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Action - A wager of any kind.

BM – Bookmaker
 
Book - An establishment that accepts wagers on the outcome of horse racing and sporting events.

Bankroll (BR) - Your available gambling money.
 
Back door – A ‘cover’ that occurs in the waning moments of a game.
 
Bad beat – Losing under unusual circumstances.
 
Beef – A dispute over the outcome of a bet.
 
Bow-wow – Un Underdog

Buy Points - Buy Points means that you can move the point spread so that you give away less points with the favorite or get more points with the underdog, for both football and basketball. To do this you must pay an extra 10% for each ½ point you buy in your favor. For the NFL and NCAA football, you will pay an additional 15% to buy on or off of 3 points - also know as Key Points. And if you buy through 3 points, you will pay an additional 20%. NOTE: There are no Key Points for basketball. You pay a flat 10% for each 1/2 point you buy. An example of how to buy off of 3 points: the Baltimore Ravens (-3) are 3 point favorites. To buy 1/2 point and make them a 2.5 point favorite, you would need to lay 125 to win 100.

Buy Point Chart (Football Key Points)
Buy 1/2 point to 3
100/125
Buy 1/2 point off 3
100/125
Buy 1 point to 3
100/135
Buy 1 point off 3
100/135
Buy 1/2 point any other
100/120
Buy 1 point any other
100/130

Chalk – A favorite.
 
Circled game – A contest on which betting limits are reduced (injuries and weather are primary reasons for games to be circled).
 
Cover - To bet the spread by the required number of points. If such occurs you have "covered the spread."

Dime - $1,000
 
Dog - The underdog in any betting proposition.

Dollar - $100

Earn – Percentage hold.
 
Edge - Advantage

Exotic Wager - Any bet other than a straight bet, i.e., parlays, teasers, if bets, reverses, round robin, round robin box reverses, etc.

Figure – Amount owed to or by a bookmaker

Futures - Odds posted on the winners of various major sport championships in advance of the event, including the Super Bowl, the World Series, the Stanley Cup and the NBA championship.

Getting down – Placing a bet.
 
Handicapper – A person who studies factors such as statistics, injuries, weather and news to predict the outcome of games.
 
Handle – Total amount of money wagered.
 
Hedging - Placing bets on the opposite side in order to cut losses or guarantee winning a minimal amount of money.

Holding Your Own - Neither winning or losing, just breaking even.

Hook - A half point added to football and basketball betting lines.
 
Juice – Amount of commission kept by the house (also referred to as vigorish or vig).
 
Laying a price – Playing a favorite.
 
Layoff – Money bet by a house with another bookmaker to reduce its liability.
 
Limit – Maximum amount of money accepted for one wager.

Line - The listed odds on a game (points or money line).

Lock - Easy winner, can not lose.

Longshot - A team or horse that is unlikely to win.
 
Matador – A cover that occurs in the waning moments of a game (see ‘back door’).

Middles (or Middling) - To win both sides of the same betting proposition; betting the favorite team at -1.5 with one bookmaker and then taking +3.5 with another bookmaker; the game ends up with the favorite winning by exactly 3 points, you have then "middled the game."

Money Line - A moneyline is offered when no handicap is given, such as a point spread or run line, and the odds are not therefore fixed. Payouts are then based on true odds rather than fixed odds. The favorite and underdog are given odds to win a game or fight.

The minus sign - (e.g.-130) always indicates the favorite and the amount you must bet to win 100. The plus sign (e.g.+110) always indicates the underdog and the amount you win for every 100 bet. Therefore based on the above moneyline, you bet 130 to win 100 on the favorite. For the underdog, you win 110 for every 100 bet.

Newspaper Line - The betting line which quite often appears in the daily newspapers. The lines are only approximate and quiet often totally inaccurate and misleading.
 
Nickel - $500

Odds On Favorite - A horse, team, or individual so favored by the public that the odds are less than even.
 
Off the board – A game on which bookmakers are not accepting wagers (generally because of injuries).

Official Line - The line that the bookmaker uses for wagering purposes. The line which comes from Las Vegas is quite often referred to as the official line; however, the line that your bookie offers you is actually your "official line."

Overplay - An advantage for the bettor in which the price on a given wager is greater than the
real probability of its success.

Over & Under - A wager for the total score by both teams will more or less than the total posted by the sports book.

Parlay - The number of teams in the parlay must all hit or the parlay loses. 2-team parlay pay 13-5 odds. 3-team parlay pay 5-1 odds. 4-team parlays pay 8-1 odds.

Parlay Cards - Wagers on a minimum of 3 and up to 15 propositions; the more you pick, the higher the payoff.

Pick - Occasionally, there will be no favorite on a game. In this instance the game is said to be a pick and you can bet 10/11 (bet 110 to win 100) on either team.

Pointspread - The pointspread - also called "the line" - is used as a margin to handicap the favorite team. The oddsmaker - also called the handicapper - "gives" points (or goals) to the underdog - for betting purposes only. The bettor must take either the favorite or the underdog. The favorite is always indicated by a minus sign (e.g. -8.5) and the underdog by a plus sign (e.g.+8.5). For betting purposes, the outcome of the game is determined by taking the actual game score and finding the difference between the scores of the two teams playing (called the pointspread or just the "spread").

For example - The Packers are 8 point favorites over the New York Jets (an 8 point spread shown as -8 beside Green Bay on our "lines" page). If the final score is Packers 20 New York 13, then the actual game score "spread" is 7 points (20 minus 13). In our example if you took New York (called the "dog"), you would win the bet since Green Bay had to win by 9 points or more to "cover the spread." The Packers needed 2 more points to "cover" since if the game landed right on the "spread" of 8 points it would be called a "push" (similar in concept to a tie in Moneyline wagering, which is also called a push) and it would be "no action" (no bet and money held in your account to cover the wager is released back into your available balance). If the "spread" is put in at a half point (e.g. -8.5 for the favorite Green Bay) by the Sportsbook handicappers then there can be no "push." In this case, there is "action" at any final game score pointspread. In a pointspread, you must wager 11 to win 10 (21 is returned to the winner). 10/11 is the standard for pointspread bets on most sports.

Post Time - The Schedule starting time.

Price – The odds on a game.

Proposition Bet - A wager on a particular aspect of the game such as how many field goals will be made.

Puckline - Hockey combines both a handicap/spread and odds. This is called the Puckline.
Sample line:
Boston +1 (-110)
Detroit -1.5 (-110)

The favorites are the Detroit Red Wings, who are giving the Boston Bruins 1.5 goals. To win the bet, Detroit would have to win the game by 2 goals. When placing this bet you are getting even money, which means that for every 110 you wager, you will win 100. If you are betting on Boston, you will receive a 1.0 goal handicap, meaning that if Detroit wins by 1 goal the game is a push. If the game ends in a tie or Boston wins, then you win the bet. The odds again are at -110.

Puppy – The underdog.
 
Push - If the result of a game lands exactly on the pointspread or is a tie in the case of betting a moneyline, or if the exact score of the game matches exactly the Sportsbook's posted game total (Total), then the game is a "Push" or "No Action" and all wagers are released back to the Available Account Balance.

Round Robin - A form of parlay betting in which we wager various combining team wagers. A 3-team robin is team 1 to 2, 1 to 3, and 2 to 3. 4-team robin is team 1 to 2, 1 to 3, 1 to 4, 2 to 3, 2 to 4, and 3 to 4. 5-team, etc.

Run Line - A line used when wagering on baseball.

Runner – One who places bets for another.
 
Sharp – A sophisticated or professional sports bettor.

Side - When one side of a wager wins and the other side ties.

Square – A novice sports bettor.

Steam - When a betting line starts to move quite rapidly. Most "steam games" do not
necessarily reflect the "right side", but are games that the mass of bettors somehow decide to key on.

Straight bet – One wager (as opposed to a parlay).
 
Sucker bet- Parlays, teasers or exotics (anything bookmakers use to entice squares to bet more).

Taking - Wagering on the underdog; taking the odds.

Teaser – A sucker wager that allows bettors to add and subtract points from posted odds.
 
Totals - Total combined point/runs/goals scored in a game; In baseball, if either of the two listed starting pitchers don't go the distance, the bet is automatically canceled.

Tout Services – A company that sells selections on games.

Value - Getting the best odds on a betting proposition; the highest possible edge.
 
Vigorish – Amount of commission kept by the house (also referred to as juice or vig).

Wager - Any Bet.
 
 
Wise guy – A professional sports bettor.


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