teamnasty wrote:Your Mets comment did make me lol.
The typical Vegas bettor isn't particularly sophisticated, they tend to be homer fans on a trip to the casinos who lay money on their favorite team. Which is why big market teams tend to post unusually poor payouts. There is a much smaller group of more sophisticated bettors that wager more per bet, but that's what causes the casinos to adjust the odds "away" from that team. So as to deter more betting and make other wagers more attractive. That's how they diversify their risk and make money hand over foot each season.
Some team odds correlate with team talent, some don't. If the Vegas odds correlated tightly with actual team strength the casinos wouldn't make money, they'd break even over the long haul.
Firstly, I'm glad you enjoyed my Mets comment. Secondly, I never said Vegas odds absolutely correlate with team odds; I said they functionally equate to and reflect team odds, even after adjustments.
As to the rest, we both agree there are sophisticated bettors and clueless rubes betting on baseball. We clearly disagree on how many of the bettors are the former and how many are the latter, and we can just agree to disagree on that. Either way, you can't say Vegas' odds don't reflect a teams chances, you can only claim how much Vegas adjusts it's reflection. I argue Vegas isn't going to adjust the odds away to a point they no longer entice smart gamblers as accurate; you claim they do. Again, we can just agree to disagree on that, as well.
As to the Mets, they
are improving, although I don't see them in the mix for a wild card. They do have a very strong front three if Harvey, DeGrom, and Wheeler all stay healthy, and DeGrom avoids that sophomore jinx. Syndergaard took a step backwards last year with his command, and may have been passed by Matz as their best pitching prospect and most likely to help the rotation this year. They have some solid middle relievers, but their bullpen is going to be in trouble if Mejia has to close again.
Cuddyer was a nice addition, and he, Duda (who is weak against lefties), and Wright should form a solid middle of the order. However, there isn't much left after that, including Granderson's mammoth strikeouts. They're most likely going to have to wait for Nimmo and Conforto before they're ready to compete, as well as for either Syndergaard, Matz, or Montero seizing that fourth spot and making their entire rotation a beast.