While the flashing lights of the casino floor attract millions, sports betting has exploded into a massive global industry.
Treating your betting funds like a professional investment portfolio is the only way to survive the long, grueling sports season.
Understanding Betting Units
A ‘unit’ is simply a standard percentage of your total starting bankroll, usually representing exactly 1% or 2%.
If your total betting bankroll for the NFL season is $1,000, then one unit (1%) is exactly $10.
- By betting a flat 1% unit, you can theoretically lose 100 bets in a row before going completely broke, allowing you to survive massive variance
- Using units allows bettors with completely different financial backgrounds to compare their success accurately and fairly
- When starting out, calculate your unit size once at the beginning of the season and absolutely refuse to change it until the season ends
Tracking Your Bets and Understanding the Vig
Tracking your bets reveals your true Return on Investment (ROI) and highlights exactly which sports or bet types are draining your funds.
When you bet on a standard point spread, you usually have to risk $110 to win $100 (odds of -110).
| Metric | Definition | Why it Matters |
|---|---|---|
| Yield / ROI | The percentage of profit relative to total money risked | The true measure of a bettor’s actual skill |
| Closing Line Value (CLV) | Beating the final odds offered before the game starts | Proves you are finding mathematical value in the market |
Sports betting should be viewed as a slow, methodical grind, not a get-rich-quick scheme.
