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Field Advantage in the MLB (Part 1) |
by:
Proloy
Bhattacharyya |
By
Proloy Bhattacharyya
NFLSystems.com
proloy@nflsystems.com
September 10, 2005
Of all the major sports, baseball is known
for not having a great home field advantage.
During the regular season, astute bettors
will prey upon bookies by betting on teams
that are in situations where the home field
advantage is extreme.
Home teams win on average 53.6% of the time.
This translates to a 7.2% advantage over
road teams which is a smaller disparity
compared to Basketball and Football.
Home teams in Football and Basketball feed
off of their home town fans and are motivated.
With baseball, it is most appropriate to
try to find situations in which baseball
teams will be more motivated.
Consider the Red Sox are 51-15 + 29 units
the past 3 seasons at home off a home loss.
Over the same span and angle, the Rangers
are 47-33 +17 units and the Braves are 52-20
+20 units. These are 3 such teams that have
a strong home field advantage given this
situation. Because baseball is such an unpopular
sport with bettors and this angle does not
apply to all teams, the oddsmakers have
not had to adjust on a situation as this.
Those 3 teams alone combined for 150-68,
+66 units. This means that to even it out,
the spread would have to be adjusted 30
points. So instead of being -130, the team
would have to be -160. Instead of being
+145, they would have to be +115. This is
considerable in the eyes of most bettors.
The normal home field advantage is already
taken into account in the spread but it
is the handicapper’s job to find profitable
situations in which the home field advantage
is higher and capitalize on it.
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