Cantor Gaming

Quite possibly the most objective way to analyze an NFL schedule is to use Cantor Gaming’s week-by-week point spreads, calculate the win odds and then arrive at a projected record for each team.

In this post, you’ll find schedules for all 32 NFL teams with point spreads, win odds, projected records and win totals. Feel free to bookmark this post as we’ll do our best to keep it updated throughout the summer as the point spreads change.

Cantor Gaming became the first Las Vegas sportsbook to release NFL win totals on Friday, and while many of the numbers were close to projections, there were several that weren’t.

Read on for a full list of totals and a few observations.

Depending on your perspective, the Green Bay Packers either have a highly inflated win total for the 2013 NFL season, or they’re vastly underrated in Cantor Gaming’s point spreads for every week.

Why? Allow us to explain.

Cantor Gaming—which operates numerous Las Vegas sportsbooks—released point spreads for almost every game (they left Week 17 out of it) in the 2013 NFL regular season.

Cantor Gaming became the first Las Vegas sportsbook to release college football win totals on Friday, and it took a few interesting positions on a handful of teams.

One of the most intriguing teams? Kansas State. The Wildcats went 10-3 last season but have an over/under of 7.5 this year, with the under juiced.

Cantor Gaming released 2012 win totals for all 32 NFL teams on Wednesday morning, which felt more like a formality than anything considering the Vegas conglomerate released point spreads for every NFL game of the 2012 season two weeks ago.

Nevertheless, Cantor had to make it official, so keep reading for all the numbers.

Cantor Gaming — which operates numerous Las Vegas sportsbooks — released point spreads for almost every game (they left Week 17 out of it) in the 2012 NFL regular season on Wednesday morning.

These are sure to be a great distraction for the rest of your Wednesday plans. Have a look.

The Palms in Las Vegas unveiled its brand new multi-million dollar sportsbook on Friday, and the early returns seem positive.

Here’s a first look at the book, which is operated by Cantor Gaming.

Last month, USA Today’s Danny Sheridan made claims that no Las Vegas sportsbook would take his action. Sheridan says he wants to bet $100,000 on college football and $200,000 on NFL games.

Earlier this month, at the MIT Sloan Conference, Cantor Gaming’s Matthew Holt said his book has never refused a player’s action and said they’d willingly take $1 million bets. So, who’s lying?