| Betting totals in college football is very different than | | | | can score. The last example deals with overtime. |
| betting totals in the NFL. I'll give you one example. In | | | | In the pros, first one to score in overtime wins and if no |
| college football, the home team usually dictates the | | | | one scores, it's a tie. Not in college. Each teams gets a |
| pace of the game. | | | | chance to score. Both teams' score, we go to another |
| This happens in the pros as well but more so in the | | | | overtime and so on and so on. You could have as |
| college ranks. If the home team is a run and gun team, | | | | many overtimes as it takes to win. |
| they will make the other team run and gun as well. | | | | There are no ties in college. The team with the most |
| Example number 2: The clock stops after every first | | | | points wins no matter how long it takes! One problem |
| down. More time, more points! In the pros, the clock is | | | | with totals in college though is sometimes they are |
| always running even when they go out of bounds. Not | | | | hard to find. It's not like NFL where every game has a |
| in college though, go out of bounds stop the clock. | | | | total. In college there are quite a few totals, but not all |
| Again, the more time you have the more points you | | | | of them have them. |