I'm sure he knew those goals were going in, before they went in, and tomorrow he'll look back and wonder, or ask the forum, why he couldn't turn a 0% profit into a 500% profit.

I think your problem Luke, is that you only see what you want to see.JustLukeYou wrote: ↑Thu Oct 17, 2019 11:53 pmTrust me there are still 100's of questions I could ask lol
Like at the moment I am following a match in Chile, I looked at the form and I was convinced there wouldn't be many goals and it is currently 0-0 after 1 hour but I can't see any value. What do I do in those situations? It is frustrating, the game is going how I thought it would but the reward for the risk doesn't seem worth it.
You can't expect people to watch a 50min video just to give you their view on it, but I can tell you in short what the general view is, since you will no doubt run into losses soon. They are a normal part of trading, winning is easy for everyone but losing is hard and people start doing stupid and emotional things when they start losing, they chase losses by going well outside of their strategies and they get tilted etc.JustLukeYou wrote: ↑Thu Oct 17, 2019 11:24 pmSo I have rewatched this video based on how to handle losses, what are peoples views on it?
I'm aware of how to edit the post headings, I think I did that with nivi7 when he had a topic locked as I was replying to a post, but it's been a long night.
There is no such thing as "odds have a positive EV".JustLukeYou wrote: ↑Fri Oct 18, 2019 9:46 amHi Euler,
So I have been reading up on Estimated Value from this Smarkets page https://help.smarkets.com/hc/en-gb/arti ... in-betting
As the page points out just because someone finds a positive EV doesn't mean they will make a profit so what is the best way to apply a positive EV? Let's say for example I find 10 football matches. I think 5 will finish with the home team winning and 5 with away team winning. Do I calculate the EV and follow the ones with a positive EV? For example, I think in the 7th match the away team will win and the odds have a positive EV so I should back that trade over the other 9 potential trades?
But aren't you comparing all three odds together though not just one single odd against the probability of it happening.Speculator_3 wrote: ↑Fri Oct 18, 2019 12:02 pmThere is no such thing as "odds have a positive EV".JustLukeYou wrote: ↑Fri Oct 18, 2019 9:46 amHi Euler,
So I have been reading up on Estimated Value from this Smarkets page https://help.smarkets.com/hc/en-gb/arti ... in-betting
As the page points out just because someone finds a positive EV doesn't mean they will make a profit so what is the best way to apply a positive EV? Let's say for example I find 10 football matches. I think 5 will finish with the home team winning and 5 with away team winning. Do I calculate the EV and follow the ones with a positive EV? For example, I think in the 7th match the away team will win and the odds have a positive EV so I should back that trade over the other 9 potential trades?
Read the page again and this time try to understand what EV means.
The given odds at any one time, combined over all possible outcomes (win/draw/lose) produce a net 0 (or negative) EV for any match, unless there is an arbitrage opportunity between different exchanges/bookmakers, which is very rare.
Expected value is calculated by summing over all possible outcomes. When you consider the odds given to you by the bookmaker / exchange, you will see that it is zero (or negative). Verify it for yourself on any match.JustLukeYou wrote: ↑Fri Oct 18, 2019 12:05 pmBut aren't you comparing all three odds together though not just one single odd against the probability of it happening.Speculator_3 wrote: ↑Fri Oct 18, 2019 12:02 pmThere is no such thing as "odds have a positive EV".JustLukeYou wrote: ↑Fri Oct 18, 2019 9:46 amHi Euler,
So I have been reading up on Estimated Value from this Smarkets page https://help.smarkets.com/hc/en-gb/arti ... in-betting
As the page points out just because someone finds a positive EV doesn't mean they will make a profit so what is the best way to apply a positive EV? Let's say for example I find 10 football matches. I think 5 will finish with the home team winning and 5 with away team winning. Do I calculate the EV and follow the ones with a positive EV? For example, I think in the 7th match the away team will win and the odds have a positive EV so I should back that trade over the other 9 potential trades?
Read the page again and this time try to understand what EV means.
The given odds at any one time, combined over all possible outcomes (win/draw/lose) produce a net 0 (or negative) EV for any match, unless there is an arbitrage opportunity between different exchanges/bookmakers, which is very rare.
So why does the Smarkets guide provide positive EV's?Speculator_3 wrote: ↑Fri Oct 18, 2019 12:08 pmExpected value is calculated by summing over all possible outcomes. When you consider the odds given to you by the bookmaker / exchange, you will see that it is zero (or negative). Verify it for yourself on any match.JustLukeYou wrote: ↑Fri Oct 18, 2019 12:05 pmBut aren't you comparing all three odds together though not just one single odd against the probability of it happening.Speculator_3 wrote: ↑Fri Oct 18, 2019 12:02 pm
There is no such thing as "odds have a positive EV".
Read the page again and this time try to understand what EV means.
The given odds at any one time, combined over all possible outcomes (win/draw/lose) produce a net 0 (or negative) EV for any match, unless there is an arbitrage opportunity between different exchanges/bookmakers, which is very rare.