Tipster Services Definitely Can Work
October 20, 2008 · Print This Article
I re-found an interesting article in a back edition of the Guardian newspaper; I’d kept this article because, well, I found it really interesting and it gives me a little bit of hope when I trawl the Internet looking for decent tipster services.
You see I’m not really into gambling systems because they rarely win in the long run: betting systems are all there to try and beat the gambling system by finding flaws and the sad news is that there aren’t any. This is big business and it’s unlikely that any easy solutions to making money would have lasted very long at all. Thus, as far as I see it, the only way to make any money is to actually know what you are talking about. Tipster services offer this solution.
But then my question is always this: if a tipster is that good, why doesn’t he (or she) just place the bet themselves? The answer, sometimes, is just that their tips are rubbish and they don’t trust their own advice. Other times it is all about spreading the risk, because even the most confident tipsters can have a bad day at the office.
One of the most highly rated tipster services I have heard about is “The Mathematician”, Guy Ward, who has extensive experience in running betting shops, and adopts a purely statistic way of analysing who that day’s winner is going to be. As well as several glowing reviews of Ward’s service, I note that the Guardian puts him down as on to a winner.
I’ve never used him myself, but that is all about to change. I’ve been a little with these services before and I’ve never really had the spare cash with which to try them out. Now times have changed and I’m going to give The Mathematician a whirl. You have to speculate to accumulate, after all.




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