Baseball Betting: How to Bet Basics
Sunday, 07.01.2007, 01:34pm (GMT)
If you know nothing about sports and you still feel the urge to wager,
baseball is the easiest sports to wager on. As opposed to football and
basketball, where you are mixed up with the point spreads and other
confusing calculations, in baseball betting you simply put your money
on the outcome of the game. In addition, the baseball season lasts
longer, which means more matches and bigger chances to go home with the
winning money. Here is a step to step guide to baseball betting.
The main difference between baseball betting and other team sports
betting such as football and basketball is that while the latter ones
use point spreads, the former uses the money line.
What is a Point Spread?
Point spread is the most common betting type offered in football and
basketball betting. The sportsbook spreads the odd of a certain match
by subtracting points from the favorite team, which is the team most
likely to win and adding points to the underdog, which is the team that
will raise a lot of eyebrows if wins.
What is a Money Line?
In baseball betting, the sportsbook sets the odds strictly on the
outcome of the match. In order to even the action, bettors would have
to risk more money on the favorite and risk less on the underdog. This
is called the money line.
For example, if the money line is minus 170 on the favorite and plus
150 on the underdog, then you would have to bet 170 dollars on the
favorite in order to earn 100 dollars. On the other hand, if you bet
100 dollars on the underdog, you would win 150 dollars if they would
eventually win the match.
The difference between the minus 170 on the favorite and the plus 150
on the underdog is known as the twenty cent line. If the money line was
minus on the favorite and plus 150 on the underdog, it is called the
ten cent line or dime line. The fifteen cent line is also common in
baseball betting.
Sportsbooks also offer total bets and run lines in baseball betting.
1) Total Bets:
These wagers are based on the sum of the runs scored by both of the
teams. For example, if the sportsbook sets the over under total of a
match as 7, the over wins if the sum of the runs scored by both teams
exceeds 7 and the under wins if it sums up to less than 7.
2) The Run Line:
This wager is the baseball variation of point spread. When you are
betting on the run line, you are betting on whether one of the teams
wins by more than one run, which is marked as minus 1.5 or stays within
one run, marked as plus 1.5.
Conclusion:
Although the money line makes baseball betting simpler than football and basketball betting, it causes the payoffs calculation to be more complicated:
1) In order to calculate the payoff when wagering on the favorite you
should add 1 to the favorite price and divide it with the favorite
price.
2) In order to calculate the payoff when wagering on the underdog you should add 1 to the underdog price.
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