No offence, but 'professional loser' may have been nearer the mark in his case!My grandfather inherited a fortune and was a professional gambler. He possessed nothing when he died.
My grandfather inherited a fortune and was a professional gambler. He possessed nothing when he died.
No offence, but 'professional loser' may have been nearer the mark in his case!
As the old joke says: How do you make a small fortune gambling? Start with a large one.
I'm studying maths at uni, perhaps I should keep it up, focussing on statistics!
This thread has made me re-think it then. I was sure more people made a living out of professional gambling. If it is as hard as those on here say then perhaps I have been getting a tad lucky.
I'm certain I could profit from gambling, but to profit the amounts I hoped for may be a bit out of my reach.
HseagullH: I used to know a man (a friend of my Dad's) who was a professional gambler. He used to work on a 2% margin, e.g. if he bet £100 he'd expect a return of £102 (i.e. win £2). Obvously not a single bet, that would be his expected return on a series of linked bets. It was all on horse racing (this was back in the 1970s) and he did it by studying a mixture of form and prices. He had his good streaks and bad streaks, some days, or even weeks, his return would be higher than 2% but sometimes he'd have a month where he'd be down overall. However over the course of a year he reckoned on a 2% overall return.
You say you've won £2300. Working on this man's principle that means your total stakes for that period should have been around £100,000. If they have been, then fair enough, give it a few more months and if you can keep it up then it maybe a decent 'career choice'. If on the other hand you've only staked about £20,000 (or less) then all you are is a lucky punter. You may THINK you're clever and that you've devised a foolproof system - but you're not and you haven't.
One other thing - this man never bet for fun and he had no interest in horses outside of a racecourse. You must take your football losses into account otherwise you're just fooling yourself, a bit like someone who says they 'won' £20 from a pub fruit machine and it turns out they put £25 in the previous night!
You've made £2300 over the Summer? In what, 3 months? So that's less than a minimum wage job. I'd keep it as a hobby if I were you.
I'm not telling the whole story. Was just being short and sharp to warn this little boy off what is a loser's game.
you sound a bit wet behind the ears,
do what you like, and like what you do.
'Short & sharp' more like misleading, he didn't make his living I.e. Professional...he was a losing gambler, simple
Wait for your student loan to come in at least, then you can use those funds for gambling. You should definately quit uni though. The time you spend studying there is time you can spend making money on horses.
All gamblers lose in the end. And that is my point.
All gamblers lose in the end. And that is my point.
Not true at all I'm afraid! For every gambler who loses, another gambler wins.
I think a certain Mr Bloom might disagree with you there.
Mr Bloom was a Poker player which involves an element of skill and a straight face.