Get Even More Visitors To Your Blog, Upgrade To A Business Listing >>

Mug Betting Experiment: Does Mug Betting Work?

It’s long been debated in the industry:

Does mug betting actually work? 

We got sick of the arguing (at best) and complete misinformation (at worst) and decided to run a small experiment to see if we could reach a definitive answer one way or the other.

At the start of 2019, we got 20 testers on board — 20 modern day heroes — that were willing to potentially jeopardise the long-term health of their Betting accounts (and their profits too) in the name of science.

We split these 20 testers into two groups of 10; those that would become mug Bettors and those that would never do mug betting.

Below, you’ll find the results of our experiment and a few bits of commentary too.

The Experiment

This experiment does not aim to suggest that we used the best mug betting strategies — far from it. However, we had to devise some simple rules that all testers could follow, so that’s what we did.

Here’s an overview of the mug betting experiment and the rules we put into place:

  • The test ran for 12 weeks, starting Monday January 7th 2019 and running until the end of Sunday March 17th 2019
  • All 20 testers were opening a full set of new betting accounts and were the first in their household to do so
  • All 20 testers started with a bankroll of £300-£400
  • All 20 testers bet only on Premier League and Champions League football matches, except for Cheltenham Festival where they bet on horse racing too
  • No bets were permitted to be placed in-play unless it was specific to an offer
  • The 2 testing groups had an even demographic split between mug bettors and non-mug bettors; 4 women and 6 men in each, 5 users under the age of 30 and 5 users over the age of 30 in each
  • No tester was permitted to intentionally take an arb (though beating SP during Cheltenham would have sometimes been inevitable)
  • The 10 ‘mug bettor’ testers had to place one mug bet* before withdrawing on a winning sign-up offer, or placing a qualifying or free bet
  • The 10 ‘non-mug bettor’ testers were not allowed to place any bets other than qualifying bets for offers**
  • We asked all users to primarily use a list of 10 big bookmakers, listed later in this post, though they were free to use others
  • No tester was allowed to make use of casino offers, whether free, low-risk or high risk

*A mug bet was only permitted to be a £1 6-fold accumulator (unlaid), a £5 treble (unlaid), or a 90-95% match single of £20 (laid), choosing a different one of the three options each time and never choosing an option that would qualify the user for another offer. If the user wished to place a bet on an offer, they’d have to deposit slightly more than needed to ensure they could also afford a mug bet. If the user selected to gamble on one of the ‘unlaid’ options, the user would track a £1 loss regardless of the bet’s outcome as this would be approximately the average amount sacrificed in EV, to avoid freak wins occurring and skewing the figures.

**For simplicity, ongoing reload offers like 2UP and Double Delight, Hat-Trick Heaven were counted as a qualifying bet (rather than distinguishing them as ‘trigger’ bets or anything else separate).

The Betting Statistics

Here, we’re simply going to look at how many bets each group managed to place and how successful they were in terms of efficiency and profits. 

Volume of Bets

1870 qualifying bets were placed by the mug bettors in our 12-week observation period, an average of 15.58 qualifying bets per person per week. The smallest amount of qualifying bets placed by a mug betting tester was 90, and the largest was 253.

1923 qualifying bets were placed by non-mug bettors in our 12-week observation period, an average of 16.03 qualifying bets per person per week. The smallest amount of qualifying bets placed by a non-mug betting tester was 103 and the largest was 240.

This could show that people were slightly more efficient at placing qualifying bets when they didn’t have to place mug bets, though the results weren’t too far apart.

Most Popular Bookmaker

The most commonly used bookmaker by our testers was Bet365, accounting for almost 25% of the qualifying bets that mug bettors placed and slightly over 26% of the bets that non-mug bettors placed.

The second most commonly used bookmaker was SkyBet, mainly due to their good value daily offer at Cheltenham Festival.

Profit Made in the Period

On average, mug bettors made £1,218.98 in profit in the 12-week testing period. The smallest profit made was £515.10. The largest profit made was £1,821.60.

On average, non-mug bettors made £1,320.88 in profit in the 12-week testing period. The smallest profit made was £584.25. The largest profit made was £1,800.92.

This shows that non-mug bettors made more profit in the observed time period on average. This is unsurprising, with slightly more qualifying bets being placed per tester in this category and with no money being reinvested back into mug bets by this group of testers. What could be slightly surprising is that the difference isn’t higher between the two profit figures; mug bettors did see a higher volume of loyalty bonuses or random free bets being awarded, which probably accounts for this. 

The Gubbing Statistics

Ladies and gentlemen, the main event…

In this section, we’re looking at the 10 main bookmakers we identified for matched betting purposes; Bet365, Paddy Power, SkyBet, Betfred, Ladbrokes, Coral, William Hill, 888, Betfair and BetVictor.

This section will also be the primary indicator of the ‘success’ of mug betting.

Number of Gubbings Received

11 accounts were gubbed in the mug bettor group, an average of 1.1 accounts per person. The fewest quantity of accounts gubbed was 0 (shared by 3 users) and the highest number of accounts gubbed was 2 (shared by 4 users).

31 accounts were gubbed in the non-mug bettor group, an average of 3.1 accounts per person. The fewest quantity of accounts gubbed was 0 and the highest amount was 5 (shared by 2 users).

These stats suggest that non-mug bettors do get gubbed and restricted at a much quicker rate than mug bettors do, even though only 0.45 more qualifying bets were placed each week per tester in this category.

Most-Gubbed Bookmakers

Of the 10 main bookmakers on our list, the most commonly ‘gubbed by’ bookmaker was BetVictor. 2 accounts were gubbed on BetVictor for mug bettors and 6 were gubbed for non-mug bettors, accounting for over 15% of the entire gubbings in this experiment.

The second most gub-heavy bookmaker was, perhaps surprisingly, Bet365. Whilst none of the mug betting testers were gubbed by Bet365, 5 of the non-mug bettors were.

These stats go to show that even the biggest bookmakers are tightening up on those that are, quite frankly, taking the p***!

Cheltenham Gubbings

2 mug bettors were gubbed from a ‘big 10’ bookmaker during Cheltenham Festival, compared to 5 non-mug bettors receiving a gubbing — a couple from multiple bookmakers — in the same timeframe.

Final Observations

At Beating Betting, we’ve long backed mug betting and the whole game of trying to avoid detection as a winning player.

The main reason we’ve backed it is because we’ve always known it worked. We’ve spoken with various people that have worked in bookmaker trading/risk-management departments and we’ve picked up a strong insight into how their systems work.

This is something that has been spoken about in our guides and videos before, but in short: we know mug betting works because it helps your account to avoid detection from bookmakers’ most simple account-checking algorithms. That’s right, most people are gubbed by bots, not human traders.

However, until now, we’ve not had any data to prove our position.

Here’s the logic that most people use when it comes to ‘mugging’:

“Mug betting doesn’t work because I still got gubbed.”

Well, yeah, this is true — you can (and will) still get gubbed as a mug bettor, as shown in the statistics above.

No-one has ever said that mug betting will keep your accounts open forever. Rather, the belief was that mug bets help you to prolong the life of your accounts and therefore make more profit over the long-term as a result.

The stats back this up, with almost 3 times more gubbings dished out to non-mug bettors than to mug bettors in our experiment.

Surprisingly, the differences in profits weren’t as large as we’d have expected, either. Over 12 weeks, the average difference in profit was just £101.90 — £8.49 per week.

When you factor in the number of gubbings, we think it’s clear that the mug bettors would soon have significantly more qualifying bet opportunities than the non-mug bettors would have, simply due to having a higher volume of healthy accounts. Based on this, we believe that the profit over the first year would probably be very similar — if not higher in the mug bettors favour.

One thing is for sure, at the speed the gubbings were dished out to non-mug bettors in our experiment, your accounts certainly won’t last long if you don’t put a little bit of effort in to maintain them.

We’re going to keep this experiment running and plan to do a 12-month update in the future. If you enjoyed this, you might also like our UK Gambling Survey Findings. 

Mug Betting Infographic

Share this Image On Your Site

Please include attribution to BeatingBetting.co.uk with this graphic.

You are free to use our infographic with correct and proper attribution to Beating Betting.

Learn How I Increased My Matched Betting Profits by 600%+ Every Month
We'll send you 5 advanced tips to take your matched betting to the next level.

The post Mug Betting Experiment: Does Mug Betting Work? appeared first on Beating Betting.



This post first appeared on Guide To Matched Betting, please read the originial post: here

Share the post

Mug Betting Experiment: Does Mug Betting Work?

×

Subscribe to Guide To Matched Betting

Get updates delivered right to your inbox!

Thank you for your subscription

×