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- May 16, 2017
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decent offer managed 0.30 p from it so farI's only this week I think.
decent offer managed 0.30 p from it so farI's only this week I think.
not tried it yetthis new notification on the mobile , is working well at the moment on PA
Sorry if mentioned before, I am not a member of matched betting providers anymore but saw Boylesports have a very decent offer on the tennis.
They will double your winnings up to £500 if your player loses first set and goes on to win (unless I read it wrong)
Might be worth backing and laying a few players and hoping for the best!
Edit: This applies to Mens and Womens games
I agree that you need to dutch Boyles for these offers (William Hill and Stan James are useful ones here), but it isn't true that you lose BOTH bets - the scenario is that one side may lose (not get paid out) and the other side gets voided (original stake returned). Ironically depending on who you have backed and when the retirement happens you can be better off as you win one side and the other side is voided so you get the stake back.DO NOT LAY THESE BETS OFF!!!
I've just double checked this because you have to be wary of Tennis. Boyle Sports Retirement Rules do NOT match Exchange Retirement rules. This means that if a player retires you could lose both your bets!
You need to Dutch this to pull a profit from it.
Thank you @Pbrail that makes perfect sense! Really useful info!!When you Arb, you're taking advantage of the Trader's dropping the ball with keeping their prices in line and can hit them in the pocket which they hate. When there's a Price Boost, this is a deliberated calculated risk/offer made by the Traders which they are ok with.
If you want a real world analogy, think of it (a bit) like your bank offering you a £100 official Overdraft. They are ok with you using your Overdraft within your allowance because it's been agreed by them in advance. If you go £100 overdrawn and you don't have an agreed Overdraft, they'll either refuse to pay your bills or they'll sting you with penalties for it.
Even though both scenarios might involve you being overdrawn by £100, one they are ok with and one they are not.
Which also I think answers your 2nd question too in a roundabout way.
Even with an official overdraft, if your account is perpetually overdrawn, sooner or later the bank is going to say enough is enough.
So, Price Boosts. They are fine to use, and you can use them pretty often. But if you do a PB every single day for the full amount at the same bookie over and over, there's almost certainly going to come a point in the future where they'll stop you taking them. An early warning sign of this can be if they start restricting your stake (ie you hear someone has put a £10 bet on a PB, but when you try, they only allow you £5 max or it's an odd amount like £4.33p).
Does that make sense?