Yesterday’s post on baseball was poorly written, and should have made clear that the prices mentioned were the true prices for backing the home team in the middle of the respective innings. The win probabilities are of course significantly different at the top of the inning compared to the middle of the inning, assuming no change in score, with the home team’s chances increasing with each out of the top half of the inning. I have updated that post to make it clearer for future generations.
Our old friend BigAl, still looking in on the blog on a frequent basis for morsels of wisdom (there are a few if you pay attention) despite his oft dismissive and derogatory comments, (I forgot he was banned before I allowed his comments through, although they were actually quite sensible) suggests that “it’s a dangerous game simply applying the overall average to every game” but perhaps BigAl is no more well versed in the nuances of baseball than he is in the rules of cricket. The unique (other than softball) nature of the sport means that unless you have a good reason to believe that in any one game the long – very long in baseball’s case – established probabilities may be wrong, backing at greater than true (long-established) value is as dangerous as backing heads at greater than 2.0.
At the risk of educating BigAl and others who might otherwise take sub-value bets from or offer plus-value bets to the more knowledgeable of baseball bettors, the key player is the starting pitcher. One need look no further than the prices on each day of a series between two teams. A team is often odds-on for game one, yet the next day underdogs, and the only difference in line-ups is one player on each team – the starting pitcher. Teams generally have five starting pitchers, who rotate to start a game every fifth day. I'd like a job like that.
So BigAl’s cautionary words are certainly true in most sports, and should always be a consideration even in baseball, but my assertion is that the established probabilities are a solid starting point. If the value price is 1.63, then you would obviously need to factor in your individual edge and look for that price rather than take the bare minimum, but ask for 1.79 and you will get filled more often than you might reasonably expect. (1.79 is psychologically a better number for someone to lay, compared to 1.8).
Home Team Odds - Bases Empty |
Cassini may be on to something though as by the time you get to the 7th innings the main reason for the fav/dog bias may be out of the game (i.e. the SPs) but I think the market may retain some fav/dog bias (gradually reducing across the 9 innings) that may not be justified. Don't have data to prove that but over 2 or 3 innings the hitting strength of each team is going to be very similar except for a few outliers (e.g. Miami, Houston low hitting) and similarly with bullpen pitching a lot of the teams will be in a narrow performance range.Indeed, and I am beginning to wish I’d never let the cat out of the bag on this strategy!
I believe it was Shakespeare, in his play The Comedy of Errors, (not a play about BigAl's betting), who wrote: "You can lead a gambler to the edge, but you can’t make him leap".
1 comment:
Hi Cass
I have now gone full time gambler/trader.
Please feel free to divulge any further edges as i have spare time.
yours faithfully
Little AL
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