5Dimes has the numbers up now. Miami is 7.5 under -145, with a 30 cent line hence the over is +115.
Check the "Props" box under Football, then scroll down.
That's all I meant by my previous posts, that the Dolphin number figured to settle between 7 over and 7.5 under. No need to rush and jump in on a bad number, considering the devastating impact on value. For example, regarding the $2500 number mentioned earlier in this thread: At -110 juice on the over, the Cantor opening number, it would take $2750 to return $2500 profit. Wait a week (or many) for more places to put it up, and you can grab a 7 flat, or a number like +115 at 5Dimes. The same $2750 at +115 instead of -110 returns $3162.50 profit, not $2500. It's like winning an additional $662.50 wager at Even money, simply by getting a decent price instead of a horrendous price.
It took plenty of bad numbers in the '80s for me to catch on. I remember giving the -14 opening number on the Tampa Bay Bandits against Memphis in a USFL game, only to sit in horror all week back in Los Angeles as the spread plummeted to 13, 12, 11, and finally down to 10.
Luckily Steve Spurrier decided to run a reverse to Gary Anderson from midfield with a minute remaining, and then have Anderson punch it in from the 5 on the next play instead of kneeling down. All was forgiven, and every number covered. :D
I could read about this stuff all day.
You mentioned you found -120 on the under on the Browns at 6.0 wins...are you particularly low on them?
Because I have to be honest, I'm looking at certain players on that team and seeing a team I might want to visit with a few times in their weekly spreads. You mentioned before you can't just add up all the games where teams are favored and not in order to get an over/under...I'm pretty aware of that I think, but I also think it's a fun way to look at things. So far Cantor doesn't have Cleveland favored in a single game. I plan on taking advantage of that, personally.
But thing is, I saw the over/under set at 5.5 (never found a 6.0, kudos on finding that)...and even being more bullish on them than I feel most people are...I don't want the over on that. I certainly wouldn't want the over on 6.0. That's just a team I would rather take advantage of on the weekly lines right at the beginning of the year, them being better right away than I think they're given credit for being, and then I'd just have to feel them out on the rest of the season...but there's a good chance I'd want to escape with some early money and then back off them.
I mean, you complain about teams that throw 40 times with "mush" quarterbacks...this is not a team that will do that. This a team that hoss'd up with Peyton Hillis in 2010 when it was possible to do so. They called plays as if they were scared to let Colt McCoy make a play (not without reason). Now they've got Trent Richardson and not only will they let him be the hoss, they'll throw a lot of screens to him too. Richardson is not Mark Ingram. He's physically stupendous, the best I've seen since Adrian Peterson, who was the best I ever saw (since I wasn't evaluating when Barry hit the Draft).
And maybe I'm biased because I've been evaluating the guy for two years and absolutely love his talent level, but I don't think they have a mush quarterback, either. Weeden was in my opinion particularly dangerous at Oklahoma State recognizing defenses as he walked up to the line and changing to the appropriate built in run plays which resulted in a tailback like Joseph Randle (who is built like a wide receiver) having an Emmitt Smith-like 24 touchdown runs not to mention nearly 6 yards per carry. That's unusual production relative to Joseph Randle's talent, in my opinion, and I believe you can lay that at the quarterback's feet.
Watching how the defense is set up...it's familiar. It's so similar to back in the early 2000's with the way Miami played. A lot of shell with aggressive coverage, a lot of relying on the defensive line to get after the quarterback. Would it shock you if I felt the Cleveland Browns' secondary in 2011 was somewhere in the top three among NFL secondaries that I studied? Dimitri Patterson was an inspired slot corner. T.J. Ward is a good safety. Joe Haden is an elite corner. The weakness was Sheldon Brown but he wasn't as weak as you see in other secondaries and they kept safeties over top of him anyway. On the DL, they just lost Phil Taylor for an unknown amount of time. A big blow and one I definitely have to take account of. But Ahtyba Rubin was the sempai in that relationship anyway. Jabaal Sheard is a stud. They have under appreciated upside surprise baked in with Marcus Benard who is healthy after a motorcycle accident, and should provide a lot of pass rush juice on nickel downs. The linebackers unit is led by D'Qwell Jackson, who is back to form. They just added my second favorite inside linebacker in the Draft, James-Michael Johnson.
You complained about the lack of contrast in the league. To me, Cleveland is that contrast. They're the team that will pound the ball at you with the best rookie tailback I've seen since Peterson, pass the ball to an unusually talented and athletic group of tight ends (the three of which are faster than many of their wide receivers) and then play frustrating Miami-style shell pass defense that keeps opposing offenses off the fast-track that seems so chic nowadays.
As I said before, I don't like an over on 6 wins. If you found the under on that, that's a good bet. But you mentioned seeing a 4.5. I personally wasn't planning on taking an over/under on that team, but if I saw the 4.5, the over might tempt me.