The Definitive Guide to Betting on Football ("Racing Post" Expert Series) ("Racing Post" Expert Series)
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Average customer review:Product Description
The Definitive Guide to Betting on Football is a distillation of Racing Post expert Kevin Pullein's extensive knowledge on how to make money when betting on football. His weekly column in the Post is hugely popular with sports betting fans. In this masterwork Pullein explains how you can work out what is likely to happen during a football match and how you might be able to exploit this knowledge profitably by betting. In each chapter there will be both theory and practice, in separate but complementary sections. The theory will always be simply explained and illustrated, and will satisfy both the more-specialist and the less-experienced reader alike, each of whom will be able to get out of it want they want most - as well as a lot of other things beside. Topics include first and second half betting, corners, first goalscorer, final result, bookings, spread betting, betting exchanges and ante post.
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #7196 in Books
- Published on: 2009-09-11
- Original language: English
- Binding: Paperback
- 160 pages
Editorial Reviews
About the Author
Kevin Pullein is the leading football commentator for the Racing Post.
Customer Reviews
Averaging Football
Averaging Football
This is a book listing statistics which may, or may not, be of use to you depending on your own style of betting.
Chapter 1 begins with a general introduction to odds and value, stating that to be profitable over the long-term one needs to be able to identify "wrong prices". Chapter 19 (4 pages) concludes the book with a summary of a few skills which makes a bettor successful (such as questioning selections to see if any important information has been overlooked, maintaining patience through tough spells). Every chapter in between briefly analyses some form of betting market (example: who will win, who will score, how many goals, corners, cards), showing statistics on European football for the past 10 years, thus explaining why bookmaker offered prices are set as they are.
If you are new to football betting some of the information may come as a surprise: for instance, a team which is losing by 0-1 is 6% more likely to score the next goal than the winning team (if there is a next goal). Other information is more obvious: for instance, teams promoted to the Premier League fair less well than teams promoted from Division One to the Championship. Pullein provides the statics as proof.
Pullein clearly "knows his onions". But is this guide useful? I cannot imagine ever using the information in the book to formulate my own market prices. To do so I would want first hand access to the data so that I could run my own analyses; this book does not give access to that data (how could it?). So instead it identifies that data which may be relevant to making a tissue.
In short, this book averages historical data and presents it as proof that football follows statistics. And that's what statistics generally do - average the past to predict the future. By doing so, Pullein hopes to identify bookmaker (or Exchange) prices which are incorrect and profit from them in the long term.
What does this mean for the bettor? If you want to use statistics to predict the future you need a database full of historical data; then you can trial ideas and back test. This book gives a rough idea as to what stats can do. By itself it cannot help with your (my) betting.
What is not covered in this book? Betting in circumstances where data does not exist (like in-play betting: Team A down to ten men losing 0-2 in a must win cup game with 33 minutes left on the clock, awful weather conditions, playing against a weakened opposition who've score two lucky goals).
The question of using statistics to predict the future is probably outside the scope of this comment. But for me, statistics simplify the game too much and can therefore miss glaring opportunities. As an example Pullein says: "I make myself aware of a team's results over the last 6, 12, 18 and 24 games, as well as the last 32. The last six, on their own, I would almost always ignore, no matter what they were". I find the last 6 games to be the most important, giving a clear indication to how well a team is really playing and what can be expected in the future. By the time the average stats have caught up that detailed knowledge has long since changed. And this is a weakness with statistics: projections need a lot of data before they become meaningful, and then one must ask if results from 36 matches ago really have any significance today? Paradoxically, Pullein believes they do. Averaging football data results in average projections, a method which misses crucial short-lived data.
As an aside, statistics can also lead us to draw completely wrong conclusions. For example, Pullein states of Steven Gerrard: "Liverpool have won 58 per cent of the Premier League games in which Gerard started and 56 per cent of the games in which he played no part - a difference of just two per cent... even the best players, on their own, contribute less to a team than you might imagine." There may be dozens of separate or combined factors which explain that analysis (like strength of opposition, partnerships within the team, need to win/draw) all of which are not examined. Instead Pullein jumps straight into a far-fetched conclusion. "Lies, damn lies, and statistics."
A more appropriate name for the book would be: The Definitive Guide to Averaging Football.
Recommendation: Read as an introduction to how bookmakers set prices for various football markets.
Very useful addition to football forecasting
Kevin Pullein, regular football columnist in the Racing Post, has compiled an extremely useful football forecasting book.
The author argues that individual football results depend on the best estimate of comparative performance between the two teams over a number of games, specifically named in the text but with discretion to use a shorter or longer run of games. He indicates the likely percentages of home wins, draws and away wins based on very easily obtainable statistical match data; these figures provide invaluable intelligence.
Apart from writing about forecasting results of individual games, the author includes chapters covering the likelihood of the following:
- the number of goals scored in a game
- which team will score first
- correct scores
- which player will score first
- when goals are most likely to be scored
- half time/full time combination forecasts
- which team will score second [!]
- which team will win more corners
- how many cards will be shown, which team will receive the first card and the most bookings
Pullein has also included discussion in separate sections on how to pick winners of whole competitions, be they league championship winners, cup winners or Champions League finalists. I should like to have seen more on these last named matters.
Throughout the text, there are very useful statistical diagrams and tables to illustrate points made. Throughout, the author is at pains to advise on the real odds of something happening and wheher those odds should be taken.
This is a book which will need some close study but there is surely something for everyone interested in bettering their football forecasting and, more importantly, their betting profitability.
Buy!




