Thursday, September 2, 2010

After 40 days in the XL wilderness, it looks like the new betting template is bug free - and target betting is delivering wins with acceptable risk.

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Please scroll down for target betting picks for Monday, September 6

The knee-jerk response to any data I publish here is always that what's past is dead and done with, and it has nothing whatever to tell us about the future.

Since last November 1, I have been challenging the conventional wisdom by running real-time tests of the principles of target betting, posting each day's selections ahead of game time (apart from the occasional mild screw-up) and allowing the future to become the past the way it always does in real play.

I am fairly confident that the bugs are all gone from the new Excel bet calculator/tracker, and until another glitch upsets the applecart (hopefully never) I plan to put up more detailed selection summaries every day from now on.

And I want to be the first to comment that the past few days have been unusually kind to target betting, and that it would be unrealistic to assume that bumpy rides are behind us.

The dog win rate (DWR) for the 2010 baseball season stood at 42.15% after Wednesday's games, vs. 43.8% this time last year, and the closest I can get to the "ideal" DWR of 45% is by tightening the qualifying odds range quite a bit from the +100 to +180 that I have used as a guideline until recently.

Wednesday was a solid day for target betting, and would not have been as kind without the help of run-line bets, an option that was barely on my radar this time a year ago.

Statistically, favorites beat the run-line about 70% of the time, which sounds like a betting slam-dunk until you factor in the overall faves WR of less than 60%.

Multiply those two critical numbers and you get a historical RL win rate that is even lower than the current DWR.

I can hear loud yawwwwwwns from readers who don't accept the relevance of statistics to the size of their next wager, but can predict that they are drop-ins who won't be back another day!

The numbers at the top of today's selections summary reflect a couple of "tweaks" from the sports-book target betting rules I put up a few weeks back, and as always they are not mandatory.

I have extended re-doubling after an opening loss in a new series from -2 to -4 to reflect the reality that overall wins are down from almost 45% to barely 43%, with halving also kicking in at -4.

Opting for -2 also delivers a healthy win but greatly increases the exposure, providing a classic illustration of the simple truth that what sometimes seems like "aggressive" play is actually just the opposite.

Plenty of smart bettors out there reason that protecting the bankroll is their primary duty, so when times get temporarily tough (and slumps are always temporary, just like winning streaks) they reduce their bets, making it much harder for them to benefit when a prolonged downturn eases upward.

We have to remember that our bankroll is our ammunition in the never-ending battle against the odds - and if we respond to a firefight by conserving ammo and burying our heads until the bad guys stop shooting at us, we're liable to get dead in a hurry!

Obviously, reckless betting is a no-no. But abandoning a proven strategy when the going gets tough is even dumber.

And on the subject of strategies, there are some interesting developments in the InvestaPick MO that merit comment.

I have been saying for months that IP was limiting its potential by applying a simple Martingale that did not take into account paybacks at less than even money.

The effect of that was that a bet of, say, $520 after four consecutive losses would win at -110 and earn $473 towards cumulative losses of $477.50.

Close, maybe, but as the blackjack cliche tells us, close only counts in horseshoes and hand grenades, and those seemingly minor shortfalls really mount up over time.

All of a sudden, IP seems to be taking steps to address that problem, as the snip below shows...


Naturally, I applaud the change!

IP's overall strategy, with or without the apparent revision, endorses the power of the Martingale in a situation where wins come along about as often as losses.

"Experts" trash double-up all the time, but those same experts tell us over and over again that we can't win in the end, and as we all know (in the lingo of an Aussie punter I met years ago) they have their heads so far up their bums, they can see the back of their teeth!

Later today or tomorrow, I will update the comparison between IP's win against its three sets of selections ("funds") and the numbers for target betting.

Meanwhile, today's target betting selections in what I hope will be a consistent format from now on:


Keep in mind that according to the experts I mentioned, the results indicated above will turn to red ink in due time, and the wins IP has achieved in three data sets dating back to January 1, 2009, are likewise impossible.

Update at 11:30am Thursday, September 2:

OK, so here's where target betting stands vs. InvestaPick against IP's day-to-day selections from January 1, 2009, through August 31, 2010.

As far as I am aware, IP is completely on the up-and-up, although the service's disappearance from April 27 this year through the end of July waved all manner of red flags.

The flags flapped even more when all the bets that had not been posted day by day during the "hiatus" popped into place when it ended!

As I see it, IP's greatest contribution (aside from the obvious benefits of its largely transparent operation!) is that it shows that steady money can be made from picks paying less than even money.

Without the three sets of proof offered on the InvestaPick website, that concept would have been a hard sell for me.

Shorter odds, of course, mean more frequent wins, to the point where IP's selections each represent a proposition much closer to 50-50 than the 45-55 or less that applies to underdogs alone.

I have no connection whatsoever with InvestaPick and am not privy to their selections ahead of game time, since I do not subscribe to the service.

I am, however, impressed with IP's results, in spite of the fact that the triple-fund's betting method is evidently not as effective as mine!

Results shown below are verifiable on the InvestaPick website and in my own worksheets, which show only wins and losses and applicable odds and do not identify selections by team name (an irrelevance offset by the availability of that information in the IP charts!).

Wherever the word net comes up, it refers to the IP service charge of about $50 a month for its daily selections.

I don't know for sure, but I assume subscribers place their bets themselves, with the bankroll values on the IP website serving as a theoretical tracking device rather than an actual betting record.

What it all comes down to is that winning is a good thing and losing is not.

And if its published results are accurate and honest, InvestaPick therefore ranks as a commendable aid to making money at sports betting.


The results shown above were achieved with double-up set at -2, which permits the previous bet (PB) to be doubled twice instead of the indefinite number of times that the IP method permits.

As you can see, target betting occasionally calls for higher bets than the IP method, and generates more than twice the action, achieving an overall win that is more than double IP's.

Bigger bets and more action translate to greater exposure along the way to a fatter finishing bankroll - but that's hardly a surprise.

The lessons both methods teach us is that we cannot hope to win in the long unless we abandon subjective, emotional choices of both bet selections and bet values, and follow a plan that replaces judgment with consistency.

Bet numbers, not names - that about sums it up!

Friday, September 3 at 10:00am

Tough day for target betting yesterday, the first in a while.

Altogether now: You've gotta speculate to accumulate.

It would be nice to win every day, but I suspect the bookies would find a way to put a stop to that!

Today's selections:


It has been suggested to me that the way to avoid one-bet slumps like Thursday's cliff drop is to "spread the load" across several wagers when one in a bunch grows much larger than the rest.

Trust me: bad, bad, bad idea.

The tracking sheet for the seven-dog trial permitted me to see what woulda happened if a large combined loss to date (LTD) had been spread across multiple bets, and I guessed ahead of time that hedging that way was very unlikely to help.

I knew that because years ago, I was persuaded to try a similar approach against blackjack and baccarat, faced with the uncomfortable reality that while I had a firm grip on the numbers, the bankroll was in someone else's grasp.

The predictable effect of "risk sharing" or whatever else you might choose to call it is that while the hole does not get deeper as fast as it sometimes can with the target betting rules properly applied, climbing out of it becomes a whole lot harder.

Yesterday, one big losing bet brought all the others down, in spite of an overall 50% win rate (7 wins in 14 bets).

Another day, a single winning bet - a whale among minnows! - will have the opposite effect.

Equalize bet values, and you will see gravity take over, with the bookies' edge taking relatively little bites out of your bankroll until it's all been swallowed.

Here's how target betting looks over the past few days:


I would love to be able to promise everyone that HUGE wins are GUARANTEED!!!

But only scammers do that.

Bet systematically or strategically, with subjectivity and emotion completely eliminated from the picture, and you can beat the odds in the long run.

You just can't do it every day...

Update at 1:30pm, Friday, September 3:

The reluctance of some readers to accept the importance of betting wholly "by the numbers" and to recognize that large wins are every bit as inevitable as large losses is, to me, completely counter-intuitive.

But then, it would be, wouldn't it?

I get similar resistance to the whole concept of running separate series (or lines, as some people prefer to call them) that are independent of each other, with bet values that are connected only to previous win-loss patterns within each series.

For the life of me, I can't see any other way to successfully challenge the house or bookies' advantage in gambling - unless there are people out there who are able to define blind luck as a method!

Winning consistently boils down to exploiting what is predictable in a given area of gambling, and defending ourselves as effectively as possible against the hazards of what is UNpredictable.

Take baseball, for example (a valid choice, since there's not a whole lot else to bet on right now, unless we are tempted to join the fleeced millions who shore up the thoroughbred horse-race industry!).

The overall underdog win rate (DWR) for the 2009 MLB season was 43.18%, with the 2010 season to date (Sep 2) lagging a little at 42.23%.

Applying a +110 to +140 "qualifying" range to dog bets last season would have improved the DWR by a significant couple of points to 45.4%. The matching number for 2010 so far is 44.4%.

How significant is that 2+ points gap between the DWR for dogs at any price and dogs within a tight range? Hard to say exactly - but in every other gambling milieu, 2% can spell the difference between winning and losing in the long run.

I have seen some benefits from sprinkling run-line bets on favorites among the money-line bets that used to be my only concern, so I took a look at those too.

In 2009, avoiding RL bets outside a very tight range (+100 to +110) woulda given us a win rate of 39.6% overall.

This year to date, the figure is 32.8%.

Remember that we're talking flat bets here, not wagers determined by the target betting rules - but the numbers serve to tell us that however smart we may think we are, the book is over the long haul certain to win more bets than we do.

We can change the WR by tightening the qualifying range still further, but as we do that, we chew chunks out of the gap between average win values and average loss values.

The primary mantra of target betting is to win more when we win than we lose when we lose, so we need to keep that gap as wide as possible.

After Thursday's finals were in, and in spite of our first really expensive day in quite a while, the average target betting winning bet was worth $328 and the average loss was $200.

If you want significant percentages, do the math! Our average win value exceeded our average loss value by 64%.

And yet there are still people out there who say, "Yeah, I get it - you bet more when you know you're going to win than you do when you know you're gonna lose."

Bet strictly by the numbers, and you don't need crystal balls...just the regular kind.

As for series betting, here's the September 2 update of the charts I put up a few days back.

The charts speak for themselves, but just in case I have readers who can't tell red from green, three of the 15 series currently being tracked are bleeding red ink, with recovery an eventual certainty. The other 12 (80% of the total) are all making money.

That's no surprise to me!


Saturday, September 4 at 10:30am

Freaky Friday!

Not much more to say about yesterday, which saw dogs getting whupped in 10 MLB games out of 14 (one game was canceled) and me landing just TWO right bets in ten.

Today's selections, which include five college football contests:


Sunday, September 5 at 9:15am

I'm still waiting for that next big bounce.

Saturday was a tad frustrating, with one large bet costing me $1,000 and another winning almost enough to cover it.

Baseball dogs won nine games out of 16 yesterday, and target betting won seven out of 16 bets.

Overall, we lost about $200 on the day - nothing to celebrate, but sustainable damage, given the current state of the bankroll.


Today's selections:


Monday, September 6 at 9:45am

That bounce I needed wasn't long in coming, as things turned out!

Yesterday's finals gave target betting a boost that's worth illustrating here (although I don't plan to post results every day, in the interests of controlling clutter!).


Ten wins in 13 bets were made possible by an underdog surge that wiped out the faves in 12 of the 15 games on the MLB Sunday schedule - a bonanza for the book, naturally.

An 18-5 thrashing (just one example) makes you wonder whose head was where when the odds were set, but then in the end, bookies and other insiders are no more infallible than the rest of us.

A $2,000 boost for target betting isn't exactly Christmas, great as it may be to be moving north again, because we still have more than $7,000 in LTDs to mop up, and that's going to take some work.

Here's how we stand right now, followed by Monday's target betting selections:




Update at 11:30am, Monday, September 6:

The new target betting template has all the bells and whistles I could think of when I was putting it together, and these include day to day tracking of bets of different types.

As of the close of play yesterday, I had placed 158 run-line bets, representing 30% of all bets selected since the current cycle began.

The RL win rate (WR) was 37% vs. 173/371 or 46.6% for money-line (ML) bets.

Winning RLBs brought in $18,975 or 30% of the total win, and lost $15,500 for a profit to date of $3,475.

MLBs have won $44,170 to date and lost $34,925, putting them ahead $9,245 so far and making them a fractionally more profitable option than RLBs.

The most critical number remains the relationship between the average win value (AWV or AWB) and the average loss value (ALV or ALB): right now it's +$275/-$170 rounded up, or 162%.

Given that we expect to lose more bets than we win, the name of the game will always be to win more when we win than we lose when we lose.

There's no doubt that tightening the qualifying ranges for both RL and ML bets has had a beneficial effect so far.

Long may that trend continue.

Never forget that what's past will always be relevant to the selections we make and the amounts we choose to bet in the future.

Lose sight of that essential truth, and you can kiss your bankroll goodbye!

An important reminder: The only person likely to make money out of this blog is you, Dear Reader. There's nothing to buy, ever, and your soul is safe (from me, at least). Test my ideas and use them or don't. It's up to you. One more piece of friendly advice: If you are inclined to use target betting with real money against online "casinos" such as Bodog, spend a few minutes and save a lot of money by reading this._

Friday, August 27, 2010

Are eight dog wins in nine games a sign that the bookies are in control? Or do the upsets show that they have no idea what they're doing?

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(Please scroll down for target betting picks for Wednesday, September 1)


No one much likes the idea that the makers of the book have the power to pull strings to get the results they want.

In fact, if we had the slightest suspicion that any outcome was unrelated to a given team's sporting chances, we would be crazy to place a bet.

It's a debate that might provide fodder for several books of the literary variety.

But what it comes down to is this: Thursday, August 26, 2010 was a very good day for baseball bookies!

It was a thin schedule, six games shy of a regular line-up, but it lent a little added credence to my long-held contention that backing underdogs is not an entirely insane way to beat the odds and make a few extra bucks.

Scoresandodds.com offers a very useful daily summary of betting trends that I don't always remember to refer to or save, but it happens that yesterday I somehow managed to do both.


At -210, the Cards were a sure thing against the Nats, and any game the worst team in the league plays against anybody can usually be counted on as yet another loss for them.

But somehow, just this once, the gods of baseball opted to shake things up a little and hand the Nats a one-run win that also dumped a bleepload of boodle into the book's back pocket.

I bet knowing that makes you feel really good...

Yesterday was the 2010 baseball season's 144th day and the windfall it brought the bookies does not prove a thing.

As it happens, it was not a bad day for target betting, either: nothing spectacular, with just three wins in seven picks, but once again the inevitable happened and one of those wins lined up with an extra-high bet.

It happens. A lot. And that's really the whole point.

Here are today's target betting picks:


(With thanks, once again, to Scoresandodds.com)

Saturday, August 28 at 12:30pm

I really can't over-emphasize the importance of eliminating subjective judgment from the selection process, at least if you plan to use a consistent, non-random betting method to beat odds that are always against you in the long run.

And of course I am aware that for the vast majority of gamblers, choices - aka gut feelings, hunches, educated guesses or whatever - are the name of the game.

I am also aware, as you are, that most gamblers are losers.

Faithful followers of this real-time adventure know that selections are drawn from the daily schedule in the order that the masters of the games dictate, and posted in chronological order with bet numbers thereby in sequence.

So when a day like Friday comes along, with far more losses than wins but with most of those wins lining up with big bets, no one is surprised except the true believers in the notion that it takes knowledge and experience to make the right choices.

Quelle crappe! as my Parisian punting pal Pierre would put it.

All right, there are days when I wince as the small potatoes get green checks and their big fat neighbors in the line up draw red exes, but I tell myself it's all for the greater good.

Right now, the numbers back me up: The latest trial began 36 days ago, and the opening BR has been more than doubled with several series still in mid-recovery.

I like that.

Next up are today's selections, a couple of which are already in play (my lists are always e-mailed before game-time, remember, even on those rare days when I post them late here!):


My one-thumb blackjack number passed a milestone in the dumpster today, clicking up a total "win" of over $200,000 in funny-munny since I had to start over after the theft of my last iPod Touch.

Target betting was created for blackjack and baccarat back in the days when dinosaurs roamed the earth and casino gamblers revered Ed Thorp.

As far as I know, Prof. Thorp remains extant, although I haven't laid eyes on him since we met at a Pebble Beach wing-ding way back in 1978.

His ideas remain relevant, too, although his take on keeping emotion and subjectivity out of the betting process is quite a bit different than mine.

The iPod blackjack app remains a frustrating opponent because the house edge is preposterously unreal.

Never mind, target betting beat the "house" anyway.


Sunday, August 29 at 10:10am

Gravity grabbed the wheel again yesterday, but no doubt the downhill rush will generate just the momentum needed to power us skyward yet again today or tomorrow!

Slim pickings today, but we're staying in the game with these selections:


Monday, August 30 at 11:20am

I guess it's a tough break when you score six right picks out of eight and all you get for it is a tiny step towards a full recovery.

But that's how it goes sometimes.

There were only eight qualifying bets on Sunday and it happens that the series (or lines) that are in greatest need of help right now are Nos. 9 through 15!

Today's MLB lineup gives us 12 acceptable bets, so we'll have to wait and see what happens next.

Overall, we are still in profit since this new trial began in late July, and profit is always a good thing.

Today's picks:


Tuesday, August 31 at 12:15pm

Six right bets and six wrong Monday, giving us a 50% win rate that would not produce a profit without target betting...or blind luck!

The current multi-bet, mixed (money-line and run-line) trial blipped up a few more bucks yesterday, coming tantalizingly close to its best win to date since the first bet was put in play on July 25.

Bet randomly against random, or essentially unpredictable, outcomes and your are sure to lose in the long run.

That's a universal rule of gambling that comes as no surprise to anyone except dreamers with get-rich-quick schemes beckoning them in the direction of the next deep hole!

Of course, everyone is in gambling to make money - or so they think.

Losers would never admit that they actually enjoy getting taken to the cleaners, although once in a while I come across someone who tells me that gambling is the most fun to be had in his or her life, and losses are the acceptable price of all that entertainment.

Casinos and sports books can't do without people of that particular persuasion, so more power to them.

Once again, I am grateful to my pal "Peter Punter" for sending news of yet another doomed GRQ scheme my way.

This one (from the same source as the PlusMoney ticket-shredding machine) has to do with Show bets on horses, and already I am agog to know how past profits can be as "HUGE" as they are claimed to be.

Personally, I would rather be at a racetrack than in a casino or sports-book any day, having been hooked on horseflesh (alive and on the hoof, not the way the French like it) since I was a teenager.

When we lived in Southern California, it was a family tradition to take a picnic into the infield for opening day at Santa Anita the day after Christmas, and there's nothing to match seeing a field of thoroughbreds thundering by with clods flying and steam rising.

That said, betting on a horse race is about as iffy a proposition as any you can find.

For fun, live and in person, it's pretty much unbeatable. As a long-term profit source, forget it!

I wish Peter P. all the best with this one, of course, but with show bets paying even less than short-odds bets on games with, in effect, only two participants, I am not optimistic.

Those HUGE wins are alluring, maybe. But once again, there's no proof - and the very first "system" bet, in the second race at Suffolk Downs on Monday, was, er, a no-show.

The three horses that did show in that race paid $3.20, $2.80 and $3.00 on a $2 bet, which effectively demonstrates the hazards of the game.

An 80-cent payback on a $2 bet is not much to celebrate, let's face it. In sports book parlance, it would be expressed as -250 (bet $250 to win $100), and odds that short do not a profit make for anyone but the book!

Meanwhile, back at games with two-legged contenders, target betting is doing tolerably well against the odds.

The template seems to be bug-free at last, and here's a summary of where the top 15 series stand before game-times today:


The above is not offered as "proof" of HUGE wins to come.

But hopefully it serves to illustrate the wisdom of applying the principles of target betting to lines or series that function independently of one another.

To date (since July 25, that is) there have been as many as 19 bets on a single day, which created 19 series, not 15 as shown.

But above #15, bets occur so rarely that tracking series activity is pretty much of a waste of time - or, given the limits of a worksheet screen, space.

Figures on the far right of each series summary show the total number of bets for that series and how many of them won, so Series #15 has so far seen 11 bets in 39 days, with 4 of them winners.

Just three of the 15 series shown are in the red right now, and overall, target betting is just a hair away from its best win to date.

The method, already anecdotally validated by the nine-month 7DT, has more than doubled its opening bankroll and has achieved a 14% "hold" of overall action to date.

That's a number that would make a bookie proud!

Today's target betting picks:


Wednesday, September 1 at 11:20am

Some days it's tough to squeak past the game-time deadline, especially when someone on high decrees that the first pitch has to be whizzing through the air by 9:05am.

Do any fans ever make it to the field on time when that happens?

Tuesday was a so-so day for target betting, with the potential damage from just three right picks in ten softened by the fact that two of those three wins matched up with bets above $100.

The overall season-to-date win rate for underdogs remains behind the number for this time last year, but certainly not by a gap wide enough to discredit the notion that dogs are a good long-term bet.

Peter Punter's new horse-race scheme had a winner yesterday and another today: at Delaware Park today, Sparkling Spirit in the 1:15 race paid $2.10 on a $2 show bet, a level of payback that according to my math cannot prove profitable in the long run.

Hope I'm wrong. Pete deserves a break!

Today's target betting picks:


An important reminder: The only person likely to make money out of this blog is you, Dear Reader. There's nothing to buy, ever, and your soul is safe (from me, at least). Test my ideas and use them or don't. It's up to you. One more piece of friendly advice: If you are inclined to use target betting with real money against online "casinos" such as Bodog, spend a few minutes and save a lot of money by reading this._

Tuesday, August 24, 2010

We're on another rollercoaster ride, with big wins one day and a cliff-drop the next. What's the alternative? Looks like there isn't one!

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(Please scroll down for target betting picks for Thursday, August 26)

I have been saying for more years than I can count that high risk is an inevitable component of any and all forms of gambling.

It is an unpalatable truth that is only a little less true if you happen to be a bookie or a casino, and can hedge your bets most of the time.

Yet almost every day, I hear about another "low risk" or "can't lose" proposition that claims to eliminate all those pesky ups and downs, replacing them with a steady stream of wins climbing skyward like the yellow brick road to Oz.

I just wish one of them actually worked.

The most impressive steady winner I have come across so far is the InvestaPick three-pick plan - until its creators mysteriously stopped posting data at the end of April, then came back to life with a bang in July, playing catch-up with bets that avoided the nuisance factor of real time.

Since then, there have been days when InvestaPick shows "Pick Posted" on its website without those picks appearing in its next day updates.

Still and all, I continue to give IP the benefit of the doubt, because just like all you folks out there, I dream of profits without risk, aka gain without pain.

What I find most impressive about InvestaPick's published results is that they were achieved from hundreds of picks paying less than even money.

In essence, the three "funds" use a simple Martingale, benefiting from the mathematical fact that while shorter odds mean smaller paybacks, they also bring more frequent wins.

From time to time, I have posted comparisons between the results achieved the IP way, and my modification of IP's method, which requires prior losses (LTDs in target betting lingo) to be fully recovered before the next bet in a sequence falls back to the minimum.

Around the end of the month, I will update the numbers and post them again.

Meanwhile, here are target betting's picks for today, Tuesday, August 24:


Wednesday, August 25 at 10:15am

Yesterday turned out to be a great day for target betting, less because of the 50% WR from four right picks out of eight, but because of our three good friends, timing, timing and timing.

Wins from bets 1 and 8 lined up with maximum wagers, shooting the method's green line skyward once again.

I can't deliver precise details because my long-in-completion bet calculator blew another gasket yesterday, and a mysterious infection that has me scarfing anti-biotics has left me too cross-eyed to cope with the task of finding the right fix.

Hasn't stopped me from finding more picks for today, though!

Timing really is critical, and it is always a sure thing that eventually, big wins will hit where they are most needed and the target betting principle will be vindicated once again.

Eventually can be a very expensive word, at least for a while, but recovery is made possible by bets that sometimes carry a lot of zeroes, but are never larger than they need to be.

It really is silly to envision a strategy that can avoid digging a deep hole at some point, a delusion matched in dumbness by the notion that cumulative losses can be recovered by making only safe bets in small amounts.

In this business, what the hell is a safe bet anyway?

Look back just a few days in the current baseball season (or any other!) and you will find results that stunned the bookies as much as they did the punters who lost their shirts on them.

At least we hope that the bookies were taken by surprise, in spite of the fact that it is their coffers that get a big fat boost when the so-called underdog thrashes the presumed favorite by 9-1 or whatever (see Chicago Cubs over Washington Nationals two days ago, for example).

Wednesday's bets:


(With thanks to Scoresandodds.com)

Update at 3:00pm Wednesday:

OK, so I munched on my drugs at lunchtime and while the bugs in my bod are still making me feel pretty rotten, the bugs in the bet calculator seem to have been vanquished.

At least until the next little bugger (hah!) pops up...

Turns out Tuesday's win was not quite enough to offset Monday's dip, and right now, today's picks are looking a tad iffy.

If the Atlanta Braves manage to hold onto their 2-run lead, the damage should not be too bad, but they are under almost as much pressure as I am!

The chart for the current state of the bankroll would make me nauseous if I wasn't sick already, but at least we're still in the green (sorry, but in my book, black is not the color of money).



Thursday, August 26 at 9:45am

Ultra-slim pickings today, but enough to keep the pot boiling:


Yesterday, the Braves not only gave up the two-run lead they need to make my run-line bet a winner, but handed the win to the other guys!

But hey, there's always today...

An important reminder: The only person likely to make money out of this blog is you, Dear Reader. There's nothing to buy, ever, and your soul is safe (from me, at least). Test my ideas and use them or don't. It's up to you. One more piece of friendly advice: If you are inclined to use target betting with real money against online "casinos" such as Bodog, spend a few minutes and save a lot of money by reading this._

Saturday, August 14, 2010

The primary test of a viable, reliable betting strategy is not how much trouble it can get into, it's how deep a hole it can get out of.

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Please scroll down for target betting selections for Monday, August 23

Trouble, after all, is the name of the game in gambling.

(And I'm very sorry, Teacher, for ending a sentence with a preposition).

The Plus Money system that "Peter Punter" was briefly hopeful about had a stunning ability to lose money, but not a hope in hell of getting it back as long as bet values were calculated as a fixed percentage of a dwindling bankroll.

It is plain common sense that if you bet progressively - or regressively! - smaller amounts in a downturn, the upturn you hope will eventually save your bacon will have to be huge to get the job done.

Losing streaks are, of course, a fact of life.

So are winning streaks.

In a game that is relatively close to a 50-50 proposition (blackjack with a house edge around 1% is a 49.5-50.5 option, for example) wins will pretty much balance out losses over time.

Not so in sports book betting, where the bookie's edge is at least 10%, and often far more.

It therefore follows that whatever the so-called experts may choose to argue, only progressive betting can conquer negative expectation and deliver a consistent long-term profit.

It can't be any old progressive strategy, of course.

It turns out that if a regular old Martingale had been used throughout my nine-month, seven-dog trial, the overall loss would have been in the hundreds of thousands.

Instead, target betting pulled off a win that averaged out at almost $10,000 a month.

And that's without doing what the promoters of TOM (the other method) did, tweaking and twiddling results from the 2009 baseball season until a huge "win" could be claimed for a strategy that could never, ever duplicate that success against future bets.

Hindsight is a wonderful thing, but not when it is used to produce fraudulent results.

The 7DT played out day-by-day for the best part of a year, and the only rule change that applied was one I predicted in the very beginning: expansion of the betting spread to comply with a target betting rule that has been in place for decades.

As things stand, I am satisfied that the sports book modification of target betting, which recognizes a "house edge" that is at least ten times greater than the negative expectation for table games, is viable and proven so.

What I am concerned about right now is the bet selection process.

For the last few weeks, I have been enthusiastic about the potential of run-line bets as a means of improving the overall win rate achieved by backing underdogs only (less than 42% at the end of the 7DT).

After three weeks, RL bets don't look so good!

Their WR since I rolled out the new betting template is barely 30%, and their notional cash position is a LOSS of almost $4,000.

"Dog" bets, on the other hand, have a WR since July 24 of 46% and are collectively $10,000 ahead.

Three weeks is not much of a test period, it's true, and I will keep going with this indefinitely.

I'm just a little less optimistic now, is all!

Here are selections for Saturday, August 14 (a longer list of bets in the wake of damage done on Friday the 13th!):



Sunday, August 15 at 8:30am

Saturday was a diem horriblis, as the Queen of England might have put it, swallowing all our profits, digging into the preliminary bankroll and putting target betting more than $10,000 behind its best win since July 24.

As I said before, it's easy enough to dig a deep hole. Getting out of it is what counts.

In a rush today with games starting early as usual on a Sunday, so here's the bare bones version of today's picks:


Update at 10:10am Sunday:

The day's pick list looks a little tidier this way:


My primary focus right now is improving the bet selection process.

It has to be entirely numbers-driven, but it's clear that since July 24 the net has been way too wide.

I have to settle on a middle ground between TOM's scatter-shot approach, and the all-dogs method I used before.

Throughout the 9-month 7DT, I fought in vain to eliminate subjectivity, at least on days when more than seven prospects fell into my +100 to +180 range.

I don't want to have to make choices, so for now I am assuming that tightening the range is the best option.

The objective is to make the process so simple that selecting the bets, then placing them (online or at one of my neighborhood casinos) takes an hour a day at most.

For many punters, that would take most of the fun out of sports betting - they love to agonize over and analyze statistics until their eyes cross, thereby (they hope) improving their win potential.

I'm betting that "letting the bookies do the choosing" can match or even improve on an expert's win rate, keeping in mind that I am still reluctant to accept selections paying less than even money.

As I have commented before, assuming InvestaPick's records are accurate, that service seems to do quite nicely with bets at odds as short as -120.

Two of IP's three funds claim a win rate above 50%, a number that would smooth out the roller-coaster ride that makes target betting a little too exciting at times!

Monday, August 16, 2010 at 12:10pm

Today's a keep it simple day:



Sunday was irritating!

Seven right bets out of 12 did not line up with larger values, so the sum total was another small dip into the bankroll.

Target betting's time will come. It always does.

Tuesday, August 17, 2010 at 11:20am

Monday was a thin baseball day as usual, but with an add-on from WBA we managed four right bets out of six picks total.

The boost to the current target betting bankroll wasn't much ($400 and change) but some progress was made, at least.

It's all about timing, as always - right picks have to line up with the big bets or it's possible to win more bets than you lose and still slide further into the hole, as we did over the weekend.

Today's picks, in plain-and-simple format:


Wednesday, August 18, 2010 at 11:00am

The battle to create the perfect Excel multi-series bet calculator goes on, with the fancy goodies in the 2010 spreadsheet still just about outweighing the familiarity of the 1997 alternative!

I have learned that there is a big difference between tailoring a worksheet for thousands of random outcomes that can be refreshed at the touch of a key, and creating one for data that comes in oh-so-slowly in real time.

I have stopped posting Excel screenshots for current bets because when an error in a formula is exposed and then corrected, it will sometimes drastically change the numbers shown on screen.

The actual bets that I place day by day are not relevant to this exercise: What has to be demonstrated (as with the 7-dog trial) is that the same set of rules, consistently applied over a long period of time (for example, nine months!) will achieve a positive overall outcome.

It's not the rules that keep changing as I struggle with this challenge, it's Excel's interpretation of them.

And, of course, it's not the program's fault: I am solely responsible for the content of each of those pesky conditional formulas, and the mistakes are mine, all mine!

Meanwhile, I am getting some great feedback from transferring my databases over to Excel little by little.

I have had the same information at my fingertips for years, but only lately have I started to take a serious interest in the comparative merits of underdog and run-line bets, and the relevance of odds ranges.

Here's a little nugget: Bet a certain range of dog options in the 2009 baseball season and the win rate (WR) woulda been 46.0% for flat bets, without the profit-building benefits of target betting.

Bet the same range throughout the 2009 NHL (hockey) season, and the WR would have been...45.8%

Apply the range to the current MLB season, and the WR is 41.58%

Should we conclude from this that underdogs are statistically certain to stage a dramatic comeback between now and the 2010 World Series? Probably not, but in both the full-season 2009 MLB and NHL databases, dog wins overall held steady at 46%.

In the current baseball season to August 15, the number is 45.2%.

We can improve the WR number by widening the range of "bettable" odds, but then we see a big change in the flat-bet value of those dog wagers.

We have to strike a balance between more wins bringing in less dough, and fewer wins at better odds, which sounds like a statement of the obvious, but is a truth that's lost on the vast majority of sports book punters.

Where's the sense, for instance, in backing primarily favorites in pursuit of a 65% WR when the average payback for all those short-odds picks is -160 or 63 cents on the dollar?

Back favorites if you must, but never place a bet at odds shorter than -120.

Here are today's picks:


Thursday, August 19, 2010 at 7:35am

Short and sweet today!


Keeping it simple again today, and crossing my fingers that stripping down the auto-bet template and virtually starting over has done the trick.

(Not that it's a trick: a trick is when you claim your strategy can win close to a half mill in one baseball season, then it goes pear-shaped almost from the first game the following year! Not much of a trick, come to think of it...).

Right now, using the rules published long ago (but with the double-up error corrected), target betting is up by about 75% of its opening BR, and its win is equal to about 12% of total action since July 24.

Today's picks:


Saturday, August 21, 2010 at 3:25pm

Still battling with the Excel instant bet calculator!

I'm beginning to think I would be better with a stubby #2 pencil and a clean napkin...

Today's picks:


Sunday, August 22, 2010 at 9:40am

Saturday was a satisfying day for target betting: seven right picks out of 15 might not sound like much, percentage-wise, but when the wins line up with the big bets, as they did yesterday, the inevitability of the effect does not make it any less gratifying!

More about that in a day or so.

Meanwhile, Sunday's picks (just in time!):


Monday, August 23, 2010 at 2:25pm

Took a hammering yesterday but we're still ahead of the game.

Thin schedule today, but hopefully it will bring more winners for target betting.


An important reminder: The only person likely to make money out of this blog is you, Dear Reader. There's nothing to buy, ever, and your soul is safe (from me, at least). Test my ideas and use them or don't. It's up to you. One more piece of friendly advice: If you are inclined to use target betting with real money against online "casinos" such as Bodog, spend a few minutes and save a lot of money by reading this._

Sunday, August 8, 2010

The harder they fall...the higher they bounce. Now's the time when confidence and consistency count the most!

_
(Please scroll down for selections for Thursday, August 12)

Saturday was a lousy day by any standard - just two wins in 15 picks.

Even the most brilliant betting strategy known to man can't make hay out of a 13% win rate. Keep that up, and I'll soon be bankrupt.

But just like a bookie, I know that numbers rule, and that even the most dramatic downturn will be canceled out by a succession of good days in due time.

And speaking of bookies, the only good news to come out of yesterday's mess is that the pattern of wins was hard on them, too.

Confidence is critical at this point.

It's easy to stick with a plan when everything is going well, but the time we need a solid, effective betting strategy the most is when wins are hardest to come by.

Letting target betting play out in real time, as I am doing all over again right now with the 9-month 7-dog trial behind me, is a nail-biting experience at times.

But recoveries that unfold "before your very eyes" are much more relevant to proving my strategy than historical data, however accurate and verifiable it might be.

The clock's running out for the start of Sunday's games, so here are today's updates:




Monday, August 9 at 11:55am

It's as much as I can do today to get the Monday picks posted!

I keep finding bugs in the new Excel template, and I am starting to wish I had stuck with reliable, old-fashioned Quattro Pro 123BC (the prehistoric version).

It's not that the target betting rules are complicated, far from it, but that my brain is struggling with a new formula language at a time when I'd rather be simply kicking back and counting my winnings.

No winnings Sunday, though, and the slide goes on.

I'm hanging in there regardless, and once I get Excel mastered, I will be able to show why.


Note the comments in the list, an indication that subjectivity is creeping back into the picture.

That's not a good thing. I want the numbers to dictate choices, nothing else. And believe me, I'm working on that...

Update at 12:45pm Monday:

I was in a rush to beat the sound of the window slamming on bets for today's early game and was too late anyway, so now I can add the following!

Betting options promising an even-plus payback enables modifications to the standard target betting rules for table games that reflect two important differences in the indoor and outdoor arenas (OK, hockey's played indoors, but work with me a little here!).

Difference #1: blackjack has a house edge that's around 1%, while sports betting gives the book an edge that's generally between 10-15%. It follows that betting sports, you are not going to win as often, but when you win you will win more (Difference #2).

The casino rule in target betting is that an opening loss in a new series may be followed by a bet as high as PB x 5 (5x the previous bet) because there's pretty much a 50-50 chance that the first loss will be followed by a win and if that happens, the series will be quickly turned around with a profit.

Not so in sports. So, never more than double the opening bet, and after that, redouble only once (-1,-2,-4,-4).

Dry spells generally lost longer in sports betting (and not just because at table games, 100 bets an hour is slow going, and at the bookie's, 100 bets a week makes your head spin!).

I'm talking now about the length of losing streaks: usually, you will see more and longer downturns, making it wise to not just freeze your wager value after a third loss, but to start reducing it.

In the 7-dog trial, and now in the new real-time test of target betting, I double twice, then start going backwards until a win prompts a bet that is not more than 5x the pre-payback value of the winner.

That's the biggest change from table games: At blackjack or baccarat, I will react to a mid-recovery win by going for the whole loss to date (LTD) plus one unit because I have about a 50-50 shot at turning things around with a second successive win.

Betting the book, the odds are 45-55 if I'm lucky, so a little caution is called for.

And please, don't confuse odds with win/loss stats!

Odds are set by the bookie to make losing a very unlikely outcome for him, keeping in mind that in most games, more than 80% of punters back the team at the shortest odds.

That's why the book needs underdogs to win just often enough to keep profits high but not so often that they make nonsense of the odds.

Assume 1,000 $100 bets on a given game, with the favorites at -170 and the dogs at +150; a fave win will give 800 bettors a payback of $59 apiece, $47,200 offset by $20,000 collected from 200 losing dog bets (a loss to the book of $27,200).

Flip the result, and the book pays $30,000 to dog backers and collects $80,000 from folks who were sure the favorite was going to win hands down. Result: a smiling bookie.

Once again, an extract from today's Vegas breakdown, courtesy of Scoresandodds.com, an invaluable online resource for anyone dedicated to the challenge of winning at sports book betting.


In sports, winning streaks are both shorter and less frequent, so the target betting casino rule that calls for the next bet after an opening win to be at least PB x 1.5 may not be as effective and may actually be a liability.

Throughout the nine-month 7DT, I shelved the win progression (WP) rule, and did very nicely without it.

Once the new template is fully debugged, it will enable thousands of sports bets to be "replayed" with minor variations in the betting rules.

This is not about fiddling and twiddling until losses become wins but enables a cool analysis of what's smart and what's not in a betting milieu in which stats do not change significantly from season to season.

Here's how the target betting rules look right now:

1. Take no odds shorter than -110
2. Start each new series with a bet that is half of 1% of your total BR.
3. After a first loss, double the bet, and do the same after a second loss.
4. After three consecutive losses, halve the bet, and do that until the minimum is reached.
5. After a mid-series win, bet the LTD rounded up plus a single unit UNLESS that bet would be more than 5x the previous bet, in which case use that value (example follows).
6. If a turnaround bet is lost, follow rule 3 above, always rounding up in multiples of your minimum.
7. After an opening win in a new series, bet PBx1.5 and keep doing that until a loss.
8. When a loss ends a winning streak, repeat the losing bet value, then apply rule 3.
9. If long odds on a winning bet cover the LTD plus a 1-unit profit (a unit being the minimum bet value) call it end of series (EOS) and start over.

Example: A mid-series win leaves you with an LTD of -$411 at a time when your minimum is $25; your next bet should be $411/25 rounded up = $425 plus a single unit (your win target) = $450, but it should be limited to 5x your previous bet if necessary.

As I said, simple rules. I just wish automating them for multiple bets via an Excel worksheet was as easy as it ought to be!

Tuesday, August 10 at 2:45pm

Still waiting for that bounce - and please, no smart remarks about dead cats...

I am as happy as I ever was with the algorithm that drives target betting, but with more bets on each day's lineup, I am becoming increasingly concerned about the selection process I am using.

It's tough for any betting strategy to stay ahead without a reasonable win rate, which I estimate to be somewhere between 43% and 45% (and higher wouldn't hurt).

Now I'm looking at casting an even wider net - something I would not have dreamed of a couple of months ago - and hedging some bets to pump up the WR.

No details yet, but going strictly by the numbers and avoiding the poisonous taint of subjectivity, expanding daily bet blocks over the past 10 days woulda pumped the WR from 41.5% to 45.5%.

The sample is tiny and inconsequential and I need to research this idea by querying the entire database. But big oaks from little acorns grow, blah blah blah.

Here are Tuesday's picks:


Wednesday, August 11 at 9:20am

Tuesday was a kinder day for target betting, with seven wins in 16 bets.

But as always, bets on the day after sky-rocket when turnarounds are incomplete, and in spite of all the totally predictable recoveries I have seen in the past, big fat wagers are nail-biters.

I guess the strategy is akin to a complex, cold-blooded game of Whack-a-Mole, with many more mallets and multiple moles.

Because the selection process is deliberately unemotional and objective, there are days when I look at how picks have lined up with large bet values and worry that if I had had the choice, I would have done things differently.

Today, for example, I'm counting on a run-line bet on the Washington Nats at +180 to give me a turnaround, and everyone knows the Nats are probably the worst team in baseball.

I'm happier putting $1,625 on the Arizona Diamondbacks to give me an underdog win at +115, for some reason.

The truth is that over time, random selection is no better or worse than the subjective process we think of as expertise, which may be bad for our egos but is demonstrably good for our wallets!

Once again, I look at the target betting template after several more hours of debugging and feel confident that now I have it right.

We'll see.

Picks for today, Wednesday, August 11:


Thursday, August 12 at 2:15pm

Wednesday gave target betting another welcome "bounce" and the green line on the chart clicked upwards another notch or two.

No surprises, but good news for all that.

In spite of all the slumps and recoveries I have seen since I started this, with downturns always obliterated in due time, whenever that line heads south, I can't help wondering if this time the hole will prove bottomless.

We're a long way from out of the woods (still in the red with over $4,000 in combined LTDs to be recovered) but believe me, I would not be revisiting the real-time experience if I didn't have faith.

The Excel template seems to be bug-free, at least until the next time, but even the Office 2010 version is giving me some major headaches, slowing down to a crawl and hanging up and sometimes even crashing with depressing regularity.

I can see keeping the day-by-day bet tracker in Excel but relying on wonderful, antediluvian Quattro Pro to do the nitty-gritty work.

Maybe it will turn out that greedy old Microsoft has built a treacle factor into the Home and Student version of Office 2010 that will disappear if I ever break down and upgrade to the Business level.

Don't want to do that. I'm a Student, after all, studying statistics and gambling at Home!

Here are today's picks. Early games are long gone, but as always, the selections were e-mailed out well ahead of game times.


Friday, August 13 at 4:15pm

Let's hope that paraskevidekatriaphobia (the fear that Friday the 13th is always an unlucky day) doesn't prove justified today.

First, today's target betting picks:


I'm not all the way through the woods with the Excel template, partly because the program keeps wigging out on me in spite of my 6MB RAM 'n my Intel Core Duo whatevers, but also because I keep finding earwigs in the formulas.

That's why I'm not crowing about yesterday's notional win, shown at the top of the bet list above.

Problem is, I have egg on my face for posting a recommendation that the next bet should be redoubled twice after two successive mid-recovery losses.

That has never been a weapon in the target betting arsenal and I think I must have been sniffing something when I said that.

The bet after a loss should only be PB x 2 after an opening loss or run of losses, simply because at the start of a new series, the bet value is at minimum, and after a failed turnaround bet, it could be in the high hundreds or low thousands.

Yikes!

I have learned already (I'm quick that way!) that betting way more than seven picks a day is a very different proposition than backing seven dogs, day after day after day.

So, I'm working on those glitches, and cautiously celebrating the fact that so far (since July 24) multiple bets mixing ML and RL picks seems to be a step up from the 7DT that just ended.

Here's something that has nothing to do wth sports betting:


When my much-loved iPod Touch was stolen in June, I was well on my way to racking up a half million bucks in funny-munny profits at one-thumb blackjack, in spite of a house edge that was so far out of whack with real-life negative expectation for a single-deck game that it was almost a joke.

As you can see, target betting is still trouncing the BJ app, and MobilityWare still hasn't done anything about the daffy algorithm behind it, probably because most people expect to "lose" and don't bother to look at the stats.

Have to say I'm happy to be away from the daily casino grind. Mini-blackjack (very mini) is my antidote to withdrawal symptoms...

An important reminder: The only person likely to make money out of this blog is you, Dear Reader. There's nothing to buy, ever, and your soul is safe (from me, at least). Test my ideas and use them or don't. It's up to you. One more piece of friendly advice: If you are inclined to use target betting with real money against online "casinos" such as Bodog, spend a few minutes and save a lot of money by reading this._

Saturday, August 7, 2010

Just ask your friendly neighborhood bookie: If you want to win big in the long term, you have to be ready to take it in the short(s).

_
My pal Peter Punter continues his brave quest to find a "system" that wins more often than it loses, pays big bucks, and makes a profit without any significant risk.

I stopped looking for that particular brass ring about 30 years ago, and so did every book-maker who plans to stay in business.

Still and all, you gotta dream, don't you?

Target betting is more about waking up to reality and doing what it takes to secure a long-term profit.

I love it when stories break out of Las Vegas telling how after some big game or horse race, the book biz is crying crocodile tears and seemingly begging for sympathy while paying out record sums to delirious punters.

What a croc! (Pun intended).

The book is built on the presumption that if punters don't win once in a while, they won't play, because even gamblers are not total fools.

It is also good policy for bookies and casinos to grab a megaphone once in a while and shout out loud about big wins for the good guys.

It's not really about sympathy, it's about the age-old principle of the carrot and the stick.

Whatever!

Target betting had a bad day yesterday and hopes for a better one today.

That's not gambling - it's mathematics, plain and simple.

Here are today's baseball bets.

(The betting template is humming along nicely, and I'm sitting here waiting for the other shoe to drop!).



An important reminder: The only person likely to make money out of this blog is you, Dear Reader. There's nothing to buy, ever, and your soul is safe (from me, at least). Test my ideas and use them or don't. It's up to you. One more piece of friendly advice: If you are inclined to use target betting with real money against online "casinos" such as Bodog, spend a few minutes and save a lot of money by reading this._