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2025 - Year in Review (Part One of Two)

Well well well, 2025 has finally come to an end. A year of opportunities has seen its logical conclusion and now we are faced with another year of brand new opportunities. I joined Sportspicks about one month before the end of last year so by the time this past year begun, I only had a month or so of betting to look at. Now I have an entire year of data. Thus it begins.

At the start of last year, we were approaching the end of the college football season while still having a bit to go in NFL. We also had over half the European football season still to play. College football had been profitable thus far but NFL after some initially profitable weeks had undergone some massive drawdowns. European football meanwhile was struggling to post profits as up weeks were modest but down weeks were really nasty. Spread betting on football had reduced the variance on a game per game basis but it left an awful lot of draws on the table when draw no bet was the pick of the day. There was therefore a lot of work to be done when we started last year.

College football was first to resolve itself in 2025 and after a few ropey fixtures in the playoffs, we won out with Ohio State to win it all against Notre Dame. NFL meanwhile say spend a solid month of good old fashioned chasing our tail, with the enormous amount of player props combining with out standard bets to cancel each other out. Next came the final game of the season, in which Robert preceded it with a deep dive into the Super Bowl and the modern evolution of NFL. In it, he highlighted how a number of Super Bowl blowouts back in the 80s or so caused such a crisis of identity that it directly led to the modern NFL philosophy that attempts to prevent any one team from gaining too much of an advantage over the rest. He also delineated the ways in which the game itself had changed, particularly the increasing protection afforded to quarterbacks which directly led to the modern game becoming so quarterback dominated.

This aforementioned analysis set the backdrop for his argument that the Kansas City Chiefs, at the time an ominous and seemingly unstoppable force, never covering spread but always winning the moneyline, were at the end of an era and their luck was due to run out. He highlighted that the Chiefs in the previous few years had been recipients of enormous amounts of injury luck, fumble luck, officiating luck and just plain old luck luck. He also highlighted that he does not consider the NFL to be rigged (I remember match fixing scandals in Italy, it's very, very difficult to hide) but that the perception of games being rigged in favour of the Chiefs had gained so much traction that if anything referees are more likely to give close calls against them so as not to drag the game into disrepute (I have observed this effect in European football too). Therefore, he considered that this Super Bowl in which the Chiefs were narrowly favoured was really advantage Eagles, especially when they had been running the Tush Push and up until that point, very few teams really had an answer for it (I believe the Buccaneers may have been one of them but they were long gone by then).

The Eagles won the day in a blowout and thus a very difficult and challenging NFL season ended on a high, even if the late rally was not quite enough for it to finish profitable. With the American football season now over, attention focused back on European football, betting on which remained challenging as the same issue persisted: on the up days our gains were modest, on the down days our losses hit hard. Robert made adjustments and the picks rebounded somewhat. Unfortunately, when US Major League Soccer was added, we had some bad beats that even European football never quite managed to experience. Back to the drawing board it was.

We had a welcome diversion next in the form of March Madness, a staple of Barnes' betting year. For this, the default pick size went up to two units. With greater potential reward comes greater risk and after the dust settled on the first day of March Madness, we were down about 20 units of bankroll after three out of four 5 unit plays missed to the extent that even I felt the heat. Nonetheless, we rebounded very well indeed thereafter and we were quickly up over 20 units with the first round of games still underway. We remained profitable for the majority of the tournament until the closing stages where we had the misfortune to witness choke job after choke job after choke job. Robert mentioned March Madness still being profitable on the whole but unfortunately I ended that tournament on a slight loss. I was in such a bad mood that I stopped recording my betting results for an entire two weeks. Of course, when the down beat had passed I looked into the results I had recorded and I started doing a deep dive into my own results.

I learned very early on that line shopping is a crucial skill if you are to make it in any kind of betting pursuit. Since spread betting is not the norm where I'm from, I had to use offshore bookmakers to deploy the official picks. I found that BetOnline not only offered pretty much every pick Robert posted but it generally offered the best odds that I had seen so far. Even today, I find that BetOnline has odds that are comparable and sometimes even better than those posted on Pinnacle, famous among Association Football bettors for its winners welcome policy (to the extent that the sports betting data analyst Joseph Buchdahl considers them to be the oracle of probability estimation for world football). Nonetheless, the standard -110 on both sides of the spread eats into your bankroll very quickly when iterated over a large number of bets, which is a crucial risk of following a high volume betting strategy such as that on Sportspicks. Thus I found myself trying to find better lines to keep myself within touching distance of profitability.

I had dabbled on Polymarket during the 2024 US presidential election and again for the Irish general election taking place less than a month later. Tradable betting exchanges are nothing now, as Betfair had fulfilled this niche for a long time. With Polymarket and Kalshi's heavy emphasis of political and more general non sporting betting, it brought tradable betting exchanges to a whole new market to the extent that the concept of a prediction market was invented to accommodate the products that it would market to a non sporting audience. While a bookmaker forces you to enter at market and accept a price on their terms, prediction markets allow you to set the price you'd like to enter at, so long as someone is willing to take the other side of your position. Since the bookmaker is not taking a slice of the action on both sides of the action, you could generally either enter at market or set a limit order between the bid and the ask and someone would be willing to take you up on it because you would both be getting a better price than you would have got otherwise have got had you gone to a bookmaker.

The edge was very obvious on moneyline. For European football bets, I was able to recreate a number of common spread by buying and selling combinations of moneyline positions to form so called synthetic spreads. At this stage, the English Premier League was the main league Polymarket supported betting markets for as well as the European Champions League and selected games from other European competitions and league. Football betting was still a grind, but I was able to keep in touching distance while the bigger drawdowns were when I took bets on other leagues where I had to go to BetOnline for the next best odds.

For March Madness, I used Polymarket where possible but I stuck with BetOnline for spreads and totals. This was inevitable with totals but I was reluctant to diverge from the spread recommendations in favour of moneyline. Having spent longer observing the differences, I would have in retrospect taken moneyline at least for the smaller spreads. I have observed that an edge moneyline generally implies an edge on the spread and vice versa (though not always; an edge on the draw in association football often coincides with both teams being overvalued moneyline). If I had taken Polymarket moneyline when spread was recommended, I may well have been able to eke out a profitable March Madness. I will return to the expanding options on Polymarket (and by extension Kalshi) that render that discussion academic.

With March Madness over, Robert diversified into Major League Baseball, introducing moneyline and 1st 5 runline picks with some game runline and total picks as well. The early results were so promising that he quickly elevated the baseball picks to two percent plays. This ushered in the motherlode of our betting year with baseball picks hitting at a ridiculous rate all the while MLB maintained a reputation for being a horrifically difficult league to bet. Whatever losses anyone may have been nursing were paid back and more with the success of the MLB picks and for the first time in 2025, we were making steady profits. Finally, we were benefitting from months and months of groundwork.

Amid all the sports betting, political picks kept pace. We had opened the year with Biden pardon bets cashing after he pardoned Jim Biden, Antony Fauci and Liz Cheney among others at the last minute. This was followed by an enormous amount of speculative picks designed to be taken on Kalshi (or Polymarket, if possible). I found that these generally were not profitable. There was (and still is) a tendency for the myriad event markets that Polymarket uploads to resolve to no. Our best political spots were elections, for which Robert did the usual deep dives. We had a hit with the Canadian elections, which despite Mark Carney losing his seat, the Conservatives generally outperformed the betting markets while smaller parties generally underperformed. The Canadian elections also had good arbitrage spots, which gave me the opportunity to hedge out some risk before election day. The Australian elections were unfortunately a miss as the Liberal Party there underperformed badly. Once again, some arbitrage opportunities help to ease the hit.

In European politics, the Romanian presidential election was full of drama as the populist frontrunner Călin Georgescu was jailed an subsequently was not able to challenge for the presidency. I cannot definitively prove that the EU intervened to prevent a populist from winning in Romania, but if you believe that election was fair, then as Messrs Christoforou and Mercouris of the Duran (two analysts who Robert frequently livestreams with and whose geopolitical analyses help to inform the official picks) would say, I have a bridge to sell you. Nonetheless, we do not bet on what we think is fair, we bet on what we believe yields us an edge. We bet on George Simion to win as Georgescu's informal successor yet he lost to Nicușor Dan, the Mayor of Bucharest. We learned afterwards that Romania was a country of crucial importance to the EU and a Eurosceptic president would have been a disaster as far as continuing Project Ukraine was concerned. Romania historically acted as a bridge between Central Europe and Eastern Europe proper. It is a Slavic nation and yet their vernacular is a Romance language. Political power is heavily centred in Bucharest and its politics is much more cosmopolitan than those of the populist base that sought to elect first Georgescu then Simion. On to the next election.

Our attention turned to the Polish presidential election, whose frontrunners were Rafał Trzaskowski, Mayor of Warsaw and the preferred candidate of Donald Tusk, current Prime Minister of Poland and former President of the European Council, and Karol Nawrocki, President of the Institute of National Remembrance in Poland and the prospective successor to sitting president Andrzej Duda. This had a similar look to the Romanian presidential election to the extent that it made some of us uneasy. Still, Robert put out a 5% play on Nawrocki as an underdog and after a night in which Nawrocki maintained a narrow and consistent lead, he was elected for a big political win on Sportspicks. Both European elections once again had very good arbitrage opportunities which helped boost the profits even more if you took them.

Part two at the link below:

https://sportspicks.locals.com/post/7566624/as-we-moved-into-the-summer-we-diversified-both-our-sports-and-our-methods-even-more-nba-picks-fol

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2025 - Year in Review (Part Two of Two)

Following directly on from part one:

https://sportspicks.locals.com/post/7566614/2025-year-in-review-part-one-of-two-well-well-well-2025-has-finally-come-to-an-end-a-ye

As we moved into the summer, we diversified both our sports and our methods even more. NBA picks followed for the post season, mixing spreads, totals and player props. This had its ups and downs but we finished the NBA season with a modest profit. Baseball continued to be profitable as we got a really good read on the betting markets with a strategy that synthesised power ratings and public betting action. We also had the football Club World Cup, hosted in the USA in advance of the 2026 World Cup. This was tough again but we had an edge betting on South American teams to outperform public expectations in the hot, humid North American summertime heat. Robert picked Chelsea to win it all, putting out a 2% play on Chelsea to defeat PSG, winners of the Champions League and every other trophy ...

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Thoughts on Last Night

Around around she goes; we she ends, nobody knows. Only truly beatable infinity, unless you believe in luck So The Good Thief lead character explains as he sees the ball chase around the roulette wheel. But it wasn't luck that lost me last night; it was failing to follow my own methodologies for the best decision making in the world of prediction markets.  

Many of my assumptions held (Mamdani bets cashed to a profit, the Democratic sweep happened, and Morris County flipped to Sherrill, while closest race was the Virginia Attorney General), but a big one didn't -- that 2025 would not bring a record-setting Democratic wave. The wave crested like a tsunami, felt coast to coast, from the northeast to the southwest, from the midatlantic to the mountains, from the industrial midwest to the southern countryside, effecting small town mayoral races in Pennsylvania to Public Service Commission statewide gigs in Georgia, from legislative districts with 36 year incumbents in ruby red Virginia heartland to the most revolutionary Mayor ever elected in New York City since Henry George's failed effort signaled the rise of Populism a century+ ago. Candidate quality did not matter. Candidate spending did not matter. Incumbency did not matter. Job approval did not matter. Scandals did not matter enough or did not matter at all. Get out the vote efforts did not matter. This was an angry electorate seeking vengance, and finding its expression wherever they could. 

That was my first mistake, and it was a mistake, rather than bad luck. I assessed the wave risk at 10%, when it was manifestly much higher. All I needed to do was listen to....myself. I went back and watched my last episode w/ Baris and an episode a few months ago with the Duran, the latter where I previewed a collapse in GOP support if Trump didn't escape the foreign focus & wars, delivering only to the donor class. I spoke often of the new MAGA that began to build in 2023 -- young, working class, often minority, deeply unhappy with the political direction of an elder class they are rebelling against, as easily tempted by left populism as right populism, and as easily susceptible to political apathy and agnosticism as engagement & activism. The shutdown was actually a negative tipping factor for these voters, as the SNAP issue played poorly with them, while enraging part of the Democratic base otherwise unenthused up to that point. I made two errors in methodology & one error in psychology I detail below. 

The second error was bankroll percentage. It was a single race in a single state; as such, keeping it closer to 5% made more sense than expending it to 34%, especially if more cognizant of the risk. It also shifted my stronger risk appetite onto others, and that was en error I usually well avoid. If I had listed every major election pick this year at 5%, we'd be in the black; even last night, splitting 5% bets amidst the 3 elections, would have only been a modest loss, given certain underdog bets hit with Mamdani. As I often say, but forgot here to practice -- bankroll discipline is the most important aspect of successful trading in the markets, sports or politics. 

The psychological error was getting attached to a pick, and not relooking at it from scratch anytime new information arives. A natural tendency is to stay committed to something merely because of prior committment rather than look at it completely anew, and being afraid of taking a loss when once vested in so much hope of a win. 

Areas to improve:

  • using the methodological approach of motivated reasoning -- you cannot make reason the master of motivation, but you can use motivation to master reasoning. The Elephant in the Brain. I needed to put myself in a position to take the opposite side of each pick, make the best argument possible for it, and then test it against the other side. In this respect, one way to best maximize this is to include substack-style articles on this site laying out the argument, and letting the community respond -- as several sagely warned in this case, which can dramatically improve the quality of reasoning;
  • tracking all data available -- for example, whether an off-year election could be a wave election that might have polls actually overstate the White House incumbent party that even the GOP the polls tend to be biased against & digger deep dives into possible explanation for a poll's results (for examply, Miyares surge was partly fog, by Democratic voters choosing undecided rather than voting against b/c they didn't want to admit they secretly supported the murderous texts of their Attorney General candidate; 
  • waiting until election eve and election day, especially in the US elections, as the volatility proffers the best opportunities, and the best information is then availabile if timely processed; 
  • finding a way to better track live-time data on election night by reemploying an older technique from my political campaign days -- prior to the election, predicting the expected % for each county (and key precincts when available) in terms of expected vote share & vote distribution, which can most accurately forecast where an election will go, to get ahead of the markets (the big models out there completely crashed last night, including the $250K new-and-improved Decision Desk model;
  • avoiding all bubbles & returning to getting into the head of a wide range of voting groups, something I long excelled in, but have to dedicate myself to these days due to inhabiting a political world more these days that can make me too responsive to criticism -- "hey Barnes, you're a panican; hey Barnes, your Barnes/Baris voter is mythical; you don't get it, Jack is a lock in New Jersey". I need to step into the minds of these independent voters, and keep listening to the independent podcasters who were a useful signal in 2024 and 2025 -- see how Andrew Stein, Tim Dhillon, Joe Rogan, Dave Smith, Theo Von -- all left Trump train in the summer of 2025;
  • staying within the 5% max recommendation on a single election in a single state unless extraordinary reason supported by extraordinary evidence recommends otherwise, and including the assumptions in those extraordinary picks such that the pick can be sold off quick if those assumptions show other signs in the data

Truth is, losses teach you more than wins. Despite as much as I try to track the underlying assumptions of winning picks, the stay-up-top-3-am reearching and obsessing motivation comes from tough losses. In addition, I learn the values of patience, forbearance, discipline, emotional equilibrium, self-belief, as well as better improving a sound methodological approach through "putting my money where mouth is" and sharing it with the world for public accountability and transparency improving decision-making skill over time, maintaining humility when the trap of hubris would otherwise ensnare.

After three decades of successful US elections, my setback in 2022 dramatically improved my analysis for 2024, proving fantastically profitable. Thanks to everyone for participating, hope you continue to partake in the community, and if I were a betting man, and I am, I would wager we will be profitable again, in matters of pocketbook, principle and politics very soon. 

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