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British Open Betting
From
WagerWeb Contributing Writer
by Mike Boozer
Planet earth's
finest golfers voyage to Royal Liverpool Golf Club in Hoylake,
England, this week for the 2006 super lotto they call the British
Open Championship.
OK, with all due respect, England is the birthplace of golf, and
golf fans on this planet do appreciate the Brits' contribution to
the sporting world. However, I'm more than just a fan. I'm a golf
handicapper whose main objective is to eliminate chance. My articles
focus on "cause and effect" as the foundation of successful sports
betting. So, after years of frustrating losses, I'm here to tell you
that none of the above works when handicapping The Open
Championship.
I can only speculate as to the reasons why I got my "REAR END"
handed to me every year I bet this event. I played every possible
angle trying to make sense of golf's oldest major. And year after
year it was the same old story. My wallet was a little lighter at
the end of the week. However, in 2003 a Kenny Perry quote summed up
my years of handicapping frustration, and also founded the winning
strategy I use today.
You ready? After a practice round before the 2003 Open, Perry was
asked his thoughts on playing links style golf. Perry said, "This is
my first time over here, so I really didn't know what to expect. But
it felt like I was playing golf on the moon."
That quote changed everything.
As a handicapper, always translating information, I interpreted
Perry's analogy of moon golf to the equivalent of dumb luck. And
since 2003 I have shown a profit using what I now call my Dumb Luck
handicapping method. Before I share my Dumb Luck secret, understand
that this is not for everyone, and this is the only golf tournament
in which I use this method.
Call it super lotto, moon golf or dumb luck. The Open Championship
is very vulnerable to chance. Thus, the Dumb Luck method takes the
guess work out of handicapping. Your best bet is to ALWAYS take the
odds. The Vegas oddsmakers don't account for the variable of luck.
So, the chalk at this tournament is always overpriced.
Thus, betting favorites at The Open makes about as much sense as
teeing it up on the moon. Good gambles! |