| ESPN.com: Page 2 | [Print without images] |
It has been this way from the start. Where is the confident precision of
Duke last year and the year before? Where is the fabled speed of UCLA, or
the kinky muscle of Stanford? We miss these things. Nobody is going to get
excited about Kansas-Maryland or Indiana-Oklahoma -- especially when they are
playing lame basketball. These are routine neo-annual clashes between
high-profile, big-budget basketball programs, like Ford vs. General Motors.
They are embarrassing.
Ed Bradley called on Friday and tried to bully me into another one of my
famous doomed bets on Kentucky, but he failed. "Never in hell," I told him. "Not unless I get 11 points." That is precisely the spread that I
predicted last week in this column, and I refused to take anything less.
Indeed. This is what my new maturity has done for me. I have learned to
never make hysterical last-minute bets on big-time sporting events -- unless
it is necessary, rather than lose the action.
That is exactly the kind of rat-brained, junkie thinking that makes gambling
dangerous. You bet. There is a gigantic, life-and-death difference between
betting the underdog plus nine points and the underdog plus 10 or 11. It
is the difference between winning and losing, between victory and defeat --
between fun and pain, on rainy nights in some cowboy towns -- so you want to
be thinking clearly when you start dealing in numbers like One or Two.
The final spread in the Kentucky-Maryland game, for instance, was an evil,
humiliating 10 -- which would have been perfect, if I had stuck with my
original eleven. But I didn't. I allowed giddiness to take over my
brain, just before tipoff, which caused me to get mushy and settle for nine.
How long, O lord, how long?
| ***** ***** ***** |
![]() | |
| Only Jayhawks and savvy gamblers will be jumping after the tourney's over. |
| BUY THE BOOK | |
| Click here to buy Hunter S. Thompson's new book, Fear and Loathing in America : The Brutal Odyssey of an Outlaw Journalist. |