I am a horrible gambler. I always lose more than I win, and to make matters worse I know the reason why I'm a horrible gambler and I haven't done anything about it . . . until now. You see, I bet with my heart and not my head. I'm one of those guys who bets with the Leafs because he loves the Leafs, or bets against the Yankees because I loathe the GD Yankees. In short, I let Mats Sundin's toothy grin cloud my judgement. So I decided that from now on I will rely only on objective facts and statistics when betting. I will develop strict criteria for what teams to bet on, and at what price. From now on I don't believe in clutch players, streaks, intangibles, or any of the other horse sh1t fairy tales my local gas bag sports announcer comes up with.
To this end, I'd be interested to hear how much you guys take into consideration numerical analysis and statistics when handicapping games. Do you rely predominantly on numbers? Which numbers are most valuable? (Obviously this will vary from sport to sport). Maybe you successfully go with your gut instinct? Or maybe you're just a lucky bastard?
Another thing I'd be interested in hearing about is if anyone has successfully used computer models to handicap games. I think baseball seems like a particularly good candidate for computer analysis since it is so well-described statistically. I know the program "Diamond Mind" baseball consistently outperforms almost all the experts when predicitng the final standings at the beginning of the baseball season.
Any thoughts?
Angus O.
To this end, I'd be interested to hear how much you guys take into consideration numerical analysis and statistics when handicapping games. Do you rely predominantly on numbers? Which numbers are most valuable? (Obviously this will vary from sport to sport). Maybe you successfully go with your gut instinct? Or maybe you're just a lucky bastard?
Another thing I'd be interested in hearing about is if anyone has successfully used computer models to handicap games. I think baseball seems like a particularly good candidate for computer analysis since it is so well-described statistically. I know the program "Diamond Mind" baseball consistently outperforms almost all the experts when predicitng the final standings at the beginning of the baseball season.
Any thoughts?
Angus O.