Pricng 0-0 in a match
- OnGoldWires
- Posts: 49
- Joined: Mon Jul 20, 2009 7:07 pm
The only advice I can give is that we are now entering the funny season when a large number of players start thinking about putting their feet up and spending their hardly earned money. Make sure the match means something to both teams and expect form reversals, even if one of the teams has already been relegated.
I totally agree with this, because when I worked for Ladbrokes (pre-internet betting) all their shops had a ready reckoner to calculate Correct Score & HTFT prices on any match on the coupon. Some punters liked this because there wasn't the same betting restrictions on those marketsEuler wrote:Odds compilers don't really use historic data to calculate 0-0. The whole historical data stuff on footy is a bit of a red herring TBH. Useful but only to spot biases to examine.
In a nutshell, the fixed odds bookies didn't read too much into 0-0 draws, they tended to be set according to the outright draw price. Obviously, with goals over/under now being a major market, that may have a bearing on 0-0 having slightly different odds, but they are predominately a set price
- OnGoldWires
- Posts: 49
- Joined: Mon Jul 20, 2009 7:07 pm
Further to my response about it being football's silly season, please see "Strange Match Odds" thread.
I guess this is a match that neither side needs to win and a draw will suit both. So, there is either an "arrangement", a rumour of an "arrangement", or a group of traders trying to spook the market. It illustrates my point that the numbers and the maths are for guidance in football, especially at this point in the season.
I guess this is a match that neither side needs to win and a draw will suit both. So, there is either an "arrangement", a rumour of an "arrangement", or a group of traders trying to spook the market. It illustrates my point that the numbers and the maths are for guidance in football, especially at this point in the season.