How can a $1 bet turn into $500,000 when so many football/basketball games are so lopsided?

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I’m talking specifically about [something like this](http://statsandshots.com/freaking-out-rn/) where there are 20 games picked. Couldn’t you just pick 20 games in the first few weeks of the college football season when all of the really good teams play really crappy schools? Same goes for something like college basketball. What’s the catch?

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13 Answers

Anonymous 0 Comments

Anyone figure out who this guy is? I want to ask him if he hedged.

Anonymous 0 Comments

Hopefully that guy is hedging. If it were me I would take the bears -4 for as much cash as I have available to make sure I book a win. Would probably fly to Vegas to make that bet. The bet in the link is a site called 5dimes (offshore). If he hits that parlay I would be absolutely shocked if they actually pay him out

Anonymous 0 Comments

That link is incredible, but s/he is mostly picking spreads. So those teams have to win by a certain amount (if there’s a “-” in front of the number) or not lose by more than a certain amount (if there’s a “+” in front). If you were just choosing the winner, the odds are so heavily in your favor for some of those games that you’d barely make anything in return (for instance the Patriots this week had something like a -3800 moneyline, which means if you bet $3800 on the Patriots to just win, you’d earn $100).

So for the first few weeks you’d have to hope for the spreads to hold and there were plenty of games so far that didn’t come anywhere close to hitting the spread for the favorite.

Anonymous 0 Comments

The bets are not for the crazy good team to win against the crazy bad team, the bets are for the crazy good team to win by +X over the bad team. Alabama will crush Southern Mississippi 95% of the time, but they aren’t good enough to crush them by 38 points every single time.

Point spreads are made to try to get the odds to be 50/50, so your link isn’t describing a bet of 20 instances of good teams over bad teams, but more like flipping the coin 20 times and getting heads 20 straight times….it is very hard.

Anonymous 0 Comments

I’m sorry to be rude, but this is kind of a silly question. Payouts are based primarily on probability (technically paid so that both betting sides are even) but basically the more likely it is, the lower the payout is. I mean surely you would have guessed this?

Anonymous 0 Comments

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Anonymous 0 Comments

even if the individual event is very likely 20 of them in a row is not. The odds of rolling a 1-5 on a die 20 times in a row is about 2.6%

Anonymous 0 Comments

I dabble in sports betting. You might notice some numbers, either + or -, next to many of the bets. That means that the team listed either gets those points added to their score (+7) or gets that many points removed from their score (-7). In that way, you can have an even matchup for a game like Morgan State vs Army. Morgan State got 49.5 extra points but they didn’t lose by more than 49.5, so if you bet on Morgan State with the points you would have won. You probably could have bet on Army to straight up win that game, but you would have probably had to have bet tens of thousands of dollars just to win $100. On the other hand, you could have bet on Morgan State to win straight up (just win the game) and a $100 bet would have probably returned tens of thousands of dollars.

With a parlay, you’re stringing a lot of bets together. I usually only bet 4-5 teams max on a parlay but this person only bet 89 cents on what would lose probably 699,999 out of 700,000 times. They need the Redskins to win tonight or they lose their 89 cents. If the Redskins win, they’ll win just short of half a million dollars.

Anonymous 0 Comments

> Couldn’t you just pick 20 games in the first few weeks of the college football season when all of the really good teams play really crappy schools?

You could but the betting odds wouldn’t be as good.

Anonymous 0 Comments

It isn’t just predicting which team will win, it is predicting that a team will win when they are heavily expected to lose to a much better team, and then being right.

If I try to bet you that the sun will come up tomorrow, you aren’t going to take that bet. But if I bet you that instead of the sun, a giant wheel of cheese will rise in the morning, you’ll take that bet and give me great odds, since you are pretty sure it’s not going to happen.