My Dad had grown up impartial to a flutter on the Grand National but was not a betting man. The same was true to the rest of my family. My closest friends were huge football fans and some might say this is where many relationships with the ninja168 world begin as here in the UK we absorb such a huge number of gambling related advertisements pre and post build up and between halves throughout the course of a regular Soccer Saturday or Super Sunday as Sky famously branded its coverage of the English Premier League. Still though – only one of them had ever been inclined to pass through the revolving door of rags and riches into the realms of the bookie and this was never much an influence on me.
With this in mind, it strikes me odd that I ever gave matched betting a shot in the first instance and if you asked me how I actually initially discovered the term I actually struggle to remember.
I guess I was probably looking for information on how to make money online as many young lads at that age no doubt do and somehow stumbled on to a goldmine of information discussing everyday regular folk consistently snatching money out of bookmaker and casino owners hands through implementing a method of arbitrage.
Admittedly when my eyes first set on this feast of information I was a bit dumbfounded by it all. I understood the principles but actually undertaking any of calculations myself seemed a bit scary. More so for somebody who had never actually staked a bet at a bookmaker before! In fact I think I can say with confidence that I never actually physically stepped inside a bookie and placed a bet over the counter until I had already extracted thousands of pounds worth of easy coin through matched betting.
For those of you reading this little discourse down memory lane then you’re probably wondering what on earth I’m talking about when I raise the phrase matched betting? Simply put – matched betting is the process by which you match any bet you place at a bookmaker with an opposing bet at a betting exchange to ensure you cover all outcomes. In taking a classic football match by way of example let’s suppose Manchester United are taking on Liverpool in no doubt bitterly, heated local derby at Old Trafford.
A normal punter of whom have contributed to the continued success and endless riches of bookmakers all around the world would undoubtedly just stake their money on a single outcome and then hope that within the event that their prediction comes to fruition.
Again – an example of matched betting would be to stake a bet of £10 on Manchester United to beat Liverpool at odds of 2/1 but then head on over to a betting exchange such as Betfair and bet against Man United to win at odds of 2/1.
Are you confused yet? Good! Because I sure was – and partly because on the face of it carrying out the process of matched betting seems to hold little value at all! What’s the point in betting to win at a bookmaker and betting against the bet you’ve just placed at a betting exchange right!?