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Right after the exciting Conor McGregor vs. Max Hollway fight, people who take bets (called bookies and agents) need to turn their eyes to UFC Oklahoma happening this coming Saturday, July 18. Using a top-notch UFC betting software is like having a magic money-making tool this summer, especially with more big fights coming up.
Imagine you want to run a betting business, but you don’t want to build all the complicated computer stuff yourself. That’s where a Pay Per Head (PPH) comes in! Think of it like renting a fully-stocked food truck instead of building one from scratch.
Here is how it works in simple steps:
Important Point: Not all PPH tools are built the same! Some advertise super cheap prices but only give you a boring, basic template (cookie-cutter software) that doesn’t help much.
AcePerHead.com is one example. They offer their Pay Per Head service for as little as $3 per player each week. For that small price, you get everything a big professional sportsbook has:
Let’s do the math: If you have 100 players for the World Cup, you pay $300 that week (but you’ll likely bring in far more than that). During the off-season after the World Cup ends and before football starts, if only 10 customers are active, you only pay $30. You only pay for who is actually playing!
UFC fighting is special. It gives betting agents a chance to make money, but it can also be dangerous if you aren’t careful.
Trying to handle all this with just a paper notebook, a basic website, and a prayer is a direct path to a financial knockout.
Important Point: You need professional tools (like a good PPH software) to avoid losing your shirt when managing UFC bets!
A "prop bet" is just a fun bet on something specific happening in the fight, not just who wins. If you use AcePerHead.com, here are all the specific prop bets you will find for the Usman vs. Du Plessis fight:
Here are the current odds for the fighters at UFC Oklahoma. (Quick ELI5 on odds: A minus sign like -400 means that fighter is expected to win, and you’d have to bet that amount to win $100. A plus sign like +300 means they are the underdog, and betting $100 wins you that amount!)
| Fighter (UFC Oklahoma) | Odds |
|---|---|
| Fatima Kline | -400 |
| Tabatha Ricci | +300 |
| Felipe Franco | +160 |
| Levi Rodrigues | -185 |
| Christian Leroy Duncan | -300 |
| Jared Cannonier | +250 |
| Jacobe Smith | -260 |
| Kevin Holland | +220 |
| Mitch Ramirez | +250 |
| Chase Hooper | -300 |
| Alberto Montes | -140 |
| Tommy McMillen | +120 |
| Stewart Nicoll | +675 |
| Alden Coria | -1000 |
| Kamaru Usman | +220 |
| Dricus Du Plessis | -260 |
— Article based on reporting by Ean Lamb, Gambling911.com
To wrap it up like a present: UFC Oklahoma is happening July 18, right after the McGregor/Hollway buzz. If you’re a bookie or agent, using a Pay Per Head (PPH) software like AcePerHead is the smart, cheap way (starting at $3 per player) to handle the crazy, exciting world of UFC betting. UFC gives you year-round action and tons of fun prop bets, but the odds move fast and smart bettors are watching—so you need good software to stay safe and make serious dough.
1. What does "Pay Per Head" (PPH) mean in simple terms?
It means a bookie pays a small weekly fee for each player they have. In exchange, a company gives them all the tools (websites, bet lines, support) to run a betting business without building it themselves.
2. Why is betting on UFC fights risky without software?
UFC odds change super fast (because of injuries or one punch), and smart bettors look for mistakes. Managing many bets across 12 fights with just a notebook can cause a bookie to lose a lot of money.
3. What are "prop bets" in UFC?
These are side bets on specific things, like "will the fight go the distance?" or "how many knockdowns will happen?" instead of just betting on who wins the fight.
4. How much does AcePerHead cost for a small bookie?
It starts at just $3 per player per week. So if you only have 10 active players in the off-season, you only pay $30 that week!
5. What do the plus (+) and minus (-) signs mean in the odds table?
A minus (-) means the fighter is favored to win (you bet more to win $100). A plus (+) means they are the underdog (you bet $100 to win that bigger amount).