One thought, maybe useful.
We play many different games every day. Greek, Premier, Portuguese, Ecuador ...
In some of them comes the favorite spot, in some it does not come and in the end it is gathered that the fund picks up depending on what we played.
These are the rumbling matches now, how are they rumbling? Has anyone studied it?
In my opinion it is not indifferent (broke - we throw the bullet - end) but there are two categories:
a) Fortune, Olympiacos-Kastoria, Sarganis, phantom.
b) The market did not know what it was saying.
An example of the second that comes to my mind is the Olympian-Apollo 0-3 the 1996. Demi's last game with Apollo's jersey, the odds were on the ace of course but an indifferent Olympian let Apollo win.
In statistics, states (a) and (b) are not identical.
If all the breaks were in form (a) it would be a different account while if it is some form (a) and some is form (b) then another comes out.
There must be a way to control this. Frank George, a longtime professor of Essex university (mathematician - football coach and NATO consultant, too) said it.
We play many different games every day. Greek, Premier, Portuguese, Ecuador ...
In some of them comes the favorite spot, in some it does not come and in the end it is gathered that the fund picks up depending on what we played.
These are the rumbling matches now, how are they rumbling? Has anyone studied it?
In my opinion it is not indifferent (broke - we throw the bullet - end) but there are two categories:
a) Fortune, Olympiacos-Kastoria, Sarganis, phantom.
b) The market did not know what it was saying.
An example of the second that comes to my mind is the Olympian-Apollo 0-3 the 1996. Demi's last game with Apollo's jersey, the odds were on the ace of course but an indifferent Olympian let Apollo win.
In statistics, states (a) and (b) are not identical.
If all the breaks were in form (a) it would be a different account while if it is some form (a) and some is form (b) then another comes out.
There must be a way to control this. Frank George, a longtime professor of Essex university (mathematician - football coach and NATO consultant, too) said it.
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