...under pressure, we're cracking. Can't we give ourselves one more chance?
The quotation "The definition of insanity is continuing to do the same thing over and over, and then expecting different results" is usually attributed to Albert Einstein, although Rita Mae Brown may actually deserve the credit, but it's a good quote.
I was reminded of it while replying to a comment by our old friend John O'Dwyer who mentioned in a recent post that in the recent Snooker World Championship, he had noticed
This is only one of the differences I've found compared to previous years. A bit like the Darts, someone out there is beating the Betfair clock by a good few seconds.This is the main reason that I don't like betting on tennis in-running. With court-siders in attendance, what is the point? Any bets that you get matched are unlikely to be value, and we all know, or should know, that without value we will lose long-term. Betting between games might be a viable option, but in-game point to point betting when someone is a few seconds ahead of you is, in my opinion, a waste of time.
John, like many insecure men, is obsessed with size - although in his case it is with bank size. He wrote yesterday
I'll probably do another update tomorrow, but I'm getting tired and fed up. It's been another struggling week. I'm using a small bank, and I'm trying to rush things and it's continuously going wrong. One of these days I might get to 1k again, and it will progress from there. I was saying this exact same thing in Jan 2010, before doing exactly what I expected to do once I got the bank size I kept going on about. Until then, I am beat. I owe so much that getting a normal job will not get me out of the trouble I am in. I've known the answer to the problem for months, but have not been able to resolve it due to a few reasons.My advice:
John - your mind needs to be clear to be successful as a trader. "Scared money don't win". Bank size isn't an issue. Like I said to you before, if you have an edge, you can start at any level and soon build a bank. I started with less than £100 and have never made a second deposit. What qualifications do you have? My advice is to get a 'normal' job and trade any edge you can develop part-time. But you need to find an edge rather than use your current approach which you may have got lucky with for a while, but luck has a habit of running out.But there's no helping some people.
Remember, this is me being honest whether I win or lose. It's all factual from me. A lot of people have opinions on why I've lost, but at the end of the day, what credentials do they have?! Where is the proof of their wins, to back up their assumptions that I am wrong in what I say? I know I am right, that's the thing. I don't need people telling me it's nothing to do with a bank size, espcially when people are guessing themselves with nothing to back up what they say.The point is that he is not accepting reality.
No one is doubting your honesty, but do you understand that no one who makes a profit from betting long-term does so without having an edge? You can take or leave any advice you are given, that is your choice, and while there are certainly people who offer advice who probably shouldn't, there are also people who are profitable long-term, and are in a position to offer sound advice based on their experience.But all advice falls on deaf ears it seems.
The reason you lose is quite simply because you do not have an edge. You can, and did, get away with this for a while but you can't defy the odds long-term. It is not unusual to walk away from a table in Las Vegas with a decent profit on a single night, but if you went there every night, you would lose. The odds are against you. You can back 1.05 shots all day and have long winning runs, but if the true price is 1.06 (or more) you will ultimately lose.
In the first 9 days of May, you bet on baseball, basketball, boxing, cricket, horse-racing, golf, snooker, soccer, tennis, aussie rules, rugby league and rugby union. Are you seriously claiming that you have an edge in all those events? That someone in Barnstaple, North Devon, has identified an edge that has been missed by everybody else?
There's nothing wrong per se with betting on any of these events, but in my opinion you need to specialise.
And if you notice that someone is beating the clock in snooker as you mentioned a few days ago, walk away. Any bets you get matched are unlikely to be value, and it is insane to stay in a market where someone has an edge over you. Nothing will stop court-siders faster than no money in the market.
Having completed the above, I notice a late comment from John, which just proves further that he doesn't know what an edge is.
I do have a edge, but it all revolves around having a bigger bank size. That's why I've been losing recently. Big bank brings stability, which I've always said.If you go to Gold All Over, you will see my EPL Value spreadsheet which shows the edge I believe I have, (or don't have), on recent EPL games. Edge is simply (StrikeRate * Probability of Winning) - ((1 * StrikeRate * Probability of Losing). If your edge is negative, as it will be for a game such as Roulette, then long-term, your expectation is negative.
I've not had 2k in my account since January, so there has been no way for me to back up what I say.
But the key here is that the edge does not change depending on your bank size.
Hi. Before I started trading I read a lot of material, including O'Dwyers blog. At the time, it was a bit of an inspiration. However, recently I cannot understand the infatuation with having a big bank. I'm guessing that with a big bank any profit you make may look good, but so will the losses. At the moment, it just seems like there is a sense of sheer desperation more than anything else and it seems he needs his betting to pay for his debts, which in my opinion isn't a good thing at all. I am by no means a successful trader, and am very new to this, but I thought one of the golden rules was not to bet (or trade) with money you cannot afford to lose. If your system/betting/trading works with small stakes over time, then there is no reason why you cannot fund your account so you can play with larger stakes. I wish him all the best with his endeavours but as you rightly point out, your advice (which is very good) seems to be falling on deaf ears.
ReplyDeleteFor what it's worth I don't think any amount of good advice will help John. From the outside we can all see what's happening, but from his perspective he just doesn't see it at all. Like any form of addiction the solution has to start with acceptance of the problem, and although deep in debt, living off his parents' goodwill and being deluded about the need for a large bank he continues to fail to accept reality. I admire those like Cassini who have tried to give constructive support to him, but until he faces the truth, he will never listen to anything other than misguided optimism. For every winner there are sadly many more like John who pay the price.
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