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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 available to them that season. Chelsea's win rounded off a welcome bounceback in association football betting.

The new season was approaching and Polymarket began to add spreads and totals for various sports, as did Kalshi. There were limited spread options for NFL the previous season but they were very low liquidity so their viability was nowhere near what it could be. We saw a hint as to where Polymarket was going to go with it when they added spreads and totals markets for later NBA post season games. This allowed an extra degree of edge seeking that had been missing to us for March Madness. With the start of the college football and NFL seasons, we now had a comprehensive set of tools in our Arsenal to have a profitable season.

European football had already begun its new season but our work was not done, as MLS was still going throughout the summer and there was a lot of analysis to be done on the football picks at large. Based upon the analysis of the community, Robert reverted to moneyline picks for association football despite the feast or famine nature this entails. This led to a very rough start to the season which had some questioning the football picks again but in October after making a few more adjustments to the system, the football picks came roaring back for some massive profits. The football picks have not been quite so profitable to end the year but with football being such a competitive sport both to play and to bet on, there will be more ongoing analysis to fine tune them and find as much of an edge as possible. The results on the whole are encouraging!

The American football season meanwhile was where after a promising start we got bogged down in the weeds. We had some really bad beats where we had a whole bunch of 5% plays that missed by the hook or the quarterback went off injured. The Raiders were a consistent loser and we were far from the only ones who rode the sinking ship. Sharp bettors expected the Raiders under Pete Carroll to perform well this season but unfortunately they were awful. Other underdog prospects such as the Saints and the Titans put in horror show after horror show and it wasn't until the Saints gave Tyler Shough a chance that things turned around and they became a sharp underdog again. We also missed a trick with the Rams and the Seahawks who have had very strong seasons as favourites in most of their games. We still have post season to turn things around as the playoff picture comes into focus.

Unfortunately, the disappointment continues as after a very successful season of MLB, the picks took a turn for the loss in the closing stages of the season. What precisely is behind this I don't know for sure as I haven't examined it closely, but it does coincide with the late stage of the regular season where teams are eliminated from playoff contention and so experiment around with different lineups. Favourites went back to winning in time for the post season and took some of the shine off what it still must be emphasised was a very profitable season indeed.

It would be remiss of me not to talk about a pretty major betting disaster in early November, that being the Virginia Attorney General race, which was won by an contemptible individual whose victory means the Democrats have no leg to stand on to lecture anyone else about decency ever again. In an environment where Democrats were enthused to vote in the midterms but Trump voters were not, Robert did issue picks to sell out of certain positions that had looked good for a while, such as Jack Ciattarelli to win the governorship of New Jersey. This left the Virginia Attorney General race as the sole red pick in a blue wave and even that pick failed. This would not normally be worth commenting on except for the enormous proportion of bankroll assigned to it. Robert did make a post addressing it and indeed, one of the big strengths of this community is the transparency with which it operates. We all learned a very valuable lesson that night and it has directly informed my own risk management strategy since.

Of course, it was not all doom and gloom. There have been bettors in the community who have had some good success this season. Crickett's college football plays have been successful enough over the course of the season to have enough conviction to call them consistently profitable. His consistent streaming with Will from Game On! has helped to bring in angles that many of us would not have otherwise seen and that includes bringing us in contact with other bettors with their own edges, such as Beardo, Heavy Steps and Ghost Wins, the latter of whom has his own locals page where he posts his own picks. I have learned the very crucial lesson not to rely on only one system for picks (though it would be easy to do so for MLB) and before I take positions, I try to find as many angles as possible and for this, being involved in other communities too is very valuable indeed. Even something as simple as finding the right newsletters (I have had good luck with Bettor Day who although they have paid services and picks do have lots of very well researched emails they send out for free). We should all be looking for alternative angles because if we see a pick posted here and it doesn't look right to us, we should be willing to say so and show a counterangle.

On the Sportspicks channel over on Rumble, Crick's Corner debuted this year with at first just Crickett solo. Then Grassguy decided to join as a regular on the show and the two of them have been doing analysis of betting action multiple times per week to find value in basketball and ice hockey, focusing on reverse line movement. I have had the pleasure to join the show as well. Crick's Picks for NHL, NBA and NCAAB may not be Sportspicks Official Picks, but they have been profitable enough over a large enough sample size to be at the very least worth taking a look with small positions if you don't want to risk much. They've been profitable at the odds quoted but with all the extra options available on prediction markets, you can generally get entries several percent better. That adds up over time.

As to the face of sports betting for the coming year and how I expect it to develop. I am optimistic about the current state of the community as although Robert has an enormous depth and breadth of sports and political betting experience, he cannot be everywhere at the same time. He doesn't put out hockey picks for example because it's just not a sport that he knows. He doesn't put out regular season NBA picks because the edge is so heavily dependent on whom is playing and whom is rested. He simply does not have the time to monitor these things. We do and Crickett and Grass Guy have been doing great work in doing so. This is what helps us expand into a diversified betting portfolio that contains many different sports, leagues and angles. From there, we can let the law of large numbers do its magic.

I expect that we will be able to do well in football betting, both of the American and association kind. The World Cup this year hosted in North America is going to be a very big deal and an enormous opportunity for us all, especially with all the new prediction market options. I would imagine that Polymarket will be fully available to US users by then too. Hopefully the new MLB season will be profitable for us too but we cannot take that for granted. I will trust last year's MLB betting system but I will be comparing it with the angles that myself and others find. If we confluence, great. If not, we will have to adjust our methods. Hopefully with the growth in the community over the past year we will be well equipped to deal with the challenges of the next year.

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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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