Handicapping techniques can be loosely grouped into evaluating teams in three categories: class, motivation, and form.
Class meaning the quality of the respective teams, form is recent play and I hope motivation is apparent.
One may immediately ask about injuries. That is covered under the "class" umbrella as the sharp player makes adjustments to roster changes, be it trade, injury, star minor leaguer, surprising and disappointing performers, etc.
Motivation includes mental state. So letdowns, sandwich games, revenge, playoff ramifications are among the issues in said subset.
Form should be weighed in direct proportion to how often the sports play. In other words, baseball, which plays every day, is the sport where recent form is slanted the heaviest, while football is where we adjust it to the smallest value.
There is no perfect interval to rate form, but as we've said it should be number of days, not games in the apples-to-apples comparison. For example, in comparing recent form of the Lakers to the Spurs, most use last five games. We prefer the last 10 days.
Nothing can, for good or bad, alter recent form as much as time off. This explains why momentum is most important in baseball and least in football.
The old adage of cream rising to the top…or dung sinking to the bottom does have a great deal of truth to the handicapper. So across the board, quality is far and away the primary derivative in sports gambling.
The public tends to overreact to aberrational recent performance, especially in high profile game. The oddsmakers are aware of this. Hence the ability to see the big picture is one of the great qualities a gambler can have.
Famed British writer Daniel Finkelstein of The Times in the
Joe Duffy's sports betting selections are at www.GodsTips.com He is the CEO of OffshoreInsiders.com, the premier source for professional handicapper selections.
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