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Canadian Football League Betting

Canadian Football League Betting Average ratng: 9,4/10 1389 votes

Betting on the Canadian Football League (Ligue canadienne de football, LCF, as called in the French area of Canada, Quebec) is available through online sportsbooks. The CFL is less popularly bet than NFL and NCAA football, but can present the highest rate of success for many bettors, with much more excitement and way faster in-game plays. Betting within your limits is key here, as you want to ensure your Super Bowl betting experience is an enjoyable one rather than worrying about your skin in the game! CFL Fun Facts – Canada. While there are no Canadian teams in the NFL, there is a Canadian Football League. Still, you can bet on the Super Bowl from Canada, even.

  1. Canadian Football League Betting Odds
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This Canadian Football League betting article explains a Pythagorean method that may help bettors predict the Grey Cup winner. Read to understand the differences between NFL and CFL, and how to implement a Pythagorean method to pick your Grey Cup winner.

Differences between CFL and NFL

The Canadian Football League is seen as the exciting appetiser for the forthcoming NFL season and while sharing many common elements, the two sports also have distinct differences.

The Canadian version is twelve a side, with the extra player utilised in the back field on offense and is played on a wider and longer pitch with deeper end zones. Scoring also allows for single points via unreturned punts to the end zone and missed field goals.

Most significantly, back field motion prior to the snap is universal and receivers are able to stretch the field by timing their sprint downfield so that they cross the line of scrimmage as the ball is snapped.

Defensive coverage is therefore more difficult compared to the NFL, so to partly redress the balance between offense and the defense, the quarterback has one fewer down per series. The CFL is three, rather than four down football, although the aim remains to advance the ball by at least 10 yards to gain a fresh set of downs.

The regular season is 18 games long and is played across two divisions. Since 2005 each division comprised of four sides in each. However, the addition of Ottawa in 2014 has expanded the competition to nine sides and the season’s length to 20 weeks to accommodate bye weeks.

Sides qualify for post season football through their regular season records, with the best being rewarded with byes and home field advantage, until two teams ultimately contest the championship game for the Grey Cup. Unlike the NFL, a team can crossover between divisions and gain a playoff place if their record is superior to a potential playoff side from the other division.

Betting OVER/UNDER on the CFL

Betting revolves around markets familiar to the higher profile NFL. Handicap lines give a start to the perceived weaker team in the match up, either measured in full or half points and total match point markets exist for those whom wish to bet on a low or high scoring contest.

Average scoring is elevated compared to the NFL, but not excessively so. The average total regular season points since 2008 is 52 per game, with home field advantage currently worth a shade over three points.

Percentage of CFL games that went Under/Over certain totals (2008-13)
Total PointsOn the number or fewerOn the number or greater
4840.262.8
4943.959.8
5046.956.1
5150.953.1
5253.949.1
5356.346.2
5459.143.7
5561.540.9
5664.038.5
5768.036.0
5869.732.0

So, for example, 40.2% of regular season games played since 2008 contained, in total, 48 points or fewer and 62.8% had 48 points or more.

Those familiar with NFL handicap betting will be aware that because of the scoring regime in the NFL, certain margins of victory or defeat are more likely to occur than others. Teams more often win by three points (the value of a field goal), seven (the value of a touchdown) and multiples of these two common numbers.

This effect is somewhat diluted in the CFL, partly through a wider diversity of scoring options. However, as the plot from the 2008-13 regular seasons below demonstrates, there is still a bias towards matches being settled by three points.

As well as sharing some common ground with the NFL, the scoring patterns are also partly comparable and so bettors may use similar techniques to estimate how successful sides may be in the 2014 season.

Using Pythagorean to predict the Grey Cup winner

Pythagorean estimates are well established in many American sports. Introduced to baseball by Bill James, this approach uses points scored and conceded as a more reliable indicator of a side’s true ability.

Therefore, it is more likely to project future wins and losses than a team’s recent actual win loss record, which may be influenced by luck, either good or bad. A team’s talent may determine their ability to score or concede points, but they may not be able to greatly influence how this scoring is distributed within individual matches.

To take an example from soccer in the Premier League, Newcastle’s goal difference of +5 in 2011/12 would rarely be good enough to gain 65 points and 5th spot, but a fortuitous split of many narrow wins and fewer large defeats ensured that is what happened.

However, the good fortune that was present in 2011/12 did not persist and Newcastle’s raw points differential gave a better indication of their subsequent performance than their actual win/draw/ loss record.

Where p is the Pythagorean constant, initially set at 2 by James, in deference to Pythagoras, but it is subject to change for different sports, various run or points scoring environments and different eras.

Past performance is a major influence for future performance, but ideally bettors would wish to allow for excessively lucky or unlucky outcomes and a Pythagorean approach appears to achieve this. Using a Pythagorean constant of 2.6 and comparing actual win/tie records for the CFL teams in year N to their performance in year N+1 since 2006 alongside Pythagorean wins from the previous year, James’ insight overall has the better predictive record.

Of the 56 individual team seasons since the start of the 2007 regular season, Pythagorean wins from the previous campaign predicted win records in the next season more accurately for 31 team seasons, ten were tied and on only 15 times did the previous season’s win/loss record prove to be a better predictor.

TeamActual wins in 2013Pythagorean Wins in 2013
BC1110
Calgary1412
Edmonton46.5
Hamilton108.5
Montreal88.5
Saskatchewan1112
Toronto1110
Winnipeg34
Ottawa--

The return of Ottawa as an expansion team for the first time since 2005 may complicate the dynamics of the 2014 season, but Calgary and Hamilton appeared to be fortunate to post the wins they did in 2013 and Edmonton and Winnipeg may well be better than they appeared.

If luck plays a role over an 18 game season, it is even more of an influence over a single match. However, the granular nature of gridiron, where each down presents a discrete data point makes the sport data rich and allows bettors to identify consistent pointers to a successful final score line.

Highly efficient NFL sides in terms of yards per passing or running play appears to go hand in hand with success. Also previous levels of efficiency usually indicate similar levels of such play in the future.

Logistic regression can be used to determine actions that correlate to discrete outcomes, such as winning or losing a gridiron game and using play by play data from the 2011 Canadian season it is possible to highlight the importance of an efficient passing game to success in the CFL.

In the NFL passing ability is more important to success than rushing talent and the current CFL appears to heighten this divide.

In the CFL punting may become an enforced option after just two downs. So the much larger playing area, an extra eligible receiver and the larger average gains made through the air compared to on the ground, dictates that passing ability is a valuable asset and this is reflected in the win loss records of the sides.

There is a strong, significant relationship between passing efficiently, denying your opponent the same luxury and winning a single game.

In 2013, Calgary excelled in both, Winnipeg in neither, with BC, Saskatchewan, Hamilton, Toronto, Montreal, and Edmonton filling the gap in between in that order. A statistic that was largely consistent with the ranking of both the Pythagorean and actual wins for all eight sides.

To illustrate the potency of passing efficiency in the CFL, if two statistically average passing sides met, the home team’s chances of winning the game would increase from around 58% to over 62% if they could improve their passing efficiency by 5%. A fall of 5% would see their win probability fall to 54%.

Football

A similar relationship isn’t seen, either in terms of size or significance on a game by game basis, between match outcome and a side’s rushing efficiency for the CFL, at least in 2011.

Therefore, likely passing efficiency, as measured by the historical yards per passing attempt records for each side, from an offensive and defensive viewpoint, is an excellent starting point to predict probabilities and ultimately points spreads for individual games in the CFL when the regular season opens on June 26th.

The Canadian Football League obviously isn't as popular in the NFL, but it does have a strong enough following for sportsbooks to offer pretty competitive lines. When you are looking at a betting market like the CFL, the most important aspect to consider is that odds are going to be more likely to fluctuate due to an imbalance of action. This can case sharp line movements and, if you're on top of your game and know what you are doing, you can find huge advantages at one book versus another. Use our table to compare the odds at the top sportsbooks in the industry and try to find those advantages to bring you more profit this season.

CFL Odds Legend

# (Rotation Number)

Each day each team is assigned a unique number called the Rotation Number. That number is most often used to identify which team you are going to bet on at an actual sportsbook, like you'd find in a Las Vegas Casino.

Time

Time each game is scheduled to start. All times are Eastern Time.

Opener

This is the first line that was available on the game. We provide it so you can compare the current odds to the opening line.

Score

When games are in progress or completed the score will be listed here.

Betting Percentage

Percent of the total number of bets placed on each team or total.

SC Odds

Our SportsCapping Odds are the average of the odds from each book listed.

Sportsbook Odds

You will find the odds from each book in the column under its logo. Click on any available odds to view a history of line movements at that book.

Odds Type Filter

Canadian Football League Betting Odds

The most common types of bets for the CFL are point spreads and totals, however, you can also view the money lines or filter by each type of bet using this menu.

Game Segment Filter

Canadian Football League Scores

Some books offer halftime lines or lines for each quarter. We show the full game odds by default but if those other odds are available, you can view them using the drop-down.