Pro Staking Plan
The Pro Staking Plan is a progressive betting strategy designed to recover losses and achieve an increasing profit target.
How the Pro Staking Plan Works
Set a Base Profit Target:
- Begin with a fixed target for the first bet, e.g., 5 units.
- Incrementally increase the target for each subsequent bet by the base target amount (e.g., Bet 2 = 10, Bet 3 = 15, and so on).
Calculate Stakes:
- For each bet, calculate the stake based on the current target and accumulated losses: Stake=(Current Target+Accumulated Losses) / Divisor
- The divisor is typically set to 3 to moderate stakes.
Dynamic Adjustments:
- Wins: Add the profit from the win to the accumulated wins/losses (AWL). The series ends only when the AWL exceeds the target.
- Losses: Add the stake to the accumulated losses and continue to the next bet.
Pro Staking Plan Example with Varied Outcomes
Assumptions:
- Base profit target: 5 units.
- Divisor: 3.
- Odds are dynamic and listed in the Odds column.
Key Takeaways
1. Dynamic Stake Adjustment:
- Stakes increase or decrease based on the accumulated losses or profits, ensuring recovery and progression toward the target.
2. Odds Impact:
- Wins with higher odds (e.g., Bet 8 at 5.0) significantly impact the AWL, helping recover losses more efficiently.
3. Stopping Rule:
- The series ends when the AWL exceeds or equals the target for the current bet (e.g., AWL = +50 at Bet 8).
Benefits of the Pro Staking Plan
Profit Recovery:
- One win not only recovers previous losses but also achieves the profit target for the series.
Flexibility:
- Adjustable divisors and stake calculations allow bettors to customize risk levels.
Discipline and Strategy:
- Encourages disciplined betting with clear progression and stopping rules.
Final Thoughts
The Pro Staking Plan is a robust betting system that balances risk and reward through dynamic stake adjustments. It is most effective when paired with disciplined bankroll management and a clear understanding of odds and probabilities.
The image below shows the example above as it would be in TSM.
Frequently Asked Questions
Answer:
- You set a Base Profit Target (e.g. 5 units).
- The target increases by that same base amount for every next bet:
– Bet 1 → Target = 5
– Bet 2 → Target = 10
– Bet 3 → Target = 15
– and so on. - The series only ends when your Accumulated Win/Loss (AWL) meets or exceeds the current target after a winning bet.
Answer:
- The Divisor (usually 3) controls how aggressive the stakes become.
- Lower divisor = bigger stakes / more aggressive.
- Higher divisor = smaller stakes / more conservative.
Answer:
- Win: Add the net profit to your AWL. If AWL now meets or beats the current target → series ends in profit. If not → continue with the updated AWL and next (higher) target.
- Loss: Add the full stake to Accumulated Losses and move to the next bet with the increased target.
Answer: Yes — it’s one of the more aggressive recovery plans in TSM. Stakes can grow quickly during losing runs, but the increasing target + one good win at decent odds can deliver strong recovery.
Always use proper bankroll management and a stop-loss.
- Base Profit Target
- Divisor
- Starting Bank
- Stop Loss (highly recommended)
- Minimum / Maximum stake limits
- Reset after successful series
- All other standard TSM options
Answer :
- One strong win can wipe out losses and deliver the full series profit.
- Fully automated in TSM — no manual spreadsheets needed.
- Easy one-click comparison against Level, Parlay, Recovery, etc.
- Built-in Monte Carlo simulation and visual tracking.
- Great for systems with a decent strike rate and average odds that can deliver occasional bigger payouts.
Answer: Only when AWL ≥ Current Target after a win.
You can also force a reset with a Stop Loss (e.g. max % drawdown from series start) to protect your bank.
Answer:
- Use it with selections that hit at a reasonable strike rate and offer decent average odds (higher odds help close series faster).
- Start with a conservative divisor (3 or higher).
- Always test thoroughly on your historical data first.
- Monitor maximum drawdown — progressive plans like this can have long recovery periods.