Monday, January 14, 2013

Chicago Sports & Travel, Inc. / AllsportsAmerica

Chicago Sports & Travel, Inc. / AllsportsAmerica

Kudos to the NFL, Great Playoff Games this weekend. They were very competitive and I hope your team won. If they didn’t, there’s nothing to be ashamed of. You can hold your head up high. I can’t wait to see these young quarterbacks next year!!!!

Congratulations to the Baltimore Ravens, New England Patriots, The San Francisco 49ers and the Atlanta Falcons. Next week, the final four will be the last two before the only one!!!


Which NFL Teams Have Never Won a Super Bowl?

Will the list reduce itself to 13 this year? There’s chance maybe!

As of this writing, 2013, 14 teams have not won the coveted Vince Lombardi Super Bowl Trophy, they are:

  1.
Minnesota Vikings – 4 Super Bowl losses, L W/C to GB 1/5/2013

  2. Buffalo Bills – 4 Super Bowl losses

  3.
Cincinnati Bengals - 2 Super Bowl losses, L WC to Texans 1/5/2013

  4. Philadelphia Eagles – 2 Super Bowl losses

  5. San Diego Chargers – 1 Super Bowl loss

  6.
Atlanta Falcons – 1 Super Bowl loss, Still a chance to exit this list

  7. Tennessee Titans – 1 Super Bowl loss

  8. Carolina Panthers- 1 Super Bowl loss

  9.
Seattle Seahawks – 1 Super Bowl loss, L DIV to Atlanta 1/13/2013

10. Arizona Cardinals – 1 Super Bowl loss

11. Jacksonville Jaguars – No Super Bowl appearances

12. Detroit Lions – No Super Bowl appearances

13. Cleveland Browns - No Super Bowl appearances

14.
Houston Texans – No Super Bowl appearances, L DIV to Patriots 01/13/2013 

Notes: NFL 2013, * Made Playoffs, * Loss during Playoffs, * Off the List (Won Super Bowl)

* Five Days until NHL Opening Night, January 19, 2013, Yeah B-A-B-Y!!!

Best sports news sites (FYI)

1. ESPN.com
2.
CBS Sports
3.
NBC Sports
4.
FOX Sports
5.
CNNSI.com
6.
The Sporting News
7.
SportsInput.com
8.
The Sports Network
9.
SportsNews.com
10.
The Sports Abyss

* Baseball Spring Training starts in 40 Days for the Diehard MLB Fans

The article below was taken from GolfDigest.com on January 13, 2013. I love the game of golf, watching and playing it. I found this very interesting and felt I needed to reprint it.

The Links: Polling wunderkind Nathan Silver and gambling on golf; What Predictions Say About Us…

By
Jaime Diaz
By The State

A lot of energy is expended predicting the winner in golf -- in magazines, on television, in bars and locker rooms, and from everywhere online. We've done a bunch of it ourselves in this issue of Golf World.

The question is, "Why?"

No one, it seems -- at least since Tiger Woods was grabbing victories in bunches -- is ever right. Choosing the winner in golf is not like picking point spreads in football or basketball, where a typical professional gambler wins about 55 percent of the time.

In other sports, outcomes are far more predictable. In thoroughbred racing the favored horse wins about a third of the time. In major league baseball games the favored team wins nearly 60 percent of the time. In men's tennis Roger Federer, Rafael Nadal and Novak Djokovic each win slightly more than 80 percent of their matches.

Golf, by contrast, is a lottery. The highest winning percentage in PGA Tour history is Woods' 25 percent, but you can build a Hall of Fame career by winning 5.5 percent like Ernie Els. The fact is that having 155 opponents at one time isn't conducive to real domination, no matter how often that term is thrown around.

Is it any surprise that, as far as anyone knows, there has never been a Jimmy the Greek of golf? In his book The Signal and the Noise: Why So Many Predictions Fail, prognosticator extraordinaire Nate Silver does an extensive exploration of probabilities in baseball and sports betting in general. Nowhere in the 534 pages does the word "golf" appear.

To speak for the sport in this context, we found Steve Masek, a 26-year-old former greenkeeper who for the last seven years has run a golf handicapping service out of his home in London, Ontario. Masek says he has been profitable by charging a few hundred clients $19 a month each to receive his six best-bets to win the biggest pro tournament of the week. A seven-handicapper who plays about 100 rounds a year and studies the game obsessively, Masek says most of his clients are avid sports bettors who admit they know little about golf, but are drawn to the possibility of a big score that brings long odds -- such as Angel Cabrera at 125-1 before the 2009 Masters, which Masek says he recommended -- can bring. Last year, his 258 picks made over 43 weeks produced exactly 10 winners, the biggest longshot being Keegan Bradley before the WGC-Bridgestone Invitational at 60-1.

"I advise my clients to be patient," says Masek, "because the favorite in golf is rarely the best bet." Last year, for the record, in 46 events on the PGA Tour, the betting favorite or co-favorite won seven times -- Rory McIlroy three times, Woods twice, Luke Donald and Ryan Moore once each.

When money isn't involved, what's nice and safe about predicting golf winners is that there is no shame in being wrong. A sentence from baseball statistical maven Bill James' blurb on the back cover of Silver's book -- "We tend not to take predictions seriously because, on some level, we know that we don't know" -- would seem to apply to golf more than just about anything.

And so, why?

Well, predictions are a way of demonstrating knowledge. Of course, in most things, a successful demonstration involves being right. In golf, a good argument will suffice (thus, the Predictions Issue).

Most compellingly, human beings are wired to predict. In ancient times predictions served as psychological counterweight to the extreme uncertainty of life. As we've gained more control over daily existence, predictions help encourage the illusion that we are in charge of our own destiny. The more that is unknown, the greater the urge to predict. As the recently departed futurist author Ray Bradbury once said, "Mysteries abound where most we seek for answers."

Where are there more mysteries and unanswered questions than in golf? By predicting who will win a tournament, we golfers are fighting back at the game that confounds us and robs us of control. For a prideful moment, we can pretend to know. Predicting is not that different than finding temporary solace in the latest swing theory or newest equipment.

But in truth, golfers only dabble in prediction. We like golf better unknowable. It keeps us in it. Forecasting, almost always unsuccessfully, just brings us closer to golf's vastness and charm. Somehow, being wrong so often tells us we are playing the best game of all.


Please let us hear your opinion on the above articles and pass them on to any other diehard fans that you think might be interested. But most of all, remember, Chicago Sports & Travel, Inc. / AllsportsAmerica wants you!!!!!

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