Finding an Edge in Minor Sports

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To the uninitiated the mechanics of the stock market can seem somewhat of
a mystery. The rise and fall of share prices can be difficult to pre-empt
as market reaction normally occurs a full week before good or bad news is
released, yet once the information hits the headlines, it creates barely a
ripple. For an average investor waiting to act until after good news is
released is a quick route to the poor house. Many times, I’ve sat on my
hands and watched a stock rise or fall during the day, and later thought
“if only I bought it before the price shot up, or shorted before it
tanked!”
While this can seem difficult to achieve without a crystal ball or
privileged information, you can get a jump on sports or financial markets
and turn that edge into profit. Instead of waiting for public reports
(from SEC filings to midweek injury reports), you can often gain
information just by closely monitoring price movements.
For a good recent stock illustration of this principle, look no further
than the recent crash of Northfield Laboratories. The company was testing
a human-blood substitute, with a critical progress report expected on
December 19 after the close of markets. That afternoon the “line” on the
stock dropped from over 14 to 11. Nearly 30% of its shares had been “sold
short” – an investor’s way of betting the stock will crash. With those two
signs, most people correctly assumed the report would be bad. The “betting
pattern” on this stock revealed the failure long before the public
announcement. The stock dropped over 50% the day after its failed test
results were disclosed, rewarding those who understood the move and bet
against Northfield.
To apply this theory to sports, consider this scenario: Payton Manning
(listed as questionable) is sitting in the locker room on Sunday morning
with worried head-coach, Tony Dungy. “How does your tweaked thumb feel?”
Dungy asks. His star quarterback frowns, and replies, “Not good. I have no
touch on the ball, so I’ll probably give it one more week to heal.” The
scene changes to you sitting at home in front of your computer, scratching
your head and wondering why line on the Colts moved from -3 -104 to -3
+111 at Pinnacle Sportsbook?
A few of the other larger-limit sportsbooks have already reacted by moving
their lines significantly, but not everyone. Regardless of whether you
know Manning’s injury status, the line moves at the big books tell all you
need to know. Mannings’ participation was questionable, the line is moving
swiftly against Indy, so the market thinks the Colts are less likely to
win QED – the negative prognosis on Manning’s injury is spreading to
Sportsbooks. Anytime you see a 10+ cent move, you can get the best of it
by “chasing the steam” – in this case, fading the Colts at slower-moving
small sportsbooks. These books obviously hate it when players beat them to
the punch, and may even throw you out, but not before nicely padding your
bankroll.
In stocks and sports, information is money. While you can gain indirect
information from watching price moves, nothing in sports betting is as
profitable as gaining first-hand injury information. Without hiding in the
locker room or knowing the personal trainers, you aren’t going to outguess
NFL injury announcements. Set you sights a little lower and change the
focus to smaller sports. Start reading University and regional newspapers
covering smaller schools that have Div I-A and I-AA programs, covered by
sportsbooks.
Many times, key player or coaching information - dynamite for smart
players - goes unnoticed past kickoff. These smaller events do not attract
syndicate action, leaving them ripe for more casual players. If it sounds
like we’re repeating ourselves, it’s because the point is crucial for
smaller players. If you bet $1000 or less per game, you will profit
handsomely by focusing outside of professional sports. The lines for these
events do not react quickly, if at all, to player injuries, weather or
coaching announcements.
If you are a smaller player looking to move up, pick a single minor sport
and hone in on it. Try Ivy League football, Albanian Soccer, Greek
basketball, or any event that is not covered on the front page of ESPN or
USA Today’s sports section that has valuable information available with a
bit of digging. For two weeks, try to spend 15 minutes a day researching
that one area. With this little time spent, you’ll likely find some nice
opportunities. If you try this, we at Pinnacle Sports Betting would like
to know how it goes. Send your findings to: askthebook@pinnaclesports.com.
The Inside Wagering Line From Pinnacle Sports By Simon Noble

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