ProBall Club – Final review

ProBall Club

December 3 2012

Sergeant Steve Reviews ProBall Club

PASSED AND APPROVED

Proball Club

Hi Bloggers,

As stated in the introduction I kept five separate banks and will review as such. I started with a $2000 bank in each, having $100 bets on all selections, except for the golf which I started with $5000 as there was a higher number of bets in that system. Therefore 20 point banks with a 50 point bank for golf.

To recap, ProBall Club gives the services of 5 separate tipsters for both Sports Bets (Football, Golf and Tennis) and Horse Racing, for both back and Lay bets (as follows).

  • Football Lays Service – laying the draw;
  • Football Back Service – double chance bets, which covers both the team you are backing and the draw;
  • Racing Lays Service – lays low priced favourites
  • Pro Tennis Tips – straight match win betting; and
  • The Golf tips service offers 2 main types of bets, outright bets (each/way) and 2/3 Ball Bets.

There was also an additional tip given out called ‘Profit/Perm tips’ which were football accumulator bets. These weren’t ‘official’ bets and dried up about half way through the review so I am ignoring them for the purposes of this final review.

I didn’t actually have to know anything about any of these sports to place these bets. I just received an email and put them on. There doesn’t appear to be a money back guarantee if you are not satisfied with this product. The cost is £47 per month all up.

ProBall Club claimed to have made £40,085.00 profit in the first 7 months of 2012 at an average of almost £6,000.00 per month (to £100 stakes). I started with a bank of $13,000 and finished with a bank of $16,954, a $3,954 profit and a 30.4% return for the trial period, much better than bank interest! And this result was exacerbated by an extraordinarily bad last day of the trial where it lost $2,390 so if we finish the trial a day earlier we make a $6,344 profit, a return of 48.8%. But that’s punting I’m afraid. Anyway, on to the nitty gritty.

 

 

Pro Football Lays (Lay the Draw)

 

So altogether there were 109 qualifiers, 89 winners and 20 losers for a strike rate of 82 per cent.

I cannot confirm the total amount staked however the bank moving from $2,000 to $3,795 represents a return on investment of around 90 per cent in less than 3 months, which is nothing to be ashamed of in this economic climate!

4 stars

Start Balance: $2,000

Final Balance: $3,795

 

Pro Football Backs (Double Chance)

Altogether there were 114 qualifiers and 64 winners for a strike rate of 56 per cent.

So therefore the total amount staked was $11,400 for a return of $11,266, a return on investment of around -1.2 per cent, a little disappointing. This system never really threatened at any stage.

2.5 stars

Start Balance: $2,000

Final Balance: $1,866

 

Pro Racing Lays

 

A bit unlucky with this system as it really gathered momentum then lost nearly $1,700 on the final 2 days. Altogether there were 113 qualifiers and 88 winners (losers) for a strike rate of 78 per cent.

 

Again, I cannot confirm the total amount staked however the bank moving from $2,000 to $954 represents a return on investment of around -52 per cent, very disappointing but also a little unlucky. This system was looking the goods for a long period of time until the end after being sluggish at the start.

 

Failed

 

Start Balance: $2,000

Final Balance: $954

 

Pro Tennis Tips

 

Altogether there were 66 qualifiers and 47 winners for a strike rate of 72 per cent.

 

So therefore the total amount staked was $6,600 for a return of $7,389, a return on investment of around 12 per cent, not bad at all. This system took a while to get rolling but was reasonably solid.

 

3 stars

 

Start Balance: $2,000

Final Balance: $2,789

 

Pro Golf Tips

 

I will divide this analysis into 2 parts, the each ways and the head to heads. I have to own up to a couple of errors along the way so revised final result is below.

 

Each ways

 

Altogether there were 121 qualifiers, with 8 winners and 16 further placegetters for a strike rate of 19.8 per cent. The total amount staked was $12,100 for a return of $13,521, a return on investment of around 12 per cent, not bad at all. This system throws up few winners, but when it does it is very worthwhile.

 

Head to Heads

 

Altogether there were 125 qualifiers, with 59 winners and 18 ties for a win strike rate of 47.2 per cent and a ‘non lose’ of 61.6 per cent. The total amount staked was $12,500 for a return of $13,629, a return on investment of around 9 per cent, not bad at all. So overall the golf is a pretty solid earner.

 

4 stars

 

 

Start Balance: $5,000

Final Balance: $7,550

 

Final Analysis

 

Any system that makes a 30%+ return in less than 3 months has to be a good one though for me I’d be cherry picking the lay the draw and golf tips personally. I have provided my ratings for each of the individual systems and I am giving ProBall Club an overall rating of 3 stars but I believe overall it may well perform better than that, I think this review might have landed in a time of lesser performance.

 

Start Balance: $13,000

Final Balance: $16,954

[See the Proball Club sales page here…]

Regards

Sergeant Steve Reviews ProBall Club