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Home
Field Advantage in the MLB (Part 3) |
by:
Proloy
Bhattacharyya |
By
Proloy Bhattacharyya
NFLSystems.com
proloy@nflsystems.com
September 12, 2005
In one of our earlier articles, we demonstrated
how the home field advantage was stronger
in the first game of a series and qualified
that by explaining how the opposing team
has to travel to a visitor’s stadium and
may struggle in the first game.
I wanted to apply a few handicapping principles
that we generally apply to the NBA such
as the betting against a team on zero-days
rest angle.
Home teams in the first game of a series
are 54.4% winners if their opponent is playing
back-to-back days but only 52.8% if their
opponent has had 1 or more days rest. This
is a significant advantage that is averaged
over approximately 5000 games.
If we condition this fact on our team not
having to travel because its previous game
was at home, the percentage increases to
975-801, 54.9%. In fact, blindly betting
home teams in this situation is +26 units
over the past 6 years. Because of the large
number of games in baseball, even simple
angles such as these do not get factored
into the spread as they should.
As my “2005 YTD Home Favorite Money Line
Records” piece suggested, home teams perform
much better against non-divisional rivals
than against divisional rivals. Utilizing
that knowledge, we improve this system to
55.6%, +39 units.
American League favorites that fall into
this system are 226-113 (66.7%), +56 units
over the past 6 seasons with no losing seasons.
Even though this is coincidental
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