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#1
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Cadel Evans 1.45 @ Alejandro Valverde 2.10 @ Denis Menchov 2.20 @ Damiano Cunego 3.25 @ Andy Schleck 3.75 @ Carlos Sastre 4.25 @ Stijn Devolder 6.75 @ Juan Mauricio Soler Hernández 8.50 @ This is reasonably accurate...except I don't think Cunego and Sastre will place that high. And I would replace A. Schleck with Kirchen. And move Valverde ahead of Evans the wheel sucker. So it could look like this: Valverde Evans Menchov Devolder Kirchen Soler Sastre A. Schleck F. Schleck Monfort Andre |
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#2
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On Jun 22, 12:05*pm, Andre <ANDREJANSSE...@yahoo.com> wrote: > Cadel Evans 1.45 *@ > Alejandro Valverde 2.10 *@ > Denis Menchov 2.20 *@ > Damiano Cunego 3.25 *@ > Andy Schleck 3.75 *@ > Carlos Sastre 4.25 *@ > Stijn Devolder 6.75 *@ > Juan Mauricio Soler Hernández 8.50 *@ > > This is reasonably accurate... The accuracy of these odds cannot be assessed. You mean it looks good to you. > except I don't think Cunego and Sastre > will place that high. These are win odds, so it doesn't really have that much to do with how high a guy will place. Perhaps the person who set these odds thinks Cunego is a good prospect to win, but will DNF otherwise. the odds don't have to reflect consistency. > And I would replace A. Schleck with Kirchen. Not after Saturday, you shouldn't. > And > move Valverde ahead of Evans the wheel sucker. Wheelsucking can win races, if you suck the right wheels. -rj |
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#3
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> This is reasonably accurate...except I don't think Cunego and Sastre > will place that high. And I would replace A. Schleck with Kirchen. And > move Valverde ahead of Evans the wheel sucker. No, I think they have the Evans/Valverde thing correct. Evans has a very cool head on his shoulders, and he'll do what needs to be done. Valverde is far more likely to overdo it and blow up. Give Valverde a year or two. For the time being, Evans is the "safe" bet, and this is a betting line, after all. --Mike Jacoubowsky Chain Reaction Bicycles www.ChainReaction.com Redwood City & Los Altos, CA USA "Andre" <ANDREJANSSENS1@yahoo.com> wrote in message news:846e9f9c-df03-412f-b00f-1ab5b4e4608e@d77g2000hsb.googlegroups.com... Cadel Evans 1.45 @ Alejandro Valverde 2.10 @ Denis Menchov 2.20 @ Damiano Cunego 3.25 @ Andy Schleck 3.75 @ Carlos Sastre 4.25 @ Stijn Devolder 6.75 @ Juan Mauricio Soler Hernández 8.50 @ This is reasonably accurate...except I don't think Cunego and Sastre will place that high. And I would replace A. Schleck with Kirchen. And move Valverde ahead of Evans the wheel sucker. So it could look like this: Valverde Evans Menchov Devolder Kirchen Soler Sastre A. Schleck F. Schleck Monfort Andre |
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#4
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On Jun 22, 10:59*am, ronaldo_jeremiah <ronaldo_jerem...@yahoo.com> wrote: > On Jun 22, 12:05*pm, Andre <ANDREJANSSE...@yahoo.com> wrote: > > > Cadel Evans 1.45 *@ > > Alejandro Valverde 2.10 *@ > > Denis Menchov 2.20 *@ > > Damiano Cunego 3.25 *@ > > Andy Schleck 3.75 *@ > > Carlos Sastre 4.25 *@ > > Stijn Devolder 6.75 *@ > > Juan Mauricio Soler Hernández 8.50 *@ > > > This is reasonably accurate... > > The accuracy of these odds cannot be assessed. *You mean it looks good > to you. Dumbass - They set odds based upon how they think people will bet. It doesn't necessarily have anything to do with how the oddsmakers think the riders will actually perform. They want an even distribution of betting dollars relative to the odds so that they make money no matter who wins. thanks, K. Gringioni. |
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#5
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On Sun, 22 Jun 2008 17:37:34 -0700, "Mike Jacoubowsky" <MikeJ@ChainReaction.com> wrote: >> This is reasonably accurate...except I don't think Cunego and Sastre >> will place that high. And I would replace A. Schleck with Kirchen. And >> move Valverde ahead of Evans the wheel sucker. > >No, I think they have the Evans/Valverde thing correct. Evans has a very >cool head on his shoulders, and he'll do what needs to be done. Valverde is >far more likely to overdo it and blow up. Give Valverde a year or two. For >the time being, Evans is the "safe" bet, and this is a betting line, after >all. Based on the Dauphiné, Valverde has either made big ITT progress or he's in excellent shape, he's a better climber than Evans too. That Kreunzinger guy who just won the TDS is pretty impressive too, might be a big surprise if he can last in the race. |
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#6
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On Jun 22, 1:59*pm, ronaldo_jeremiah <ronaldo_jerem...@yahoo.com> wrote: > On Jun 22, 12:05*pm, Andre <ANDREJANSSE...@yahoo.com> wrote: > > > Cadel Evans 1.45 *@ > > Alejandro Valverde 2.10 *@ > > Denis Menchov 2.20 *@ > > Damiano Cunego 3.25 *@ > > Andy Schleck 3.75 *@ > > Carlos Sastre 4.25 *@ > > Stijn Devolder 6.75 *@ > > Juan Mauricio Soler Hernández 8.50 *@ > > > This is reasonably accurate... > > The accuracy of these odds cannot be assessed. *You mean it looks good > to you. > > > except I don't think Cunego and Sastre > > will place that high. > > These are win odds, so it doesn't really have that much to do with how > high a guy will place. *Perhaps the person who set these odds thinks > Cunego is a good prospect to win, but will DNF otherwise. *the odds > don't have to reflect consistency. > > > And I would replace A. Schleck with Kirchen. > > Not after Saturday, you shouldn't. > > > And > > move Valverde ahead of Evans the wheel sucker. > > Wheelsucking can win races, if you suck the right wheels. > > -rj Actually these were top ten odds. |
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#7
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On Jun 22, 7:48*pm, Kurgan Gringioni <kgringi...@hotmail.com> wrote: > On Jun 22, 10:59*am, ronaldo_jeremiah <ronaldo_jerem...@yahoo.com> > wrote: > > > On Jun 22, 12:05*pm, Andre <ANDREJANSSE...@yahoo.com> wrote: > > > > Cadel Evans 1.45 *@ > > > Alejandro Valverde 2.10 *@ > > > Denis Menchov 2.20 *@ > > > Damiano Cunego 3.25 *@ > > > Andy Schleck 3.75 *@ > > > Carlos Sastre 4.25 *@ > > > Stijn Devolder 6.75 *@ > > > Juan Mauricio Soler Hernández 8.50 *@ > > > > This is reasonably accurate... > > > The accuracy of these odds cannot be assessed. *You mean it looks good > > to you. > > Dumbass - > > They set odds based upon how they think people will bet. It doesn't > necessarily have anything to do with how the oddsmakers think the > riders will actually perform. > > They want an even distribution of betting dollars relative to the odds > so that they make money no matter who wins. > > thanks, > > K. Gringioni. Dumbass - I know that. (Still, it's a good point.) Presumably, the bettors' mental models of who should win are based in reality; therefore, the betting lines based on how people would bet should approximate the odds one would create if one was simply intending to model reality. So, my point is still the same - to say the odds "look accurate" is technically imprecise. One can only compare them to one's own mental model of the odds, because the actual probabilities are unknown and, in this case, unknowable. -rj |
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#8
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On Jun 22, 8:27*pm, Andre <ANDREJANSSE...@yahoo.com> wrote: > Actually these were top ten odds.- Hide quoted text - > Andre - No way those are top ten odds. They look like win odds. Besides, what bookmakers offer top ten odds? (That's not to say they couldn't, just that it would be unusual.) What is your source for these? -rj |
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#9
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ronaldo_jeremiah wrote: > On Jun 22, 7:48 pm, Kurgan Gringioni <kgringi...@hotmail.com> wrote: >> On Jun 22, 10:59 am, ronaldo_jeremiah <ronaldo_jerem...@yahoo.com> >> wrote: >> >>> On Jun 22, 12:05 pm, Andre <ANDREJANSSE...@yahoo.com> wrote: >>>> Cadel Evans 1.45 @ >>>> Alejandro Valverde 2.10 @ >>>> Denis Menchov 2.20 @ >>>> Damiano Cunego 3.25 @ >>>> Andy Schleck 3.75 @ >>>> Carlos Sastre 4.25 @ >>>> Stijn Devolder 6.75 @ >>>> Juan Mauricio Soler Hernández 8.50 @ >>>> This is reasonably accurate... >>> The accuracy of these odds cannot be assessed. You mean it looks good >>> to you. >> Dumbass - >> >> They set odds based upon how they think people will bet. It doesn't >> necessarily have anything to do with how the oddsmakers think the >> riders will actually perform. >> >> They want an even distribution of betting dollars relative to the odds >> so that they make money no matter who wins. >> >> thanks, >> >> K. Gringioni. > > > Dumbass - > > I know that. (Still, it's a good point.) > > Presumably, the bettors' mental models of who should win are based in > reality; therefore, the betting lines based on how people would bet > should approximate the odds one would create if one was simply > intending to model reality. You are assuming a well informed, dispassionate betting public. That is not a good assumption. People bet for many reasons, some of them ignorant and emotional. Name recognition plays into these odds at least as much the likelihood of winning. |
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#10
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On Jun 22, 8:18*pm, Fred Fredburger <Fred.Fredbur...@Where.Are.The.Nachos.Huh> wrote: > > You are assuming a well informed, dispassionate betting public. > > That is not a good assumption. People bet for many reasons, some of them > ignorant and emotional. Name recognition plays into these odds at least > as much the likelihood of winning. Dumbass - I agree. Anecdote: a friend of mine actually makes money at gambling, most of it on college football. He'll make value bets vs. the teams that have the most passionate, most numerous fans (pre-2007 Notre Dame for instance), waiting till they go against a quality unknown opponent with a small fanbase and Notre Dame will get something like 5 touchdowns in the spread. The reason he's able to beat the bookies' take over time is self-evident. He's not taking money from the bookies though. The bookies just want an equal amount of money on both sides of any spread. He's taking it from the overly rabid fans of the big school. thanks, K. Gringioni. |
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#11
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On Jun 22, 9:48*pm, ronaldo_jeremiah <ronaldo_jerem...@yahoo.com> wrote: > On Jun 22, 8:27*pm, Andre <ANDREJANSSE...@yahoo.com> wrote: > > > Actually these were top ten odds.- Hide quoted text - > > Andre - > > No way those are top ten odds. *They look like win odds. *Besides, > what bookmakers offer top ten odds? *(That's not to say they couldn't, > just that it would be unusual.) > > What is your source for these? > > -rj http://www.betbrain.com/oddsOverview...2751737/site/0 Of course Rogers is out. |
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#12
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Andre schreef: >> No way those are top ten odds. They look like win odds. Besides, >> what bookmakers offer top ten odds? (That's not to say they couldn't, >> just that it would be unusual.) >> >> What is your source for these? > > http://www.betbrain.com/oddsOverview...2751737/site/0 If you click on the TopX link, you'll those are podium odds. |
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#13
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Mike Jacoubowsky wrote: > No, I think they have the Evans/Valverde thing correct. Evans has a very > cool head on his shoulders, and he'll do what needs to be done. Valverde > is far more likely to overdo it and blow up. Give Valverde a year or two. > For the time being, Evans is the "safe" bet, and this is a betting line, > after all. A few weeks ago I would have said Valverde can't TT. I seem to recall "Who would have thought x could TT like that" was a rbr code. |
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#14
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#15
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On Jun 22, 10:36*pm, Kurgan Gringioni <kgringi...@hotmail.com> wrote: > On Jun 22, 8:18*pm, Fred Fredburger > > <Fred.Fredbur...@Where.Are.The.Nachos.Huh> wrote: > > > You are assuming a well informed, dispassionate betting public. > > > That is not a good assumption. People bet for many reasons, some of them > > ignorant and emotional. Name recognition plays into these odds at least > > as much the likelihood of winning. > > Dumbass - > > I agree. > > Anecdote: a friend of mine actually makes money at gambling, most of > it on college football. He'll make value bets vs. the teams that have > the most passionate, most numerous fans (pre-2007 Notre Dame for > instance), waiting till they go against a quality unknown opponent > with a small fanbase and Notre Dame will get something like 5 > touchdowns in the spread. The reason he's able to beat the bookies' > take over time is self-evident. > > He's not taking money from the bookies though. The bookies just want > an equal amount of money on both sides of any spread. He's taking it > from the overly rabid fans of the big school. > > thanks, > > K. Gringioni. You guys are dumbasses, and are just making my point. If the odds are off, someone with knowledge of that fact will come along and exploit it, and the odds will have to be adjusted. Given sufficient time and bettors, the odds should become a good model of 'reality,' even if they aren't that in the first place. But, they probably will be that in the first place, because the bookies who set the original odds have good information and are in the business of making good odds. If they couldn't do that, they'd be out of business before very long, since they're competing with other bookies who are attempting to do the exact same thing. Ergo, the odds offered by bookies will tend to be a good model of the actual probabilities. Of course, I'm a bigger dumbass than either of you for taking the time to correct the original poster's message to make a finer point about his personal assessment of the odds on offer, when we all probably knew what he meant in the first place. -rj |
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