A detailed preview of the premier league weekend covering the different matches and performance of individual players with some valuable insights for spread bettors for the coming days.
The monetary fortunes of Roman
Abramovich and Sheikh Mansour, billionaire owners of Chelsea FC and Manchester
City FC respectively, attract much speculation. But it is the contrasting Premier
League fortunes of their managers Carlo Ancelotti and Mark Hughes which will
come into focus over the next few days as spread bettors gear up for the teams’
clash at the City of Manchester stadium.
The untold wealth of the clubs’
financial backers means rewarding wages but lower job security, as Avram Grant
and Phil Scolari have recently found out to their detriment, and spread buyers
of Chelsea’s supremacy will hope Frank Lampard and co can help push Hughes closer
to the Sheikh’s trapdoor with victory tomorrow. Win index spread buyers or
sellers may or may not be expecting the 10-point outcome on either team’s index
(25pts for a win, 10pts for a draw, 0 for a loss) as Chelsea have, after 14
games, still not drawn a league match this season, while Man City have tied every
one of their last seven.
Chelsea’s clinical 3-0 win over title
rivals Arsenal continued their excellent form in front of the net and it’s no
surprise that Sporting Index’s football spread traders are primed for a glut of
buys on the total goals spread. Didier Drogba’s second against Arsenal last
Sunday was the Blues’ 17th in five games, excluding a further 11
goals in four games in the European and League Cups since October. City,
despite sharing the spoils in every match in the last two months, have
nevertheless managed to score in all bar one of these games, and spread buyers
of total goals will be further pleased of the 12 goals scored in City’s last
three. Goal minutes buyers would rather a repeat of City’s Liverpool meeting
two weeks ago which saw four second-half goals (make-up: 272 minutes) rather
than 127 goal minutes against Hull.
Although Tottenham have also thrilled
goals buyers in recent weeks, the more competitive game on Sunday, and the one
that will split more buyers and sellers on the spreads, is likely to be Fulham
v Sunderland. Buyers of both teams’ win index spreads previously in the season
might be happily surprised at their current standings of tenth and eighth in
the table, but it’s the single point that separates the clubs which will throw many
of this game’s spread bettors.
Buyers of Fulham’s win index spread
might be surprised that the Cottagers haven’t beaten the Black Cats in this
corner of West London for nearly four years. Sunderland’s head-to-head record
of W3-D2-L1 in their last six meetings will serve sellers of Fulham’s supremacy
spread better, although the same spread punters should also take into account
Roy Hodgson’s far superior home record of W4-D1-L2 this season compared to
Steve Bruce’s W1-D1-L5 away. Sellers of the booking index spread will be
pleased to see that last season’s two meetings produced only two bookings
overall and that the Cottagers have averaged only 13pts on the index spread
make-up at home this season.
| Additional articles about football betting |
|
|
| About the author |
Chris Williams is a reputed author who writes primarily for the domain of sports betting.
Football Spread Betting |
| Please Rate This Article |
Number of ratings: 0
Rating: 0