How To Bet On Boxing: Bout Winner, Method of Victory and Round Winner
There are some big fight nights on the horizon, with Anthony Joshua set to tackle Francis Ngannou in Saudi Arabia on Friday, March 8 and fellow heavyweights Tyson Fury and Oleksandr Usyk clashing to crown the first undisputed heavyweight champion since 1999 on Saturday, May 18.
There are many more top-level battles upcoming, throughout the weight divisions and boxing is a popular betting sport.
Even when an overwhelming favourite looks to have all angles covered, one big punch can change the course of the fight, as we have seen many times in the past, and there are also a plethora of markets available to bettors.
For those new to betting on boxing, it can be a tricky field to navigate and it’s easy to get lost in the minefield of unbeaten records, styles, trash talk and hype.
To help out, we have developed a guide to the most popular markets with all the information you need ahead of the upcoming big-fight nights.
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How To Bet On the Bout Winner Market
This is the most straightforward way to bet on a fight and it involves picking the winner of the bout.
It’s most frequently a three-way market and it’s worth remembering that the draw can come into play, but it is also possible to bet on a two-way match, with stakes returned in the event of a tie.
Bout winner covers any means of victory from unanimous decision, majority decision, split decision, technical knockout, knockout and disqualification.
So, if for example, a £10 bet was placed on Ngannou to beat Joshua on Friday night at 3/1 and the Cameroonian was to win the contest by any of those methods, the play would be a winner and return £40.
How to bet on the Method of Victory
If you wish to be more specific about the outcome of the fight you can bet on the method of victory.
It’s more rewarding, in terms of bigger odds, but you have to select the fight winner and the means by which they will defeat their opponent.
Let’s take the Joshua v Ngannou contest as an example again to explain this five-way market.
The options available are Joshua to win by stoppage, Joshua to win by decision, Ngannou to win by stoppage, Ngannou to win by decision and the draw.
A £10 wager on Joshua to win by stoppage at 4/7 with bet365, would cover an AJ technical knockout, a knockout triumph for the Watford man or a disqualification for his opponent, and return £15.71, but a victory for the British fighter by any other method would result the wager as a loser, as would a Ngannou win or draw.
How to bet on Round Betting
Selecting the exact round a fighter will win the fight requires the greatest level of accuracy of prediction, but it also offers the greatest rewards.
For example, Ngannou is 40-1 to win Friday night’s heavyweight clash with Joshua in round one, and a £10 wager on the Predator to end the contest in the opening round, would return a whopping £410.
There are 12 rounds to select from in championship fights, with two fighters offering 24 possible outcomes and nothing more than predicting the correct boxer and exact round will yield a return.
In the event of a fighter retiring on his stool between rounds nine and ten for example, it will count as round nine for settlement purposes - the last fully completed round.
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