Hopefully this game will fire us up for the ASU game (ASU going down to the wire with Stanford as of now)
Johnfox said:
Hopefully this game will fire us up for the ASU game (ASU going down to the wire with Stanford as of now)
hbear777 said:
FOr the 1 millionth time-vegas doesn't know anything, don't care to know anything except gauge what a spread needs to be at inorder to have 1/2 money on each side...or else they would be gamblers
JimSox said:hbear777 said:
FOr the 1 millionth time-vegas doesn't know anything, don't care to know anything except gauge what a spread needs to be at inorder to have 1/2 money on each side...or else they would be gamblers
Ha ha. People have a rough time with that concept, don't they? See, if there's the same amount of money on each side of the bet, then the book has to make money since it pays less than even money to the winners. Usually odds of 10-11. Let's say there's $110 bet on team A and $110 bet on team B. Team A covers the spread. The book pays team A bettors at odds of 10-11. They get $100 profit, plus their $110 back. $210 total. But the book took in $220. Same if team B covers. $220 in, $210 out. Ten dollars profit for the book no matter what the score. (Unless there's a push. Team A favored by 19 points, say, and wins by 19 points. Then the book gives everyone their money back and neither makes nor loses money.)
SO Vegas tries to set a line that will attract exactly the same amount of money on both teams. If more money comes in on one team than the other, then the line gets adjusted to attract more money on the other side. Tonight, for instance, the original line was Arizona by 17 1/2. Money started coming in on Arizona, so the line got adjusted up, eventually reaching 19 1/2, attracting Cal suckers, er I mean Cal bettors, to even things up.
And there you have it. Bottom line, sheesh did we get beat! The only good news, I myself did not bet.
ducky23 said:JimSox said:hbear777 said:
FOr the 1 millionth time-vegas doesn't know anything, don't care to know anything except gauge what a spread needs to be at inorder to have 1/2 money on each side...or else they would be gamblers
Ha ha. People have a rough time with that concept, don't they? See, if there's the same amount of money on each side of the bet, then the book has to make money since it pays less than even money to the winners. Usually odds of 10-11. Let's say there's $110 bet on team A and $110 bet on team B. Team A covers the spread. The book pays team A bettors at odds of 10-11. They get $100 profit, plus their $110 back. $210 total. But the book took in $220. Same if team B covers. $220 in, $210 out. Ten dollars profit for the book no matter what the score. (Unless there's a push. Team A favored by 19 points, say, and wins by 19 points. Then the book gives everyone their money back and neither makes nor loses money.)
SO Vegas tries to set a line that will attract exactly the same amount of money on both teams. If more money comes in on one team than the other, then the line gets adjusted to attract more money on the other side. Tonight, for instance, the original line was Arizona by 17 1/2. Money started coming in on Arizona, so the line got adjusted up, eventually reaching 19 1/2, attracting Cal suckers, er I mean Cal bettors, to even things up.
And there you have it. Bottom line, sheesh did we get beat! The only good news, I myself did not bet.
Oh my god! This nugget again. I swear this has to be the biggest myth in the sports world. I don't know how many times over the years I've had to write this on this site. I feel like a sticky needs to be made
But once again, the goal of sports books is not always to have the money equal on both sides. There are a million reasons that some books don't want this, or why it's just impossible.
One of the biggest reasons is that books don't want to be stuck in a position where all the smart money is on one side and all the public money on the other. Which is why the goal for opening lines is to be as ACCURATE as possible so it doesn't get slammed by the smart money. Again accuracy is the goal and not necessarily a line that gets even money on both sides. Because not all money coming in is equal!!!!!!
But there are a million other reasons why having money equal on both sides is not reality. So please! Stop just reciting these myths as if they are accepted fact.
https://www.reviewjournal.com/sports/sports-columns/todd-dewey/fact-or-fiction-do-sportsbooks-balance-bets-to-lock-in-profit-2538940/amp/
https://establishtherun.com/disproving-popular-sports-gambling-fallacies/#:~:text=%E2%80%9CA%20popular%20misconception%20is%20that,factor%20to%20move%20the%20odds.
https://www.onlyplayers.com/myth-conceptions-do-sportsbooks-need-equal-money-on-each-side-of-a-game
JimSox said:ducky23 said:JimSox said:hbear777 said:
FOr the 1 millionth time-vegas doesn't know anything, don't care to know anything except gauge what a spread needs to be at inorder to have 1/2 money on each side...or else they would be gamblers
Ha ha. People have a rough time with that concept, don't they? See, if there's the same amount of money on each side of the bet, then the book has to make money since it pays less than even money to the winners. Usually odds of 10-11. Let's say there's $110 bet on team A and $110 bet on team B. Team A covers the spread. The book pays team A bettors at odds of 10-11. They get $100 profit, plus their $110 back. $210 total. But the book took in $220. Same if team B covers. $220 in, $210 out. Ten dollars profit for the book no matter what the score. (Unless there's a push. Team A favored by 19 points, say, and wins by 19 points. Then the book gives everyone their money back and neither makes nor loses money.)
SO Vegas tries to set a line that will attract exactly the same amount of money on both teams. If more money comes in on one team than the other, then the line gets adjusted to attract more money on the other side. Tonight, for instance, the original line was Arizona by 17 1/2. Money started coming in on Arizona, so the line got adjusted up, eventually reaching 19 1/2, attracting Cal suckers, er I mean Cal bettors, to even things up.
And there you have it. Bottom line, sheesh did we get beat! The only good news, I myself did not bet.
Oh my god! This nugget again. I swear this has to be the biggest myth in the sports world. I don't know how many times over the years I've had to write this on this site. I feel like a sticky needs to be made
But once again, the goal of sports books is not always to have the money equal on both sides. There are a million reasons that some books don't want this, or why it's just impossible.
One of the biggest reasons is that books don't want to be stuck in a position where all the smart money is on one side and all the public money on the other. Which is why the goal for opening lines is to be as ACCURATE as possible so it doesn't get slammed by the smart money. Again accuracy is the goal and not necessarily a line that gets even money on both sides. Because not all money coming in is equal!!!!!!
But there are a million other reasons why having money equal on both sides is not reality. So please! Stop just reciting these myths as if they are accepted fact.
https://www.reviewjournal.com/sports/sports-columns/todd-dewey/fact-or-fiction-do-sportsbooks-balance-bets-to-lock-in-profit-2538940/amp/
https://establishtherun.com/disproving-popular-sports-gambling-fallacies/#:~:text=%E2%80%9CA%20popular%20misconception%20is%20that,factor%20to%20move%20the%20odds.
https://www.onlyplayers.com/myth-conceptions-do-sportsbooks-need-equal-money-on-each-side-of-a-game
Thanks for that Ducky. What I get from that is that they're trying to get equal money on both sides but it's very difficult and complicated by complex bets so they have to do some gambling and try to side with the "smart money." Makes sense. But the theory still holds. They're better off when they get equal money. And they do move the line often, as they did tonight on the Cal game.
So we're both right. Equal money is the goal, but not often attainable so they employ other strategies. Thanks for the education on this.
Very nice write up, explanation. And speaking of "from a quantitative standpoint" here are the sports dollars wagered in December ALONE:RedlessWardrobe said:
Ducky, I have been gambling for 45 years. I understand your smart money vs. public money concept, but the bottom line is from a quantitative standpoint, there is no difference between a "smart" dollar and a "public" dollar.
The reality is, the books always hope their opening line is going to attract an equal amount of the aggregate total of both smart and public money. When they don't get it right and have to move the spread, they run the risk of a game hitting a "middle" in which case they can get burnt on both ends. If yesterday's line started at 18, ended up at 19 1/2, and Zona ends up winning by exactly 19, it's a bad day for the books.
RedlessWardrobe said:
The reality is, the books always hope their opening line is going to attract an equal amount of the aggregate total of both smart and public money. When they don't get it right and have to move the spread, they run the risk of a game hitting a "middle" in which case they can get burnt on both ends. If yesterday's line started at 18, ended up at 19 1/2, and Zona ends up winning by exactly 19, it's a bad day for the books.
In this rare instance, you, Ducky, myself, and everyone else on this board can all finally agree on something.bearsandgiants said:
The "accuracy" a book seeks is not to nail the final score. It's simply to keep the line from moving at all, from the moment it's released until the game begins.
If a line is introduced and doesn't move at all, the oddsmakers nailed it. It means the money on both sides is perfectly balanced, and the book will make 10% on half of the bets.
I believe the dollars in off-shore betting are even larger!mbBear said:Very nice write up, explanation. And speaking of "from a quantitative standpoint" here are the sports dollars wagered in December ALONE:RedlessWardrobe said:
Ducky, I have been gambling for 45 years. I understand your smart money vs. public money concept, but the bottom line is from a quantitative standpoint, there is no difference between a "smart" dollar and a "public" dollar.
The reality is, the books always hope their opening line is going to attract an equal amount of the aggregate total of both smart and public money. When they don't get it right and have to move the spread, they run the risk of a game hitting a "middle" in which case they can get burnt on both ends. If yesterday's line started at 18, ended up at 19 1/2, and Zona ends up winning by exactly 19, it's a bad day for the books.
1. New York: $2.05B
2. New Jersey: $1.28B
3. Pennsylvania: $925.6M
4. Nevada: $843M
5. Ohio: $830M
6. MA: $658.7M
7. VA: $633M
8. Michigan: $613.4M
9. Maryland: $560M
10. Indiana: $503M
When it wasn't legal, sure there were some big dollars involved...but, to me, this pretty amazing.
I think we're getting very close to a consensus, but we're not quite there yet.bearsandgiants said:
The "accuracy" a book seeks is not to nail the final score. It's simply to keep the line from moving at all, from the moment it's released until the game begins.
If a line is introduced and doesn't move at all, the oddsmakers nailed it. It means the money on both sides is perfectly balanced, and the book will make 10% on half of the bets.
Quote:
"A popular misconception is that sportsbooks set their lines in order to get an equal amount of money on each side. Aside from rare exceptions like the Super Bowl or 2017's Mayweather-McGregor fight, public money is generally not enough of a factor to move the odds. The book typically prefers to keep the line close to the 'correct' number and gamble on the result, rather than move to an off-market number and attract a flood of action from advantage players."
barsad said:
I think it would be hard to find a more soporific sports topic than the technical elements of betting lines. Someone please stab me in the eye so I can stop reading this.
Cal88 said:barsad said:
I think it would be hard to find a more soporific sports topic than the technical elements of betting lines. Someone please stab me in the eye so I can stop reading this.
I think it's kind of interesting, and it's not like this has been discussed in detail that often before.
The one key issue WRT betting on sports is that you can't get ahead by betting on sports because your winnings are taxed as income, while your losses aren't deducted. This means that whatever slight edge you might have from your superior knowledge of a sports team you follow closely, that edge is not going to be large enough to overcome the aftertax upside.
calumnus said:Cal88 said:barsad said:
I think it would be hard to find a more soporific sports topic than the technical elements of betting lines. Someone please stab me in the eye so I can stop reading this.
I think it's kind of interesting, and it's not like this has been discussed in detail that often before.
The one key issue WRT betting on sports is that you can't get ahead by betting on sports because your winnings are taxed as income, while your losses aren't deducted. This means that whatever slight edge you might have from your superior knowledge of a sports team you follow closely, that edge is not going to be large enough to overcome the aftertax upside.
You can deduct gambling losses from your gambling winnings. but you cannot deduct net losses, so yes, it is asymmetric in that regard. It is not like a side business where you can deduct losses from your other income.
https://www.irs.gov/taxtopics/tc419