Moneyline Ncaa Basketball

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  2. The best way to bet on college basketball and win is to specialize in a select few conferences and bet lines right when they. A moneyline is a wager.

The NCAA Basketball (formerly NCAA March Madness) series was a college basketball game which was published by EA Sports from 1998 until 2009. After EA Sports' rival publisher 2K Sports cancelled its own college basketball game, College Hoops, in 2008, EA changed the name of the series from NCAA March Madness to NCAA College Basketball. The series was discontinued on February 10, 2010.[1]It was released on PlayStation, PlayStation 2, Xbox, Xbox 360 and PlayStation 3.Like other games based on NCAA sports, it could not feature the players' names (as that is against NCAA policy/rules), so only the players' numbers were used in the rosters. Users were able to edit the rosters, putting in the correct names for each team if they wished to do so. Many player last names were built into the in-game commentary, like in the NBA Live series.

Michigan State, Moneyline.

Verne Lundquist, Brad Nessler, and Gus Johnson lent their voices for play-by-play in the games at various times. Lundquist was the original announcer, with Nessler taking over in the mid-2000s and Johnson joining him for the most recent game in the series. Bill Raftery and Dick Vitale were analysts. Raftery originally worked with Lundquist on their games and returned to work alongside Johnson for CBS-branded games in NCAA Basketball 10, while Vitale and Nessler joined the series at the same time.

Games[edit]

Moneyline

NCAA March Madness 98[edit]

NCAA March Madness 98 is the 1998 installment in the NCAA March Madness series. It was released on February 28, 1998 for the PlayStation. Former Wake Forest player and retired San Antonio Spurs player Tim Duncan is featured on the cover.

NCAA March Madness 99[edit]

NCAA March Madness 99 is the 1998 installment in the NCAA March Madness series. It was released on December 18, 1998 for the PlayStation.[2] Former North Carolina player Antawn Jamison is featured on the cover.

NCAA March Madness 2000[edit]

NCAA March Madness 2000 is the 1999 installment in the NCAA March Madness series. It was released in December 1999 for the PlayStation. Former Maryland player Steve Francis is featured on the cover.

NCAA March Madness 2001[edit]

NCAA March Madness 2001 is the 2000 installment in the NCAA March Madness series. It was released on December 7, 2000 for PlayStation.[3] Former Cincinnati and NBA player Kenyon Martin is featured on the cover.

NCAA March Madness 2002[edit]

NCAA March Madness 2002 is the 2002 installment in the NCAA March Madness series. It was released on January 9, 2002 for PlayStation 2.[4] Former Duke player and former Miami Heat player Shane Battier is featured on the cover.

NCAA March Madness 2003[edit]

NCAA March Madness 2003 is the 2002 installment in the NCAA March Madness series. It was released on November 21, 2002 for PlayStation 2. Former KansasJayhawks player Drew Gooden is featured on the cover. The game's cover shows deformities within the artwork.[5]

NCAA March Madness 2004[edit]

NCAA March Madness 2004 is the 2003 installment in the NCAA March Madness series. It was released on November 17, 2003 for PlayStation 2 and Xbox. Former Syracuse player Carmelo Anthony is featured on the cover. Commentary is done by Brad Nessler and 'Mr. College Basketball' Dick Vitale as he is introduced in the game. This is the first time the player can pick their favorite school and the menus are stylized in the school's colors and a cheerleader or mascot can appear on the main menu while playing the school's fight song. The game plays similar to NBA Live 2004.

NCAA March Madness 2005[edit]

NCAA March Madness 2005 is the 2004 installment in the NCAA March Madness series. It was released on November 16, 2004 for PlayStation 2 and Xbox.[6] Former Connecticut player, Charlotte Bobcats player, New Orleans Hornets player, Washington Wizards player, and New Orleans Pelicans player and current NBA free agent player Emeka Okafor is featured on the cover.

NCAA March Madness 06[edit]

NCAA March Madness 06 is the 2005 installment in the NCAA March Madness series. It was released on October 12, 2005 for PlayStation 2 and Xbox.[7] Former Oklahoma City Thunder player Raymond Felton is featured on the cover.

NCAA March Madness 07[edit]

NCAA March Madness 07 is the 2006 installment in the NCAA March Madness series. It was released on January 17, 2007 for PlayStation 2 and Xbox 360. Former Gonzaga player Adam Morrison is featured on the cover.

NCAA March Madness 08[edit]

NCAA March Madness 08 is the 2007 installment in the NCAA March Madness series. It was released on December 11, 2007 for PlayStation 3, PlayStation 2, and Xbox 360. Former University of Texas and current Brooklyn Nets forward Kevin Durant is featured on the cover. It was the only March Madness game to debut for the PlayStation 3 until the name change.

NCAA Basketball 09[edit]

NCAA Basketball 09
Developer(s)EA Canada
Publisher(s)EA Sports
Platform(s)PlayStation 3, PlayStation 2, Xbox 360
Release
Genre(s)Sports
Mode(s)Single-player, multiplayer, multiplayer online

NCAA Basketball 09 is the 2008 installment in the NCAA College Basketball series. It was released on November 17, 2008 for the PlayStation 3, PlayStation 2, and Xbox 360. The cover featured former UCLA and current Cleveland Cavaliers forward Kevin Love.

Moneyline Ncaa Basketball Schedule

NCAA Basketball 10[edit]

NCAA Basketball 10
Developer(s)EA Canada
Publisher(s)EA Sports
Platform(s)PlayStation 3, Xbox 360
ReleaseNovember 18, 2009
Genre(s)Basketball simulation
Mode(s)Multiplayer
single-player

NCAA Basketball 10 is a basketballvideo game developed by EA Canada and published by EA Sports. It was released November 17, 2009 on Xbox 360 and PlayStation 3.[8] Former University of Oklahoma and current Detroit Pistons forward Blake Griffin was featured on the cover.

The NCAA Basketball series was discontinued after NCAA Basketball 10.


Cover Athletes[edit]

List of Standard Cover Star
GameCover Star
NameTeamPositionNBA Draft Pick
NCAA March Madness 98Tim DuncanWake ForestPower forward1st Overall (1997)
NCAA March Madness 99Antawn JamisonNorth Carolina4th Overall (1998)
NCAA March Madness 2000Steve FrancisMarylandPoint guard2nd Overall (1999)
NCAA March Madness 2001Kenyon MartinCincinnatiPower forward1st Overall (2000)
NCAA March Madness 2002Shane BattierDukeSmall forward6th Overall (2001)
NCAA March Madness 2003Drew GoodenKansasPower forward4th Overall (2002)
NCAA March Madness 2004Carmelo AnthonySyracuseSmall forward3rd Overall (2003)
NCAA March Madness 2005Emeka OkaforConnecticutCenter2nd Overall (2004)
NCAA March Madness 06Raymond FeltonNorth CarolinaPoint guard5th Overall (2005)
NCAA March Madness 07Adam MorrisonGonzagaSmall forward3rd Overall (2006)
NCAA March Madness 08Kevin DurantTexas2nd Overall (2007)
NCAA Basketball 09Kevin LoveUCLAPower forward5th Overall (2008)
NCAA Basketball 10Blake GriffinOklahoma1st Overall (2009)

Discontinuation of NCAA Basketball Series[edit]

The video game series had used names and likenesses of college athletes, threatening their amateur statuses. [9] The amateur rules of collegiate sports overruled any claim that the athletes had towards compensation based on the Likeness Licensing Litigation; there is a contractual agreement made when scholarships are given out to do this. [10]

External links[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^'NCAA Basketball Series Officially Canceled'. Retrieved 10 February 2010.
  2. ^IGN staff (December 18, 1998). 'Madness Ensues Early'. IGN. Ziff Davis. Retrieved September 9, 2020.
  3. ^IGN staff (December 7, 2000). 'Hoop It Up'. IGN. Ziff Davis. Retrieved September 13, 2020.
  4. ^IGN staff (January 9, 2002). 'EA Ships NCAA March Madness'. IGN. Ziff Davis. Retrieved September 15, 2020.
  5. ^Good, Owen S. (March 17, 2012). 'Ten Disasters Under the Covers of Sports Video Games'. Kotaku. Gizmodo Media Group. Retrieved September 18, 2020.
  6. ^Adams, David (November 16, 2004). 'NCAA [March] Madness Marches Out'. IGN. Ziff Davis. Retrieved September 19, 2020.
  7. ^Adams, Dan (October 12, 2005). 'NCAA March Madness 06 Hits Shelves'. IGN. Ziff Davis. Retrieved September 19, 2020.
  8. ^'Release Date Info'. Archived from the original on 2009-06-29. Retrieved 2010-02-10.
  9. ^Moore, Mary Catherine (October 2010). 'There is No 'I' in NCAA: Why College Sports Video Games Do Not Violate Collage Athletes' Rights of Publicity Such to Entitle Them to Compensation for Use of Their Likenesses'. Journal of Intellectual Property Law. 18 (1): 277.
  10. ^Moore, Mary Catherine (October 2010). 'There is No 'I' in NCAA: Why College Sports Video Games Do Not Violate Collage Athletes' Rights of Publicity Such to Entitle Them to Compensation for Use of Their Likenesses'. Journal of Intellectual Property Law. 18 (1): 293.
Retrieved from 'https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=NCAA_Basketball_series&oldid=1005019725'

How Can I be successful at College Basketball gaming?

The best way to bet on college basketball and win is to specialize in a select few conferences and bet lines right when they open. That way, you can get the best of the numbers.

You can use our power ratings to create your own point spread projections. Be sure to follow local beat writers and team accounts for your selected conferences to acquire more information than the betting market and sportsbooks.

Explain a point spread in college basketball odds?

Point spreads are a bet on the margin of victory in a game. One team will be favored because they're the stronger team, and they need to win by more than the point spread to win the bet. The other team needs to lose by that number of points, or win the game, to win the bet.

Let's say UCLA is a -9.5 favorite over Indiana in the NCAA Tournament. UCLA needs to win by 10 points or more to win the bet. If Indiana loses by 1-9 points, or wins the game, it wins the bet for its bettors.

Moneyline ncaa basketball game

Ncaa Basketball Moneyline Picks

What is a Total bet in college basketball?

The total is a bet on the combined points scored by both teams in a single game. As a bettor, you're not trying to guess the number exactly -- you're trying to predict whether it will go over or under the preset amount. That's why a total is also called an over/under.

Let's say the total in that UCLA-Indiana game is 144 -- an average college basketball total. If Villanova wins 80-70 (150 total points), the game goes over. If UCLA wins 70-60 (130 total points), the game goes under.

Explain how college basketball moneylines work?

A moneyline is a wager that forces you to pick the winner of a game, but the odds are adjusted for each team's ability.

American moneyline odds are based on winning $100. A favorite will have a minus sign in front, and that number represents how much you need to risk to win $100. The underdog will have a plus sign, and that number represents how much you will win if you risk $100.

UCLA might be -400 against Indiana if it's about 10 points better on the point spread. To win $100 betting on UCLA, you must risk $400. You'll get your $400 back, plus $100, if UCLA wins as expected. Indiana will be a corresponding +300, let's say. If you risk $100, you'll win $300 (plus your original $100 back) if the Hoosiers pull off the upset.

American odds scale up and down based on how much you want to bet, so it's usually easier to think of them in cents rather than dollars -- $4 wins $1 on UCLA, $1 wins $3 on Indiana.