Domestic Cups vs League Betting - Different Markets, Different Edge?

SharpEddie47

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American sports don't have an equivalent to this and it took me a while to understand what I was missing.

The Premier League runs all season. Simultaneously, the same clubs are entered into the FA Cup, a separate single-elimination knockout competition against clubs from every level of the English pyramid, including part-time amateur sides.

There's no American equivalent. The closest structural comparison is March Madness: single elimination, upset narratives, a tournament that exists alongside but separate from the regular season grind.

The US does technically have a domestic cup in soccer, the US Open Cup, MLS teams against lower-division and amateur sides. Almost nobody bets on it. Almost nobody outside dedicated soccer media covers it. It exists in a kind of obscurity that the FA Cup, for all its discussed decline, has never approached.

The question I'm interested in: does the dual competition structure create a genuinely different market, or is it the same teams playing the same sport with a different name on the trophy.
 
The "magic of the cup" narrative is the specific public money driver and it's been remarkably durable.

Every round: media coverage emphasizes the possibility of upsets. The non-league side hosting a Premier League club. The romantic narrative of the underdog.

The public response: backing the underdog for the upset at inflated stakes relative to their genuine probability, specifically because the narrative makes the upset feel more available than it statistically is.

The counter-pattern: backing the favorite heavily because "surely they won't lose to a part-timer," which can push the favorite's price shorter than their actual cup-tie probability warrants given the specific dynamics of facing a deep-defending lower-league side they have no data on.

Both directions of public money exist simultaneously in cup matches in a way that doesn't happen in league fixtures between two top-flight sides with extensive head-to-head data.
 
The DFB-Pokal first round is the clearest version of the cross-league pricing problem.

Every August: regional and lower-division German clubs draw Bundesliga opposition. Often at small stadiums holding ten or fifteen thousand people, with an atmosphere completely different from anything the visiting Bundesliga side experiences in normal league play.

The market has to price a Bundesliga club, with fourteen years of data behind my model, against a fourth-tier regional side with essentially no comparable data at all.

What the model can incorporate: Bundesliga club's quality, expected squad rotation for an early-season cup tie, general base rates for upsets at this stage.

What the model cannot incorporate: the specific atmosphere of a packed small stadium against a team that plays at this level every week and is treating this single match as the biggest of their season, while the visitors are treating it as a formality before the league campaign that actually matters to them.

The data asymmetry between the two sides of the match is the largest I encounter in any context.
 
The "cup team" versus "league team" distinction is real from a coaching perspective and underpriced.

A manager at a club fighting relegation: the league is existential, the cup is a distraction. Team selection for cup matches at this level often signals this directly, weakened lineups, younger players given minutes, first-team regulars rested.

A manager at a club with a stable mid-table league position and no European football: the cup represents the most realistic route to silverware or European qualification all season. Team selection reflects genuine priority.

Two clubs of similar league standing can have completely different cup motivations depending on their specific situation, and this is knowable in advance from understanding each club's season context.

The market applies a generic "cup rotation" discount. The specific direction and magnitude of that discount varies enormously by club and situation in ways the generic discount doesn't capture.
 
Welsh clubs in the FA Cup qualifying rounds is a world most English football fans never see.

Several Welsh clubs play in the English pyramid rather than Welsh competitions, which means FA Cup qualifying rounds in August and September involving teams from the Cymru Premier playing English non-league sides.

These matches: essentially zero betting market depth. If a market exists at all it's been set using whatever generic non-league model the operator applies, with no specific knowledge of either side.

Genuinely know some of these clubs from following Welsh football generally.

The information advantage in these specific fixtures: real, in the sense that almost nobody else has bothered to think about them at all. Whether the liquidity is sufficient to do anything with that advantage: a fiver each way, maybe.
 
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