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Late 2006 Baseball Betting
If you late 2006 baseball betting hasn't been going as
planned, you may be taking a look at the wrong teams. Find out who
is on the right track and whose wheels have fallen off coming down the
stretch with this article by Scott Spreitzer.
Have you been having bad luck of late trying to get teams who look
good in the standings to win for you?
I've been hearing a lot of that amongst the sports betting public here
in Las Vegas. Boston's supposed to be fighting for their lives, but
they're playing poorly. The White Sox had the Wildcard all but wrapped
up, but now they're in a big fight with a few other teams, and the St.
Louis Cardinals don't look at all like the team that was supposed to run
away with the NL Central.
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Many fans and casual sports handicappers make the mistake of thinking
that the standings tell you who the best teams are. That's true in a
general way. But in a sport like baseball, what happened before the
All-Star break represents a large chunk of the full season mark. What's
been happening since the break tells you a lot more about how the teams
are playing right now.
If you're like most people, you've been trying to jam teams like the Red
Sox, White Sox, and Cardinals through a square hole. You've also missed
some great runs from teams who you don't trust because they don't have
big payrolls.
Do you know who the hottest team in baseball is since the break? Nope,
it only seems like the New York Yankees. Heading into this past
weekend's action, two different AL teams had a better record than the
Yankees (though by the time you read this it may be a dead heat because
the Yanks are on quite a tear as I write this).
The Minnesota Twins were 24-11 heading into Saturday's action. The
Oakland A's were 23-11. Both of those guys were a shade ahead of the
Yankees 22-12 mark.
Let's run the numbers for all the AL playoff contenders so you can get
some context. See how many teams are currently out of alignment with the
way you may be wagering.
American League:
Minnesota: 24-11
Oakland: 23-11
NY Yankees: 22-12
LA Angels: 21-14
Detroit: 20-14
Texas: 18-17
Chicago White Sox: 15-18
Boston: 16-19
We already talked about the top of the order here. The Angels have also
been playing well, like they typically do in the second half of the
season. Detroit's winning, but they're so expensive that they may not be
winning enough to make you money.
Two playoff teams from last year are bringing up the rear. You'd figure
that the last two World Champions would know how to lift their games
during crunch time. Instead, we're seeing those guys get left in the
dust by teams who are surging at the right time.
In Las Vegas terms, Boston and Chicago are being priced like they're
95-win teams. But they're playing like 75-80 win teams right now. If you
hadn't adjusted your strategy, you've been getting spanked with them. I
know a lot of players who have been trying to take these teams after a
loss figuring they're too good to lose two in a row.
Let's do the same thing with the National League. The senior circuit
(misnamed for now) is interesting for different reasons. Here, hardly
anyone is playing well since the break. And the Wildcard race is largely
a competition amongst .500 caliber teams.
National League:
NY Mets: 20-12
Philadelphia: 19-15
Atlanta: 17-15
Arizona: 18-16
LA Dodgers: 18-16
Cincinnati: 17-16
St. Louis: 17-17
Houston: 15-18
Milwaukee: 14-18
San Francisco: 14-19
Colorado: 15-20
San Diego: 13-21
You know it's a weak bunch when playing two games over .500 for more
than a month puts you near the head of the class. The Mets are still
dominant even though Pedro Martinez has been hurt. Most everyone else
has been alternating good runs with bad runs. Well, at least the teams
in the middle have been doing that. The teams at the bottom have had
mostly bad runs.
Note that San Diego brings up the rear here among teams in the pennant
race. That's another division winner from last year that's not getting
any boost from experience.
Houston's also got a ton of experience. But I apparently jinxed them
with last week's article! I still wouldn't be surprised to see them make
a late run. Strong frontline pitching has a way of getting the job done
in the final weeks of the season.
What are the lessons for sports handicappers?
1) Don't handicap sports by relying on the full season records. Focus on
what's been happening lately. Or, better yet, focus on the lineups on
the field now rather than the lineups that used to be on the field.
Injuries have hurt some teams, while acquisitions have helped others.
How teams performed before those developments occurred doesn't really
matter.
2) Don't assume that experience means anything. The struggles of Boston,
Chicago and San Diego make that clear.
3) Be sure that the moneylines reflect the true win potential of the
teams you're considering. Laying odds with NL contenders doesn't make
much sense when most of them have been playing .500 ball lately and all
year. It doesn’t matter that they need to win.
4) Remember that the public gets scared away from smaller payroll teams
like Minnesota and Oakland every year. You'd think by now they would
have learned not to do that! You can get those teams at very affordable
prices. In fact, it's ridiculous not to take those teams at affordable
prices when they're playing this well.
Be sure you're making the proper adjustments so you can add baseball
profits to your football profits between now and the MLB Playoffs!
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