Football
Betting Column: The Pinnacle Pulse
What are the three most important
things a professional considers when betting
a game? Price, price and price. Getting the
best number on every game will turn a 50% handicapper
into a net winner and allows a 53% capper to
show a handsome profit at season's end. Every
penny you're able to shave off of a price adds
to your bottom line.
We
price shop to save cents on a gallon of gas
and smart bettors are just as price sensitive
with sports betting and use comparison shopping
to find the best lines. playing at the best
available price is one of the easiest ways for
any player to increase his potential winnings.
In
addition to your existing bookmaker, you should
ideally hold accounts at one or two reduced
juice bookmakers like Pinnacle Sportsbook, along
with a couple of recreational books, where you'll
find inflated favorite prices and therefore
attractive odds on the underdog.
Using
an exchange is another option, but one question
I'm often asked is how do you compare the cost
of playing on an exchange, versus playing at
Pinnacle Sports? The easiest way is to look
at the total juice paid if you play both sides
of the same game.
If
you see a line on a game listed on an exchange
you need to adjust the price for any commission
charged to get to the true price for comparison
purposes. Exchanges generally charge between
2% and 5% in commissions on bets placed. Every
1% in commission is the equivalent to 2.2 cents
on the moneyline.
At
Pinnacle Sports we use an 8-cent line on MLB.
So if for example we listed the Yankees -112/Boston
+104 and an exchange listed the same game at
what appeared to be a 6-cent line at Yankees
-111/Boston +105, is the exchange offering the
best price on the game? If the exchange charges
a 2% commission on winning wagers, the equivalent
moneyline is 6 cents + (2.2 * 2) = 10.4-cent
moneyline.
By
way of comparison, a wager to win $100 on the
Yankees at Pinnacle Sports Betting would return
$212 ($112 risk amount + $100 winnings) while
an exchange would return $206.78 ($211 –
2% commission). Conversely on the Red Sox, a
customer at Pinnacle would see a return of $204
($100 risk + $104 winnings) while on an exchange
it would be $200.90 ($205 – 2% commission).
If
exchanges at times are not all what they seem,
is there another way to beat Pinnacle's already
low prices? The answer is yes, by using the
Pinnacle Sports Wager Order Form. First, you'll
save money compared to the market price and
unlike exchanges, Pinnacle Sports never charges
commissions on either winning bets or matched
offers.
How
do you use the order form? On all major sports,
the Pinnacle sports betting menu has a "Wager
Order Form" option on the top-right of
the page. This takes you to the same sport-specific
page where you can select a wager you'd like
to customize by adjusting the spread or moneyline
in your favor.
Once
you've selected a team to wager on, you can
adjust the spread, price and enter the wager
amount. One extra feature is a cutoff time,
where you can set your order to expire anywhere
from one minute all the way up until game time.
If the line on the game moves for even just
a fraction of a second to the price you have
set on an open order, your bet will automatically
be accepted and you'll have action at the enhanced
price and line you set.
Pinnacle's
order form can save you a lot of money, but
you must be careful with orders open for a long
time. Consider this: The market price on the
Chicago Bulls is -6 (-110). PinnacleSports.com
is offering -6 (-105). You place an offer for
the Bulls at -6 (-102). If the market price
moved to Bulls -6 (+100) which is the equivalent
to -5.5 -110, your order would get filled at
-6 (-102) as the market drifted. You will still
beat the initial offering of -6 (-105), but
if you spent 3 hours in front of a service like
Don Best, you might have been able to get a
better deal.
If
you're a full-time professional that already
watches the screen, this isn't a problem. If
you see the market drifting down, you can simply
cancel your order at any time. Most bettors
don't have that kind of time and those players
have another option – set the cutoff time
for 5 minutes, 30 minutes or however long you
plan to spend making your bets. If at the end
of that time it isn't filled or only partially
filled, you can always cancel your order and
take the best market price.
Another
method any player can use is to offer very close
to the market price. Orders that are 1-cent
cheaper than Pinnacle's price (e.g. we are offering
Bulls -6 -105, and you order -6 -104) will often
get filled and if it does, you've taken another
step towards being a pro by getting a better
price. If it's not filled, you can still play
at Pinnacle's reduced juice pricing. If you
have more time and patience, you can start with
larger discounts and lower them until you fill
your order.
We
regularly receive questions about the Wager
Order Form, so hopefully this week's column
helps players understand how it can save them
even more money on their bets. Although I try
to provide insight on general gambling theory
in the Pinnacle Pulse column, if you have a
question that you would like answered, please
feel free to send it to askthebook@pinnaclesports.com
like these players below.
Jack
wrote:
Why
is the order form offered in some sports, but
not others? I'd also like to know if the Pinnacle
clears a lot of orders during the last flash
because it often looks like that could be profitable
to me.
Simon:
It's
practical to offer the order form when two requirements
are met. First, there must be moderately high
volume – we don't want our players frustrated
by placing orders that are never filled. Second,
the prices dealt must be somewhat stable, or
no one will want to risk leaving an order up
long-term. For these reasons, the pro sports
(NBA, NFL and MLB) will always have order forms
available after the openers have been sharpened
by early players.
Regarding
your second question, we see a LOT of volatility
in the last 5 minutes before post. It's common
to see a market fluctuate wildly, even by 5
or 10 cents in the last few minutes. Some savvy
players will offer a price way off market (e.g.
Yankees -180, when -200 is the market price).
They monitor what gets filled and can often
scalp this with other books right before post.
These opportunities arise because many of our
largest players make multiple limit bets in
the last 5 minutes. To balance our action, we
move aggressively which provides patient players
using the order form with an easy way to make
a buck.
Berry
wrote:
I
was interested in betting on the Soccer World
Cup. Would you explain the difference between
"1x2 Coupon" betting and "Handicaps"?
Simon:
A
1x2 line gives a player 3 choices: (1) Team
A to win, (x) the draw or (2) Team B to win.
If regulation plus anytime added on for stoppages
ends with the teams tied, the draw wins (overtime,
golden goals or penalty shoot-outs do not count
for betting purposes). If the draw wins, wagers
on either team will lose regardless of whether
a team eventually goes on to win the game in
overtime, on golden goals or in a penalty shootout.
A
Handicap wager or 'Asian handicap' is similar
to an NFL spread. For example, at Pinnacle Sports
we're currently offering Germany -1 (-156) versus
Costa Rica +1 (+148). If Germany wins by exactly
1 goal, the wager is a push. If Germany wins
by 2 or more, $156 wagered wins $100 on Germany.
If Costa Rica ties or wins, $100 risked wins
$148.
Another
feature you'll often see with 'Asian handicaps'
and totals are "quarter-balls". In
the German Bundesliga this week, we're currently
offering Bayern Munich -0.5 and -1 (-111), or
Hamburger SV +0.5 and +1 (+107). When a handicap
lists 2 spreads, half of your bet is wagered
at each spread. If you bet on Bayern and they
won by exactly 1 goal, half your bet would be
graded as a push and the other half would be
graded as a win (paying 100 per 111 risked).
Quarter-balls are used on totals as well –
if you bet over 2.5 and 3.0, a game total of
3 would be half a push and half a win.
If
you have any sports betting related questions
that you would like answered in future columns,
please feel free to write to me at askthebook@pinnaclesports.com
Pinnacle
Sports Book & Online Betting
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