By Ted Sevransky
...and that every recreational bettor should learn
Most casual bettors don’t make a profit from their sportsbetting hobby.
This includes bettors who are relatively sharp as well as those who couldn’t
pick a winner if their lives depended on it. That’s not a horrible thing
either if every bettor won, sportsbooks would be going belly up far more
often than they do, and bettors would run out of places to play. And many bettors
really don’t care very much about earning a long term profit. They like
to have some action on games as a form of recreation or excitement, not as an
investment decision. Many of these type of bettors are far more interested in
TV games than anything else, and they tend to bet more on bigger games, like
the Super Bowl or NCAA Tournament.
Much of the industry jargon considers money management
as important as picking winners, if not more so. And
it certainly is. But throwing around buzzwords like money
management and describing esoteric concepts like isolate
a percentage of bankroll and positive expectation
bets really doesn’t help the fortunes of
most recreational bettors. If you, personally, are content
with betting for entertainment purposes only than this
essay will serve little purpose. But if you wish to be
a successful sports bettor, even as an amateur, and earn
a profit from your betting over an extended period of
time, here are some tips that should help you in that
quest.
1) Don’t bet into bad numbers. Professional handicappers
recognize the value of the half point. On the average
college basketball Saturday, for example, there are at
least dozen games that are won or lost against the
spread by a point or less. If he bet on the game, the
pro bettor will be on the right side of just about every
one of those decisions. He’ll either getting the
push when others lost, or he’ll get the win when
others pushed. (I use he because, to be
honest, every professional sports bettor that I know
is a man - this is a very segregated industry in
that regard). The pro will take the extra time to shop
around for the best number at multiple sportsbooks. He’ll
have accounts that are funded in enough places to ensure
that when he finds the line that he is looking for, he’ll
be able to place the bet. And he’ll have an idea
of which direction the line is likely to move, enabling
him to bet early or late, depending on which time offers
an advantageous number. The pro wins by a half point
far more often than he loses by the hook. Making a modest
20 bets a week (1000 a year, a number that is on the
low side for most professionals), it is not unusual to
gain an extra 10 or 15 wins a year and another 10 or
15 pushes just by betting into good numbers. Assuming
the bettor is betting a modest 2% of his bankroll on
any given play, those 20 or 30 favorable decisions translates
into a 40-60% swing in his return on his sportsbetting
investment. That’s not chump change, folks, it’s
hard earned profit gained one half point at a time!
2) Make more straight
bets and fewer parlays. Professional
bettors make the vast majority of their bets as straight
bets, not as parlays. For amateurs, the number is closer
to 50:50, and there are many, many amateurs who rarely
straight bet at all. But the straight bet is the pro’s
bread and butter. Professionals are satisfied with the
return on investment from a 3-2 day, or a 12-8 week.
They are in it for the long haul, not always looking
for the quick score that parlays provide. Amateurs are
often lured by the big paydays that winning parlays provide,
conveniently forgetting that a season largely consisting
of steady 2-1 type days will be even more profitable
than the big hits that parlays provide even in a good
overall season. Straight bettors never curse the 4-1
days – when they pick more winners than losers – because
they make a profit every time, while parlay bettors don’t.
There’s a reason that every sportsbook in Las Vegas
has their parlay cards prominently displayed – frankly,
parlays pay the bills at most joints here in town. That’s
not to say pro bettors never go for the longshot score,
but when they do, they do it for a considerably lesser
percentage of their bankroll, and they do it in conjunction
with their straight bets, not in lieu of them.
3) Concentrate more
on box scores and less on final scores. It’s easy to look at the final score of
a game and make all kinds of false assumptions. This
team got killed, that team gave em all they could
handle. But without reading game recaps and looking at
box scores, you really have no idea of what took place,
and what kind of current form the teams you are examining
are in. It’s key to handicap games again, after
the games are over. What happened that you expected to
happen, and what was a surprise? Which things are likely
to repeat themselves, and which are something of an anomaly?
Here’s an example. The Pistons play the Bulls at
home, as nine point favorites, but win by only seven,
97-90. But looking at the box score, it’s clear
that Detroit dominated for most of the game. The Pistons
won the rebounding battle and forced the Bulls into turnovers.
They led by double digits at halftime and after three
quarters. Bu the Bulls hit some late shots in garbage
time and made the final score closer than the game was.
On that same night, the Raptors are nine point favorites
to the Nuggets, and win by that same 97-90 margin. But
the box score here indicates a whole different story.
The Raptors trailed throughout this game, but got hot
in the 4th quarter to steal the win. Toronto made an
uncharacteristic 27-30 from the free throw line, and
hit ten three pointers, while Denver shot just 4-19 in
the 4th quarter. By examining the box scores you can
recognize that the Pistons are in better form than the
Raptors and/or the Nuggets are in better form than the
Bulls, making your future wagers involving those teams
more likely to be successful, even though the final scores
of the two games were exactly the same.
4) Take advantage of
value. Linesmakers have a pretty
good idea of which way the money is going to flow once
they hang their opening numbers. And amateur bettors
are a big part of this, falling in love with public teams,
betting them over and over again. In college sports,
these public teams are usually in the Top
25, from a major conference – well known schools.
In the pro sports, they are the hottest teams, teams
at the top of their respective divisions or conferences.
The professional bettor will recognize this public bias,
notice that the lines are inflated for many of the best
teams in the country, and either bet against many of
the good teams or pass on their games entirely. Instead,
the pro’s concentrate much more on backing the good
but not great type of squads, teams that have
fallen underneath the public’s collective radar,
as well as fading some of the mediocre type squads that
are in poor current form. The pros bet against Top 25
clubs far more often than they back ‘em – that’s
where the value is, catching six points with an underdog
that should only be getting four. It’s equally
important to recognize when the linesmakers have priced
you out of a play. Kentucky and Arizona have been red
hot in college basketball for the last couple of months,
and they are the top two teams in the whole country right
now. While few bettors of any ilk like to step in front
of juggernauts like these, they also recognize that the
time to back these two schools has come and gone – there’s
no value on their respective sides. Both clubs had great
records against the spread at one point this season,
but neither is above .500 vs. the number here in February.
5) Be smart when betting
your streaks. It’s one
of the most common mistakes that amateurs make, and it’s
quite possibly the most costly. They press their losses,
raising the stakes to get back to even off a losing week/streak.
Pro bettors know that there will be times when you lose
more than you win. Hopefully, those times are few and
far between, but inevitably, they will happen to everybody.
Rather than raising the stakes during those times when
you are having a bad run, the pro lowers his stakes,
conserving bankroll while waiting for things to turn
around. There’s no double or nothing attitude
on Monday Night Football games for the pro. Conversely,
the pro knows that winning streaks are the time to press
your bets, not the time to pull back with a conservative
approach to their recent profit. When a ‘capper
is in good form and good rhythm, with his read on the
games in solid form and the bounces generally falling
in his direction, he’s not afraid to raise his
stakes a bit, making larger plays when the percentages
are in his favor (positive expectation wagers) It sounds
so basic – don’t chase losses, ride your
winning streaks, but few amateur bettors are able to
maintain an even keel during periods of higher rates
than the norm of both successes and of failures.
Source: www.whocovers.com