The Pinnacle Pulse Inside the Wagering Line
PinnacleSports.com
Simon Noble
8/30/2007
The Pinnacle Pulse, a column highlighting betting strategy and line
movement on key games. In this edition, Simon Noble of
PinnacleSports.com
discusses handicapping college basketball games before discussing line
movement on a variety of betting options at
PinnacleSports.com.
He then gives insight into the early line movement on this
weekend’s big games. The Pinnacle Pulse Thursday 30th August
2007
Pinnacle Pulse: Issue 76
The Inside Wagering Line from Pinnacle Sports Book by Hobbes
Recognizing Value - the Key to Gaining a Gambling Edge
Risk is
part of everyday life, more so than most people probably realize. From
crossing the road to the more obvious financial decisions such as buying
a house, or starting a business, all involve varying amounts of
uncertainty which must be considered. Gambling is the purest expression
of risk, yet even when presented with a seemingly simple choice of
potential outcomes for an unknown event, such as a football match, many
bettors display a worrying ignorance of the concept of value and the
fundamental mathematical principals involved. In simple terms,
if a bettor cannot recognize 'value' they will never be a long term
winner.
Take a
look at this seemingly simple mathematical puzzle, known as the Monty
Hall paradox (named after the host of 'Let's Make a Deal', a popular US
show in the 60's & 70's which formed the basis of the poser):
An
unbiased game-show host has placed a car behind one of three doors.
There is a goat behind each of the other doors. You have no prior
knowledge that allows you to distinguish among the doors. 'First you
point toward a door,' he says. 'Then I'll open one of the other doors to
reveal a goat. After I've shown you the goat, you make your final choice
whether to stick with your initial choice of doors, or to switch to the
remaining door. You win whatever is behind the door.' You begin by
pointing to door number 1. The host shows you that door number 3 has a
goat.
Do you
gain value and see your chances of winning the car increase by switching
to Door 2 or do you stay with Door 1 as it has an equal chance with only
two doors left to choose from? When this question was posed in Parade
magazine, 10,000 readers complained that the published answer was wrong
- including several maths professors.
The
assumption of 'equal probability', while being intuitively seductive, is
wrong. The simple answer is to always switch doors. The car is behind
one of the two closed doors, but you have no way of knowing which. Most
contestants intuitively see no advantage in switching and assume that
now there are only two doors, each must have an equal probability of
revealing a car. In fact, your chances of winning the car actually
double by switching to the door the host offers. If you switch, you gain
value as theoretically you now have a 2/3 chance of winning the car. If
you stayed with your original selection you have just a 1/3 chance of
winning.
The
principle is underlined by increasing the number of doors to 100. If 99
doors have a goat behind them and only one has a prize, if the player
picks a door and then the host opens 98 of the other doors that were all
shown to contain goats and then gives the player the opportunity to
switch, the intelligent player would switch. The reason being that on
average, in 99 out of 100 times the other door will contain the prize,
as 99 out of 100 times the player first picked a door with a goat.
The Hole-In-One Gang
An excellent example of how this concept applies to betting was
demonstrated by two sharp punters - Paul Simmons and John Carter - the
self-styled Hole-In-One-Gang. In the summer of 1991, after studying the
form, they calculated the chances of any given golfer in a tournament
hitting a hole-in-one at around 50%. So they toured the UK placing
maximum bets on the chances of a hole-in-one being scored by any player
at a major that year. Lazy bookmakers who didn't take the time to study
the statistical likelihood put a finger in the air, and quoted amazing
odds with 100-1 not uncommon.
That
year, there were hole-in-one's scored at 3 of the 4 majors and the
pair's winnings were reputed to be around £1million. Although it is
difficult to put exact odds on a hole-in-one, it is clear that it is
nowhere near 100/1. Due to the tradition of buying everyone in the
clubhouse a drink after a successful hole-in-one, you can now buy
insurance against it happening. Most insurers would probably refer to
Francis Scheid's (retired chairman of Boston University Maths Dept) 2000
study for Golf Digest. The magazine has kept hole-in-one stats since the
1950's and Scheid put the odds of a Tour player scoring a hole-in-one at
3,000-1. You can make a rough calculation for an average event like this
week's Johnnie Walker Championship at Gleneagles.
4 (short
holes)*156 (players before cut)*2(rounds) PLUS 4*70 (players after the
cut) * 2
= (1,248+560) 1,808 attempts against an average frequency of 1 in 3,000.
Probability Yes: 1,808/3,000=0.6026 or a 60% chance of occurring with
true odds of 1.66
Probability No: 1,192/3,000=0.3973 or a 39% chance of occurring with
true odds of 2.52
The
hole-in-one gang were getting exceptional value on their bets playing at
odds of 100/1 when in reality the chance of a hole-in-one occurring
using Scheid's figures was no more than a 2/3 (1.666) shot at true odds.
Such
notions are all too common mistakes in gambling when bettors and
bookmakers frequently act against their best interests. It doesn't
matter if it's a game show, playing the lottery or sports betting,
understanding and finding value is the key to profit. Like the Monty
Hall question, successful betting requires the skill to understand
whether the odds offered on an event represent the statistical
probability of that event occurring - if it doesn't then you will have
an edge and gain value.
Why is a Bookmaker telling me this?
PinnacleSports.com's philosophy is that if we can improve the
sophistication of players everywhere, more bettors will recognize the
benefit of our unique pricing model, which offers up to 60% better odds.
PinnacleSports.com benefits from educating its players, as it is sharp
bettors who firm up our early prices on all markets offered, that allows
us to provide the highest limits and most competitive odds around.
About PinnacleSports.com
PinnacleSports.com is the Internet’s largest sports betting site serving
customers in more than 80 countries worldwide. Founded in 1998,
PinnacleSports.com was the first sports book to introduce reduced margin
wagering using a -105 pricing model that gives bettors up to 50% better
value on wagers than traditional bookmakers. With low minimum bet
requirements and the highest maximum limits on the Web,
PinnacleSports.com has earned an industry leading reputation for
providing consistent value to the player, professional customer service
and the quickest payouts online. Fully licensed and regulated in Curacao
and the United Kingdom, the company offers a secure environment for
sports betting, racing and casino gaming.
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