New York Post

Winning isn't the only thing

- By ANDY MACNEIL Andy MacNeil analyzes the NHL for VSiN.com, The Sports Betting Network.

Novice sports bettors can get a leg up on their peers by studying the three core areas of gambling — science, philosophy and psychology. Ironically, though, it’s a hypothetic­al cognitive bias called the Dunning-Kruger effect that will keep most from doing so.

A cognitive bias is a term that refers to the systematic ways in which context and framing of informatio­n influence our decision-making. With the Dunning-Kruger effect, people with limited knowledge or competence in a particular domain greatly overestima­te their own knowledge or competence in that domain. Alternativ­ely, those who have extensive knowledge and competence in a domain might underestim­ate their skill because they are cognizant of the fact that the human brain is subject to limitation­s.

One of those limitation­s is the tendency to judge a decision based on its outcome rather than on what factors led to it. This is referred to as outcome bias and it might be affecting how those who are growing tired of handicappi­ng the same matchups day in and day out are making decisions.

Take the Calgary Flames, for example. After two strong performanc­es as underdogs on the road against the Toronto Maple Leafs that resulted in a regulation win and an overtime loss, the team traveled to Ottawa to take on the lowly Senators. The Senators took the fight to the Flames (-155) and skated to a 6-1 victory as +135 underdogs. Some sports bettors would say it was a classic letdown spot, or that the Senators had the element of surprise due to the fact that it was the first meeting between the two teams this season. However, fatigue also was a factor. The Flames were playing their sixth game in nine days and backup goaltender David Rittich had played in all of them. He mercifully was pulled after the Senators scored their fourth goal and was given the second half of the game off.

Two days later, the Flames and Rittich returned to the rink looking for their revenge and this time looked worthy of their steep (-145) price tag and picked up a 6-3 win. Note the discounted price compared to that of the first game. This is an indication that too much was made out of the result of the first game. Bettors who opted to bet the Senators at +125 probably felt as if they had not received fair value in hindsight given that the Senators opened up as +150 underdogs in the first meeting before closing at +135.

We’ll see these two teams match up against each other seven more times in the next two months, and bettors should expect a wide range of outcomes that should tilt toward the favorite. Of course, that doesn’t mean the favorite will always win. Sometimes, an underdog will win decisively. Seasoned hockey bettors are rarely, if ever, surprised by results.

The takeaway: Don’t be scared off by a bad performanc­e or a bad result, and don’t get so high on your skills after an easy win that you don’t consider making adjustment­s. Learn to frame outcomes as a range of possibilit­ies, some more likely to happen than others; like a deck of cards. Bettors should focus on what they can control and judge themselves based on how they perform in those areas. Any bookmaker will tell you that consistent­ly beating the closing line is the leading indicator as to whether a bettor is sharp or square, not their wins and losses.

 ??  ?? GO BEYOND THE FINAL SCORE: David Rittich makes a save in the Flames’ 6-3 win on Saturday in Ottawa, two days after being pulled during a 6-1 loss to the Senators.The change in odds between the two games was an example of outcome bias in which the result of the previous game wrongly outweighed the circumstan­ces.
GO BEYOND THE FINAL SCORE: David Rittich makes a save in the Flames’ 6-3 win on Saturday in Ottawa, two days after being pulled during a 6-1 loss to the Senators.The change in odds between the two games was an example of outcome bias in which the result of the previous game wrongly outweighed the circumstan­ces.

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