Someone said: Everyone and their mothers on CAR tonight.......... Go VGK !!!
It was going to be so easy, count your winnings, lay -1.5 and get the easy
plus money.......... How about VGK winning 5-4.........
When everyone is on the same side like this, I'll side with the books need
every time win or lose because I know if you do it long enough, you'll be
living large while the other guys will be broke
What that bettor is describing is a common betting philosophy: fade the public.
The idea is simple:
If 70%, 80%, or 90% of casual bettors are on one side, sportsbooks often need the other side to win. Therefore, bet against the crowd.
There is some truth to it, but it's not a guaranteed winning strategy.
What People Get Wrong
Many bettors think:
Public on Carolina = Vegas automatically wins.
Public on Over = Under automatically wins.
Sportsbooks don't set lines to predict winners. They set lines to manage risk and attract action on both sides.
A game can have:
80% of tickets on Carolina
65% of money on Carolina
and Carolina can still win easily.
What Sharp Bettors Actually Watch
Not public percentages alone.
They watch:
1. Reverse Line Movement (RLM)
80% of bets on Carolina
Carolina opens -160
Carolina drops to -145
That can signal respected money hitting Vegas.
2. Ticket % vs Money %
80% of tickets on Carolina
45% of money on Carolina
This suggests larger wagers may be on Vegas.
3. Closing Line Value (CLV)
Beating the closing number consistently is more important than individual wins and losses.
About Game 1 Specifically
A lot of bettors were indeed on Carolina.
Why?
Better regular season.
Better playoff record.
Home ice.
Strong analytics.
Favorite in most prediction models.
Vegas winning does not automatically prove the public was wrong to bet Carolina.
If Carolina wins that game 6 times out of 10 and you got a fair price, it's still a good bet even though this particular result lost.
The Part of That Quote I Agree With
"When everyone is on the same side, I pay attention."
That's reasonable.
If:
85%+ tickets are on one side,
line moves the opposite direction,
respected books move first,
then there may be value on the unpopular side.
The Part I Disagree With
"I'll side with the books every time."
If that worked by itself, sports betting would be easy.
Some of the biggest losing strategies are:
Blindly fading the public.
Blindly betting favorites.
Blindly betting underdogs.
Blindly following steam.
The profitable approach is combining:
Public betting data,
Sharp money indicators,
Injury information,
Matchup analysis,
Price/value.
For Game 2, I'd be more interested in whether the market overreacts to Vegas winning Game 1.
If the public suddenly piles onto Vegas after one upset while sharp money returns to Carolina, that's the type of situation professionals look for.