Step 1: Understand the Odds
Three formats are used worldwide. They all mean the same thing in different notation:
- American (+/-): -110 means bet $110 to win $100. +150 means bet $100 to win $150.
- Decimal: 1.91 means you get $1.91 total for every $1 bet (including stake back).
- Fractional: 10/11 means win $10 for every $11 wagered. 5/2 means win 5 for every 2.
Step 2: Learn Implied Probability
Every line represents a probability. -150 = 60% implied. +200 = 33.3% implied. You’re not picking winners – you’re picking outcomes where you think the true probability is higher than the implied.
Step 3: Know the Common Bet Types
Moneyline
Pick who wins. Simplest market.
Point Spread
The favorite gives points, underdog gets points. Designed to make both sides closer to a coin flip.
Totals (Over/Under)
How many combined points/goals/runs will be scored?
Parlay
Combine multiple bets. Bigger payouts but the math usually favors the house more than single bets.
Prop Bet
A bet on something other than the final score. Player props, team props, game props.
Future
A bet placed in advance on an end-of-season outcome.
Step 4: Choose a Sportsbook
License and reputation, welcome bonus terms (rollover matters), sports you actually bet on, banking that works for you, mobile experience.
The 10 Beginner Rules
- Never bet money you can’t afford to lose
- Track every bet you place
- Start with sports you understand
- Bet small until you have a sample size
- Line-shop across multiple books
- Avoid parlays as a primary strategy
- Don’t chase losses by doubling up
- Read the bonus terms before claiming
- Withdraw winnings regularly
- Take breaks. The games will be there tomorrow.
Sports betting is a long, slow grind that rewards discipline over genius. The smartest person in the room loses money if they can’t stick to a system.
Final Thought
Betting is a long game. Don’t expect to make money in your first month. Don’t take it personally when a bet loses. Treat this as a serious activity, not a path to instant riches.