CoachTony_Bets
Market Sharp
- Joined
- Dec 7, 2024
- Messages
- 551
- Reaction score
- 9
- Points
- 18
The coaching angle on this is specific and worth sharing.
Teams have identifiable first half patterns that persist across a season. Some teams press aggressively for the first 20 minutes and fade. Some teams sit defensively in the first half and push in the second when they have the fitness advantage. Some teams start poorly in every match regardless of opponent and improve after halftime adjustments.
These patterns are observable and persistent. They're also incompletely priced in first half markets.
The reason: the market prices first half results from full match analysis with a proportional adjustment. The proportional adjustment assumes the first half is roughly representative of the full match.
It isn't. The first half has specific tactical characteristics for specific teams that don't appear in the full match outcome data.
A team with a 55% full match win rate might have a 48% first half lead rate because they consistently start slowly. The market prices their first half at approximately 55% minus a small adjustment. The genuine probability is closer to 48%.
The gap between market-priced first half probability and team-specific first half probability is the structural edge I've found most consistently in this market type.
Teams have identifiable first half patterns that persist across a season. Some teams press aggressively for the first 20 minutes and fade. Some teams sit defensively in the first half and push in the second when they have the fitness advantage. Some teams start poorly in every match regardless of opponent and improve after halftime adjustments.
These patterns are observable and persistent. They're also incompletely priced in first half markets.
The reason: the market prices first half results from full match analysis with a proportional adjustment. The proportional adjustment assumes the first half is roughly representative of the full match.
It isn't. The first half has specific tactical characteristics for specific teams that don't appear in the full match outcome data.
A team with a 55% full match win rate might have a 48% first half lead rate because they consistently start slowly. The market prices their first half at approximately 55% minus a small adjustment. The genuine probability is closer to 48%.
The gap between market-priced first half probability and team-specific first half probability is the structural edge I've found most consistently in this market type.