The Week 5 opening lines dropped on Sunday afternoon, and you have a short amount of time to take advantage of the action before the public money starts rolling in and the lines ultimately shift by Monday.

I’m on a bit of a roll after going 13-for-18 in my Against the Spread picks the last two weeks and judging by the opening lines, I see an advantage in these two games:

Missouri at LSU (-14)

Putting all the issues with coaching transitions on the Bayou aside for the moment, LSU has certainly not played well enough to be a two-touchdown favorite over arguably the biggest surprise team in the SEC this year. Despite turning the ball over five times against Georgia, Missouri was in control of that one until the closing moments of the game. Had they had one fewer turnover, the line in this game would be drastically different, and Mizzou would enter this game with a 3-1 record.

It may also surprise you that Missouri has the No. 1 passing offense in the SEC after four games, and after throwing the ball an SEC-high 170 times, Mizzou has only given up one sack. The Tigers also have six receivers with at least 120 receiving yards on the season. This isn’t a one-dimensional offense either as Missouri is averaging nearly 180 yards on the ground, too.

On the flip side, LSU limps into this game. Against Auburn last week, LSU was down to one healthy cornerback, running back Leonard Fournette (already not at 100 percent) appeared to have aggravated an existing injury in the closing moments of the game and quarterback Danny Etling walked out of the game with a gash on his head after having his bell rung.

With an offense capable of putting up points via explosive plays, take Mizzou and the two touchdowns while you can get them. The advantage at opening belongs to Missouri.

Tennessee (-4) at Georgia

This line could be an accurate indicator of the final score of this game. The last five in this series have been decided by 8 points or less (the five-year average in this series is 5.6), and the all-time series stands at 22-21-2 to Tennessee after winning the 2015 contest. All that to say these two play each other as close as can be expected from two SEC East rivals.

However, Tennessee’s epic comeback over Florida was the most-watched game on TV last weekend and very well could lead to more public money coming in on the Vols. Combine that with the nationally televised poor performance of Georgia and true freshman quarterback Jacob Eason on the road at Ole Miss this weekend, and the line should shift in Tennessee’s favor early in the week.

Struggles on the road for a young team, led by an even younger quarterback, were to be expected for realistic fans of Georgia. Expect Kirby Smart’s team to rally upon return to the friendly confines of Athens and give Tennessee a game this weekend. The Vols won’t be able to attack the Dawgs in the passing game in the same manner of Ole Miss and will need to rely on the ground game to get points, something UGA should have more effectiveness in stopping.

If Georgia can play a mistake-free, defensive-style game, Georgia may be able to win this one outright this weekend. The danger for the Bulldogs will likely come from Tennessee’s defensive line, which is on par with Ole Miss’ and could shut down the running game as well as Ole Miss, Missouri and Nicholls State were all able to do.

Tennessee should win this game, but if Georgia hangs around and jumps on the Vols early, the Dawgs should at the very least cover a touchdown spread. If you like Tennessee to win this game outright, take advantage of the line before it gets any larger, if and when it gets to six or seven, the value will flip to Georgia. The advantage at opening is with Tennessee, but should it get to a touchdown, the value flips to Georgia.