1 comments

  • adrienditta 3 hours ago
    Most people think bookmakers try to estimate the true probability of a match and then add a margin.

    In practice, their real problem is predicting how people will bet.

    A simple coin-flip example shows why:

    Even with a 10% overround, if 80% of money lands on one side, the bookmaker becomes exposed to extreme short-term variance. Three consecutive popular outcomes can wipe out the theoretical edge.

    The article breaks down:

    – why money distribution matters more than probability – how emotional teams distort football markets – why positive expected value does not prevent bankruptcy

    Curious how people here see the analogy with market makers in financial markets.

    Full breakdown here: https://www.playaiodds.com/en/blog/money-made-on-public-bets