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Baylor Wins NCAA Championship

Congratulations to Baylor winning the NCAA Championship. The game did not even come close to living up to its hype. It featured undefeated #1 Gonzaga and the 2-loss #2 Baylor Bears. It was the highest winning percentage for a championship game ever. The teams were supposed to play in December when they were ranked #1 and #2, but the game was canceled due to COVID-19 issues a couple of hours before the game.  Baylor started the game 9-0 and it was 11-1 at the first media time out. There was only a short period of time in the second half when the margin was under 10 points. Baylor led by 10 at halftime and ended up winning by 16, 86-70. The game was under 159.5 points, which is fitting because the unders dominated this tournament. Out of the 67 games, 40 of them went under. That's 60%. And Gonzaga was the favorite (lost the game outright) which means that underdogs were 35-32 against the spread and underdogs won the game outright 23 times. That's 34%, which is really high for und...

Cincinnati on the Money Line

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  William Hill sports book was doing a promo for new customers. Get a "free" bet of up to $300. If you lose the bet, you get your bet back in site credit. This means you have to "bet through" that amount. So, if you lose the $300 bet, you have to make 15 separate bets of $20 each before you can close your account. I went 50/50 with a friend of mine and we chose a 4 point underdog to win outright at +165. They ended up winning an incredibly stress-filled game and we won $495. It was a great win for us.

College Basketball Regular Season Ends Today

Today is the last day of the college basketball regular season. Quite a few games were cancelled because of COVID-19. Usually at the end of the regular season there are a bunch of 20-win teams. This year there are 20 out of 357 NCAA division 1 teams.  Illinois had a great regular season. 20 wins, 6 losses. Second place in the Big Ten conference. It looks like they will earn a top seed in the upcoming NCAA tournament (the bracket is announced one week from today). They are 1 of 4 teams to be ranked in the top 10 nationally in both offensive and defensive efficiency - Gonzaga, Michigan, and Houston are the other 3. That metric is normally a sign of a national championship - 10 of the last 12 national champions have ranked in the top 7 in offense and all have been ranked in the top 20 in defense. Illinois, Michigan, and Gonzaga are the only 3 teams that fit into that group this year.  Since there was no NCAA tournament last year, people are little more excited than usual for Marc...

College Basketball Tournament in COVID year

Last year the NCAA basketball tournament was cancelled due to COVID-19. This year they are isolating it to Indianapolis and doing some other things to keep players and coaches, etc. safe. Today the TV schedule was announced. It looks pretty similar to other years, but the first four games are all on the same night instead of on consecutive nights. And the tournament itself is pushed back a few days. Usually the round of 64 games are Thursday and Friday, this year they are Friday and Saturday. That means that I don't have to take 2 days of vacation this year to watch the games - I'll just take Friday off. Here are the times (all times Central): First Four Thursday 3/18 at 4:00, 5:20, 7:30, and 8:50 Friday/Saturday First Round games 3/19 and 3/20 at 11:00, 11:30, 12:00, 12:30, 1:45, 2:20, 2:50, 3:20, 5:15, 6:00 (x 2), 6:15, 8:10, 8:30, 8:45, and 8:50 Sunday/Monday Second Round games 3/21 and 3/22 at 11:00, 1:30, 4:00, 5:00, 6:00, 6:30, 7:30, and 8:30 (I won't be taking Monday...

2021 - New Year, New ISP

 We bit the bullet a few days ago and got rid of all TV providers and are only going with streaming now. A few years ago we switched from Comcast to a local company called Metronet, but still included TV. Then, once the introductory prices went back up, we switched back to Comcast because the package of TV+Internet was cheaper. Now, after that contract was up, we switched back to Metronet, but with an Internet-only package. We're using only streaming services for TV.  So far it's been decent. There is the occasional time when there's buffering on the TV, but it's minor and goes away fairly quickly. The speeds seem to work well for us and we haven't had really any issues, but we're also only a few days into this new way of watching TV.

Golf's Second Slam

People generally know about winning the grand slam in golf - victories in the 4 major tournaments (US Open, Masters, British Open, PGA). There have been 5 players who have done it in history - Gene Sarazen, Ben Hogan, Gary Player have done it. Jack Nicklaus and Tiger Woods won each of those majors at least 3 times so they are each 3 times grand slam winners. Any discussion about the greatest golfer of all time comes down to those 2 golfers. In addition to winning the majors, there is a thing called the "second slam" where you get second place in all four majors. There have been 8 players who have done this. Craig Wood, Arnold Palmer, Tom Watson, Greg Norman, Phil Mickelson, Louis Oosthuizen, and Dustin Johnson are 7 of those. What about Tiger and Jack? Tiger hasn't gotten second place in all the majors. Jack, in addition to winning the grand slam three times over, has won the second slam 4 times over. In my mind, that closes the argument. Tiger has won a lot of tournament...

College Basketball Starting Soon Without Fans

In a normal year, the college basketball season would have started by now. With this being 2020 and all, it's starting the day before Thanksgiving. I'm an Illinois fan. I'm not a season ticket holder, but I know people who are and I buy 2-3 games a year off of them to go watch. Illinois is ranked 8th in the nation in the pre-season. I can't imagine what it would be like to be one of these people who invested all the time and money over the last however-many years hoping this team would eventually be good, and now they are good and you can't go to the games because of COVID-19. What a bummer. I'm sure the Iowa fans and season ticket holders feel the same way. At least I'll be able to watch the games on TV. And I'd rather they be good than bad, even if I can't see them in person.

No Flights In How Long??

I noticed over the weekend that I haven't been on a plane since July of last year. I highly doubt that I'll be on a plane the rest of 2020. That will be a span of at least 16 months between flights. I started my current job in March of 2007. It started out as a travel job - going to customer sites. In recent years things have been more remote, but I've still had periodic trips. Going back to early 2000, when I moved to Colorado, I would fly back to Illinois at least once a year if not more. I don't have records for the 1990's, but my wife and I are fans of vacations and most certainly took flights at least once a year going back to our marriage in 1997.  All this means that I'm guessing it's been 25 or more years since I've gone this long without being on a plane.

Back from Branson

 Last week my family and I spent the week in Branson, MO. We chose to stay at a VRBO condo to minimize any potential contact with other guests (like we would see in a hotel). We were a bit concerned at the start of the trip - we did carry out pizza the first night and walked in to pick up the pizza and the 3 customers (2 others plus myself) were all masked but out of the 7 or 8 employees, there was only 1 mask. We did find out that Branson had implemented a mask order on July 31st, so those employees should have been wearing a mask. The rest of the restaurants we frequented during the week were all masked up and had signs telling people to wear masks. Early in the week we went to a show in a theater. People wore their masks coming into the show, but the majority of people took them off when they sat down. I would say the theater was around 15% full. There was nobody in our row and nobody directly in front of or behind us. There were groups in the row in front of us to either side, ...

School Starting Remotely

 Just like a lot of districts across the state and nation, our district is starting school remotely. School starts on Monday, August 24. Initially we were given a choice of 100% remote learning from a different company (outside of the district) or 2 days on site and 3 days remote from the district. We figured that at some point everyone would be remote, so it would be less disruptive if we just did all remote from the start. Turns out, "at some point" was "before the start of school" and now we're just like every other kid in the district learning remote from the district. It's going to be strange, and it's supposed to be "real class" instead of what they were doing last March, April, and May attempting to just make it through the school year. We're talking online web conferences with the different teachers, online videos when they aren't doing web conferences, and so on. An actual structured learning day.  Here's hoping it all goes...

Iowa Golf Trip

Over the weekend I took a very mini-vacation up to Iowa to play a couple rounds of golf and stay at Riverside Casino. We drove up on Sunday through some horrible rain and played in the afternoon. The weather for golfing was perfect - mid 80s, sunny, light breeze. Then we stayed overnight and golfed Monday morning before driving home. It was a bit strange seeing all the masks on everyone, but it seems like most people were being smart and trying to stay safe. This was my first time golfing this year, and it showed. I shot a 91 both days, although I did manage a birdie each day. The course we played is pretty difficult, and shooting 91 isn't anything embarrassing, but I still would have liked to have been in the 80s - I don't like shooting worse than bogey golf (a bogey on every hole would be a 90).

Haven't Posted In A While

I realized that I didn't post anything in the month of June. Last post was about getting our dog. She's working out pretty well - the cats still don't really want anything to do with her, but they get along well enough. We're doing some training with her. She's smart, but she's also a bit stubborn - some things she knows what we're saying, but will only obey for a few seconds.  We still haven't brought out the camper this year, and I honestly don't know if it will happen or not. Camping is an outdoor, socially distant, activity, but part of the fun in camping is doing all the stuff the campground has to offer - the playground, the pool, and so on. That stuff isn't the best with COVID-19 potentials. And the campground bathrooms should be strictly off limits. Our camper has a bathroom, but since it hasn't been out this year, it's still winterized from last fall. That means a lot of extra time to de-winterize in order to use the bathroom. An...

Looks Like We Got A Dog

Although not officially adopted yet, we now have a dog. Bailey came to our house last Saturday (May 16). With the coronavirus stuff still going on, we haven't been able to take her to the vet or anything like that yet. She still needs to be spayed (which will happen as soon as possible, but nobody knows what that means). She's a rescue that's estimated to be 1 year old and has already had a litter of puppies. Bailey and the 2 cats still need to work some stuff out. So far, they just tolerate each other. There's been a little bit of growling, but it's been better than expected so far. I'm hoping that the growling goes away and that they simply tolerate each other - I'm not expecting anything more than that.

Nothing New To Report

It's almost the end of April and I generally try to post something at least once a month. But with the stay at home order having taking up more than the last 6 weeks, there really isn't much to report. My family has been staying at home, going outside when the weather cooperates enough to go for a walk or play tennis on the driveway or whatever. We do all our shopping online now and go pick things up. For example, we do an online order for groceries and then go pick them up after a few days. (There are so many people doing that, it's a few days between when you order and when you pick up). Then the groceries sit out in the garage for a few days (the longer the better) just in case. That means that we have to plan our groceries about a week and a half out - what are we going to need 10 days from now? It makes shopping really difficult. But we're staying safe and healthy and hoping things return to normal at some point.

The New Normal

The COVID-19 (Coronavirus) has forced people to stay at home (for the most part) for the foreseeable future. I've been working at home for the past week and it will continue for at least a couple more weeks if not longer. My daughter was off school last week, the upcoming week is spring break, and then she'll be at home for at least a week and a half after that. Instead of working in the office in the basement, I've moved everything upstairs into the dining room. The setup isn't too bad, and I'm not locked away from everything like I would be in the basement. We can go out for groceries and to do drive through (or curbside pickup) food, but a lot of the town is shut down. It's just a very strange time that will last a few more weeks at least. As of today, there have been 6 confirmed cases in my county, 753 cases in the state (along with 6 deaths), nearly 27,000 in the United States (354 deaths), and over 322,000 world wide (13,829 deaths). It appears that Ch...

NCAA tournaments canceled over coronavirus

I understand the decision, but it still stinks. I've taken the first days of the NCAA basketball tournament off for at least the last 20 years and have made several posts about  my NCAA basketball trips over the years. I really don't know how to respond to this news. It's really sad that some of these players, especially seniors on teams who would be making their first NCAA tournament (Illinois, Rutgers, Penn State, countless others), won't get a chance to play in the NCAA tournament. My wife and daughter are supposed to be going to the Billie Eilish concert during spring break in a couple of weeks. So far, she has not canceled any tour dates, but I'm not confident about that concert still happening. We'll just wait and see I guess. COVID-19 is wreaking havoc on the entire world right now.

March Madness Trips Through The Years (2001-2020)

I love college basketball and love betting on college basketball. With sports betting coming to more and more states, trips just to bet on March Madness are becoming less necessary. But I still have my entire history of March Madness trips here in one place: https://mattholthe.blogspot.com/2009/05/my-march-madness-trips.html  2001 through 2009 https://mattholthe.blogspot.com/2012/07/march-madness-since-2009.html  2010 through 2012 https://mattholthe.blogspot.com/2014/03/march-madness-trips-2013-2014.html  2013 and 2014 In 2015, I attended the Final Four games in Indianapolis. I saw Wisconsin beat an undefeated Kentucky team and then Duke destroy Michigan State in the semi-finals, and then was back two days later to watch Duke beat Wisconsin in the final. In 2016, we went to Wisconsin Dells over Spring Break. Very close timing-wise to the NCAA tournament, so hard to justify anything other than staying around town for the games.  https://mattholthe.blogspot.com...

Reviewing Travel Statistics

I was just gathering up my travel statistics for 2019 (yes, we're almost 2 full months into 2020, I know). What's interesting is comparing the 7 year averages from 2007 (when I started my current job) through 2013 and the 6 year averages from 2014 (when travel slowed way down and I started doing more and more remotely) through 2019. From 2007 through 2013, I averaged 57 work nights a year on the road (basically, Sunday night through Thursday night, excluding holidays and vacations). This meant I was on the road 25.8% of the work nights. Factoring in the entire year (including vacations when I was away from home) I averaged spending the night somewhere besides home 86.6 nights a year, or 24.3% of the year. Starting with 2014, I was still doing about the same number of trips away from home. (Slightly fewer, but not by a significant amount) But now I'm spending an average of 2.8% of the work nights away from home (6.3 work nights per year) and 8.3% of the total calendar ni...

Kansas City Chiefs Are Super Bowl Champions

The Kansas City Chiefs won the Super Bowl last night 31-20. They were down in the fourth quarter. (The guy who sits in the row next to mine has said multiple times "with 5 minutes to go", which isn't true - they scored with a little over 6 minutes to go to bring it within 3). They were down every game in the post season and won all of them. My daughter was rooting for the Chiefs, but she didn't really have much reasoning behind it. But at least she went to bed happy last night because "her team" won the game.

Decade coming to a close

Next week is the end of another decade. My, how time flies and things change. Late in 2009 I was moving back to Illinois after becoming a father a few months earlier. I've now lived in Illinois for 10 years and my daughter is in fifth grade. I'm still doing the same job, but travel has gone down significantly. People are way more willing to let me help them remotely instead of requiring me to be on site. So I'm able to get the work done without having to be physically on site. I turned a half a century old this year and I'm realizing that I'm going to have to make a lot of changes to live another 50 years. Here's to the next decade!