I've been experimenting with betting on sports, and for now I don't see a difference between when I'm making an educated bet and just betting blindly looking only at the odds. It hasn't been long, however, so I'll keep experimenting.
My question is about a related matter. When I've asked in a different thread what is required to become a good bettor, many have mentioned that knowing the games, the teams and things like that is essential. But I'm sure there's a certain limit to this flow of information, and when this limit is reached, it's not useful and is even potentially harmful for making the decision. If a person is betting on a soccer match and reads about every match of every person on every team, plus weather forecast, plus research on home advantage etc., the amount of information can be overwhelming and probably not that important or useful to bet on the outcome a particular match. What do you think: is there a rule that would help not to drown in information but only focus on what is helpful? Or is it 'the more, the better' in your opinion?
The thing is most of the times when you are engaging in sports Betting and you are really good at it, you do know each and every player , you literally stalk them , the team , the coach , what they are going through , the allegations .
That's a lot of hardwork literally.
I don't think any knowledge can be termed overwhelming until and unless you are getting affected by it. Contrary to popular belief I do think the more you know the better , but at the same time you have to remember that *It's a bet* , it can play out according to you and it cannot.
First we have to look into the basics:
Know your team
Know your players
That would be the very basic strategy , if someone is going to ask you to go Messi vs Ronaldo , most people would be very frizzy about the decision , what you need to do is to actually see how their game is going through this season..
So I don't really think it's much to think about , just try , get updated with each and everything that's going on in the sports industry itself.