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Odds and Pricing
#928884 01/06/26 12:50 AM
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One of the most important starting points is to understand odds and pricing.

Odds Are Prices, Not Predictions

A sports book is not trying to tell you who will win. A sports book is trying to balance action and protect its margin.

–110 is not a prediction that the favorite will win 52.4% of the time.
+150 is not a prediction that the underdog wins 40% of the time.

These numbers are simply prices that reflect what the market is willing to pay.

Think of it like buying a stock. You’re not told the stock will go up. You’re told the price you must pay to take a position.

Sports betting works the same way.

Since this is an American‑based forum, we use American odds:

–110 Risk $110 to win $100
+150 Risk $100 to win $150

Examples

–110 = 52.38% implied probability
+150 = 40.00% implied probability

This is not a prediction, it’s the break‑even point for the bettor.

Every line includes the vig also known as juice.

Example:

Two sides both priced at –110

Each side implies 52.38% probability
Combined = 104.76%

That extra 4.76% is the sportsbook’s profit margin.

Your job as a bettor is to:

Identify when the true probability is better than the implied probability and bet only when the price is in your favor.

Most bettors focus on who will win. Profitable bettors focus on whether the price is wrong.

Two bettors can have the same opinion about a game but make completely different decisions based on price:

You may like a team at –110
But you may not like them at –150

The team didn’t change but the price did.

This is why sharp bettors say: “There are no bad teams, only bad numbers.”

When you understand odds as prices, you start thinking like a trader:

You stop forcing bets
You stop chasing favorites
You stop overvaluing predictions
You start identifying mispriced lines
You start passing when the number isn’t right
You start winning long‑term instead of short‑term guessing

This is the difference between:

Gambling
Handicapping
Investing

Sportsbooks open the line.

The market shapes it.

When money comes in:

Lines move
Prices adjust
Implied probabilities shift

This is why you’ll see:

A team open at –3
Move to –4.5
Close at –6

Nothing changed about the team. The market changed the price. Understanding this flow is essential to beating the number.

Your Goal as a Handicapper

Your job is not to predict the future.

Your job is to:

Identify mispriced odds
Bet only when the implied probability is wrong
Beat the closing line
Think in terms of value, not outcomes

If you consistently get better prices than the market, you will win long‑term, even if short‑term variance punches you in the mouth.

This is the foundation of profitable betting.


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Re: Odds and Pricing
FREAK #928886 01/06/26 12:54 AM
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Here's an odds breakdown and what % of wagers you need to win to break even:

-105 = 51.22%
-110 = 52.38%
-115 = 53.49%
-120 = 54.55%
-125 = 55.56%
-130 = 56.52%
-135 = 57.45%
-140 = 58.33%
-145 = 59.18%
-150 = 60.00%
-155 = 60.78%
-160 = 61.54%
-165 = 62.26%
-170 = 62.96%
-175 = 63.64%
-180 = 64.29%
-185 = 64.91%
-190 = 65.52%
-195 = 66.10%
-200 = 66.67%

+200 = 33.33%
+195 = 33.90%
+190 = 34.48%
+185 = 35.09%
+180 = 35.71%
+175 = 36.36%
+170 = 37.04%
+165 = 37.74%
+160 = 38.46%
+155 = 39.22%
+150 = 40.00%
+145 = 40.82%
+140 = 41.67%
+135 = 42.55%
+130 = 43.48%
+125 = 44.44%
+120 = 45.45%
+115 = 46.51%
+110 = 47.62%
+105 = 48.78%
+100 = 50.00%


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Re: Odds and Pricing
FREAK #928887 01/06/26 12:59 AM
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A quick example and we'll use MLB as an example.

Team A is -200 in all three games of the series for simplicity of math.

Using the example of laying $200 to win $100

If you go 3-0 you win $300.
If you go 2-1 you break even. You win $200 on the 2 wins but lose $200 on the 1 loss
If you go 1-2 you lose $300. You win $100 on the 1 win but lose $400 on the 2 losses
If you go 0-3 you lose $600

In the above scenarios you have to go 3-0 to make a profit. All the rest put you at even or at a loss.

On the flip side of things, let's say you take +200 in all three games of a three game series

If you go 3-0 you win $600
If you got 2-1 you win $300 You win $400 on your two wins and lose $100 on the loss
If you go 1-2 you break even. You win $200 on your win and lose $200 on the two losses
If you go 0-3 you lose $300

In this scenario three of the four break even or show a profit.

You can do this with all the numbers listed to see how it all plays out and while this is an extreme example, it just goes to show that the higher % favorite needs a much bigger winning % to break even.


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