suggest, though, that you should not freak out too much and lean against a team because they have a different coach. Every case is different.

Bad Bowl Game Rebounds

Bowl games feature blowouts, upsets, and some crazy results. But what happens a year later in a bowl game after a team was on the receiving end of a beat down or suffered a humiliating upset as a big favorite?

Since 2008, there have been 70 teams who have (1) lost a bowl game and failed to cover the spread by at least 17 points, and (2) returned to a bowl game the following season.

After removing the six matchups between two teams that both qualified, we are left with 58 teams. Those teams are 33-25 against the spread (56.9%) over that span. The rationale behind such an effect is that the players (and coaches) remember how the most recent bowl game went, and a team that suffered some humiliation may be more motivated in their bowl preparation a year later.

Over the last three years, such teams are on a scorching hot 18-4 run against the spread. (Of course, that means that before the last three years, these teams had a losing record against the spread, so the evidence that this trend is meaningful is not clear).

Underdogs who struggled the previous year perform better than favorites have. (Though we will note the sample sizes become even smaller). Underdogs who meet the criteria are 18-10 straight up and 18-9-1 against the spread since 2008. If you had wagered the money line on all underdogs who failed to cover the spread in the previous year’s bowl game by at least 17 points, you would be up +24.8 units in 28 games since 2008.

Underdogs this bowl season who failed to cover last year’s bowl game by at least 17 points include:

Western Michigan, +3.5 vs. Western Kentucky (Lost to BYU 49-18 in 2018 as 10-point dog)Michigan, +7 vs. Alabama (Lost to Florida 15-41 in 2018 as 4-point favorite)Temple, +4.5 vs. North Carolina (Lost to Duke 27-56 in 2018 as 3-point favorite)

Cold Weather Bowl Games are for the Dogs (and Overs)

Traditionally, college bowl games were played in warmer weather venues (compared to the rest of the country in winter). With the expansion of bowl games, though, we have seen a greater variety of locations start to host games. There is now a bowl game in Boise, Idaho and in New York City, for example.

Using data from Weather Spark, we pulled the average daily high temperature on January 1st in each of the bowl host cities. (Bowl games played in a dome were denoted as such as well). Then, we compared the spread and over/under results since 2008 based on the typical climate in the host cities in bowl season.

SU ATS TOTAL
TEMPERATURE W L WIN PCT W L T WIN PCT O U N OVER PCT
50 degrees and under 36 28 0.563 26 37 1 0.414 41 23 0 0.641
51 to 60 degrees 72 32 0.692 52 50 2 0.510 51 50 3 0.505
61 to 70 degrees 42 26 0.618 32 36 0 0.471 26 42 0 0.382
71 degrees and above 52 31 0.627 44 38 1 0.536 37 45 1 0.452
Dome Games 46 35 0.568 38 41 2 0.481 38 43 0 0.469
OVERALL 248 152 0.620 192 202 6 0.488 193 203 4 0.488

The cold weather venues (those with an average January 1st daily high of 50 degrees or lower) have resulted in more underdog covers and point totals going over the number compared to other bowl games. Underdogs have covered in 58.6% of the bowl games since 2008 at a colder venue. The point total has gone “over” in 64.1% of such games.

The coldest venues currently hosting a bowl game are:

Boise, Idaho (Famous Idaho Potato Bowl), 36 degreesBronx, New York (Pinstripe Bowl), 41 degreesAnnapolis, Maryland (Military Bowl), 45 degreesAlbuquerque, New Mexico (New Mexico Bowl), 47 degreesNashville, Tennessee (Music City Bowl), 49 degreesMemphis, Tennessee (Liberty Bowl), 50 degrees

Only four bowl games have featured at least 8 “Overs” in the last 11 years. Three of those bowl games with the highest “over” rates since 2008 are among the four coldest venues for bowl games, and two of them are the only bowl games played at high elevation. (The other is the New Orleans Bowl, which has gone over in 8 of the last 11 bowl games).

In games played at average temperatures above 60 degrees, meanwhile, the games have gone “under” the total 57.9% of the time since 2008. That includes every outdoor game played in Florida, Arizona, and Southern California, as well as the Hawaii and Bahamas Bowl.

Home Cooking?

If we count teams as playing at home if they are in the same metropolitan area as the bowl game (even if not played at the venue they play the majority of their true home games in the regular season), then teams that get to stay at home are 12-13 straight up and 12-13 against the spread since 2008.

That is to say, it seems as though the betting market properly prices the impact of teams in these situations.

Expand out, though, and there is some evidence that teams with a regional proximity edge can provide value.

We divided every bowl team since 2008 into four categories:

(1) playing in home metro area,(2) playing in home state,(3) playing in a state that neighbors their own home state, and(4) all others.

Teams that get to play in their home state, when playing against an opponent who is not from the same state or a neighboring state, are 52-37 straight up, and 46-41-1 ATS (52.8%).

Teams that get to play in a neighboring state, playing against an opponent not from that state or a neighboring state, are 56-39 straight up, and 50-44-1 ATS (53.2%).

Both of those situations are just above the 52.4% cutline for profitability (if we assume 10% vigorish). But let’s isolate it to underdogs who get to play near home, against opponents coming from further away.

Underdogs who are from the same state or a neighboring state to where the bowl game is played, when playing favorites who do not meet that criteria, are 32-34 straight up, and 38-26-2 ATS (59.1%). Despite being the betting underdogs, they have won nearly as many games as they have lost since 2008.

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