Dallas Mavs Daily Fantasy Value, Betting Report – February 19

Written by:
Ean Lamb
Published on:
Feb/16/2015
Dallas Mavs Daily Fantasy Value, Betting Report – February 19

The Dallas Mavericks daily fantasy value and betting report as we enter into the second half of the 2015 NBA season is examined by Gambling911.com, the official sponsor of the first ever Daily Fantasy Sports Expo in Miami Beach.  This is just one of the many new additions to the Gambling911.com site to compliment the second half of the season that we hope will make you a winner whether you’re betting on games or playing daily fantasy NBA.

Dallas comes into this game with a 36-19 record Straight Up.  They are right at the .500 mark Against The Spread. They have won five of their last ten while covering the spread in four.  Update February 17 4 pm EST: Amar'e Stouemire has committed to joining the Mavericks according to league sources.  He was officially waived from the Knicks over the weekend.  This will change the dynamics of the team.

The Mavs will play Oklahoma City on the road.  They then return home to play Houston, Charlotte and Toronto.  They return to the road to play Atlanta. 

Here are your projected salaries and target fantasy points to make value (vary between sites):

Monte Ellis (SG) $7.7K – 35 fantasy points

Chandler Parsons (SM) $6K – 30 fantasy points

Dirk Nowitzki (PF) $6.2K – 30 fantasy points

Jose Juan Barea (PG) $4.6K – 24 fantasy points

Dirk Nowitzki – Atlanta has struggled against the power forward position of late and Nowitzki is one of the best at a very enticing price.  He failed to make value against the Hawks the last time he played them.

Overall, the next five teams Dallas will face do not permit for any enticing fantasy value.

- Ean Lamb, Gambling911.com

Basketball Odds News

Sixers? Knicks? Who Can Challenge Boston in the East this Season?

As the new NBA season gets underway, there is most certainly a sense that the Boston Celtics are the team to beat once again. The 18-time champions really took an “if it’s not broken, don’t try to fix it” policy in the offseason, and it’s hard to argue with the tactic.

Syndicate