Why England always lose at football

I’ve recently been thumbing my way through a brilliant book called ‘Why England Lose & Other Curious Football Phenomena Explained’, which has inspired me to think differently about my betting on the beautiful game.

Now you would think a book entitled ‘Why England Lose’ might just contains 2 words… “Emile and Heskey”… but actually it tackles many of our (often wholly baseless) theories on football. Most England fans for example think that we underperform on the national stage, but as the book explains…as a nation we actually if anything do better than the stats say we should!

Beyond just England though, the book reveals some great stats for betting, such as the fact that home advantage globally is worth a head-start of roughly 2/3rds a goal per game. It’s not going to be bed time reading for the likes of Robbie Savage, but it is a great read if you like to think beyond footballing clichés.

Thankfully though you don’t need a master’s degree in Economics like Arsene Wenger to make use of stats in football (or even know how to sign a half-decent goalkeeper). Here are some ready to use resources and tips on how to apply them to your betting.

The Fink Tank Ratings

The Fink Tank ratings provided by the boffins at Dectech, bring together a number of factors to assess the percentage probability of a particular team winning, drawing or losing. We’ve been keeping track of the performance of these ratings here: https://smartbettingclub.com/blog/category/fink-tank/

Our test is simple, if the predicted chance of success is better than that implied by the bookies, you take the bet. So far the approach is working very well with a return of 31.55 points for the season with an ROI (Profit on Turnover) of 13%.

Kick off Percentage Stats

I was also put onto another great resource to help you with this in the form of http://www.kickoff.co.uk/, which lists the percentage chances in each Premier League game using easy on the eye pie charts.

They’ve also got a neat little tool which converts the percentage predictions into odds for you and vice versa. For example a 10%chance equates to 9/1 and this can be really useful for working out your bets.

Continue reading

A Drunkard’s Betting Walk

The next time you stagger home from the pub a little worse for wear and you receive ‘that look’ from your nearest and dearest, if all else fails, you could try explaining that you were giving yourself a valuable lesson in probability theory.

I’ve recently been caught up in a new book called ‘The Drunkards Walk’ which explores the concept of randomness and how it impacts us in everyday life. The phrase ‘a drunkard’s walk’ was coined by a certain Albert Einstein to explain how in many things in life from the movements of tiny molecules to weather patterns are as predictable as the individual steps of a drunk person on their way home from the pub.

What interested me most of course is how randomness affects us all from a betting perspective and how as humans we regularly make the wrong calculations or assumptions based on our poor understanding of it.

A lot of it applies to betting and the world of tipsters and systems so let me explain with some key concepts.

The Gamblers Fallacy

The gamblers fallacy is one such term explained by the book that is relevant to betting (one of many), which most of us at one point will have fallen victim to. Consider if I tossed a coin 100 times and picked heads only 44 times out of 100. Our natural thinking is to assume that there is likely to be more tails than heads in the next 100 to catch up.

Right? …. Well wrong actually as this is the fallacy in action as the coin will not develop a bias towards tails to catch up. The coin itself doesn’t have a clue that it’s flipped more tails than heads – it’s a coin after all! On the 101st throw it will still remain a 50/50 chance it will be either tails or heads.

While that may make sense to most of us when we observe the simply coin flipping analogy, unwittingly we sometimes unconsciously fall foul to this mistake on a regular basis when we consider being in or out of form. A run of good form doesn’t mean a period of bad form is due and vice versa.

Over the fullness of time and stats (perhaps 10,000 throws) you will get closer to the 50/50 exact outcome but over short samples – randomness rules!

Expert or Just Plain Lucky?

I also found the book explained another term applicable to the betting and tipster world called the ‘hot-hand fallacy’. This theory basically states that if enough people try their hand at predicting something, someone by chance will be extremely successful.

The example the book uses is the American pundit who correctly predicted turns in the stock market in 18 out of 19 years. An outstanding record that beat many ‘experts’ hands down!

What was his secret you may ask?

Well nothing more than basing his predictions on what team won the US Superbowl that year…or in other words, pure luck! What this means now that the Green Bay Packers just won this year’s – who knows!

Perhaps this is why we see some tipsters or systems have an amazing burst of form, which they are then never able to maintain long-term. They simply got lucky at the start and were no more a betting expert than I am on the intricacies of cross stitch knitting.

How Do We Avoid These Traps?

How therefore do we avoid getting caught up following a system or tipster that has simply got lucky like the ‘Superbowl pundit’ above?

Well the answer is fairly boring in that it’s often nothing more than….

  • – Observing a large number of bets.
  • – Observing performance over time.
  • – Professional statistical analysis.
  • – Expert judgement.

All these things combined can help protect you as much as possible from falling prey to lucky tipsters or systems. It can take time and effort though to apply all of this, which is where we come in at the Smart Betting Club.

We only recommend services that have

  • – Proven themselves over many hundreds if not thousands of bets.
  • – Proven themselves over at least a 12 month period (with very rare exceptions).
  • – Proven themselves over different conditions (especially relevant for horse racing tipsters).
  • – Handled losing and winning runs in a professional manner.
  • – Undergone our full statistical analysis of performance.
  • – Had all aspects of their service thoroughly reviewed.
  • – Offer real value for money.

Those services that tick the right boxes for all these questions and more help to make up our Tipster Hall of Fame, which is currently 16 services strong. We believe therefore by following them, they offer you the best opportunity to make money betting.

Gain access to our Hall of Fame instantly by taking up a Smart Betting Club membership today.

Pigeons love a flutter too

A recent scientific study found that (surprise surprise), pigeons are not the world’s most sophisticated gamblers. When given the choice of going for small regular rewards vs infrequent jackpots, the pigeons chose to go for the jackpot, even though this mean they received less grain overall.

While pigeons may have a brain only slightly smaller than John Terry’s, their behaviour is actually not too dissimilar to the way human beings like to gamble.

The odds of anyone winning the lottery are astronomical and even when it comes to the small prizes you’re effectively getting a 10/1 on what is a 57/1 shot! But of course most people don’t care about odds, they play the lottery for the dream, the chance of hitting it big no matter how small that chance is.

If pigeon behaviour is anything to go by, it may be that us human beings are hardwired to go for the jackpot.

Certain tipster marketers know this only too well and play up to it in their marketing; often listing just the big 50/1 winners while failing to mention the thousands of losers they had on the way. More like a vulture than a pigeon.

Avoiding Betting Scams

I’m sure there are many advantages of being a pigeon – relieving yourself on unsuspecting members of the public from a great height must bring a certain pleasure. However, us humans have a few things going for us; namely higher reasoning and analysis. We may be hard wired to do it, but we don’t have to chase long shots or caught out by the scams.

To help us make better decisions, we do need accurate information and when it comes to tipsters, this is an area that the Smart Betting Club specialise in.

We delve deep into each service we review and weigh up just how realistic making a profit is in reality for you. This can all be found through the reviews, stats, information and analysis that we publish each month.

All of which designed to do all the hard work for you…leaving you time to get on making money betting and feathering your own nest!

Monkeys, Shakespeare and Sods Law When Betting

Have you ever started to follow a betting system or tipster, only to find that as soon as you join it hits a losing run? Well if you have you are not alone let me assure you. Some consider this simply ‘sods law’ and just the way things work, but delving deeper is there anything that can be done to pre-empt such runs?

I am of the firm belief that this is most certainly the case, especially when it comes to relatively new betting products, which we should always be wary of. Let me explain using some monkeys and William Shakespeare…

The Merchimp of Venice

Consider first the theory that in a world with unlimited parallel universes, somewhere a monkey sat on a typewriter has written the complete works of William Shakespeare. The ‘Merchimp of Venice’ if you will!

For this to happen there would be need to be trillions of universes where gazillions of monkeys have typed out utter gobbledygook. But in just 1 out of these infinitive universes, somewhere a monkey purely by chance has randomly emulated the famous bard.

The reason I share this theory is that anything random is possible if given enough occurrences, especially when it comes to making a profit betting.

If enough betting products are spat out in any given month then the law of randomness insists that a good percentage of these will make a profit – purely by chance.

The Maths Part

To give an example, let’s say we have 100 products released (be they systems or tipsters) in any given month. If our law of randomness suggests 50% of any product will make a profit in any given month, then that means 50 out of this 100 will profit in month 1.

Drilling this down to month 2, 50% of the remaining 50 make a profit. Leaving us 25 products in profit for both month 1 and month 2.

In month 3 this goes down to just 12.5 products, month 4 just 6.25, month 5 – 3.125, until we get to month 6 where 1.56 of the initial 100 products have made a profit in each month.

So after 6 months it is conceivable that a maximum of 2 services out of 100 have profited purely from randomness. No skill involved…purely chance!

Danger From Short-term Results

This is why it is so dangerous to read too much into the results of a betting product from just a few months. Could it be that the system that has done so well in its first 3 to 6 months, has benefitted purely by chance?

It could also be that a product has simply over performed and is due a losing spell to correct it. Of course it is also true that it actually does make a profit and is worth following – but doing so after just a few months is very risky. We just don’t know how much is luck and how much is skill.

I always note with real concern when sweeping statements are made about a product based upon just a few month’s results. This is no real period of time to make any concrete decisions and certainly not worth risking your money upon.

That is why here at SBC we only make decisions based upon the long-term performance of any given product. We need to view a service’s achievements over at least a year’s performance or a few thousand bets. Enough results that can help assure us that their edge is based on skill – not luck!

In our Tipster Report we always list performance for the past 6, 12 and all-time results of over 35 services. We update these figures every month so you can see exactly who or what has proven to have real skill (and not just luck) over the long-haul.

Check out our latest report (released last Friday) as a full SBC member.

The Far East Betting Problem

A few weeks back I blogged about the corruption engulfing the Japanese Sumo Wrestling world but that is but the tip of the iceberg when it comes to betting problems out in the Far East.

On Friday, we had the latest insight into the murky world of illegal gambling in Asia with over 5000 people arrested in a major operation led by Interpol. Around $15m was apprehended from over 800 ‘gambling dens’, which were raided in China, Malaysia, Singapore and Thailand in a concerted operation.  The question remains though as to the significance of these arrests and only serves to highlight a major problem for the authorities.

Renowned author on illegal Gambling, Declan Hill helped to share some colour on this story via his BBC viewpoint article, which is a fascinating read. He likens it to prohibition-era America, where alcohol consumption was illegal yet extremely popular, leading to the growth of an enormous underground industry with links to corruption and organised crime.

The same thing is occurring out in the Far East, with a huge interest in betting from the general population ultimately driving the whole industry underground.

What difference these arrests will make is up for question, indeed are they little more than a publicity stunt on the back of the World Cup? When you consider that back in 2006 this illegal industry was estimated to be as large as $450 Billion, the $15 Million figure confiscated in this bust is very insignificant.

In speaking with contacts in the betting industry in the UK, they have long painted the picture of some very big movers and shakers out in Asia moving large sums of money on European sport. Leagues as unfashionable as the Scottish 3rd division have much more invested on them than the 500 or so loyal fans that attend games by the likes of East Stirling will think possible.

Already we have also seen the influence that some so called Asian Bookies like SBOBet have brought to the betting market, offering to take large stakes and offering very competitive odds on football betting. It has really enhanced the options and also the returns possible from football betting.

It will be very interesting to see what comes out of these latest stories, is it the start of a concerted push against illegal gambling  or will it all just die away only to fan into flames after the next major betting event?

Equally, what are the chances of betting being legalised in some of these countries in the future?

If you have thoughts or experiences to share in relation to this topic, do let us know here at SBC as we would love to hear from you.

Sumo Wresting & Betting

When browsing the BBC website earlier today, along with the top story that Paul the pyschic octopus has predicted that Spain will beat Germany, I noticed an intriguing report on a new betting scandal in Japanese Sumo Wrestling.

It appears that a number of wrestlers and trainers have admitted to illegal betting on baseball and other sports, which is kicking up quite a storm. This is because Sumo Wresting is a highly respected sport in Japan with certain standards expected of competitors. Illegal betting and subsequent links with Japanese gangsters is not what the followers of this sport expect.  I imagine it to be the equivalent of hearing about a Croquet or Crown Green Bowling drugs scandal!

Betting controversy and Sumo Wrestling is not new though and anyone who read the fascinating analysis on this sport as undertaken by the authors of cult book ‘Freakonomics’ will testify. In the book through data mining they were able to demonstrate what they believe to be the existence of cheating among sumo wrestlers. Allow me to quote from Wikipedia…

“In a sumo tournament, all wrestlers in the top division compete in 15 matches and face demotion if they do not win at least eight of them. The sumo community is very close-knit, and the wrestlers at the top levels tend to know each other well. The authors looked at the final match, and considered the case of a wrestler with seven wins, seven losses, and one fight to go, fighting against an 8-6 wrestler. Statistically, the 7-7 wrestler should have a slightly below even chance, since the 8-6 wrestler is slightly better.

However, the 7-7 wrestler actually wins around 80% of the time. Levitt uses this statistic and other data gleaned from sumo wrestling matches, along with the effect that allegations of corruption have on match results, to conclude that those who already have 8 wins collude with those who are 7-7 and let them win, since they have already secured their position for the following tournament.”

Therefore be warned, any of you contemplating a bet on Sumo Wrestling anytime in the near future!

Sumo Wresting & Betting

When browsing the BBC website earlier today, along with the top story that Paul the pyschic octopus has predicted that Spain will beat Germany, I noticed an intriguing report on a new betting scandal in Japanese Sumo Wrestling.

It appears that a number of wrestlers and trainers have admitted to illegal betting on baseball and other sports, which is kicking up quite a storm. This is because Sumo Wresting is a highly respected sport in Japan with certain standards expected of competitors. Illegal betting and subsequent links with Japanese gangsters is not what the followers of this sport expect.  I imagine it to be the equivalent of hearing about a Croquet or Crown Green Bowling drugs scandal!

Betting controversy and Sumo Wrestling is not new though and anyone who read the fascinating analysis on this sport as undertaken by the authors of cult book ‘Freakonomics’ will testify. In the book through data mining they were able to demonstrate what they believe to be the existence of cheating among sumo wrestlers. Allow me to quote from Wikipedia…

“In a sumo tournament, all wrestlers in the top division compete in 15 matches and face demotion if they do not win at least eight of them. The sumo community is very close-knit, and the wrestlers at the top levels tend to know each other well. The authors looked at the final match, and considered the case of a wrestler with seven wins, seven losses, and one fight to go, fighting against an 8-6 wrestler. Statistically, the 7-7 wrestler should have a slightly below even chance, since the 8-6 wrestler is slightly better.

However, the 7-7 wrestler actually wins around 80% of the time. Levitt uses this statistic and other data gleaned from sumo wrestling matches, along with the effect that allegations of corruption have on match results, to conclude that those who already have 8 wins collude with those who are 7-7 and let them win, since they have already secured their position for the following tournament.”

Therefore be warned, any of you contemplating a bet on Sumo Wrestling anytime in the near future!

Have you ever made a drunken bet like this?

Ever woken up hungover to find you’d wagered a few quid on something daft like Wayne Rooney to win pipesmoker of the year? Or maybe even something more ridiculous such as England to win the World Cup??!

Well if you have, I hope the damage wasn’t as bad as this guy who must have had one hell of a hangover the next day. Stephen Perkins was banned from his job as broker after drunkenly gambling trading on the price of oil at 2AM. His inebriated trades were so large that they accounted for nearly 70% of the day’s trading volume, pushing oil to a record high at the time.

I know one online poker player who earned a pretty penny by only playing around midnight at weekends – when British guys came home from the pub and fancied a few drunken hands of poker.

Mike always talks with amazement about how in Australia they have betting terminals in pubs, allowing you to risk a fortune on some drunken bet. Its small wonder there is such a gambling problem down under!

The bookies always welcome these sort of mindless & drunken wagers with open arms. I would imagine Friday and Saturday night are peak betting times for markets such as Paddy Power’s Elvis World Cup (I kid you not). Betting for fun or interest might seem harmless if using small stakes, but more often than not its money down the drain, especially when indulging in a few light refreshments.

Alcohol and betting have always been uneasy bedfellows, so if in doubt dont bet!