Sports Bet Details

Key Bets

Supremacy: also known as Superiority. A measure of winning margin, or by how much one participant performs better than the other. (E.g. how many more goals will Man Utd score than Chelsea in a football match, or how many more points will Leicester score than Bath in a rugby game.)

Match bet: similar to Supremacy. A bet on the relative performance of two participants in an event against each other, regardless of how well any other participant performs. (E.g. by how many lengths one horse beat another. Alternatively, a match bet can be determined by a scoring system - as in 18-hole golf matches where a player is awarded 10pts for winning and 3pts per shot won by.)

Index bet: a bet in which performance is measured by awarding points for reaching particular stages or filling particular positions. (E.g. in a horse race a 50-30-20-10 index rewards 50pts to the winner, 30pts to the second, 20pts to the third and 10pts to the fourth. Similarly, a bookings index for a football fixture would reward 10pts for each yellow card and 25pts for each red.)

Numbers bet: a bet on the totals of certain numbers occurring in sporting events - either in a match or a tournament. Specifically:

Total: the number of runs scored in a cricket game, corners or goals in a football match, or points or tries scored in a rugby match.

Shirts: a customary abbreviation for the combined numbers worn on the shirts of scorers of goals in football or tries in rugby, etc.

Multi/Cross: one total multiplied by another. This theme is especially popular in corners markets. Here multi-corners are 1st half corners times by 2nd half corners, whilst cross-corners are Team A's corners times by Team B's corners. We also operate similar markets on other sports, like multi-kickers and cross-kickers pertaining to kickers' successful conversions in a rugby match. The same principles always apply.

Times: we have a wide range of markets available on the specific time certain actions will occur in any given event. (E.g. the times of a team's or match's first goal, card or corner in football.)

Binary bet: a different way to bet on markets with only two possible outcomes. In effect, these are Yes/No propositions where the lone winning outcome makes up at 100 and everything else makes up at 0. (E.g. tennis players to win Wimbledon.)