Chicago Bears at Minnesota Vikings: 2013 Week 13 NFL Pick

Chicago Bears (6-5) at Minnesota Vikings (2-8-1)

The Vikings are favored here for the 3rd time this season. The first two times didn’t go well. They lost straight up at home as touchdown plus favorites over the Browns week 3 and then they got blown out as small home favorites over the Panthers 35-10 during week 6. The Vikings are nowhere near the team they were last year. Adrian Peterson has been much more human this season, exposing their lack of a passing game, while their aging defense has suffered significantly more injuries and is missing the retired Antoine Winfield. They never should have been favored against Carolina and they never should have been favored by over a touchdown over the Browns.

The Vikings are favored here once again. Everyone knows they aren’t good, so we’re not getting the kind of line value with the underdog as we were in those first 2 games, but I still think we’re getting line value. The Vikings are currently 2-8-1. Teams who finish 2-14 or worse are 2-17 ATS as favorites since 2002. The Vikings might not necessarily finish that poorly, but all of their remaining games come against opponents who are currently .500 or better, including the Bears here, so they could. In terms of rate of moving the chains, they are moving the chains at a 73% rate, as opposed to 80% for their opponents, which is a differential that is 31st in the NFL, so they’re certainly bad enough to finish with just 2 wins. Either way, I don’t think they deserve to be favored anyone, with the exception of a few. I don’t think the Bears are one of those exceptions.

The Bears have had injuries all over their team, especially on defense. Henry Melton and Charles Tillman are both out for the season, while Lance Briggs remains out indefinitely. Those aren’t their only problems defensively, as age and the departure of defensive coaches Lovie Smith and Rod Marinelli have reduced their once proud defense to one of the worst in the NFL. If they can’t force a takeaway, they generally can’t keep their opponents from scoring, as they have forced a league worst 40 punts. It’s tough to rely on takeaways. They are allowing opponents to move the chains at a 78% rate, a rate that is increasing as injuries derail them more and more.

Fortunately, their offense is doing enough to make up for it, also moving the chains at a 78% rate. This is in spite of the injury to Jay Cutler. Josh McCown is playing out of his mind right now, completing 65.5% of his passes for an average of 7.47 YPA, 7 touchdowns, and 1 interception. He has a 100.8 QB rating, leads the NFL in QBR, and is ProFootballFocus’ 7th ranked quarterback, despite just 3 starts and 2 relief appearances. The Bears don’t deserve to be underdogs here.

The Vikings could also be exhausted off of last week’s tie. They essentially played 5 quarters of football last week. You saw how bad the Packers looked this week against the Lions off of that tie last week. The Vikings aren’t on a short week here, which helps, but teams are now 4-9 ATS off of a tie since 1989. It’s not a huge sample size, but it makes sense and it’s worth noting.

There are reasons this isn’t a bigger play, however. I don’t know how much I trust Josh McCown. All of this is coming from a guy who is 34 years old, has a career QB rating of 73.6, and hasn’t posted a QB rating higher than 70 since 2005. He didn’t suddenly become a starting caliber quarterback. I have no doubt that Marc Trestman is a fantastic offensive coach who is making him look better than he is, but I don’t have a ton of faith he can keep this up continually. If he can’t, that would expose their defense.

Also, this kind of feels like a trap line. The public is all over the underdog because they know the Vikings suck. I normally like to stay away from public underdogs. What if this is the week Josh McCown shits the bed? What if Adrian Peterson rushes for 200+ yards on Chicago’s skeleton crew run defense? I still think the Bears are the right side, but I’m not that confident.

Chicago Bears 27 Minnesota Vikings 23 Upset Pick +100

Pick against spread: Minnesota +1

Confidence: Low

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Minnesota Vikings at Green Bay Packers: 2013 Week 12 NFL Pick

Minnesota Vikings (2-8) at Green Bay Packers (5-5)

One of the most powerful trends in football says that divisional home favorites rarely cover before being divisional road dogs. Teams are 18-49 ATS in that spot since 2002, which is ridiculously low and impossible to ignore. The Packers are in that spot this week, as they go to Detroit next week. Making matters even worse, that game is just a few days after this one on Thursday for Thanksgiving. Teams are 27-50 ATS since 2008 as favorites before a Thursday Night Game, including 11-26 ATS before a divisional Thursday Night Game. We saw the Colts and Titans both fall flat in a huge way in this situation 2 weeks ago and the Saints had their first non-cover at home under Sean Payton since 2010 last week in this scenario, snapping a streak of 13 straight covers.

The Vikings, on the other hand, are in a good spot as road underdogs off of a road loss. Teams are 98-58 ATS in this spot since 2008 and cover at close to a 65% rate historically no matter what year you use to cut off your sample. The Packers are in no position to be favored by more than 3 against pretty much anyone right now, with Scott Tolzien under center. They are arguably one of the worst teams in the NFL without Aaron Rodgers. It’s a strong play on the Vikings.

Green Bay Packers 24 Minnesota Vikings 23

Pick against spread: Minnesota +5

Confidence: High

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Minnesota Vikings: 2013 Week 11 NFL Power Rankings (#30)

Last week: 30 (+0)

Record: 2-7

In his last two games, Christian Ponder has completed 42 of 58 for 410 yards, 3 touchdowns, and 2 interceptions. However, you have to remember he was facing two defenses in Dallas and Washington that are among the worst in the NFL and he was facing the latter on a short week when they were coming off of an overtime game (teams are 3-17 ATS on Thursday Night after an overtime game). Washington’s terrible “stop” unit made even Matt Cassel look passable when he game on in relief of an injured Christian Ponder. Ponder is expected to be fine going forward and to keep his starting job, but the schedule gets a lot tougher, with trips to Seattle, Green Bay, Baltimore, and Cincinnati to go with home games against Chicago, Philadelphia, and Detroit. It’s very, very possible we see another quarterback change for the Vikings at some point. They aren’t paying Josh Freeman 3 million for one start and a half of a season riding 3rd string.

Week 10 Studs

TE John Carlson

LE Everson Griffen

DT Kevin Williams

Week 10 Duds

RE Jared Allen

ROLB Chad Greenway

DT Chris Baker

MLB Erin Henderson

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Minnesota Vikings at Seattle Seahawks: 2013 Week 11 NFL Pick

Minnesota Vikings (2-7) at Seattle Seahawks (9-1)

In his last two games, Christian Ponder has completed 42 of 58 for 410 yards, 3 touchdowns, and 2 interceptions. However, you have to remember he was facing two defenses in Dallas and Washington that are among the worst in the NFL and he was facing the latter on a short week when they were coming off of an overtime game (teams are 3-17 ATS on Thursday Night after an overtime game). Washington’s terrible “stop” unit made even Matt Cassel look passable when he game on in relief of an injured Christian Ponder. Ponder is expected to be fine for this game, but the schedule gets much tougher as they go to Seattle, arguably the toughest place in the NFL to play.

The Seahawks have been incredible at home since 2007, to the point where you can almost just blindly bet them at home. They are 36-17 ATS at home over that time frame, including 20-9 ATS as home favorites, and 10-3 ATS as home favorites of 7 or more. They have been especially good over the past two years, as they’ve broken out as an elite team, going 9-3 ATS since the start of the 2012 season. They’ve won all 12 games at home over the past 2 seasons by an average of 17.7 points per game. The Vikings are a below average team that could get completely destroyed.

The Buccaneers did almost pull the massive upset in Seattle two weeks ago, but I think that was a fluke, not a new trend. Seahawks got back on track in Atlanta last week and now get Percy Harvin back. He might not play a full set of snaps, but his presence certainly won’t hurt. Also, Minnesota is worse than Tampa Bay, thanks largely to a terrible stop unit that is allowing opponents to move the chains at an 80% rate, as opposed to 72% for their offense. That differential ranks 31st in the NFL. The Seahawks rank 6th, moving the chains at a 78% rate, as opposed to 72% for their opponents. That suggests this line should be at about 11.5, before you even get into the Seahawks home dominance. Even at 12.5, this line is too low.

The Seahawks are also distraction free with a bye coming up. Home favorites of 7 or more are 40-14 ATS before a bye since 2002. It makes perfect sense. Dominant teams are able to dominate when they know they have a week off coming up. The Vikings, meanwhile, could be distracted as they have to head to Green Bay next week, a big rivalry game. It might not be a huge distraction, but enough to prevent them from keeping it close with a vastly superior opponent. Teams are 47-74 ATS as non-divisional road dogs before being divisional road-dogs. It’s a strong play and a projected blowout victory for the Seahawks.

Seattle Seahawks 31 Minnesota Vikings 10

Pick against spread: Seattle -12.5

Confidence: High

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Minnesota Vikings: 2013 Week 10 NFL Power Rankings (#30)

Last week: 30 (+0)

Record: 2-7

In his last two games, Christian Ponder has completed 42 of 58 for 410 yards, 3 touchdowns, and 2 interceptions. However, you have to remember he was facing two defenses in Dallas and Washington that are among the worst in the NFL and he was facing the latter on a short week when they were coming off of an overtime game (teams are 3-17 ATS on Thursday Night after an overtime game). Washington’s terrible “stop” unit made even Matt Cassel look passable when he game on in relief of an injured Christian Ponder. Ponder is expected to be fine going forward and to keep his starting job, but the schedule gets a lot tougher, with trips to Seattle, Green Bay, Baltimore, and Cincinnati to go with home games against Chicago, Philadelphia, and Detroit. It’s very, very possible we see another quarterback change for the Vikings at some point. They aren’t paying Josh Freeman 3 million for one start and a half of a season riding 3rd string.

Week 9 Studs

RB Adrian Peterson

RG Brandon Fusco

RT Phil Loadholt

C John Sullivan

RE Jared Allen

LE Brian Robison

DT Sharrif Floyd

Week 9 Duds

ROLB Marvin Mitchell

ROLB Erin Henderson

CB Marcus Sherels

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Washington Redskins at Minnesota Vikings: 2013 Week 10 NFL Pick

Washington Redskins (3-5) at Minnesota Vikings (1-7)

The Redskins won a crazy home game against the Chargers last week in overtime, but that game might really hurt them here this week. Teams are 3-16 ATS since 1989 on Thursday Night after an overtime game. It makes sense. Recovering from a longer game on a short week would obviously put you at a disadvantage. Teams usually don’t do well as favorites off of a home overtime win anyway, going 22-41 ATS since 1989 in that situation.

The Vikings aren’t a very good team, but the Redskins have a terrible defense that they can move the ball against and compete in this game. Christian Ponder completed 25 of 37 for 236 yards, 1 touchdown, and 1 interception last week in Dallas against a weak Dallas defense. The Redskins allow opponents to move the chains at a 78% rate on the season. If Ponder, with Adrian Peterson, can move the ball well against the Cowboys in Dallas, he can do the same at home, where he’s been a lot better in his short career. It’s not a big play, but I expect the Vikings to win here over a tired Redskins team.

Minnesota Vikings 23 Washington Redskins 20 Upset Pick +120

Pick against spread: Minnesota +2.5

Confidence: Low

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Minnesota Vikings at Dallas Cowboys: 2013 Week 9 NFL Pick

Minnesota Vikings (1-6) at Dallas Cowboys (4-4)

The Cowboys are in a bad spot this week in between a crushing loss in Detroit and a tough game in New Orleans. This home game against the Vikings is the definition of a trap game.  Favorites of 7 or more are 37-71 ATS since 1989 before being underdogs of 7 or more. Meanwhile, favorites off of a loss as underdogs before being underdogs again are 73-94 ATS. On top of that, the Cowboys haven’t been a very good team as big home favorites, going 5-10 ATS as home favorites of 6 or more since the new Cowboy Stadium opened in 2009.

It’s not going to be very big play on the Vikings at all though because they are a poorly quarterbacked team who we aren’t really getting any significant line value with. They are also expected to be without three starters in the secondary. However, they should be the right side. There’s a very good chance that, even if the Vikings get dominated, they could lead a garbage time cover against Dallas’ terrible defense, which is expected to be without DeMarcus Ware again. The Cowboys are my Survivor Pick though.

Dallas Cowboys 31 Minnesota Vikings 24 Survivor Pick

Pick against spread: Minnesota +10

Confidence: Low

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Minnesota Vikings: 2013 Week 9 NFL Power Rankings (#30)

Last week: 29 (-1)

Record: 1-6

At this point, it’s pretty clear than Christian Ponder, Matt Cassel, and Josh Freeman are all pretty lame ducks. The Vikings can keep rotating them all they want and they may in a quarterback situation that has become very reminiscent of the 2010 49ers’ quarterback situation. Freeman will probably get another chance once his concussion is healed he learns the playbook and considering he has the best arm and they are playing him 3 million for roughly half a season, that makes sense. I just don’t think it’ll end up being a promising endeavor. The Vikings will almost definitely be looking at quarterbacks with what should be a top-5 pick in the 2014 NFL Draft.

Week 8 Studs

RB Adrian Peterson

Week 8 Duds

LG Charlie Johnson

RG Brandon Fusco

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Green Bay Packers at Minnesota Vikings: 2013 Week 8 NFL Pick

Green Bay Packers (4-2) at Minnesota Vikings (1-5)

Josh Freeman was awful last week. He threw 33 incompletions (only 3 of which were drops) on 20 of 53 passing for 190 yards and an interception against a team that was previously one of the worst in the NFL defensively. ProFootballFocus said his performance graded out as the worst they’ve graded since they started in 2008 and it pretty much broke their grading system. It wasn’t totally his fault though. He definitely deserves a lot of the blame because his mechanics and accuracy looked awful, but he wasn’t put in a situation to succeed by the coaching staff. He had been with the team just 14 days and clearly didn’t know the playbook and understandably so.

The Vikings are lucky that he won’t be able go this week with a concussion (or they’re smart for inventing a concussion). Christian Ponder isn’t very good because of his limited arm, but he at least knows the playbook. He played pretty well at home against the Packers last year, completing 16 of 28 for 234 yards and 3 touchdowns, as his lack of arm strength can kind of be hidden inside in a dome where there is no wind. For that reason, I can’t put a lot of confidence in the Packers even though they should be the right side. They’ll be completely focused with only a game at home for the Bears and Josh McCown next week. Divisional road favorites are 36-22 ATS before being divisional away favorites since 2002.

Green Bay Packers 27 Minnesota Vikings 17

Pick against spread: Green Bay -9.5

Confidence: None

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