maverick2112 said:
YYZ........great thread. Good points on both sides. But I notice how people that disagree with you bring up records for say the past few years..........WHAT DOES THAT MATTER!!!!!!
I think the question to answer is
SINCE YOU STARTED SPORTS BETTING ARE YOU UP OR DOWN $$$$......
It doesnt really matter if I won 50,000 in the last 2 years in the NFL if I am down $500,000 for the last 30.
I would be curious to see the answer to this question from the ones who say they are successful at this.
Maverick,
I respectfully disagree.
I do not believe this is an important issue. It might be important if you were to ask this question to an 80-year old man who gambles, since we can pretty much be certain that his "lot in life" has been cast (e.g., he is already and WINNER or a LOSER and the next few years are not going to change that position). This question would be pointless for a much younger person -- since it's conceivable the young gambler lost lots of money early in his betting "career" and learned from his mistakes and slowly but surely became a more skillful gambler -- in other words, a winner.
I'll give you an exmaple. Pro poker player Daniel Negreanu quit high school and became a professional poker player by age 17. By his own admission he went broke several times. Broke! By the age of 24 (I think) he won his first World Series gold bracelet. Had you asked him at the age of 22, for instance, if he was up or down LIFETIME, he would probably say he lost. But, he took all that knowledge and experience and became a better poker player. Now, he plays $200-400 every day at the Bellagio (which requires a six-figure bankroll).
The same thing applies to sports gambling, albeit to a lesser extent.
Think of it this way.
People think nothing of spending $100,000 to get a college degree, which in and of itself is no assurance of getting the money back. There is no guarantee, particularly if you study somethink like history or philosophy (non-marketble degrees). It's an investment in knowledge. In a sense, all gamblers get their "college degrees" through hard knocks and losses. Most never graduate. But some do. Some do graduate. They take the losses and become better handicappers.
So, the point is -- it matter not how much money was lost (or won) X years ago. It all comes down to -- where are you NOW? What have you learned? How are you a better gambler now than years ago? Are you winning NOW.
I think Message Forums like this make us all into more astute gamblers. We still make mistakes, sure. But many of us learn from those errors, which then INCREASES our chances to profit in the future.
I suppose if past gambing losses were analogous to a college degree, I'd be a PhD.
-- Nolan Dalla