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Sportsbook Guide and Strategies
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Basics
The main
object of sports betting is to beat the 'Oddsmakers'. Additionally,
placing a bet on your favorite sport event makes the game exciting
and more enjoyable.
Betting
is done through Sportsbooks (US) or Bookmakers (UK) entities that
accept bets. You can bet on the outcome of several sporting events,
such as; Baseball, Basketball, Football, Tennis, Hockey, Snooker
and Soccer games.
To place
a sports bet, you go to a sports book, physical or online. You could
also bet over the phone with many sports books. Note that a sports
book or sportsbook is not the same as an oddsmaker. The sports book
simply accepts sports bets. An oddsmaker is a person who sets the
betting odds.
You need
to state what you are betting on by making a selection, the type
of bet and the amount you are wagering. Your selection will obviously
depend on the odds offered, so you will want to examine the range
of odds available before you make a decision.
There
are many types of bets you can place. Some sports books may offer
more betting varieties and combinations than others. Below is a
list of the more common types of bets.
- Straight
bet or Single. This is the simplest and most common bet. You bet
on a winner at given odds.
- Point
Spread. This bet lets you bet on a winner from two selections who
have been made equal by allocating appropriate points to the underdog
team. The Point Spread is the number of points allocated and is
shown with a + sign for the favorite and a - sign for the underdog.
The favorite has to win by more than the Point Spread for you to
win, otherwise you lose your bet even if the team wins. Inversely,
if you bet for the underdog, that team has to lose by less than
the Point Spread for you to win. If the favorite wins by the exact
Point Spread, then it is a push or a tie. You get your bet back.
To eliminate a tie result, the oddsmakers sometimes include a half
point spread. Since scores use full numbers only, one team has to
win outright.
- Buy
Points. Also, to buy Key Points. Move the Point Spread favorably
at a price.
- The
Moneyline. This establishes the odds for each team but inversely
proportional to what would have been a Point Spread, and is indicated
by a + for the underdog and a - sign for the favorite. Say team
A is favorite and quoted at -180 and B is the underdog at + 120.
The bets offered would be 10:18 odds-on for the favorite, and 12:10
for the underdog. For every $180 you bet on A you would win $100
or lose $180, but for every $100 you bet on B you would win $120
or lose $100.
- Total.
A bet for the number of points scored in the game by both teams
combined, including points scored in overtime.
- Over/Under.
A bet that the combined number of points scored by the two teams
in the game will be Over or Under the total set by the oddsmaker.
- Parlay
or Accumulator. A multiple bet. A kind of 'let-it-ride' bet. Making
simultaneous selections on two or more games with the intent of
pressing the winnings of the first win on the bet of the following
game selected, and so on. All the selections made must win for you
to win the parlay. If a game is a tie, postponed or cancelled, your
parlay is automatically reduced by one selection; a double parlay
becomes a straight bet, a triple parlay becomes a double. A parlay
bet can yield huge dividends if won.
- Teaser.
It is like a parlay, but with the option to add or subtract points
(called 'moving the line') from one or more Spread bets. When betting
a teaser additional points are either added to the underdog or subtracted
from the favorite. The odds vary according to the number of points
the spread is moved and the number of teams combined to form the
teaser. As in the parlay, all selections must win for the teaser
to win. Teasers odds are usually worse than the parlays.
- If-wager.
A bet that allows the bettor to make a second wager, up to an equal
amount, pending a win on the first selection.
- Open
Wager. Open wagers allow the bettor to play teasers or parlays making
a selection at different times and even different days.
- Future.
A bet on a future event. At the start of each season, the sports
books give out odds for teams to win a certain championship. The
odds change as the game date approaches and in most cases get shorter,
but if you win you get paid at the original odds that you took.
This is possibly one of the most profitable bets if you have considerable
knowledge of the sport that you are betting on including the players,
and a good sense of judgement.
- Exotic
Bets. Betting on unusual events. Some sports books post odds and
take bets on a wide variety of other sports related events and activities.
A few others will take bets on just about anything you can think
of.
- Proposition
Bet or Prop Bet. An offer of bets at odds and conditions chosen
by the sports book, usually on 'Exotic' bets.
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