Hi guys...
Being a bit of an aspiring history buff, I wonder if anyone has ever seen this wagering rule used before. The example is soccer, but could happen in any sport at all.
Eurobet offers those Asian Handicap odds we soccer junkies crave so much. (For you non-soccer types, that's the two sided "pointspread" style lines instead of the win lose or draw three-way lines that are more common.) Very fair prices on a whole stack of leagues. One thing's a little disturbing though:
If you play a game at a pick or a 1-goal or 2-goal spread, if the game lands on the number, the game pushes of course, but you lose the juice. (Since these are decimal prices, juice is calculated at 5% of the money laid.)
Not slamming them...I'm opening there anyway based on the wide number of leagues offered and the fact this rule doesn't apply to games with fractional handicaps (games with a half-goal, or three-quarter-goal spread etc), but I'll have to remind myself to look elsewhere first on round-number-handicaps.
Anyway, has anyone ever seen this "Push Loses Juice" rule before? It's not a true split line but I suppose it is a variation.
Imagine the last Super Bowl with this one...
Shawn
Being a bit of an aspiring history buff, I wonder if anyone has ever seen this wagering rule used before. The example is soccer, but could happen in any sport at all.
Eurobet offers those Asian Handicap odds we soccer junkies crave so much. (For you non-soccer types, that's the two sided "pointspread" style lines instead of the win lose or draw three-way lines that are more common.) Very fair prices on a whole stack of leagues. One thing's a little disturbing though:
If you play a game at a pick or a 1-goal or 2-goal spread, if the game lands on the number, the game pushes of course, but you lose the juice. (Since these are decimal prices, juice is calculated at 5% of the money laid.)
Not slamming them...I'm opening there anyway based on the wide number of leagues offered and the fact this rule doesn't apply to games with fractional handicaps (games with a half-goal, or three-quarter-goal spread etc), but I'll have to remind myself to look elsewhere first on round-number-handicaps.
Anyway, has anyone ever seen this "Push Loses Juice" rule before? It's not a true split line but I suppose it is a variation.
Imagine the last Super Bowl with this one...
Shawn
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