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How To Place A Football

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How To Place A Football
  1. This guide will walk you through what a football accumulator is, how to place one and some of the shortfalls.
  2. A few helpful hints that may sound silly but are essential: Know the rules of your league! Scoring systems vary dramatically in fantasy football, so make sure you know what settings are in place.

Are you a football fan? Would you like to get involved in someexercise or activity? Have you considered disability football? If not, you will now.

If you’ve always loved cheering for your favourite team from the stands and showing off your team’s colours, but you also want to get more active, then maybe playing disability football isthe thing you need to consider.

In the UK, theFootball Association – more commonly known as the FA – has begun to support disability football initiatives in the last 20 years or so. In 1999, they established the Football Development Programme and that, combined with the launch of the English Federation of Disability Sports (EFDS) in 1998, saw the first real steps towards identifying and embracing disabled footballers and encouraging them to be a part of the beautiful game we all love.

Disabled people who want to get involved inplaying football first need to figure out which category of accessible football they want and can be a part of. The options include:

How

Contents

When a team has possession of the football, it can score points in several ways. Touchdowns, extra points, two-point conversions, field goals, and safeties all can increase a team’s score. Touchdowns A touchdown is worth six points — the ultimate goal. A team scores a touchdown when an offensive player carrying the ball, or a.

Visually impaired and blind football

Players of visually impaired football are classified according to the vision they have in categories B2, B3 and B4.

Once classified, the players play the game a little differently to conventional football. For blind players, there are five players on each team and the match is played on a solid surface. Unlike the non-disabled football, there is no offside rule in blind football, and outfield players have to wear blindfolds and eye patches.

The football contains a lot of small ball bearings. This means it makes a noise, helping the players to identify where on the pitch it is. Finally, the goalkeeper is usually not blind but she or he can’t leave their area.

Hearing impaired and deaf football

Unlike the other types of disability football, the rules for deaf football are no different to the rules for non-disabled players. To qualify, players must have lost 41 decibels or more of their hearing, and hearing aids must be removed before a match starts.

Amputee football

In amputee football, players use two elbow crutches to get around the pitch, while usually dispensing with their prosthetic limbs. Amputee football goalkeepers are normally single arm amputees.

Cerebral palsy football

For this type of disability football, players with cerebral palsy who can stand up and walk gather together in teams of seven a side and play their matches on a smaller pitch. The size of the goals is also made smaller for cerebral palsy football matches.

There is a total number of 60 minutes of match play in cerebral palsy football, divided into two halves of 30 minutes each. The offside rule is not in play in this game, and the ball can be rolled back into play as well as thrown, if preferred.

Football

People with cerebral palsy who are wheelchair users would play wheelchair football rather than with the cerebral palsy-specific rules.

Dwarf football

Similarly to cerebral palsy football, restricted growth individuals play matches on a smaller pitch, eight a side, with the match being divided into two halves of 25 minutes each. Also, a few specific rules apply – headers and sliding tackles are prohibited.

Learning disability football

For football players with a learning disability, a game is usually played with five players on each side. There are different organising bodies that oversee learning disability football, and each has slightly different rules, so do check the relevant rules for the type of learning disability football you will be playing.

Wheelchair and powerchair football

For football players who are wheelchair users, specially adapted chairs are used to engage in play. It is an indoor game, played on a pitch for five a side, and each match has two halves of 20 minutes, totalling 40 minutes altogether.

Players can only be tackled by one player from the opposing team at a time, and there are rules about the size of the football and of the goals. Only two defending players can enter the penalty area at once.

Pan-disability football clubs

Disabled football players can group together to create teams that include individuals with a range of disabilities and impairments.

Get involved

To find teams and clubs to join and start playing disability football across Europe, check out the disability football directory website for guidance. If there are no teams near you, find likeminded individuals and start playing. Who knows, maybe you can start your own team or a club. The point is – if you like football, there’s no excuse not to play it.

Keep reading

A football accumulator, otherwise known as an acca, is a bet which combines multiple selections, of four or more, into a single bet.

This type of bet is popular among casual punters who only have a flutter at the weekend, and can return huge winnings if successful. In this article we will cover how accumulators work, provide some examples and answer some common questions you are likely to have around football accumulators.

If you are completely new to football betting then you might enjoy reading our beginners guide to football betting.

How Does a Football Accumulator Work?

In a football accumulator, the punter makes multiple selections of four or more and combines them into one bet. All selections must be successful for the bet to win.

If you put on a five-fold accumulator and only four selections win, your bet will lose. However, if all five selections are successful, your winnings will be considerably higher than if you had backed them all individually.

The risk of an accumulator bet is greater than that of betting on singles, but the reward can far outweigh the risk.

Example

Place

Let’s say you have made five selections, priced at:

8/13
11/10
7/4
1/1
9/4

Betting on five singles, at a 10 stake for each one, means your initial lay-out would be 50.

If all five selections were successful, your total winnings would be 117.15. This is a decent overall profit of 67.15.

If selection B failed, but the other four were successful, you would still win 96.15 overall. This is a 46.15 profit.

How To Place A Football Bet In Vegas

However, combining all five selections into an accumulator and placing a 50 stake on this bet would return a whopping 3,031.88. This is profit of 2,981.88.

Even if you laid out just a 10 stake, meaning you are already 40 better off before kick-off, your returns would be 606.38.

This is a 596.38 profit from the winning bet and you would save 40 from your initial stake.

Obviously, if selection B was unsuccessful, your returns would be zero.

What Advantages are There to Taking the Increased Risk?

Well, the greater winnings are an extremely good reason for taking a higher risk. The potential for winning large amounts is why so many punters place an accumulator bet every week.

Also, an accumulator bet is great for those who like to follow the action online and look to utilise the cash-out facility.

If a punter makes several selections and the bet is going well, an online bookmaker may offer a decent cash-out amount which enables the punter to make a profit before the bet has even finished.

How Many Selections Makes an Accumulator?

The minimum number of selections for a bet to be classed as an accumulator is usually four.

Under this amount, a bet is either classed as a Single (one selection), Double (two), or Treble (three).

Higher than a four-fold is classed as an accumulator, and there is no upper limit on number of selections for this type of bet. Some bookmakers may impose their own limit, but most will allow a punter to put in as many selections as they like.

Is an Accumulator Available for Different Markets?

Yes.

Most football punters will likely have started by placing a small stake on a match result acca one Saturday afternoon.

However, football betting has evolved and the accumulator bet is widely accepted on most available markets. The most popular, other than Match Result, are Both Teams to Score and Over/Under 2.5 Goals.

How

These are not the only markets though, and some bookmakers will even allow mixed accumulators where a punter can combine selections from different markets into the same bet.

How Do I Place a Football Accumulator?

Once you’ve studied all the information available, and made your selections using an analytical approach as explained in previous articles, you are ready to place your accumulator bet.

If betting online, you will find whichever site you’re using has a section for the market(s) you would like to bet on.

Once you have made your selections, you open your betting slip and select the accumulator option.

If there’s no accumulator option, simply count the amount of selections and select the option for that amount. For example, six selections would be a six-fold.

Once you’ve selected the type of bet, fill in your stake and it should tell you your potential returns before placing the bet. If you’re happy, place the bet.

If you bet in an actual betting shop, as some people still do, you will find dedicated slips for different markets. You mark your selection using a pen, write down your stake and select the type of bet.

If the bets you would like to place do not have a dedicated slip, or you wish to mix selections from different markets, you can write the selections down using a blank slip.

Once you’re happy with your selections, you hand the slip and stake money over to the cashier. They will give you back a slip, which also acts as a receipt, and you will be required to show this when collecting any winnings. Most of the time, this slip will give you a potential return amount.

How To Place A Football Accumulator Bet

Does The Footy Tipster Provide Accumulators?

At the time of writing (September 2017) we don’t provide tips for the sole purpose of putting together accumulators. We’ve written about it before in an article about accumulators vs single/double bets. It boils down to the fact we think that football bettors should focus on losing less often.

Questions about Football Accumulators

If you have any questions or think we haven’t covered something in this post, please feel free to leave a comment below.

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