Alright folks, today was a deep dive into this tennis tipster everyone keeps talking about – Baez and his predictions. Wanted to see if all the hype was real or just hot air. I mean, people throw money based on these things, right? Gotta know.
The Starting Point: Pure Curiosity
It all kicked off when my buddy Dave messaged me saying, “Hey, Baez called another upset!” That got me scratching my head. How often is this guy actually hitting the mark? Saw his name pop up on some forums too, people swearing by his picks. Time to put it to the test myself.

Digging In: Finding the Data
First step? Hit the web. Didn’t trust any single source blindly. Searched for his recent predictions for a specific tournament, let’s say the Sunshine Open. Jotted down every single match Baez gave a winner for. Then, cracked open reliable sports stats sites – the kind everyone uses for official results – and noted what actually happened in each match. Tedious? Yeah. Necessary? Absolutely. Couldn’t just take his word for it.
Here’s a snapshot of what I was tracking:
- Match: Baez pick vs Actual Winner (Big check mark or X)
- The odds at the time Baez made his pick (Important context!)
- Whether it was a straight-up favorite or an underdog call.
Crunching the Numbers (The Ugly Part)
Okay, got about 25 matches tracked from different events recently. Pulled out ye olde calculator – or honestly, just a spreadsheet, because ain’t nobody got time for manual math on a Monday. Here’s what I tallied:
- Total number of matches Baez predicted.
- How many times he got the winner right (Win).
- How many times he got it dead wrong (Loss).
Simple division – Wins divided by Total Matches – gave the raw win percentage. Thought that was it? Nope. Not that simple.
Looking Deeper: Context is King
The raw percentage was one thing, but it felt kinda hollow. Needed more meat on the bone. So I asked:
- Was he just calling the obvious favorites? Anyone can shout “Djokovic wins!” Duh.
- How’d he do with the juicy underdogs? Those are the calls that matter, where you actually make money.
- Were his wins coming against strong opponents, or just when the other guy fell apart?
Started grouping his picks. Separated the obvious favorites (like Novak at 1.20 odds), the slight favorites (odds between 1.20-1.80), and the real risky long shots (odds above 1.80 or real underdogs).
The Cold, Hard Results
Right, the bit you probably skipped to anyway. For this batch I tracked:

- Raw Win Rate: Around 65%. Sounds pretty damn good on the surface. Better than flipping a coin!
- But…
Digging into the groups:
- Calling the massive favorites? Got almost all of them right. Like, 90%. Not surprising.
- Slight favorites (the murky ones)? Win rate dropped to maybe 55-60%. Hit or miss.
- The underdog shouts? This is where it got messy. Only nailed about 1 out of 3 of those big upsets he supposedly spots. So, 30-ish percent? Ouch. This is where the real profits (or losses!) happen.
Also noticed a pattern: sometimes his “correct” pick happened because the favorite just played like crap that day, not necessarily because Baez saw some genius trend. One match, the guy he picked won, but it was only ’cause his opponent got a bad cramp mid-match! Pure luck.
The Aftermath: Putting It Together
Look, the headline “65% win rate” sounds fantastic. Makes you wanna jump on board. But breaking it down tells the real story. He’s solid on the sure things (who mostly win anyway) and really shaky on the risky calls – the exact ones people follow him for hoping to win big. It breaks my heart a little, honestly. All that hype?
In the end, would I blindly tail his picks? Nope. Seems like you’d win plenty backing the huge favorites, but you barely make any profit on those low odds. And when he swings for the fences with an underdog… well, in my little sample, it felt like my bucks going down the drain most of the time. More noise than signal on the interesting bets. Think I’ll stick to watching the beautiful game without pretending I have a crystal ball.