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New to matched betting?
My Matched Betting Academy is the best place to get started. Learning the fundamentals takes 10-15 minutes and you’ll make £15 in the process.
Learning the fundamentals takes 10-15 minutes and you’ll make £15 in the process.
On busy football match days, you can often find some accumulator markets at Betfair and Smarkets. You could place the corresponding accumulator at 1XBET and lay it at the exchange.
There is also the option of selecting matches that don’t overlap and laying each leg sequentially using my Sequential Lay Calculator.
If I were you though, just make sure you feel it’s worth doing as there’s nothing wrong with passing up an offer if you don’t feel there’s any value in it or if it seems too tricky.
How many times does the bonus need rolling over Miguel?
Exactly Johnny.
Instead we can take a speculative approach to these offers as shown in my post for the Man Utd v Liverpool match > https://matchedbettingblog.com/football/man-utd-v-liverpool-offer-betway-2/.
I’ll be posting the Everton v Liverpool version over the weekend if you want to keep an eye out for it.
Thanks @gilbs. I must remember to keep an eye out for this one next week!
You can often find some extra place opportunities well in advance of the race starting, when the odds are more static.
Weekend’s and the big festivals tend to present a lot more opportunities than regular weekday’s. Maybe take a look tomorrow (Saturday) and see how you get on.
Hi @mikejv1986.
I always like to work out the effective odds I’m getting and then gauge whether I feel those odds are greater than the chances of the player finishing in those specific places.
So, if you’re risking £2.00 to make a profit of £15.00, you’re getting effective odds of 8.50 (£15.00 / £2.00 + 1.00).
Those odds probably aren’t high enough on this occasion, so it’s all about perseverance and finding another option, ideally not one of the tournament favourites.
The opportunities for golf aren’t as plentiful as horse racing. The four Major tournaments (The Masters, US Open, The Open, US PGA) usually present the best extra place opportunities.
Hope that helps!
Unfortunately, the calculator isn’t able to break it down in that way.
When it comes to the last leg, we have a choice between locking in a guaranteed profit or letting it run for a risk-free shot at a larger potential return.
You can use my Sequential Lay Calculator for this > https://matchedbettingblog.com/sequential-lay-calculator/.
You just need to enter your boosted odds as the back odds and ensure that your three selected matches don’t overlap.
We are able to extract around 80% cash from any free bet, by laying the same selection as our free bet at a betting exchange. In doing so, we cover all possible outcomes and extract consistently high profits from our free bets.
Please take a look at my Matched Betting Guide for a complete walk-through of how this should be done > https://matchedbettingblog.com/matched-betting-guide/.
I’ve not had issues with them myself and I’ve not heard of anyone having any trouble with them either.
No problem mate. They’re a speculative type of offer where we risk a quid or two for a big return. Well worth doing, provided the free bet is the same value as the stake. There are a few ‘Bet £10, Get £5’ offers flying around which aren’t so good.
For future reference, here’s a similar offer to the one you received…
https://matchedbettingblog.com/football/man-utd-v-psg-offer-betway/
I would be inclined to use them separately.
Maybe you should lay the first one and just punt the second, just to be on the safe side.