Josh Appelbaum

Josh Appelbaum is a Sports Betting Analyst at VSiN and has been working in the betting industry since 2011. He has been with VSiN since 2019, contributing data-driven articles to VSiN.com, hosting the Morning Bets and Market Insights Podcasts and appearing on VSiN and DraftKings programs such as Follow the Money, The Lombardi Line, Sharp Money and The Sweat. He is a contrarian bettor and also the author of The Everything Guide to Sports Betting.

Exclusive Content

Sports Betting 101: Define and manage your bankroll for long-term success

​Believe it or not, bankroll management can be just as important as picking winners. The goal is to map out a disciplined, consistent strategy that allows you to maximize your profits and minimize your losses, providing long-term sustainability. Think of bankroll management as the way to invest in sports, not just bet on them._x000D_

Sports Betting 101: Avoid Confirmation Bias and Gambler’s Fallacy

Confirmation bias means seeking out information that fits your already held opinion. In other words, bettors are looking for information that tells them what they want to hear. Once they find it, they end the search for more data. This is dangerous because it causes bettors to talk themselves into or out of a bet based on cherry-picked information that may not tell the whole story._x000D_ _x000D_

Sports Betting 101: Betting systems better than trends to avoid recency bias

In Sports Betting, trends are one of the most common go-to sources of information when determining who to bet on, especially for new or casual bettors. They give bettors a brief and easily digestible breakdown of how both teams have been performing recently. By comparing both team's head-to-head trends and looking for situations where one team's trend lines up nicely against the opponent, it increases the confidence level of bettors to pull the trigger and make a pick.

Sports Betting 101: What betting advice you should take and avoid

Once new bettors have abandoned their long-held allegiances and learned the pitfalls of betting like a fan, the next step is to block out media hype and bias. This means ignoring the noise and not falling into the trap of betting games based solely on the opinions of sports talking heads. _x000D_

Sports Betting 101: How to Calculate the House Edge

​According to a UNLV Center for Gaming Research study, more than $81 billion was bet on sports in Nevada from 1984 to 2018. Of that $81 billion, Nevada won $3.9 billion. Why does Vegas win so much money? Sure, they set set very accurate and hard to beat lines and of course capitalize on the luck and randomness of betting, but they also hold a built in advantage over bettors based on the rules of the game and overlooked fine print.

Sports Betting 101: The house takes vig, vigorish or juice on every bet

We've discussed the three most popular ways to bet on a game: The spread, the moneyline and the total. In this edition of VSiN Betting 101, it's time to discuss the final basic tenet of sports betting that all bettors must know. Consider it the elephant in the room._x000D_ _x000D_ I’m talking about the juice.