How to enjoy cricket and make money
By
Deputy Editor
Tim Bennett Aug 31, 2010
Print this article
Cricket has been back in the headlines again – but for all the wrong reasons. No sooner had the last Test match finished than some members of the Pakistan team were accused of involvement in a betting scam.
Suddenly, Mohammed Amir was back at centre stage but this time not for the quality, or otherwise, of his bowling. Or at least not the way he would like. Everyone, from fans to the MCC, has been debating whether he deliberately, or accidentally, bowled a series of 'no balls'.
Sadly, cricket has been the victim of various betting scams over the years – indeed centuries – but that shouldn't put you off as a spread better. These days you can place bets on just about every type of international match plus many of the county games.
There are several ways to bet on the outcome of, say, a single game, but perhaps the most obvious is based on the total number of runs scored.
So, for example: England might be quoted at 300-330 for an individual Test match. If you think the team will easily hit more than 330 runs you could place an up bet ('buy the spread') at 330 runs for, say, £10 per point (a point being a run). If England eventually bat their way to 350 runs, you make 20 runs (350-330) at £10 each, or £200. The downside is that should England score just 305 runs, you will owe your broker 25 runs (330-305) at £10 each, or £250.
Claim your FREE report from MoneyWeek: An introduction to online trading, with tips & advice including:
- Spread betting – The easy way to geared, tax-free returns
- Forex trading- How to profit from currency movements
But the options don't end there. You could also bet on the highest team score; the number of runs you expect an individual player to score; the number of wickets you think a particular bowler will take; or even the number of fours and sixes that will be hit.
You could even use spread betting to hedge your emotions. By betting on the opposition to do well, you have it both ways: if your team wins, you lose a bit of money, but get to celebrate; and if the opposition wins, keep quiet and pocket a profit!
Published in
Spread betting explained
| More
articles
by
Tim Bennett
Related articles
-
By Tim Bennett, May 18, 2012
-
By John C Burford, May 11, 2012
-
By Bengt Saelensminde, May 09, 2012
-
By Tim Bennett, May 03, 2012