• Guest, Forum Rules - Please Read

    We keep things simple so everyone can enjoy our community:

    • Be respectful - Treat all members with courtesy and respect
    • No spam - Quality contributions only, no repetitive or promotional spam
    • Betting site owners welcome - You may advertise your site in the Betting Picks or Personal Threads sections (minimum 3 posts required before posting links)
    • Stay on topic - Keep discussions relevant to the forum section you're in

    Violating these rules may result in warnings or account suspension. Let's keep our community friendly and helpful!

Analysis Paralysis: Can You Overthink a Bet?

SharpEddie47

Value Hunter
Joined
Mar 4, 2024
Messages
85
Reaction score
1
Points
8
Something happened to me that rarely happens, and it got me thinking.
I had Lakers -4.5 circled all week. Did my research, checked the injury reports, ran my models, everything pointed to value. Line opened at -5, moved to -4.5, even better. I was ready to pull the trigger.
Then I started second-guessing. Checked three more injury reports. Re-ran my numbers. Started reading what other cappers were saying. Looked at the weather (for an indoor game, I know). Checked the ref assignments. By the time I finally decided to bet it, the line had moved to -5.5 and I talked myself out of it entirely.
Lakers won by 14.
So here's my question: Can you actually overthink a bet? I've spent years preaching about doing your research and trusting the numbers, but is there a point where more analysis actually hurts your decision-making?
I'm curious if anyone else has experienced this or if I'm just losing my edge in my old age.
 
Eddie admitting he overthought something is like seeing a unicorn lmao
But yeah man this happens to me all the time, just from a different angle. I'll identify a good contrarian spot - public's hammering one side, line's moving the other way, sharp money is clear. Should be an easy bet.

Then I start doom scrolling Twitter. Some capper posts a thread about why the public side is actually right this time. Another guy posts injury news that wasn't on the official report. Someone else mentions some random stat about Tuesday night road favorites in January.
Next thing I know I've talked myself out of a good bet because I found twelve reasons to doubt my original analysis. Meanwhile the sharp bettors already placed their bets three hours ago and moved on with their day.

The worst part? I'll track the bet I didn't make and it wins like 60% of the time. I'm literally analyzing myself OUT of good bets.
 
Wait you guys actually have the opposite problem from me??
I barely do any analysis lol. I see a bet I like, maybe check if anyone's injured, and I just place it. Takes me like 2 minutes max 😅
Maybe that's my problem tho? Like should I be spending more time researching? I always assumed more research = better bets but now Eddie's saying you can overthink it?
I'm so confused. How much analysis is the RIGHT amount??
 
This is actually a really important topic and I think there's a sweet spot that most people miss.
Eddie, I've done what you did probably a hundred times. You start with good analysis and a solid thesis, then you keep digging and digging until you find reasons to doubt yourself. The problem isn't the analysis - it's that you're using MORE analysis to override your ORIGINAL analysis instead of just refining it.
Think about it like coaching. I game plan all week for Friday's opponent. By Thursday I have my plan locked in. If I'm still changing plays on Friday afternoon, that's not being thorough - that's being indecisive. At some point you have to trust the work you already did.

Here's my framework:

Phase 1: Deep Analysis (Monday-Wednesday for weekend games)
This is where you do the real work. Matchups, injuries, trends, situational spots, coaching, everything.
Phase 2: Confirmation (Thursday-Friday)
Check for any major news. Injury updates, line movements, weather. You're not re-doing your analysis, just confirming nothing major changed.
Phase 3: Execute (Saturday)
Place your bets based on Phase 1 and 2. If you're still analyzing at this point, you already messed up.

The key is knowing when to STOP analyzing and trust your initial work. More information doesn't always mean better information.
 
Tony that framework is actually brilliant and I'm annoyed I didn't think of it myself.
You're right - the problem wasn't that I did too much analysis. The problem was that I did my analysis, then KEPT analyzing past the point where I'd already found the answer.

It's like if you solve a math problem, get an answer, but then keep solving it seventeen more times hoping to get a "better" answer. At some point you're just wasting time.
I think what happened is I found value, but then started looking for reasons why I might be wrong instead of just executing. Classic confirmation bias in reverse.
Princess to answer your question - you probably need MORE initial analysis, but once you've done it, stick with it. Don't be like me yesterday and analyze yourself into paralysis.
 
The other problem with overanalysis is you start finding "information" that isn't actually meaningful. Like Eddie said he checked the refs. Okay but unless you have 5+ years of data on specific ref tendencies by team and matchup, what does that actually tell you? You're just adding noise.
Same with reading what other cappers think. Who cares? If you did your own research and found value, some random Twitter thread shouldn't change that. Either your analysis was good or it wasn't - other people's opinions don't change the underlying math.


I learned this the hard way. I used to check like 8 different forums before placing a bet. If I saw too many people agreeing with me I'd get nervous (contrarian brain). If I saw everyone disagreeing I'd also get nervous. It was paralyzing.
Now I do my research, check line movement and betting percentages, and place the bet. Then I close everything and don't look at it again until the game's over.
The goal isn't to eliminate ALL doubt before betting. That's impossible. The goal is to find +EV spots and execute with discipline.
 
Okay so follow up question because I'm genuinely trying to understand this
How do you know the difference between "I need to do more research" vs "I'm overthinking this"?

Like sometimes I'll be about to place a bet and get a weird feeling about it. Is that my gut telling me something's wrong? Or is that just my brain trying to sabotage me?
Because I feel like Eddie and Fade are saying "trust your analysis and stop second-guessing" but Eddie also always says "trust the process not your gut" so which is it?? 😅
 
100% you can overthink it. For me there’s a line between “doing the work” and “trying to find a reason not to pull the trigger.” If I’ve checked form, injuries, schedule and price, and I still can’t decide, I just pass. No bet is also a decision. I’d rather miss a winner than force something I’ve talked myself in circles over.
 
Okay so follow up question because I'm genuinely trying to understand this
How do you know the difference between "I need to do more research" vs "I'm overthinking this"?

Like sometimes I'll be about to place a bet and get a weird feeling about it. Is that my gut telling me something's wrong? Or is that just my brain trying to sabotage me?
Because I feel like Eddie and Fade are saying "trust your analysis and stop second-guessing" but Eddie also always says "trust the process not your gut" so which is it?? 😅

That's a great question Princess and I think you're identifying the real tension here.
Here's how I think about it:
"I need more research" = You don't understand the matchup yet. You can't explain WHY you like one side. You're just guessing based on vibes.
"I'm overthinking" = You already did the research. You have a clear thesis. But now you're finding tiny details to second-guess yourself.
Example of needing more research: "I like Team A because I think they're good" - okay but WHY are they good? What's the specific matchup advantage?
Example of overthinking: "Team A has a defensive efficiency advantage, coaching matchup edge, and rest advantage. But I just saw that their backup left tackle is questionable and now I don't know if I should bet this." That's overthinking.
As for the gut feeling thing - your gut is usually just pattern recognition based on past experiences. If you've done your research and your gut is telling you something's off, maybe there's a detail you're subconsciously noticing. Or maybe you're just nervous about risking money.
The solution? Set a decision deadline. "I will decide on this bet by 2pm." When 2pm hits, you either have enough information to bet or you don't. No more analysis after that.
 
To clarify my position since Princess asked - "trust the process not your gut" means don't make bets based on FEELINGS without backing it up with analysis.
But once you've DONE the analysis, you have to execute. Otherwise what was the point of the analysis?
The problem is when you do analysis, find an answer, but then your gut (fear, really) makes you keep analyzing until you talk yourself out of it.

Here's a concrete example:
Bad: "I have a gut feeling about this team" places bet without research
Good: "My research shows value here" places bet based on analysis
Also bad: "My research shows value here but let me check 47 more things first" never places bet

The third one is what I did yesterday. That's overthinking.
 
Back
Top