Why the Public Always Overbets Favorites

FadeThePublic

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Here's a fact that will never change: the public loves betting favorites.

I pulled data from Action Network for the last NFL season. Games where the favorite got 70%+ of public tickets? The underdog covered 58.7% of the time. That's a massive edge.

Why does this keep happening? Because casual bettors think betting favorites is "safer." They'd rather risk $150 to win $100 on what feels like a sure thing than take +140 on a "bad team." It's backwards thinking and it's been consistent for decades.

The books know this. They shade lines toward favorites because they know the public will eat it up. Meanwhile, sharp money quietly takes the dog, waits for the line to move even further, then loads up more.

If you're still betting favorites at -150 or worse, you're literally funding my bankroll. So thanks for that.
 
Okay but like... what if the favorite is actually better though?

I bet on the Chiefs pretty much every week and they WIN. Yeah sometimes I'm laying -200 or whatever but they're literally the best team in the league. Why would I bet on some terrible team just because they're getting points?

Like last week everyone was on the Jaguars +7.5 because "public overbetting the favorite" and the Chiefs won by 21. So the public was actually RIGHT.

I feel like you contrarian people just assume the favorite is always overpriced but sometimes teams are favorites for a reason lol. Not everyone who bets favorites is a "casual bettor" who doesn't know what they're doing.
 
Okay but like... what if the favorite is actually better though?

I bet on the Chiefs pretty much every week and they WIN. Yeah sometimes I'm laying -200 or whatever but they're literally the best team in the league. Why would I bet on some terrible team just because they're getting points?

Like last week everyone was on the Jaguars +7.5 because "public overbetting the favorite" and the Chiefs won by 21. So the public was actually RIGHT.

I feel like you contrarian people just assume the favorite is always overpriced but sometimes teams are favorites for a reason lol. Not everyone who bets favorites is a "casual bettor" who doesn't know what they're doing.
Princess I'm going to explain this as clearly as I can.

The question isn't whether favorites win. They do win. That's why they're favorites. The question is whether they win at a rate that justifies the price you're paying.

Let's use actual math. If you're betting Chiefs at -200, you need them to win 66.7% of the time just to break even. Not to profit - just to break even. Are the Chiefs ACTUALLY 66.7% likely to win that game? Or are they 60% likely, but the line is -200 because the public loves them?

That 6.7% difference is the edge. That's what Fade is talking about.

When you bet a favorite at -200, you're getting 2-to-1 odds. You risk $200 to win $100. If the true probability is 60%, not 67%, you're making a -EV bet even though the team might win.

Over 100 bets at -200 with a true 60% win rate:
  • You win 60 times: +$6,000
  • You lose 40 times: -$8,000
  • Net result: -$2,000
You lost money even though you won 60% of your bets. That's why blindly betting favorites is a losing strategy.

Now, if you can identify spots where the favorite is ACTUALLY 70% likely to win but priced at -200, then yes, bet the favorite. But that requires analysis, not just "Chiefs are good so I bet them."
 
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