Bet the right Way: Online Sports Betting Tips For Advanced Punters

If you’ve been betting and breaking even or even making minor profits for a while, it may be time for you to move to the next stage. While there no secret formula that will make you a daily winner, there are a few principles that can significantly increase your chances of winning and make you a successful punter. However, you’ll want to be careful and avoid betting money that would be otherwise be committed elsewhere. 

Here are a few tips worth using when placing your wager on Betway. However, you’ll need to have a strong grip on the basics of betting to use these tips: 

Always Bet With Value

Betting according to the value in odds is the best way to become a successful sports punter. It’s the only realistic way to regularly and consistently win money when betting. As such, you might be jeopardising your chances of succeeding in the long-term if you don’t find value. That’s one of the key things most punters don’t realise.

Instead of betting for value, most punters bet on the outcome, they think it will most likely happen. That may seem like the most logical approach, though it fundamentally flawed. You might have won lots of wagers by using this approach, but you won’t necessarily make a significant profit overall.

To become a successful bettor at Betway South Africa, you’ll need to realise that success lies in more than just picking as many winners as you can. It’s all about finding a spot where the odds seem to be in your favour and commit your money when you’re expecting positive outcomes. 

Try and Calculate Your Chances of Winning Your Bet

While you may identify value according to the odds given, don’t place your wager until you check the stats. Make sure you clearly understand the statistics and ensure that you can statistically work out the chances of winning. That can be a difficult task to achieve, though there are a couple of basic methods you can consider.

Check Home & Away Form

In general, you need to understand that about half of football, rugby and basketball games end with home wins, while around a quarter end in draws. That’s essentially true across all major professional leagues, meaning that the Home Advantage is real.

One of the most common methods of forecasting involves checking the previous match results in the current season and perhaps the last few seasons. By cross-referencing the home team’s form versus the away team’s form, you can have a rough guide on the match before betting on either team. Of course, it won’t be that easy to win, but that will improve your chances.

Other Form Factors

Injuries / Absences

Absences and injuries can have a significant impact on the outcome of a game. That’s because some players are more important than others in matters of attack and defence. In most cases, central defenders and goalkeepers are crucial towards winning, so be warned if one of them is missing. A team captain is also as equally important.

Recent Form & Events

Instead of looking at the season long-form, it’s wise to look at the team’s recent form. The idea is that a team that’s been recently building confidence and has recovered from injury woes is most likely to win. There might also be tactical reasons to oppose or bet on a specific side. For instance, teams threatened by the relegation zone are likely to put in the extra effort compared to a leading team.

Kids, though…

Every Monday morning for the past ten weeks, I have had to drag my teenage son from his bed at 6:30am to get ready in time for school.

This Monday morning, with no need to get out of bed at all, he was in our room crashing the code into the burglar alarm panel at 6:25.

Sometimes, I just don’t understand.

In other news: no lie-in for me today.

Best day

Yesterday was a pretty good day. Bit of lie in, a drive out to the winelands up North, some lovely wine in a really unusual setting – themed ‘caves’ set in old reinforced concrete wine tanks – at Klein Roosboom, then onto Nitida next door for more wine and a rather decent lunch. I only took the new 50mm lens out to force me to be a bit less lazy, and some of the shots were quite good, but we weren’t really there for the photography, to be fair. (We were there for the wine.)

This one is of the Rouge Lounge, where the walls have been stained red through years of wine fermentation, and glisten with tartaric acid crystals.

We only got back home at quarter to four and then I watched Sheffield United beat Everton at Goodison Park before lighting the braai for a bit of late steak. With some more wine. Because why not?

There was some top trolling from the traveling Sheffield United fans at Goodison Park yesterday. 😀

For the record, despite all that wine, I still managed a reasonable 5km run this morning. A reasonable one, not a particularly fast one.

And now? More football, more wine, I guess.
Well, someone’s got to do it.

Wine time

I’m not blogging today. Fortunately, knowing yesterday that I wasn’t blogging today meant that I could write this yesterday for today.

Days like tomorrow… er… today were made for relaxing and drinking wine at wine farms, and that is what I fully intend to do. The weather could be better, but you can’t actually have everything and wine, a wine farm and a family will do very nicely in lieu of some sunshine, thank you very much.

Yes, the week (it was actually 6 days) of being good is over and I have lost 1.7kg by just exercising a little more and eating and drinking a little less*. It’s really not that difficult, and if you think you have to buy an overpriced cookbook based on dodgy science and suffer by not enjoying nice things like chips, bread, and chip butties, then you’re sadly mistaken.

Just be a bit better than you were being and then reap the rewards the following Saturday.

Just like what I am doing. Expect photographs… soon.

 

* The Tall Accountant will agree.