Tuesday, December 28, 2010

The Coaching Ball Revolutionize the Way Kids Learn to Kick a Soccer Ball

Click Here To Know How To Play The Best Soccer of Your Life

                

Now there is a soccer ball that will guarantee that you will strike a soccer ball low and on target and that will show you where to kick a soccer ball to swerve it or loft it. The Coaching Ball IS soccer's new training revolution! The Coaching Ball is the soccer ball to improve YOUR technique. Youth Soccer will benefit from the strong training experience that the Coaching Ball provides.

The Coaching Ball guarantees to:

? Help soccer players improve their passing and shooting.
? Ideal for all ages.
? Helps improve accuracy.
? Simple to use.

Dual use as it can be used as a regular soccer ball as well.

The coaching ball is the latest and most effective training aid for soccer players of all ages. Prepare for the next tournament or season with the latest soccer training aid with the Coaching Ball. Developed by a fully qualified British coach, the Coaching Ball helps soccer players to visualize where to make contact with the ball. Used by professional coaches, PE teachers, grass roots soccer clubs, soccer academies and parents and grandparents across Europe, the simple patented design allows immediate results to be seen.

Improve Soccer Skills

Developed by a fully qualified British coach, the Coaching Ball helps soccer players to visualize where to make contact with the soccer ball. This simple but highly effective technique lays a solid foundation that gives all children an equal chance of realizing their soccer potential. The "Coaching Ball" has been developed to give budding soccer stars a head start. A unique product, the Coaching Ball enables young soccer players to sharpen their skills from the moment they can walk!

The Coaching Ball is made with a new 2 tone advanced hi-tech PU outer layer with a 4 layer backing (65% Polyester and 35% cotton). The bladder is made of latex with a butyl valve. It is hand sewn in a child labor free environment. The Coaching Ball has brightly colored patches (2 component durable ink printed) labeled with simple directions, such as "Strike", "Loft", and "Swerve". The ball is placed on the floor and the relevant panel kicked according to the shot you require.

The Designer explains

The colored patches allow learners to identify the exact area of the football to strike in order to make the desired pass and is ideal for even the very young beginner".

With pressure on parents to provide expensive training for their future soccer stars, the Coaching Ball is an inexpensive and effective tool to encourage children to develop their soccer ability. The Coaching Ball is proving successful with professional clubs, with Premiership clubs undertaking field trials of the ball.

Why wait? Give your young soccer player the competitive advantage he or she deserves. The Coaching ball is a perfect gift for soccer players of all ages!

How to use the Coaching Ball:

1. Place the ball onto the ground (valve at the top)

2. Ensure you can see all of the panels.

3. Kick the ball on the correct zone for the pass you wish to achieve.

4. It's as simple as that!

Applications

You don?t need to be a professional coach to achieve immediate results.

? Strike
-The Drilled Pass
- Direct passes
- Shooting

- Penalty kicks
- Swerve

( Can be used with the inside and outside of the foot)

- Passing Corners

- Free Kicks

- Passing around obstacles

* Loft

- Passing

- Goal Kicks

- Defensive clearances

- Chipping the ball

M. Burbank is the co-owner of www.thecoachingball.com and www.supergoalie.com. The coaching ball is a revolutionary new training aid for soccer players.

Labels: , , , , , ,

Tuesday, March 2, 2010

How To Improve Your Soccer Bets Using The Simple Sequence Method

Click Here To Know How To Play The Best Soccer of Your Life

                

How To Improve Your Soccer Bets is a series of articles that describe some well known and well used statistical techniques that will help the soccer punter make more informed bets. Each of the techniques has its own advantages and disadvantages and using them in isolation will improve your chances of winning. However, together they will prove invaluable in your battle with the bookies. In each article we will describe in detail how a particular method works giving you enough information for you to go ahead and create your own forecasts. We will also give you information as to where you can already find websites that use this technique in comprising their weekly forecasts.

The statistical methods described in this set of articles will help you to arrive at a better decision about the match, or matches, that you are betting on.

In this article we will be describing the well known Simple Sequence method. The Simple Sequence method is not just a single method, there are many ways of devising a simple sequence method, and you could probably devise one of your own. The way the Simple Sequence method is implemented in the Footyforecast 2.0 software and on the 1X2Monster website is to use a weighting factor on each of a series of games.

Here are the basic rules...

A number of matches are used to look back at from the forecast date. So let's say our team has the following results (most recent on the right hand side):

W D L L W

This would give them the following points: 3 + 1 + 0 + 0 + 3 = 7

Now to take into account current form each is given a weighting factor, so the oldest match is multiplied by 1 up to the most recent match being multiplied by 5. Of course this will vary depending upon the number of matches you use, but for this example it gives us the following:

3*1 + 1*2 + 0*3 + 0*4 + 3*5 = 20 points

Now let's say the away team playing against the team above have the following record:

W W D D D

They will have: 3*1 + 3*2 + 1*3 + 1*4 + 1*5 = 21 points.

The points difference HOME v AWAY = 20 - 21 = -1.

Now, depending how you classify this it could represent an away win, i.e. all matches below a points difference of 0 = away win, or it could be classed as a draw.

Let's look at a simple example...

For our example we will use the last ten games played for each team. That's the last ten home games for the home side, and the last ten away games for the away side. The match is between Middlesbrough and Bolton Wanderers in the English Premiership played on 20th Jan 2007.

Middlesbrough

L L W W W D L D W W

This gives 0*1 + 0*2 + 3*3 + 3*4 + 3*5 + 1*6 + 0*7 + 1*8 + 3*9 + 3*10

This equals 0+0+9+12+15+6+0+8+27+30 = 107

Bolton

L W W W D L L W W L

This gives 0*1 + 3*2 + 3*3 + 3*4 + 1*5 + 0*6 + 0*7 + 3*8 + 3*9 + 0*10

this equals 0+6+9+12+5+0+0+24+27+0 = 83

Therefore the difference is

107 - 83 = +24

This could be determined as a home win but depending on your chosen threshold levels could be classed as a draw.

Now it's your turn...

Of course you may choose to use different values to those shown above and by experimenting you may come up with better values to use. You may also choose to use all home and away games played by each team in your calculations instead of just home games for the home team and away games for the away team. You may choose to have different thresholds than those shown above. You may also find it beneficial to plot actual results against the Simple Sequence method predictions to see how many actual draws fall in the away win, draw, and home win prediction zones.

If you have the necessary skills you could go away and build your own spreadsheet of data or even write a piece of software to take in results and fixtures and apply the Simple Sequence method to your data. Or, if you're lazy like me, you could grab some free software that already does this for you. If this last option is for you then visit 1X2Monster where you can download a FREE copy of the Footyforecast 2.0 software which utilises all of the statistical methods described in this series of articles. You will also be able to download FREE weekly database updates for your software, how cool is that?

Here is a list of all the articles in this series...

How To Improve Your Soccer Bets Using The Rateform Method How To Improve Your Soccer Bets Using The Footyforecast Method How To Improve Your Soccer Bets Using The Win Draw Loss Method How To Improve Your Soccer Bets Using The Simple Sequence Method How To Improve Your Soccer Bets Using The Score Prediction Method How To Improve Your Soccer Bets Using The Superiority Method

Malcolm Nossiter is the owner of 1x2monster.com and footyforecast.com. He has been providing hundreds of 1X2 tips every week since 1999. Please visit 1x2monster.com for a fountain of information on soccer betting.

Labels: , , , , , , , , , ,

Monday, December 21, 2009

How To Improve Your Soccer Bets

Click Here To Know How To Play The Best Soccer of Your Life

                

How To Improve Your Soccer Bets is a series of articles that describe some well known and well used statistical techniques that will help the soccer punter make more informed bets. Each of the techniques has its own advantages and disadvantages and using them in isolation will improve your chances of winning. However, together they will prove invaluable in your battle with the bookies. In each article we will describe in detail how a particular method works giving you enough information for you to go ahead and create your own forecasts. We will also give you information as to where you can already find websites that use this technique in comprising their weekly forecasts.

The statistical methods described in this set of articles should help you to arrive at a better decision about the match, or matches, that you are betting on.

In this article we will be describing the Footyforecast method. The Footyforecast method was originally developed for the English Football Pools and attempts to eliminate those matches that will not be draws, leaving you with a shorter list of matches from which to choose your 8 from 11. This method was introduced to the world in 1999 on the original Footyforecast website (now 1X2Monster.com). This method is similar to the Simple Sequence method which is described in another of our articles in this series.

Here are the basic rules?

For each team work out the following,
1. Work out the total number of points obtained for the last N games.
2. Work out the maximum number of possible points for the last N games.
3. Divide the total number of points obtained by the maximum available and multiply by 100.
4. Calculate the forecast value.

In (1) and (2) above N games could be all the home games for the home side and all the away games for the away side. Alternatively N could be the last N games including all home and away games for a team.

The forecast value is calculated like this...

HOMEPOINTS = number of points for home team from last N games

AWAYPOINTS = number of points for away team from last N games

HOMEVAL = (HOMEPOINTS / (POINTSFORWIN * N)) *100

AWAYVAL = (AWAYPOINTS / (POINTSFORWIN * N)) *100

FORECAST = (HOMEVAL + (100 - AWAYVAL)) / 2

To calculate the possible outcome of a match based on the Footyforecast method the value is compared with the following...

1. A forecast value of 50 = a draw.
2. A value between 50 and 100 gives an increasing chance of a home win the closer to 100.
3. A value between 50 and 0 gives an increasing chance of an away win the closer to 0.

There are a few variables to consider, for example the number of matches to use and whether to use all matches or just home for home side and just away for away side to name but two. You may wish to experiment with these values.

By plotting actual resulting draws against the forecast it is possible to generate two threshold values, one for away wins and one for home wins, any values in-between these thresholds are likely draws. All matches outside these thresholds will be less likely to be draws. For example a value of 40 or less for away wins and a value of 60 or more for home wins. This would mean any matches falling between 41 and 59 may be draws. What this method does, with careful tuning by the user is to eliminate many matches which will not be draws giving you a short list to choose from. This method is best used where an English Pools Plan is to be used.

Here is a worked example?

The values shown are the points gained by the team for each game in a sequence of four recent matches, you of course could choose more games to base your calculations on. West Ham
H4 = 3 (oldest match)
H3 = 1
H2 = 1
H1 = 0 (most recent match)v Leeds Utd
A4 = 1 (oldest match)
A3 = 3
A2 = 0
A1 = 3 (most recent match)

Using only home games for home side and only away games for away side...

FFPHome = ((3 + 1 + 1 + 0) / 12) * 100 = 42
FFPAway = ((1 + 3 + 0 + 3) / 12) * 100 = 59
FFPForcast = (42 + (100 - 59)) / 2 = 42

If our threshold values are 40 and 60 then for this match the prediction lies in the expected draw region and at the lower end meaning that if it is not a draw the most likely other outcome would be an away win. This may be interpreted as an X2 prediction, i.e. draw or away win, which some bookies will accept as a bet.

Now it?s your turn?

Here is a list of all the articles in this series?

How To Improve Your Soccer Bets Using The Rateform Method
How To Improve Your Soccer Bets Using The Footyforecast Method
How To Improve Your Soccer Bets Using The Win Draw Loss Method
How To Improve Your Soccer Bets Using The Simple Sequence Method
How To Improve Your Soccer Bets Using The Score Prediction Method
How To Improve Your Soccer Bets Using The Superiority Method

Malcolm Nossiter is the owner of http://www.1x2monster.com and http://www.footyforecast.com. He has been providing hundreds of 1X2 tips every week since 1999. Please visit 1x2monster.com for a fountain of information on soccer betting.

Labels: , , , , , , , , , ,

Monday, February 9, 2009

Nigerian Soccer Coach Vogts explains interest in German-born duo

Click Here To Know How To Play The Best Soccer of Your Life

                

Super Eagles Coach, Berti Vogts, has explained why he is interested in having Germany-based Chinedu Ede and Dennis Aogo play for the team.

Ede, who currently plays as a striker with German club Hertha Berlin, has already featured for Germany?s Under-19, 20 and 21 sides.

The German coach is also looking in the direction of SC Freiburg midfielder Dennis Aogo, another member of the German under-21 side who could switch allegiance to Nigeria under new FIFA rules.

FIFA?s rules on international eligibility allow a footballer capped at junior level to represent another country as long as he possesses dual nationality and makes the request to change nationality while under the age of 21.

Vogts is hoping to persuade the duo to play in Nigeria?s subsequent 2008 African Cup of Nations qualifying campaign.

?They are both bright prospects that will bring so much to the Nigerian team,? Vogts told BBC Sport.

?They qualify to play for Nigeria because of their fathers and I have been monitoring their performances.

?Even though they?ve played for the German youth sides, I am hoping that with the new FIFA rule we can have them play for the Nigeria national team,? Vogts said.

Berlin-born Ede has a German mother but his father hails from Enugu State.

Karlsruhe-born Aogo has been with Freiburg since August 2002 and has a German mother while his father hails from Ondo State.

The 20-year-old Aogo had apparently been keen on playing for Nigeria in the past but accepted a German under-21 call-up when he felt he had been overlooked by handlers of the Flying Eagles.

?It will be a dream come true to play for Nigeria someday, I think my father would really be proud of me.

?I have a Nigerian team mate (Seyi Olajengbesi) and I know a lot about the country from him, my father and from my last visit there in 2005.

?I?ve read about Vogt?s interests in me and it will be a great achievement to play for Nigeria,? Aogo explained.

Emmanuel Ayomide Praise is a world leading internet entreprenuer and investor. Some of his areas of interest include sport management,merchandise,ownership,internet entreprenuership,investments, media and writing amongst others. Business URL: http://www.emmapraise.blogspot.com

Labels: , , , , , , , , , , ,

Thursday, October 30, 2008

The Rules Of Soccer-Offside--A Primer For Coaches-Fans-And Players

Click Here To Know How To Play The Best Soccer of Your Life

                

Penalty kicks aside, soccer?s offside rule may produce more frustration for fans and players alike than all the other rules combined. But its purpose is simple, and taking a few moments to understand it may do more to reduce a soccer fan's blood pressure than anything short of bypass surgery.

Of course, understanding won't change a single call on the field. But before screaming at the referee, it might help to understand what all the fuss is really about.

The Purpose of the Offside Rule

Perception of Coaches, Fans, and Players: The Main Purpose of the Offside Rule is to give the officials an excuse to take away any goal our team scores.

A Secondary Purpose of the rule is to let the officials give the other team a breakaway, and let them score whenever they pass the ball behind our defenders.

Reality Check:

Officials do not like to disallow goals. They realize how hard each team works for any goal it scores, and will disallow a goal when a team scores by violating the rules. In addition, the Referee does not really care which team wins.

The Real Reason for the Offside Rule

The purpose of the Offside Rule is the same in Soccer as it is in hockey ? to prevent ?cherry-picking? by a player who camps in front of the other team?s goal, perhaps hoping for a long pass so he doesn?t have to move around very much. Without the Offside Rule, Soccer would be a large field game of ping pong, filled with long kicks and alternating mad scrambles from one end of the field to the other. By preventing any ?offside? player from participating in the game, the rule puts a premium on dribbling and passing, rather than long kicks. This promotes teamwork, which, in turn, encourages quick switching from one side of the field to the other, and compresses the action to a smaller area of the field ? usually about 30 or 40 yards long. The end result is that all the players stay closer to the action, and everyone has a better chance of participating in the game.

The Offside Rule:

A player in an offside position is only penalized if, at the moment the ball touches or is played by one of his team, he is, in the opinion of the referee, involved in active play by interfering with play, or interfering with an opponent, or gaining an advantage by being in that position.

?Offside Position?

Perception of Coaches, Fans, and Players: A player is ?Offside? whenever he gets past our defenders. The officials will not notice this, however, unless we bring it to their attention by screaming at them.

Reality Check:

The rule is a bit more complicated than this...but there is at least one official watching the offside line at any given time. However, occasionally the Referee?s attention is on the contest for the ball, instead of the official watching the offside line, which sometimes results in a late whistle.

The ?Offside Position?:

Law 11 states that a player is in an ?offside position? whenever ?he is nearer to his opponent?s goal than both the ball and the second last opponent,? unless ?he is in his own half of the field of play.? Put more simply:

? Nobody can be ?offside? in his own half of the field.

? Nobody can be ?offside? if even with, or behind the ball.

? Nobody can be ?offside? if even with, or behind two or more opponents.

In addition, there are three major exceptions to the offside rule. Anyone receiving a ball directly from a throw-in, a corner kick, or a goal kick, cannot be ?offside.? So, if Sally receives the ball directly from her teammate?s throw-in, it doesn?t matter if she is in an offside position. The fact that it was a throw-in means that the play was not offside. However, if she flicks the ball along to Jane, who is even further downfield than Sally was, Jane can be offside, since she received the ball from Sally, rather than from the throw-in. The same holds true for corner kicks and goal kicks, as well. If the ball comes directly from the restart, the play cannot be offside; but once the first player receives the ball, the ?offside? rule comes back into play.

?Involved in Active Play?

Perception of Coaches, Fans, and Players: Referees often use the phrase ?not involved in the play? to avoid admitting they missed an offside call. If the players on the other team were not ?involved in active play,? they would not be on the field, they would be on the sidelines.

Reality Check:

A good referee tries to stop the game only when necessary ? usually, only for a serious injury, or when one team would otherwise gain an advantage by a violation of the rules.

Contrary to popular misconceptions, it does not violate the rules merely for a player to be in an offside position. The violation comes only when an ?offside? player becomes involved in the play. So the referee ? or the assistant referee on the sidelines ? who allows play to continue even if everyone can see a player well beyond the offside line is probably not missing anything. Rather, they are applying the rule correctly, by letting play continue until the player in the ?offside position? becomes ?offside? by getting involved in the play.

?Involved in Active Play?

There are three ? and only three ? situations where someone in an offside position is penalized for being ?offside.? All of them, however, require participating in play from an offside position ? or, in the wording of the rule, becoming ?involved in active play?in one of three ways:

? Interfering with play

? Interfering with an opponent, or

? Gaining an advantage by being in an offside position.

The easiest example of ?offside? comes when an offside player receives a pass from a teammate. In this case, he is directly ?interfering with play? because he got the ball. Other examples of the same principle apply this same logic, but seek to spare the players a few steps, or the coaches and fans a few heart attacks. So, if one or more attackers is trapped offside and running to play the ball, the play will be ?offside.? (Some sadistic or mischievous assistant referees may prefer to wait until the player actually touches the ball in order to raise the flag. This is not, strictly speaking, necessary; but it is not incorrect for them to do so, either...providing some incentive, however meager, to be nice to them). On the other hand, if an offside player removes himself from the play ? pulling up, for example, in order to let an onside teammate collect the ball ? an alert official will allow play to continue. And if the ball is going directly to the keeper, the officials will usually let the players keep playing.

While it is not an offense to be in an offside position, a player who never touches the ball may nevertheless affect play in such a way as to be penalized for being offside. The offside player who runs between an opponent and the ball, for example ? or one who screens the goalkeeper from a shot, or interferes with the keeper?s ability to jump for, or collect the ball ? violates the offside rule by participating in the play. But this sort of participation does not come from touching the ball. Rather, it comes from interfering with an opponent?s chance to play the ball. In this case, once the assistant referee sees the participation, the appropriate response is to raise the flag. But, if the offside player pulls up, steps to the side, or clearly indicates that he is removing himself from the moment?s active play, the alert official will simply allow play to continue.

Among the trickiest things to spot ? either as a spectator or an official ? is the player who exploits an offside position to gain an unfair advantage. This does not mean that the player is ?gaining an advantage? by avoiding some extra running on a hot day, however. Instead, it means that the player is taking advantage of his positioning to exploit a lucky deflection, or a defensive mistake. So, if an offside player is standing to the side of the goal when his teammate takes a shot ? but does not otherwise interfere with play or inhibit the keeper?s chance to make the save ? then he is not offside...and the officials will count the goal. But if the ball rebounds, either from the keeper or the goalpost, and the offside player bangs the rebound home ? the play is offside, and the goal will not count, because the player is now gaining an advantage from the offside position.

?The Moment the Ball is Played....?

Perception of Coaches, Fans, and Players:

The referees never get the offside call right, and have a hard time making up their minds. That?s why their flags are often late. And that?s why they sometimes raise the offside flag even when the players are clearly onside.

Reality Check

The Offside rule is the source of more controversy than any other rule in soccer ? and for good reason: it?s pretty complicated. In addition, there are at least two critical moments of judgment in every offside call, or no-call. The second of these, the moment of participation, is often easy to see: that?s usually where the ball lands and the players are playing, and that?s where everybody is looking. But the first ?moment of truth? is usually away from everyone?s attention, because what determines the ?offside position? is the relative position of each player at the moment the ball is struck.

?The moment the ball touches, or is played, by a teammate....?

Players touch the ball a lot during a soccer game, sometimes in very rapid succession. And soccer being a fluid game, on a good team each player is constantly in motion. This means that the first moment of judgment ? determining whether any players are in an offside position ? is constantly changing, and the relative position of the players will often be very different from one moment to the next. Yet the officials have to keep it all straight, and have a heartbeat or less to take a mental snapshot of the players? positioning at one frozen moment in time ? the moment the ball is played by a member of one team ? in order to judge whether an offside member of that team subsequently moves to play the ball, interferes with an opponent, or gains an advantage from being offside. From the official?s perspective, the game is an endless series of these snapshots, because each new touch of the ball redetermines the offside line.

Part of the difficulty in this is simple physics. Imagine that you are watching cars pass one another on the highway. It may seem easy to tell when one car is passing another in the two northbound lanes of traffic; but try telling the precise moment that a car traveling north is exactly even with a car traveling south. Now, combine this with the need make your decision at the precise moment that some other northbound car flashes its brights, and you get a pretty good idea of what the officials have to do, dozens of times in every game. If the cars are even, or the northbound car has not quite passed the one heading south at the moment the third car flashes its brights, the play is onside; if the northbound car has nosed ahead of the southbound car, the play is offside. Now, widen the highway to twenty lanes...increase the number of cars to twenty-two...set them all moving in different directions and at varying speeds...tell the assistant referee to stay even with the ?next to last car?...and if you can keep track of it all, you?re doing what the referees are doing every moment of the game. Just remember ? the official has to make each decision in a heartbeat.

But what really seems to confuse everyone is more a matter of psychology and perception. Suppose everyone is watching the car with the lights. When its brights flash, everyone turns to see the northbound car racing ahead, and by the time they turn their heads, it?s well past the southbound car, racing north as fast as the speed limit allows. In a soccer game, substitute players for cars, and the ball for the lights, and whichever way the call goes, this is the moment that half the crowd will often start screaming at the officials. But in fact, nobody but the assistant referee has any idea what the call should be, because nobody, except the one, lonely official, was watching the right players at the critical moment.

The important thing to remember is that the moment of judging ?offside position? is different than the moment of judging participation. And this is true whichever direction the players are moving. An offside player who comes back onside to receive the ball is still offside; to avoid the call, he cannot participate until another teammate touches the ball, or his opponents manage to collect it. On the other hand, a player who is onside will remain onside, no matter how far she runs to retrieve it, and no matter where the other team?s players move in the meantime. So, if Judy is onside when Stacey kicks the ball forward, it doesn?t matter if she?s twenty yards behind the defense when she collects the ball. The play will be onside...because she was onside at the moment her teammate passed the ball. And if Judy is onside...but Mary is offside...then an alert official will wait to see which one of them moves after the ball ? because if Mary takes herself out of the play, and allows Judy to collect it, then play can continue because there is no offside violation.

Soccer Officials and Offside

The offside rule has been part of Soccer for a long time, and has generated arguments and controversies since its inception. But its purpose is simple: to prevent ?cherry-picking.? And since it is an important part of the game, the match officials will enforce the rule to the best of their ability. So when the officials rule a play offside ?or let play continue, because they saw no infraction ? they are not doing it out of spite, or to hurt one team or the other. Rather, they are doing so regardless of which team it hurts or benefits, simply because the rules require it.

Officials have a difficult and sometimes thankless job. They have to enforce the rules, even if nobody else understands them, in order for the players to have a fair contest of skill. But the officials are there because they have no interest in the outcome, only a deep respect for the sport, and a willingness to run about the field, occasionally enduring unkind or uninformed remarks so that others can play a game they all love.

Knowing the rules can help coaches, players, and spectators understand the decisions the officials hand down during the match, as they try to keep the game fair, safe, and enjoyable for everybody. And occasionally, understanding the rules may spare everyone some needless grief, when a call goes against your favorite team.

Jeffrey Caminsky, a veteran public prosecutor in Michigan, specializes in the appellate practice of criminal law and writes on a wide range of topics. Both his science fiction adventure novel The Star Dancers, the first volume in the Guardians of Peace (tm) science fiction adventure series, and The Referee?s Survival Guide, a book on soccer officiating, are published by New Alexandria Press, http://www.newalexandriapress.com

Labels: , , , , , , , , ,

Thursday, January 10, 2008

Soccer Live Betting

Click Here To Know How To Play The Best Soccer of Your Life

                

Live betting is one of the main sources of income for the bookmaker why?

Well before the match starts there is always large publicity about the coming fixtures for Live matches. They are often 2 strong team facing each other and they are most likely to be telecast throughout the world. Why? It is because a lot of people likes to bet on sports that they are able to view live especially those recreation punters who gets real kick watching their favourites team play and also big-time soccer punters who bet 30K-50K per match. There is the jalan bet or live betting bet and the half-time bet which make it more interesting and more variety for punters to bet. These live matches are matches where the bookmakers makes lots of money through the vigourish and not forgetting fixed match.

Observations

How to you identify whether the match is fixed?

1.) During the match observe the 1st 10 mins if any team scores, the match it is mostly fixed. They will score at the most unimaginable timing like within 30 seconds or 3 mins are common signs.

2.) Pay attention to the speed of both team players. The team that will lose will tends to run slower than the other team. Another point to note is the team that is fixed to win they will fight with all their might to get to the ball and the one that is fixed to lose {note this also refers to team that gives ball but unable to cover the AH given} will miss even inches infront of the goal post. Sometimes the team that is fixed to lose will even score for the next team that is the own goal or they are extremely disorganised at the defence showing no effort in blocking the strikers attack.

3.) Not all footballers are great actors pay close attention to their body language, they will display great agonies while missing clear cut shots but their eyes are secretly laughing away some even had difficulty in controlling their facial expression ,occasionally they subconsciously look into the camera before diverting their eyes swiftly away.

4.) Coach odds decision to remove key players from the team substituting with a less superior player. Consider this why would a coach remove that particular key striker that has just scored the crucial goal and try to defend the 1 goal lead well within the early 50 or 60 mins.

5.) biased refeering decision. Legimate goals claimed as off-side, or clear penalty given as no foul are common signs. Giving unessary penalty to team that don't deserve it.

What to do when you know its fixed?

1.) Don't bet big when its livematches. Try to observe 1st before you bet then bet during the 2nd half as thats where the bookies tricks reveals itself.

2.) you need to master the art of odds decoding before you are capable of betting big.

3.) Don't fully trust what you see in the 1st half as what is obvious is often a trap.

4.) Do not doubt the odds, the odds posted are often set in a way to trap the average punters ,so try to mold your thinking like a bookie and you will see much clearer.

Winder,Winder sports

http://www.geocities.com/winder21/winderexpertsoccerpicks.htm winder expert picks -Asian handicap specialist to european soccer fixtures.

http://www.windersports.com

winder sports portal -Your guide to winder's interest on sports : provides tips and techniques to improve your game.

winder21@yahoo.com

Labels: , , , , , , , , , ,