Stratmaster wrote:Jcool0 wrote:jnrjr79 wrote:
I think the disconnect here is you think demonstrating that Vegas odds have a margin of error ~10% proves Vegas odds are a bad metric to judge team expectations.
If the Vegas algorithm said the Bulls would win 38 games but placing it at 32 gets them more people betting which number do you think they are going with?
Yep. But the real goal is to be as close to a 50/50 split as possible in the over/ under. They aren't trying to win money by duping our outsmarting bettors. They aren't gambling. They make their money off the juice.
Yep. And this is wby these things move as bets start coming in. But this is also why Vegas projections are a fairly rational projection of team performance, because if 50% of people are on either side of the over/under, you’re getting a view of what the consensus is as to a team’s likely performance. So, it makes it a good metric as to “how good to people think this roster is” in an NBA context, which is why I’m so befuddled at your rejection of it in those terms. The only real exceptions are when markets become irrational due to emotional bettors (e.g. everyone wanting Mike Tyson to beat Jake Paul), but I doubt that’s going on much on Bulls over/unders, and if it were, I would think it would add to the Bulls’ projected win totals, not detract from them.