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Feature
Dan
Gordon
The
6 Big Myths of Sports Betting (continued)
Year after year, NFL bettors go
into the season filled with confidence and end up losing. How can
this happen?
Big
Myth #1
To Win, You Should Bet the Better Team
Statistically, the average bettor tends to bet favorites. That is
a big mistake, and heres why.
First,
the average bettor tends to overstate the relative strength of the
leagues better players and teams. What pro handicappers know
is that there is actually tremendous parity in the league, with
not that much difference between the best player at a position and
the worst.
When
a team of slightly worse players is more motivated than a team of
slightly better players an outright upset is possible. Most certainly,
its possible for the "inferior" team to cover the
point spread.
Second,
the point spread tends to nullify any obvious scrimmage edge (skill
or power advantage) a team has over its opponent. In the 1999 and
2000 seasons, for example, there were 167 games in which the point
spread was seven points or more (games where one teams advantage
over another was perceived to be sizable). While the underdog won
just 36 of these games outright (21.6 percent), the underdog covered
the point spread in 83 of the games (while tying it in six): a success
rate of 51.6 percent.
Third,
by betting an underdog, you have an important element of game strategy
on your side. NFL teams do their best to win a game. Therefore,
in the last few minutes of a game, a team that is leading seldom
takes much risk to score more points. Instead, it concentrates on
hanging on to its lead. The team that is losing, on the other hand,
usually tries to score until the bitter end. If a bettor has taken
a favorite that is ahead but not covering with five minutes or less
to go, that bettor is in trouble.
In
20 years of handicapping the NFL, I have yet to come across a long-term
winning bettor who does not bet mostly underdogs.
Big
Myth #2
The "Fix"
The "fix" is a widespread belief among amateur bettors.
Every now and again, accusations of a fix even make it into respected
books and magazines.
I dont
believe that NFL games are fixed and heres why. First, over
the past 25 years, I have known a number of handicappers, including
myself, who have consistently won money betting the NFL. If the
games werent honest, we couldnt have won. Handicapping
just couldnt overcome players who were dumping or shaving
points. Second, in order to fix a game, two events would have to
occur. The fixer would have to get important players involved, and
be able to bet enough to overcome the payments he has made to the
crooked players.
Over
the last 15 years, NFL salaries have skyrocketed. Important players,
who would have to be in on the fix for it to work, make well into
the millions each season. They make even more from endorsements
and advertisements. It would cost a lot of money to get to such
players. And you could never fix a game with one player alone; at
least a few would have to bought.
The
fixer would then have to bet enough on the game to turn a profit
on the deal. In order to bet this big he would have to use hundreds
or thousands of bookmakers.
And
bookmakers would definitely notice when they saw this tidal wave
of money coming in on one team. As the money came in from all over
the country, bookmakers would be in a race to lay off the money
with other bookmakers. When huge money comes in from seemingly nowhere
it is called unnatural money, and bookmakers are always suspicious
about it. With multiple millions suddenly coming in, suspicion would
be rampant.
When
bookmakers see unnatural money, they take games off the board until
they know the reason for it. And there is always a reasonable explanation.
Sometimes its an injury that comes to light. Sometimes a big
name in betting likes the team.
Bookmakers,
who themselves depend on accurate handicapping, know that the only
way they can survive is for NFL games to be honest. Coups, such
as the ones that have tarnished college basketball from time to
time, could wipe them out. Bookmakers would be the first to turn
in anyone who tried to fix a game.
Believers
in fixes also point to referees as possible culprits. Since referees
make far less money than players and exert great control over games,
this could be feasible except for two things.
First,
the NFL does a very close background check on potential referees.
Before anyone is allowed to ref NFL games, a lot of solid sources
have to consider him bribe-proof.
Second,
sources in Las Vegas keep records on which referees work which games
and correlate the data with any big money that comes in on a game.
If any suspicious correlation between a particular ref and unnatural
money turned up, it would be reported immediately to the NFL.
Dont
use the fix as an excuse to lose. Instead, get to work on your handicapping.
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