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Champions League Quarter Finals - My Lookahead Picks

1% Arsenal not to win vs Sporting Lisbon at 45c (good to 50c)
1% Real Madrid draw no bet vs Bayern Munich or any combination of Real Madrid to defeat Bayern Munich at 33c (good to 37c) and Bayern Munich not to win at 55c (good to 60c) (for example, 55% of your stake on Bayern no at 55c and remaining 45% on Real Madrid at 33c would be equivalent to draw no bet at around 42.5c)
1% PSG to win vs Liverpool at 52c (good to 56c)
1% Barcelona not to win vs Atletico Madrid at 36c (good to 41c)

With the international break coming to an end, the Champions League is about to return. The quarter finals are about to begin and there are some pretty big matchups on the horizon. Since these are lookahead picks, certain things may change in the meantime such as injuries. I will make a post closer to the day to confirm what positions I'm still on before the games begin.

1. Arsenal not to win vs Sporting Lisbon. This will be a very interesting matchup as Sporting Lisbon play at home against Arsenal after having completed a major home comeback against Bodø/Glimt. Bodø/Glimt uncharacteristically decided to sit back and dend their 3-0 lead from the first leg but Sporting pressured them relentlessly and won 5-0 after extra time. Morale will be high knowing they can turn the screws at home. Arsenal meanwhile is a team which can be brutally effective through physically imposing themselves on midfield and getting goals through set pieces. When a team can't match them physically, Arsenal tend to win easily. When a team can match up to them, they tend to drop back and play more passively. Bayer Leverkusen did this effectively in the first leg of the last 16, conceding a late equaliser through a penalty that arguably shouldn't have been given. I would expect Sporting to give them a really strong game in the first leg and carry a result into the second leg. Whether they're able to go through from there is another question but for now, I think their chances for a home first leg are being underestimated somewhat.

2. Real Madrid draw no bet vs Bayern Munich. This is a big Champions League clash between two teams that consistently make the semifinals. Real Madrid have had a chaotic season, sacking their manager and former player Xabi Alonso and replacing him with another former player Alvaro Arbeloa. There was discontent in the dressing room with Alonso's methods, and at Real Madrid, they're far more willing to replace the manager than the player. Arbeloa is inexperienced but has managed Real Madrid's B team and his style is closer to Carlo Ancelotti, whom Alonso replaced. This style is one of tactical versatility, building the team around the strongest players and using them to hit the other team's weak points. Real Madrid did this well against Manchester City, hitting them on the break in the first leg and beating them in Manchester in the second leg. Real Madrid wins are not always convincing but they have shown over the years that they are very effective at pulling out big results.

Bayern Munich under Vincent Kompany have a squad of elite talent which is used to not just defeating teams but annihilating them too. Kompany played under Pep Guardiola at Manchester City and as a manager, he has tried to play a Pep style of possession based football dominance. This helped him bring Burnley back to the Premier League but this approach did not help Burnley survive in the Premier League and thus they were relegated the season after. He was then appointed to replace Thomas Tuchel at Bayern Munich and his methods have worked very well with players that are at the level to dominate with them. His front players constantly interchange roles, which teams not on their level find very difficult to keep up with.

Nonetheless, I do have my misgivings about Kompany as a tactician. His system like Pep's is built upon being so ruthlessly executed that the other team can't stay within touching distance. Against teams where the talent divide is not so big, they do have vulnerabilities to being hit on the break when their intricate play can't break down their defence. This is exactly the kind of approach that Arbeloa employed against Manchester City and is how Ancelotti got the better of Pep when he managed Real Madrid. Other teams have had the idea to do this against Bayern but generally Bayern are able to overwhelm them. Against a peer squad like Real Madrid, this is where I expect Bayern to find it much, much more difficult. My instinct is that either Real will pull off a win or Bayern will win easily and right now I'm feeling that there's an edge on the win.

3. PSG to win vs Liverpool. PSG have had their struggles this season having played the maximum number of games possible last season. They won the Ligue 1 title, La Coupe de France, the Champions League and after all that, they reached the final of the Club World Cup in the USA, finishing as runners up to Chelsea. They have shown signs of fixture fatigue this season, wining but never truly convincing for a large part of this season to date. There is a lot of speculation that this will be Luis Enrique's last season at the club. They did however show some real signs of venom against Chelsea, in which they won both home and away while scoring some rather ominous looking goals in the process.

It may well be that PSG are going up a few gears going into the business end of the season. Indeed, their game against Lens, scheduled for the weekend between their two games against Liverpool, has been rescheduled for May to help them in their tie against Liverpool. I don't really like football leagues intervening to help clubs like this but be that as it may, PSG are in a very good position to approach this tie. The international break will have given a chance for their players to recover and they play Toulouse on Friday night, leaving five days until the first leg against Liverpool. Liverpool meanwhile play Man City in the FA Cup on Saturday afternoon. It's a very minor rest edge, but it's a rest edge nonetheless, especially with Liverpool travelling over to Paris (it's not that far really, but it's still travel).

Liverpool meanwhile have been having troubles all season with their summer signings failing to gel, especially since they're not players that fit the system Liverpool have been playing for the decade. Liverpool's press under Jürgen Klopp was built on having high energy midfielders that were able to assist their dynamic forwards in winning the ball high up the pitch. Florian Wirtz is more of a playmaker from midfield and he has not gelled well with Liverpool's pressing system. When you have a pressing system, you need to have the entire team built to make it work. PSG are one of the best teams in the world at evading and playing around the press. They looked the better team in both legs against Liverpool last year when Liverpool were performing better than they are now so I would see this is a very rough matchup for Liverpool, especially when their away form has been as shaky as it has been this season. So I see an edge on PSG to win the first leg.

4. Barcelona not to win vs Atletico Madrid. This is a rematch of the tie these teams played in the Copa Del Rey in which Atletico won 4-0 in the first leg and held on for a 3-0 loss in the second leg at the Nou Camp. Atletico Madrid are a veteran team under Diego Simeone and play a tight, defensive structure that sees them absorb pressure from their opponents and hit them either on the break or from set pieces. Atletico underwhelmed in the group stages but this is not surprising because the new group stage format incentivises winning big to improve your position in the table. Knockout football is a totally different animal and Simeone's methods are built for shithousing your way through the tie, by hook or by crook.

Barcelona meanwhile thumped Newcastle 7-2 at home in the second leg of the last 16 and their potency to hammer teams on the break was there for all to see. Atletico Madrid will not be naive like Newcastle were. They do have a mental block when they play Real Madrid but they don't have the same hangups against Barcelona and Simeone has indeed knocked Barcelona out in the past by playing very tight, defensive football. Hansi Flick's high line is facilitated by the lethal talent they have up front but as Atletico have shown in their Copa Del Rey tie, they can hit that high line right where it hurts. I expect Atletico to absorb pressure and look to take advantage of Barcelona's high line. The number one priority will be avoiding defeat in the first leg so that they can try and win it in Madrid for the second leg.

We still have most of a week to go before these games are played so I'll be keeping an eye out for other angles in the meantime.

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Barnes Betting Report: Midterm Elections

Historical Context

  • Without war, recession or major scandal, the odds of the White House party losing 25+ House seats & 5+ Senate seats is a relative rarity in the post-WW2 modern era, covering 20 midterm elections. The Senate saw 5+ flips in 1946 (war ending), 1958 (recession), 1986 (midwest/farm recession), 1994 (evangelicals join the GOP down ballot), 2006 (Iraq war), 2010 (GFC recession) * 2014 (Obama hangover). That means in 15 of the last 20 midterms, the Senate saw little shift. Indeed, the party holding the White House has just as often gained seats in the Senate as lost them, including the last 2 midterm election cycles. The House saw 25+ house seats flip in 1946 (war ended), 1950 (Korean War), 1958 (recession), 1966 (Vietnam war), 1974 (Watergate), 1982 (recession), 1994 (evangelicals join GOP down ballot), 2006 (Iraq War), 2010 (GFC), and 2018 (anti-Trump). The House, with all seats up every cycle, are more vulnerable to swings against the party in the White House, but claims of inevitability are greatly overstated. Even the House is only 50-50 in the post-WW2 era in massive swings, with the most vulnerable swings occurring when one party has a lopsided edge in the House. Point in fact, since 1986, 60% of the time the House has not had a major 25+ swing in seats in midterm elections. The same rule holds for each part of Congress -- without war, recession or major scandal, massive shifts are far more uncommon than common. That said, when a war is raging or just ended, a recession haunts the economy, or a major scandal consumes the news, the odds of a major shift in at least one of the two houses of Congress is a perfect 7-for-7, and the odds of a major shift in both houses of Congress is 6-for-7. Without a recession, war or scandal, the odds of a big swing in both houses of Congress drop dramatically to just 2-for-13, with both coming in major realignment elections (evangelicals join GOP down ballot in 1994 & old Jacksonian Democrats from the reverse-L of eastern Oklahoma to western North Carolina, up through Kentucky and Ohio of Appalachian hearland swing away from Obama's Democrats). 

2026

  • GOP enters with a 3-vote edge in the Senate, with 53 Republicans, though they must lose 4 seats to lose control (due to VP's tie-breaking vote), and maybe even 5 (if Fetterman flips to vote with the GOP & Murkowski does not flip to the Dems). GOP enters with a 2-vote edge in the House, with 218 Republicans and 214 Democrats, and 3 vacancies representing 2 Republican-held seats, and 1 Democratic held seat. The Supreme Court's slow action reversing the Voting Rights Act limits the chance of effective redistricting, while redistricting currently net favors Democrats if the Virginia redistricting succeeds and the Texas redistricting in Mexican ancestral areas of Texas showed they likely trend Democratic in the recent primary. The current Iran war, the risk of looming recession, the possibility of lurking scandals, and the lost realignment of the Trump 2024 coalition all point to this cycle being a major shift in both houses. Baris' polls amongst the extremely enthused show Democrats with a double-digit lead on the generic ballot, unheard of in the contemporary era since the realignment of evangelicals in 1994. 

2026 Senate

  • The competitive seats identified by third party observers are: Maine, Michigan, Ohio, Iowa, North Carolina, Georgia, South Carolina, Texas, Nebraska, and Alaska. Currently, Republicans old all but 2 of these competitive seats, making them more vulnerable due to the map of seats up for election this cycle. Internal GOP polls and Baris' polls show the races already as a dead heat in Ohio, Iowa and Alaska, with the GOP candidate down in Maine, Michigan, North Carolina, and Georgia. Should Cornyn win the nomination in Texas and Graham in South Carolina, as well as the establishment candidates prevail in the GOP primaries in Iowa, GOP vulnerability increases due to up to one-third of GOP primary voters saying they will not vote for either in the general election. My odds for these states voting Democrats in the Senate are as follows for these 10 seats:
  1. Michigan: 95%
  2. Maine: 85%
  3. North Carolina: 80%
  4. Georgia: 75% 
  5. Ohio: 65%
  6. Alaska: 65%
  7. Iowa: 60% (75% if Carlin loses the primary; 50% if Carlin wins the primary)
  8. Texas: 50% (65% of Cornyn is nominee; 35% if Paxton is nominee)
  9. South Carolina: 50% (65% of Graham is nominee; 35% if Lynch or Dans is nominee)
  10. Nebraska: 40% (Independent is one to watch)
  • Senate Overall in 2027: 53-47 Democratic, with Murkowski likely to flip to the Democrats, and Fetterman staying put on the Democratic side, increasing that to 54-46 in voting terms. I set the odd of the Senate going Democratic at 80%. 

House 2026

  • The key competitive seats are in the industrial/rural midwest and the heavily Hispanic southwest, with both constituencies recent GOP converts now returning en masse to Democratic voting habits their voting ancestry supports. These are both war-sensitive demographics, as well as recession-sensitive demographics. The Democratic message of the Epstein Class vs the Working Class resonates deeply with these voter groups. Meanwhile, voter enthusiasm amongst GOP-leaning independents hit new lows in a range of voter surveys, evidenced by the 27-0 edge Democrats enjoy in flipping state legislative seats over the last 6 months or so & the lopsided Democratic edge in turnout in the Texas primaries (exceeding GOP turnout for the first time since 2002). I forecast only 1 currently heald Democratic seat flipping to the GOP: Texas CD 32; by contrast, I forecast 33 seats flipping to the Democrats, for a seat profile in 2027 House that is 246 Democrats, and 189 Republicans. I see the odds of the House going Democratic at 98%. These are the seats I see as likely flipping to the Democrats in 2026 midterms: 
  1. Alaska At Large
  2. Arizona 1
  3. Arizona 2
  4. Arizona 6
  5. California 1
  6. California 6
  7. California 22
  8. California 48
  9. Colorado 3
  10. Colorado 5
  11. Colorado 8
  12. Florida 7
  13. Iowa 1
  14. Iowa 2
  15. Iowa 3
  16. Michigan 4
  17. Michigan 7
  18. Michigan 10
  19. Montana 1
  20. Nebraska 2
  21. New Jersey 7
  22. North Carolina 11
  23. Pennsylvania 1
  24. Pennsylvania 7
  25. Pennsylvania 8
  26. Pennsylvania 10
  27. Tennessee 5
  28. Texas 15
  29. Utah 1
  30. Virginia 1
  31. Virginia 2
  32. Wisconsin 1
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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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