Doc Moseman is the owner and founder of Doc's Sports Services and is known as one of the greatest sports information minds in the nation. Doc started the company in the early 1970s and has since cemented his legacy with nearly four decades of successful sports handicapping. He is most well known for his Big Ten Game of the Year, which covered the spread 19 years in a row. During this time, he moved the Las Vegas line as much as a touchdown for his big game and he became known as the guy from Wisconsin that the bookmakers respected as much as any handicapper in history. Doc continues to lead the Doc's Sports team and is still involved in the day-to-day operation of the company he started with a telephone and a notepad back in the 1970s. He contributes regular articles during the football season, providing readers with his unique insight into the world of sports information.
Jeremy Martin is the lead editor and content manager for Doc's Sports. A graduate of UNLV, he has been covering sports for more than two decades. Martin has had an interest in sports handicapping since his teens and is thrilled to have made his career in an industry as exciting as this one. Martin manages Doc's Sports writers and he is responsible for the content on our Web site, which is widely considered the best in the industry.
Robert Ferringo is one of the lead writers for Doc's Sports Services. His unique style provides expert analysis from the perspective of one of the nation's top handicappers, and he does so in a way that is highly entertaining. Robert graduated from Syracuse University and was formerly a sports writer in New York, covering both college and professional teams. He is the lead writer for Doc¹s Sports Blog, as well as having syndicated his features to more than 50 Web sites on the Internet. Robert's weekly NFL Power Rankings are a must-read for anyone that wagers on the gridiron, and his insights into trends and systems through the major sports are solid reading for all sports fans.
Max Powers is one of the finest minds in the sports information industry. He has been with Doc's Sports since 2004 and has become well known for his opinions on a vast array of subjects from the sports world. He traveled to Arizona State for college, but returned to his Midwestern roots and currently works out of our main office in Wisconsin. He specializes in the Big Ten Conference and writes weekly articles during the football and basketball seasons. Despite going to Arizona State, he has been a lifelong ‘cheesehead,’ consistently rooting for the Badgers, Packers, and Brewers. He has developed a great readership of sports fans and his columns tend to pinpoint the exact moment in the game that caused the game to be won or lost.
T.O. Whenham writes all day long, and almost all of it is about sports handicapping. He lives in Western Canada but he doesn't much like hockey. That's a criminal offense in Canada, so he is always on the lookout for the Mounties. His love of sports is guided by a few simple principles - Michigan is the best at everything regardless of what their record may be, horse racing is the best sport ever, college is almost always better than the pros, and Nolan Ryan is the greatest player in the history of sports. When it comes to sports handicapping he favors a slow and steady, value-driven approach to success, but he has a weakness for longshots with a chance.
Alan Matthews has been a sports journalist for nearly 20 years in the Sunshine State. Whereas once he thought the Internet would be the death of his career – i.e. in newspapers – it instead has proven to be quite useful. Mathews has a degree in English, but he still swears that typing was the most useful class he ever took. He is a big Chicago sports fan as well as of the “U”, although Nevin Shapiro may change that allegiance if not kill the program.
Nick Tolomeo has covered the world of sports for Doc’s Sports Services since the summer of 2008. He is a graduate of West Virginia University and a lifelong resident of Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, the “City of Champions”. As a resident of the Steel City, Nick has always been around successful sports teams, except the Pittsburgh Pirates. His weekly Sports Betting: A-Z is an intersection of sports, gambling and entertainment. Nick thinks the most electrifying two minutes in sports is betting on the ‘over/under’ of the Super Bowl “National Anthem”. His favorite teams are the Pittsburgh Steelers, the West Virginia Mountaineers and whoever is playing the Pirates. He enjoys college football more than the pros, but nothing beats high school football, especially in Western Pennsylvania.
Christopher Shepard has been a sports predictions enthusiast since the Knicks drafted Patrick Ewing. His favorite sports teams are the teams that cash his ticket (obviously), whether they are the Red Sox or the Yankees. Chris has an MS in Journalism and worked for years in the low rent world of community journalism before combining his passion for sports, team mascots, statistics, and writing. While Chris writes about all sports, as well as popular culture, he specializes in tennis, horse racing, and NASCAR. When he is not handicapping and writing pulp stories he teaches English at University of Phoenix and lives in metro-west Boston with his wife, two sons and two cats.
Darin Zank has been hooked on sports handicapping since the day he picked a winning three-team NFL parlay card for his dad at the age of 12. A graduate of the University of Wisconsin-Eau Claire's School of Journalism, Darin has worked as a reporter for several newspapers in Wisconsin and Minnesota, and he has been writing about the gaming side of sports for 15 years. A die-hard Green Bay Packers fan, Darin prefers statistically-based handicapping theories rather than those that involve emotions. This is one reason why he actually bet against the Packers in Super Bowl XLV.
David Schwab is one of the newest members of the Doc’s Sports writing team, and he runs his own content-providing company, Blue Pointe Advisors. After toiling in the sales and marketing fields for nearly 20 years, Schwab decided to return to what he loved – covering the sporting world. Schwab specializes in college football and the NFL, but he writes about all sports and he has a real passion for studying the odds.