пятница, 18 октября 2013 г.

We look at the opportunities in betting Challenger tennis

We look at the opportunities in betting Challenger tennis

By Mirio Mella Oct 10, 2013

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Challenger Event Schedule

Tournament

Date

Mouilleron-Le-Captif, France

14/10/2013

Beunos Aires, Argentina

21/10/2013

Poitiers (Women's Futures)

21/10/2013

Geneva, Switzerland

28/10/2013

Charlottesville, VA, USA

28/10/2013

Bogota, Colombia

04/11/2013

Bratislava, Slovakia

04/11/2013

Ortisei, Italy

04/11/2013

Knoxville, Tennessee, USA

04/11/2013

All Women's Challenger events

04/11/2013

As part of the expansion of our tennis betting markets Pinnacle Sports will start offering regular Challenger tennis odds starting from October 14th. Read why this is great news for tennis bettors and anyone seeking an edge.

Getting an edge

Challenger Events mix raw young talent making their way up the tennis rankings alongside journeymen on their way down from the main ATP Tour. As such, Challenger Events present a unique challenge as well as opportunity to tennis bettors, and are a source of invaluable information for anyone betting on the main ATP circuit.

Available information – such as injury news – can be sketchy, while modest prize-money, more humble venues & small crowds add in complicated motivational and situational factors. This however represents a real opportunity to gain an edge for those bettors prepared to do the research.

Not so shocking shocks

Casual bettors may, for example, have been very surprised at Dan Evans' run at the 2013 US Open. Having been ranked as high as 367 in March, Evans came through three rounds of qualifying at Flushing Meadows before knocking out 11th seed Kei Nishikori (in straight sets) and world number 52 Bernard Tomic.

"The Challenger event name is well chosen ..a million miles from the glamour of the ATP Tour"

However, those who studied Evans’ form on the Challenger Tour leading into the US Open – making consecutive finals at the Vancouver Open and Comerica Bank Open – would have been less surprised. Evans’ performances are even less surprising with the knowledge that he had made important changes to his coaching team and in his previously wayward personal life.

Recent Challenger events have featured a former world no.8 – Radek Stepanek – who won in September in Orleans, and previous no.38 Donald Young who won back-to-back tournaments in California. At one time Young was considered one of the game’s hottest prospects before falling down the rankings, including a 17 game losing streak (the 3rd highest in Open era).

Another example of a challenger doing well recently is Vasek Pospisil. It’s no coincidence the Canadian won back-to-back Challengers – Johannesburg & Vancouver – before reaching the semi-final of the ATP 1000 Canada Masters.

Challenger in name & nature

The Challenger event name is well chosen – the environment is a million miles from the comfortable hotels and glamour of the ATP Tour. Jamaican born Dustin Brown won the AON Open Challenger on clay in September, and reached the 3rd round at Wimbledon in 2013 (beating Lleyton Hewitt), but those high profile results belie a career that has been a struggle. Dread-locked Brown has spoken of travelling around Europe in a campervan clawing a living by playing Challenger and Futures level events.

Understanding the difficulties that players like Brown face in just competing on the Challenger Tour is crucial. But those bettors that are prepared to do the research can utilise this kind of information to turn the challenge of Challenger Events into potentially significant rewards; and of course the odds and limits at Pinnacle Sports are unbeatable. Reason enough to start betting.

Click here for the latest Challenger Tennis odds(available from October 13th)

If you have feedback, comments or questions regarding this article, please email the author or send us a tweet on Twitter.

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