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  2. Sports betting systems - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sports_betting_systems

    Since sports betting involves humans, there is no deterministic edge to the house or the gambler. Systems supposedly allow the gambler to have an edge or an advantage. Sportsbooks use systems in their analysis to set more accurate odds. Therefore, the novice gambler may believe that using a system will always work, but it is the general ...

  3. Betting strategy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Betting_strategy

    A betting strategy (also known as betting system) is a structured approach to gambling, in the attempt to produce a profit. To be successful, the system must change the house edge into a player advantage — which is impossible for pure games of probability with fixed odds, akin to a perpetual motion machine. [ 1 ]

  4. Oscar's grind - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oscar's_grind

    Oscar's Grind is a betting strategy used by gamblers on wagers where the outcome is evenly distributed between two results of equal value (like flipping a coin). It is an archetypal positive progression strategy.

  5. Betting is the ‘Achilles’ heel’ of US sports. Are leagues ...

    www.aol.com/betting-achilles-heel-us-sports...

    A teller is counting money before betting opens to the public at Monmouth Park Sports Book by William Hill, ahead of the opening of the first day of legal betting on sports in Oceanport, New ...

  6. Martingale (betting system) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Martingale_(betting_system)

    Thus, for all games where a gambler is more likely to lose than to win any given bet, that gambler is expected to lose money, on average, each round. Increasing the size of wager for each round per the martingale system only serves to increase the average loss. Suppose a gambler has a 63-unit gambling bankroll.

  7. Why are so many athletes getting caught betting ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/sports/why-many-athletes-getting...

    However, the power of the advanced monitoring systems is clear in the scope (from the NFL to a random Iowa State athlete) and how minor the mistakes are (betting in the wrong location).

  8. Spread betting - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spread_betting

    Spread betting was invented by Charles K. McNeil, a mathematics teacher from Connecticut who became a bookmaker in Chicago in the 1940s. [5] In North America, the gambler usually wagers that the difference between the scores of two teams will be less than or greater than the value specified by the bookmaker, with even money for either option.

  9. Mathematics of bookmaking - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mathematics_of_bookmaking

    In gambling parlance, making a book is the practice of laying bets on the various possible outcomes of a single event. The phrase originates from the practice of recording such wagers in a hard-bound ledger (the 'book') and gives the English language the term bookmaker for the person laying the bets and thus 'making the book'.