How Does 1x2 Betting Work on Basketball and American Football?
Collapse
X
-
bookieSBR MVP
- 08-10-05
- 2112
#1How Does 1x2 Betting Work on Basketball and American Football?Tags: None -
raiders72001Senior Member
- 08-10-05
- 11209
#3edit- saw there was a HT there.Comment -
LT ProfitsSBR Aristocracy
- 10-27-06
- 90963
#4Would make sense, you'd think 1x2 is for regulation time only. That said, USA facing books do not have 1x2 lines on foots or hoops.Originally posted by bookieWhen there are no ties, I don't understand the point of listing them this way. Or do they count overtime games as ties making both home and away bettors losers?
[ATTACH]74323[/ATTACH]Comment -
spiderSBR Posting Legend
- 05-21-11
- 11378
#5if you have only two prices listed, then it includes any overtime that is played.
if there are 3 prices listed, (home,draw,away) then its the final score in regulation that counts.Comment -
bookieSBR MVP
- 08-10-05
- 2112
#6So a tie in regulation is considered no bet? Or both home and away bettors lose? By the odds it looks like it has to be the latter.Comment -
LT ProfitsSBR Aristocracy
- 10-27-06
- 90963
#7It is a 1x2, so home and away both lose, tie (draw) wins.Originally posted by bookieSo a tie in regulation is considered no bet? Or both home and away bettors lose? By the odds it looks like it has to be the latter.Comment -
LT ProfitsSBR Aristocracy
- 10-27-06
- 90963
#8I just opened up the link and it looks like a regular straight line and not a 1x2? Despite what the heading says?Originally posted by bookieSo a tie in regulation is considered no bet? Or both home and away bettors lose? By the odds it looks like it has to be the latter.Comment -
LT ProfitsSBR Aristocracy
- 10-27-06
- 90963
#9Yes, what is being described as a 1x2 simply looks like a straight Money Line.Originally posted by LT ProfitsI just opened up the link and it looks like a regular straight line and not a 1x2? Despite what the heading says?Comment -
OptionalAdministrator
- 06-10-10
- 62106
#10If you switch to classic view you will see the same odds listed under the column heading MONEYLINE.Comment -
bookieSBR MVP
- 08-10-05
- 2112
#11My first thought was that those must be moneylines, but if you look at the VT-MIA game that would mean one was about +200 and the other +180. Unless I am confused about how to read Hong Kong lines.Originally posted by OptionalIf you switch to classic view you will see the same odds listed under the column heading MONEYLINE
I gotta figure it out because I don't have the option of switching to classic view.Comment -
OptionalAdministrator
- 06-10-10
- 62106
#12Yeah you are confused by conversion. And it's just decimal odds not HK.Originally posted by bookieMy first thought was that those must be moneylines, but if you look at the VT-MIA game that would mean one was about +200 and the other +180. Unless I am confused about how to read Hong Kong lines.
I gotta figure it out because I don't have the option of switching to classic view.
$2.09 = +109 (Decimal is saying you get $2.09 back in total for each $1 bet)
$1.81 = -120 (if you risked $100 @ -120 you make $81 profit... hence your decimal return on $1 = $1.81)
It's actually bloody US odds that are the complicated ones!.Comment -
bookieSBR MVP
- 08-10-05
- 2112
#13Thanks Optional...now it makes sense.Comment
Search
Collapse
SBR Contests
Collapse
Top-Rated US Sportsbooks
Collapse
#1 BetMGM
4.8/5 BetMGM Bonus Code
#2 FanDuel
4.8/5 FanDuel Promo Code
#3 Caesars
4.8/5 Caesars Promo Code
#4 DraftKings
4.7/5 DraftKings Promo Code
#5 Fanatics
#6 bet365
4.7/5 bet365 Bonus Code
#7 Hard Rock
4.1/5 Hard Rock Bet Promo Code
#8 BetRivers
4.1/5 BetRivers Bonus Code
