jackhunter64
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BET under extreme totals!
While the 2019 season saw the virtual disappearance of games totaled 7 or lower, they aren’t extinct, merely endangered. Betting markets appear to find it difficult to bet that a game will land on 7 or fewer runs when the league average is closing in on 10 runs! You can profit from the market’s inability to imagine a game without much offense. Here’s the setup:
In the Major League Baseball regular season
If a home team is an underdog AND
The game total is 7 or less
BET under the total.
Over the last decade, this system has produced a 55-percent record and an ROI of 5.6 percent. This system would have put you in the black nine of the last ten years. In high-scoring seasons, the opportunities are less abundant, but baseball changes from year to year, so by the time you read this, the high-flying home-run hitting offenses of 2019 might just be a distant memory, and you’ll have opportunities to bet under the 7-run total in droves.
The success at betting under extremely low totals is an indicator that there is a certain gravitational pull in the betting markets, almost certainly created by bettors’ preconceived notions about what a reasonable outcome is. The reality is that when two aces face each other, with great bullpens behind them, 4–0 and 3–1 games are relatively common . . . but gamblers have reflexive discomfort betting under extremely low totals.
Having said that, the number of games with totals at or below 7 has been steadily shrinking as run production has gone up.
Make the total bet at –110 odds. When the under is bet heavily, the odds will change before the total itself will move from 7.5 to 7. For example, if bettors are pounding the under 7.5 at –110, it will move to 7.5 –115, then 7.5 –120, and 7.5 –125 before moving to 7 –110. And as the odds move from –110 toward –125, the break-even win percentage increases. You have to win 55 percent of your bets to be profitable on –125 odds.
While the 2019 season saw the virtual disappearance of games totaled 7 or lower, they aren’t extinct, merely endangered. Betting markets appear to find it difficult to bet that a game will land on 7 or fewer runs when the league average is closing in on 10 runs! You can profit from the market’s inability to imagine a game without much offense. Here’s the setup:
In the Major League Baseball regular season
If a home team is an underdog AND
The game total is 7 or less
BET under the total.
Over the last decade, this system has produced a 55-percent record and an ROI of 5.6 percent. This system would have put you in the black nine of the last ten years. In high-scoring seasons, the opportunities are less abundant, but baseball changes from year to year, so by the time you read this, the high-flying home-run hitting offenses of 2019 might just be a distant memory, and you’ll have opportunities to bet under the 7-run total in droves.
The success at betting under extremely low totals is an indicator that there is a certain gravitational pull in the betting markets, almost certainly created by bettors’ preconceived notions about what a reasonable outcome is. The reality is that when two aces face each other, with great bullpens behind them, 4–0 and 3–1 games are relatively common . . . but gamblers have reflexive discomfort betting under extremely low totals.
Having said that, the number of games with totals at or below 7 has been steadily shrinking as run production has gone up.
Make the total bet at –110 odds. When the under is bet heavily, the odds will change before the total itself will move from 7.5 to 7. For example, if bettors are pounding the under 7.5 at –110, it will move to 7.5 –115, then 7.5 –120, and 7.5 –125 before moving to 7 –110. And as the odds move from –110 toward –125, the break-even win percentage increases. You have to win 55 percent of your bets to be profitable on –125 odds.