A Rant about inside Information

SPY STEPS OUT OF THE SHADOWS

SPIRIT OF THE LAW becomes his first runner from the lucrative Notebook feature, winning at AYR on Monday at odds of  7/2

This follows Saturday’s advice for Ahtoug at 11/2 – a strong word for Homeric at 9/2 [Broxbourne nominated as a big danger] – and a suggestion that War Command was an opposable 2/5 favourite in Sunday’s Group 1 feature at the Curragh.

Can you afford to be without his comments and advice in his free feature on this site?

see the Notebook tab above.

A RANT FROM Mr ANGRY…

(That’s Spy … not Bob!)

I thought I would write this while my tail is up. Also, today, (Tuesday) is a non event for me as far as racing is concerned.

I have touched on the subject of information before and felt the need to do so again – if only because, judging by the quality of many messages doing the rounds, some of you out there need protection.

If you think that sounds drastic or that I am over-hyping my importance, I ask you to hear me out.

Racing is awash with rumour and counter-rumour, whispers and half-truths. Some so-called Derby or Royal Ascot contenders in May are still maidens ploughing their way round Pontefract in September. We have heard the whisper that such-and-such yard has a better filly than the one that has just won the Cherry Hinton. Last year a notable Charlie Hills insider was busy telling me Just The Judge was only ordinary. He persisted with this right into autumn, despite my claims to the contrary based on evidence my own eyes provided. Far too many message-carriers give the impression of being in possession of the facts in question when only knowing half the story.

Frankly, these big mouths annoy me intensely. They seem to believe their kudos is such that they only have to mention the name of a horse for the rest of us to scuttle off in search of a bookmaker naïve enough to accept our money. If they know so much, why do they never seem able to answer the most obvious of questions?

Inside information is desirable; surviving without it in this business is difficult. I can live without it most of the time, but if someone is going to pass me a message – particularly if I have chased it up because of an interest in the race in question – I want the answer to be credible. I don’t just wish to be told the John Cleese (bleedin’ obvious). So would-be purveyors of such information – take stock: If I ask a question about a horse, don’t respond with the working-well-looks-a-million-dollars nonsense. I assume any horse deemed worthy of taking part in a race (unless it is not off) is working well enough to justify a place in the line-up. Let’s take it as red the horse looks well and is working adequately shall we?

How is it that once asked the salient question that is not readily available, these so-called informants don’t know the answer. If the horse hasn’t run for two months, I would like to know why. That’s when there is a lengthy and heavy pause. Actually, that is why I am asking in the first place. I know the horse can win if returning to that run at Ascot when beaten a neck in a sixty grand handicap – that ain’t what I want to know.

I want to know where it’s been since May. On its holidays? Been on jury service – had an offer of a screen test in Hollywood for a Seabiscuit remake – has there been a bereavement in the family?

Racehorses aren’t normally prevented from racing by design. Normally such an absence is a sign something has gone wrong – the plan has shifted from the A variety to the B version – flagging up a danger signal.

Look, if a city dealer told me to buy shares in, let us say, Talk Talk without stipulating why, I might take note, but keep my hand in my pocket. If he told me Talk Talk was about to take over Orange, now that would be a different matter. Obviously, such a move would mean an increase in Talk Talk shares and, armed with the full facts, I am now in a position to make a considered judgement.

Similarly, if wishing to know a piece of inside information on a horse, that is what I am after not a scrap of tittle-tattle I can read in the newspaper the next day. Okay, I accept a good deal of so-called information is a combination of what is doing the rounds in the pubs in Newmarket and Lambourn, or what the work riders swopped over breakfast after a morning’s gallop. That means it might be part fact, part opinion and part optimism. It can be useful but it is not the last word. It is merely a view based on a better set of facts than those available to the man just leaving his bathroom in Maida Vale.

I have been in this business long enough to risk upsetting people. I would rather upset them than waste my money on a half-chance. I can pick those out myself! As a result, I am not afraid to ask the hard questions, even if those supplying their version of the answers take umbrage when I cast doubt on their version of events.

You might deduce from this tirade that I have recently fallen victim to a Chinese Whisper of the most expensive kind. Actually, I have not but only because I was able to outsmart the messengers, all of whom thought they knew something yesterday that in hindsight they did not.

What they did was to take a collective flyer. They took the evidence at their disposal and drew the wrong conclusions, largely because (1) they were too lazy to check the information presented to them and (2) because they wanted it to be true so assumed it was, making two and two into five.

I guess I should rejoice that I am cleverer than the average bear this game attracts. I hung up my ego on a hook a long time ago. And, to a degree, the more idiots that populate this business the better my chance of cashing in on their laziness and inefficiency.

The purpose of this is to suggest that those of you similarly exposed in the future take stock, ask the obvious and don’t get caught up in the euphoria before a race that so often turns into sourness afterwards.

Always remember it is your money; therefore, the final decision whether to play or not should be yours. Don’t get swept away by the rumour-machine. Those that operate it will be back the next day and the one after that. And isn’t it funny how they are conspicuous by their absence when they have relayed a bad message?

We are not supposed to shoot piano players or messengers. As far as I am concerned the first group is safe. The second better watch out …

 

note from Bob

Spy and I were not communicating regularly last summer and as you’ll recall our Hills man was max on Just the Judge when he won for us in Ireland!

Just serves to illustrate how many differing opinions there are in this game. As it happens I know Spy’s source he’s referring too. And he’s a solid man, good judge and you make money following him normally. Tricky game eh? But that’s what makes it fun and interesting!

Another week

Regular postings from ‘Spy’…

Spy is Horse Racing Pro’s Resident Racing Journalist. He’s an ex odds compiler with over 20 years experience working or one of the big firms and has a wealth of racing knowledge which he loves to share in a weekly, often mildly provocative chat! …


ANOTHER WEEK …

We are nearing the end of another racing week. Windsor and Pontefract came and went although Windsor returns tomorrow. Saving its best card for Saturday, Haydock is another track that seems reluctant to leave the stage.

In truth, apart from the impressive win of Moonlight Cloud in France on Sunday, not a lot has occurred. Even Newbury wheeled out a so-so card on Sunday, but the show goes on.

This weekend we have the Shergar Cup – the only race meeting where jockeys are according pride of place in the commentary. The event costs those wishing to attend in Premier Style over £40.

Admittance is free to under eighteens, although those dressed as Angus Young out of AC/DC will need to provide identification. Even so, taking into account the car park and then sundry expenses such as racecards, hamburgers and drinks – not to mention visits to the Tote windows to back those catchily-named horses – a party of four in search of ‘family fun’ at the Berkshire venue is liable to spend somewhere between two and four hundred pounds.

That’s a lot of money for an afternoon at the races. For that you could put the wife and kids in a kennel and jet off to Paris or to one of those all-inclusive weekend breaks in Spain.

The Shergar Cup is the brainchild of Sheikh Mohammed. Some say he dreamt up this scheme under the influence of too much mint tea. Racing professionals tend to shun this card; even certain trainers seem less than keen – presumably because they are unable to book a jockey of their choice.

Noticeably those most supportive are trainers with a vested interest. Jockeys don’t mind giving it a go if they have nothing better to do. Aged fifty, Rest Of The World Captain, Gary Stevens, returned from retirement this year, winning the Preakness Stakes at Pimlico (not the one in South London but in Maryland) in May on Oxbow.

A man with a history in this country for those old enough to remember it, he is a welcome visitor from America. Notable defectors from the home side and victims of the fixture list this year include Richard Hughes, Ryan Moore, Frankie Dettori, Jamie Spencer and William Buick.

By design the card comprises of tight Class 2 and 3 handicaps. Possibly the 1.30 and 2.05 present the best betting opportunities.

Improving Broxbourne returns to the scene of her Brown Jack triumph in the 1.30, where runner-up Homeric receives an 8lbs pull for just over three lengths. That form looks key. Broxbourne may be good enough to follow up but it is likely to be close.

Ahtoug (hardly a catchy name for the Tote punters) has a serious chance in the 2.05. Partnered by Brazilian-born Joao Moreira, who is the leading rider in Singapore, he will not lack assistance from the saddle.

The Shergar Cup presents racing stalwarts with the opportunity to complain. It is all a bit too much like fun and frivolity for their liking and, after all, racing should be serious!

The thing is, whether we like it or not, Ascot will be packed on Saturday, the bars and ice cream sellers will do good business and there is a concert after racing. So the bandstand will be rocking to the sounds of Bjorn Again and Waterloo as opposed to the strains of Rule Britannia at the Royal meeting.

As it could be argued the day offers something for everyone, it does sound a bit like a chance to sell racing to those that don’t usually follow the sport. The Grumpy Brothers will have to accept that for at least one day of the racing year, they take second place.

Elsewhere on Saturday, there is Group action at Haydock with the first serious test of the year for one-time Derby aspirant Telescope in the Rose Of Lancaster Stakes. This may not be a strong Group 3 contest but we will know a lot more about the son of Galileo after his appearance here.

Newmarket also stage a Group 3 event with the renewal of the Sweet Solera Stakes. After an impressive win last week at Goodwood, Amazing Maria turns out minus her regular jockey, Frankie Dettori. He is claimed by his retaining owner (Bin Hamad Al Thani) to ride Midnite Angel. This presents trainer Ed Dunlop with a jockey headache but could also result in his filly starting at too big a price. Clearly the absence of Dettori in the plate does not reflect the jockey’s personal opinion and, having stated after her victory last week that Amazing Maria was good enough to win the Fillies’ Mile at Ascot, punters could do worse than to take heed of the hint. It is likely that the reputedly highly strung Amazing Maria, effectively racing on home territory, will have less to be concerned about on Saturday than when asked to travel.

There is an abundance of Group action on Sunday although none of it takes place on these shores. There is a seller at Leicester and several Class 5 handicaps dotted about the domestic cards. It is a different story at the Curragh, where there are four Group races including the Group 1 Phoenix Stakes that sees the return of Coventry winner, War Command, one of five entries for Aidan O, Brien. Those of us left wondering after Royal Ascot if this War Chant colt really was the deal he was cracked up to be will find themselves better informed after Sunday.

However, France takes pride of place in the quality stakes when Deauville stages what promises to be a cracking Prix Jacques Le Marios.

Principle contenders are Dawn Approach (who had a hard race at Goodwood and whose participation is likely to be more a Sheik Mohammed mint tea decision than a Jim Bolger considered one), French Derby winner Intello (who may be better over further) and Moonlight Cloud (who may be better over shorter). Add the presence of ultra-tough Elusive Kate and Declaration Of War and we have the race of the week by an EU kilometre.

Life's a gamble

LIFE IS A GAMBLE …

The clue is in the title.

It is called gambling after all.

Those of us that try to minimise risk cannot hide behind formbooks or talk tactics on the phone forever. Although a professional approach to betting means you can severely reduce the risk you take, it is still prevalent in any transaction that involves a degree of gambling. Eventually, if you are to play, you have to walk the high wire without a safety net.

Most cutting-edge decisions necessitate an informed gamble. Buying a house, a car – even choosing a life partner contains an element of uncertainty. A surgeon once told me that they are not immune, considering themselves to be in the risk business.

If you wait for the perfect bet you will be waiting for a long time; and when you think you have unearthed it, chances are the selection in question will be 1/3.

As we all know, no one ever made a living backing horses – or anything else – at that sort of price.

So, after all the preliminary work and scrutiny, if we are to put our money down, we have to take a chance – become risk-takers. And as soon as we do that, the game changes. No longer the careful calculating analyst, we become a gambler, a punter that is at the whim of Fortune.

Those backing Sky Lantern in the Nassau at Goodwood on Saturday were required to do just that.

There were plenty of reasons to suppose Sky Lantern would win. For a start, she was the best horse in the race. Elusive Kate had endorsed the Falmouth form and, as a strong traveller, there was every possibility that Sky Lantern would stay the extra yardage. The price of 2/1 – or 7/4 at the death – was of course wrong, but if you had a strong view – did that matter?

Every horse, every proposition in life has its price. However, it is rarely unequivocally correct. Prices are a reflection of opinion. The only variance is the worth of those expressing such an opinion. When using market forces as a guide, such opinion succumbs to supply and demand.

There comes a point when layers will yield to weight of money even if it transgresses their own views; similarly, punters often have to accept their price is no longer relevant in the grand scheme of things. It is always possible that both sides on this particular divide can be mistaken.

Therefore, if you thought Sky Lantern was a 7/2 chance to win the Nassau, were you justified in taking half those odds? Without being emphatic, the answer has to be – not really. The negatives obviously were the trip and the fact that as a filly, particularly after a busy season at the highest level, there was always the chance she would underperform. Then there were the logistics of winning from a high draw and the general problems associated with races run at the helter-skelter track this is Goodwood. But trying to quantify the odds of possible eventualities before the race is not an exact science. It has to be accepted that prices arrived at by both layers and players are open to interpretation.

Therefore, a price of 7/2 Sky Lantern probably swung too far in the favour of the punter – her final SP of 7/4, too far in the favour of the bookmaker. Of course, when it all boils down to liquid in the stew, what really matters is the result.

To that end, the race made painful viewing. Having walked on water all week, Richard Hughes may have found his own strike rate intoxicating.

A great jockey with such a perfect style that makes it all look silky smooth and easy, for a moment down the straight, he had the chance to remain in the clear on the outside, but chose instead to head for cover back in the pack, therefore riding into trouble that even he could not overcome.

In fairness, this is the sudden death dilemma jockeys face each riding day. Unlike the majority of mortals, they do not have the luxury of considered opinion. Their business demands instant decision-making. They are applauded when right, castigated when wrong.

I have no idea if Richard Hughes is being criticised by others for his ride on Sky Lantern. If he is, after all his triumphs this week, that is a shame. And in his defence, the filly did not look quite as bouncy as she had in previous races this year.

It is possible she remembered the whip that flew across her face last time and that Richard Hughes opted to shuffle her back in the pack to galvanise an interest he felt was on the wane.

Unfortunately, she hesitated for a fatal stride before committing and the race was lost in an instant. Whatever the reason, it is true to suppose we did not see the Sky Lantern we had seen at Newmarket, The Curragh or Royal Ascot.

Returning to any pre-race appraisal made: if you considered Sky Lantern likely to win and made her winning chance 7/2, is it reasonable to make her a lay because she trades at 7/4? It is my contention that it is not. If the win price fails to meet your criteria, surely the answer is not to bet. To turn all your logic on its head and make the filly a lay mocks your opinion. Some gamblers are price-driven, most of us are to a degree, but surely, your assessment stands whether or not you actually pull up your money.

You do have to let winners win in this business, just as you have to be grateful when a horse you did fancy but failed to back for whatever reason is beaten.

To use a high street analogy: buying a sales bargain you never wear is pointless; having the best value wardrobe in the country that never sees the light of day means those supposed bargains were a waste of money. If you want a Hugo Boss suit, it is probably best to pay the market price for it.

Sometimes you just have to play the odds even if they fail to come up to your expectations.

Those backing J Wonder at Newmarket were hardly rejoicing when they saw the morning line. However, armed with the knowledge they were backing a strongly fancied horse, were rewarded by the courage of their convictions when watching it burst clear.

How not to win a Porsche

Note From Bob

A typically self effacing tongue -in-cheek piece from “SPY” after not having the best Goodwood he’s ever had.

(But haven’t we all been there at some time?)

NO CIGAR, NO PORSCHE – NOT EVEN

AN ICE CREAM…

If we believe the marketing, this is supposed to be a glorious week. With a mizzle straight out of Wuthering Heights and a sea fret from Jamaica Inn, it started as anything but.

However, despite the rain, the ground, although on the easy side, was not soft. Anyway, I have a plan. I am taking a leaf out of one of those self-help manuals – you know the sort of thing – written by a know-it-all that charges £100 a shot for a seminar. He promises to reveal the secrets of success to those eager to listen. You and I could be part of this high-powered world with correct coaching, at least according to the speaker who seems to have it all wrapped up. Makes you wonder what he is doing targeting losers like us when he could be making inroads into his second million.

Without needing such assistance, I provide my own motivation. I set myself a betting target with a reward at its end. The target is to win between three and five thousand pounds on the week. The reward is to use the money to buy a Porsche offered in an eBay auction.

Owning a Porsche is top of many a list of things to do. This one is a 1999, 2.5 Roadster. Porsche have hardly tampered with the shape of this car over the years, so equipped with private plates the age of this particular model will not be evident. It is in turquoise with a black leather interior. It has only done 52,000 miles and has a year’s MOT. A year can be a lifetime in this game and I can picture myself rolling up to Kempton on a Wednesday evening, drawing admiring glances from those that know me. They will obviously conclude I am doing well and it could be good for business. That aside, it has always been an ambition to drive a Porsche – here is my chance …

Day One and I am enthusiastic. I am prepared to take on penalised Aljamaaheer with Producer who is a seven-furlong specialist, will like the ground and has solid overall form, including when beating the favourite at Leicester earlier in the year. Clearly I am on the right lines as they have withdrawn Aljamaaher. Richard Hannon (I am not sure which one), promptly sends out the first two winners.

He trains Producer. I don’t need to know that. It reminds me of a day at Newcastle when Willie Carson rode five winners, his only loser being the one I backed! This puts me in mind of how finite luck is. Producer goes to post calmly enough but takes a fierce hold on the way back, effectively losing his race in the first hundred yards. Now I remember him doing the same thing at Epsom. I have lost my money in cold blood. And why did I so readily overlook Garswood? This is not a good start.

When I think about it, a Porsche is a bit of an indulgence. I mean, it will be expensive to insure and is unlikely to better 30MPG. And it will probably spend most of its life outside the house making the drive look nice. It could be a temptation to burglars, and what about the likelihood of its soft top being slashed in Kingston’s car park? Still, it is a Porsche…

Day Two and, running off a penalty in the opener, I reckon Broxbourne could be well-in. She has the beating of chief rival Lieutenant Miller on their Doncaster form earlier in the season and won readily at Ascot last week. However, there is the question of the trip. We know she gets two miles, but this is 2m 5f. Backing her would be taking a bit of a chance. She is by Refuse To Bend and he won a Guineas. These races can be very hard to solve, best I stick to the bet of the day – if not the bet of the week – Excess Knowledge. I watch Joe Fanning conjure a winning burst from Broxbourne that sees the partnership mow down Lieutenant Miller inside the last furlong.

Excess Knowledge handles Goodwood like a drunken sailor on leave in Hong Kong. Gathered together he starts to find his stride. Then he is hampered by Spillway – a 33/1 chance; his jockey loses his reins, he gets going again but is beaten by a fast-closing head. Results like this leave you shell-shocked. You try to keep your composure but feel someone has it in for you.

Clearly Excess Knowledge should have won, but somehow didn’t. It’s as if someone up there doesn’t want you to get above yourself. Results like this make you question what you are doing.

I backed Toronado at Ascot where he should have won the St James’s Palace Stakes but for a crunching bump. Justice has been done; I cheer him home with misty eyes as if I have backed him again here. Then comes the realisation that such emotion is costly and I am left to wonder why I didn’t have the courage of my convictions.

I am intent on backing Ribbons in the handicap but she is reluctant to go down. Horses are implacable but she seems to have a just-been-stung-by-a-wasp expression on her face. I am beginning to feel an affinity with her. She consents to start and pricks her ears a furlong out before taking off, winning easily.

Let me tell you a little more about the Porsche. Indulge me; talking about it might be as close as I am liable to get. Did I mention its distinctive colour; that it is taxed and that according to the photographs is relatively free of scratches? It seems there is another significant Porsche fact to impart. Right now, someone other than me is going to own it. Perhaps they backed Garswood and Toronado.

Day Three looks like being quiet. The two with the best chances appear to be Figure Of Speech and Wild Coco but are short. I decide to let them run. It is hot and I have a cold lager in the sun.

Day Four and it is not too late to make amends. Another foot may be about to rev the pedal on the Porsche, but I have a strong fancy for Smoothtalkinrascal in the King George Stakes. I will spare you my reasoning. He is available at 10/1. The race is tough but, surely, Montiridge is an able back up in the second race. He looks primed to add to the Hannon tally and will pay for the day whatever happens. He wins but Smoothtalkinrascal is not keen at the start, fluffing his race as the stalls open. Once again, I am prepared to lose but there is no need to make me feel like a jerk!

Never mind a motor car, there is a coupon in the Racing Post that entitles me to a free ice cream. I am beginning to think I should take advantage of it while I can.

Day Five on Saturday looks impossible! If you haven’t won by now it is unlikely you are about to do so in races like the Stewards’ Cup or the sprint handicap that opens the card. I assume Sky Lantern will stay the ten furlongs of the Nassau, but have no desire to pay to find out.

The Porsche is sold. The hammer fell at £4,797. Someone is behind the wheel as I write. I bet the top is down and the driver has a big blonde in a short skirt sitting in the leather seat beside him. The pair of them will be listening to something like Fleetwood Mac or Tom Petty on the stereo.

What do I care? Sunday is Family Fun Day at Leicester. I could do with some fun. However, I don’t have a family and am not going to Leicester. I mean, without a car, how would I get there?

Are you Flushing £50 notes down the toilet?

How this simple tactic can

Save You £5,777.72

After the seasonal celebrations last weekend my exhausted wife asked me to pick up a couple of items from the supermarket on the way home.

I’m not a shopper. I’d almost go as far as to say I hate shopping! I’m more of a buyer than shopper. If I need a new shirt I just go to a shirt shop and as soon as I see one I like I buy it.

My wife would visit the first shop in town … then no matter how much she liked the item she’d have to check just about every darned shop in town to see if there was anything better … 2 hours later we’d end up back in the first shop buying something we could have had 2 hours ago! Sound familiar?

So I dashed in and bunged the items in a basket ready to rush out. A sign caught my eye.

“Spend £60 or more and get 10p per litre off your next fuel”

Mmm … my wife drives a thirsty X5. It’s a mind boggling £100+ to fill it up! around 90 litres. I made a quick mental calculation and reckoned I’d already got about £50 quid’s worth of shopping in the basket! (it was supposed to be just a pint of milk and loaf of bread but when I saw the pack of beers on offer … and we needed some wine …)

It was a no brainer. Spend another £10 and I’d get £9 off the next fill up! In went a steak, bacon and eggs! Effectively the last tenner’s worth was free!

Would you drive a mile further to fill up at 30p per litre cheaper?

I chuckled to myself wondering why I was so bothered about getting 10p per litre off my petrol? And then I remembered. I just plain feel petrol is too expensive.! Do you remember it wasn’t that long ago it was under £1 per litre? When I was a kid it was under £1 per gallon! I could fill my first car up for around a tenner!

And so I started to think …

If there was a petrol station that was a little bit out of my way and fuel was always 10p per litre cheaper would I make a tiny detour to fill up there rather than the closest? mmm …

What if it was 20p cheaper? 30p?

You bet I would!

Are you flushing £50 notes down the toilet?

So what the heck has cheap petrol got to do with betting? Quite a lot actually. You see when you’re having a bet most of us think about the stake. I’ll have a £50 bet. or a £100. We don’t work out the PRICE of the win.

Let’s suppose you’d like to win £1,000

The odds are 4/1 with your bookie. You have to bet £250 to win £1000.

The Price of the bet is £250.

But what if a bookie down the road is offering 5/1?

To win the same £1,000 now only costs £200

The price with him is just £200!

If you bet with the bookie offering 4/1 instead of the bookie offering 5/1 you might as well take a £50 note and flush it down the toilet! You just paid £250 for something you can buy for £200! You paid 25% over the odds!

You wouldn’t pay 180p per litre for petrol and you should NOT pay £250 for a £200 bet!

30-65% discount in ONE race!

Here’s an example of a race where we bet the winner, Viscount Vert but ALL the horses placed were available at widely differing prices. I’m using this an illustration because the odds of the winner are not huge so it’s a fairly typical race.

I’ve seen races where you could get double the odds. Or half price bets!

Viscount-vert-race-odds_458x344

Here’s a summary of the best and worse price for the winner, 2nd and 3rd. The difference is staggering … ranging from 30% to an enormous 65%! And a 65% difference is like paying £165 to fill a£100 petrol tank!

Best          worse     Difference
Price          price

  • Winner     –       Viscount Vert           3/1            9/4        30%
  • 2nd         –       My Lord                  20/1          14/1       43%
  • 3rd          –      Calypso Magic         33/1          20/1       65%

Notice how Ladbrokes were the worse odds on 2 out of the 3 horses! It’s no coincidence they have the most betting shops in the country so it’s easier to find a Ladbrokes shop than any other.

They may even be the closest shop to you?

Stan James were best price on 2 horses and Betfred on one. This is a lttle unusual because very often thebest odds are with Bet365. They were even bigger but we’d hoovered up the bigger odds before I happened to take this screenshot!

So to bet Viscount Vert to win £1,000 would have cost you £444.44 with Ladbrokes but only £333.33 with Stan James.

That’s a lot more expensive. £111.11 more for the same bet to be precise.

Now multiply that up. Place one bet a week for 52 weeks of the year and if you pay £111.11 too much for each one that’s a staggering £5,777.72. Pays for your summer holiday!

If you’d bet the 3rd horse Calypso Magic with Sporting bet at 20/1 instead of the 33/1 at Stan James you’d have paid a staggering 65% more!

To put that in perspective petrol at my local garage is 131.9 p per litre. Pay65% more than you should and it’d be a staggering 217.63p per litre! At 65% less a frugal 79.9p

Best odds advised

Because it’s worth so much money to you whenever I advise clients of a horse to bet I’ll always specify which bookies are offering the best odds.So if you happen to beclosest to a Ladbrokes or hills or Corals you’ll know if their odds are worth taking or whether you should call your independent bookie.

And during January I’m offering a free trial of a service where I’ll tell you who has the best odds for any horse you’re betting whether you got it from me or not.

Just text me on 07797 800 655 the phrase Best Odds plus the horse’s name and I’ll text you back with where best to bet.This is NOT a premium rate text number and texts will be charged at your normal rate or included in your text bundle if you have one.

How to save that £5,777.72

The moral of the story is you simply must have a spread of bookies to bet with.

Many recreational investors will only bet with one of the major high street bookies like Ladbroke, hills or Corals. They tend to offer the worse prices and fleece the punters.

There are 3 reliable, solvent and trustworthy bookmakers who most often have better odds than the high street bookies. You should have an account with them. What’s more as a New Year’s Promotion they are offering a FREE bet worth up to £200 for anyone opening a new account.

It’s a New Year’s bargain not to be missed and a great way to start 2013 with some bookies cash in your pocket!

 

Warm Regards

 

Bob Rothman

Stacking the Odds in Your favour

PS Here’s the 3 best bookies who often offer better odds AND who are offering a FREE bet when you open an account this week!

Simply click on these links below

  1.  Best         –   £200 FREE Bet365

  2. Good        –    £50 Free Betfred

  3.  Useful      –   £10 Free Stan James

Horseracing Information

A DELIGHTFUL FREE FORMAT PIECE FROM SPY! …

THE ART OF WINNER-FINDING

           (Well, sort of)

‘DO YOU EXPECT ME TO TALK?’

‘No, Mr Bond, I expect you to die.’

Sorry, I could not resist it. The famous line from Goldfinger – I always wanted to write that line and often speak it, much to the intense annoyance of any female I may be accompanying. If you are as sad as I am, you may have noticed women dislike any reference to James Bond whatsoever. This is a fact I cannot claim to understand. I mean they would hardly refuse his advances would they?

Try them with the one-legged Tarzan sketch: (Your right leg I like; it is a lovely leg for the role. I have nothing against it. Trouble is, neither have you), the Monty Python dead parrot sketch: (I wish to make a complaint!) Harry Enfield (Oi! No!), the Badiel and Skinner line: (That’s you that is) and the result is the same; you might as well forget any plans for an evening of wild abandon.

Even though I know this, I cannot help myself in the false belief that one day I will stumble, or hop if doing the Tarzan number, across a woman who finds this funny. It isn’t and I won’t. I mean these sketches are priceless, but only in their original format. The sight of grown men imitating James Bond, Peter Cook, John Cleese et al is only hilarious to those taking part.

I did come close once on a Nile Cruise with a very pretty blonde from Essex. To be fair she was unfamiliar with the Tarzan sketch, but it was a great icebreaker and had her husband not shown up, who knows where it may have led. Other than that, I am one of those men that agony aunts denigrate. They remind the female race that such behaviour is just not funny, and to stay well clear of any man that cavorts about relating word-perfect lines from these sketches. This also applies to lines like, ‘I know what you’re thinking; did he fire five shots or six. To tell the truth, in all this excitement I kinda lost track myself but, seeing as this is a 44Magnum, the most powerful handgun in the world and will blow your head clean off, what you got to ask yourself is: Do you feel lucky? Well punk, do ya?’ Clint Eastwood! Dirty Harry! See, I can’t stop myself! I am a hopeless case, which accounts for the fact I am still single. Well, that and other things I would prefer not to go into.

What has all this got to do with an article on betting I hear you ask? Patience my dear Bond, I am about to come to the point. Meanwhile, I trust the champagne is to your taste – Dom Perignon ’53 if I am not mistaken. Actually, it has nothing to do with world domination or a uniped auditioning for the role of Tarzan. You see, even though I know I should not behave like this, I still do it. I cannot resist whatever the consequences. It is a clear indication we are what we are. People are not for changing. You can adjust their behaviour by fear, or by bribery but you will not change their inherent personalities.

Roll of drums please… so now the point: Careless talk will cost you. Information in racing can be gold dust. On consideration, it is not always knowing a horse is fancied that is most useful but knowing it is not. Let me explain in case this point has escaped you. A fancied horse still has to win. An unfancied horse only has to lose. Losing is easier than winning. But whatever nugget of information you have picked up or even unearthed yourself, once you pass it on to someone else, assume it will be in the public domain before long. If you cannot keep your own counsel, how can you expect others to?

Most news starts out as exclusive information and ends up as common knowledge. In this current climate, nothing is confidential. And sooner or later, once you have a bet or use an agent, information will filter into a market it will affect. That is a fact. There is nothing that can be done to prevent everything being known by race time. Nevertheless, if you do know something that is unique, then consider that your knowledge is only valuable as long as you keep it quiet. It is not always what you know, but when you know it! Timing can be as important as content. If you know what everyone else knows, it is not exactly worthless but it is not a scoop either. If you know what others do not, then you have a distinct advantage.

I am afraid one of our least likeable facets as humans is a compulsion to do what we know we should not. We will hop about reeling lines from the Tarzan sketch, scream, ‘I ain’t bovered’ even though it isn’t funny unless Catherine Tate does it. Whatever our faults, we cannot help ourselves. Similarly, tell someone information in confidence and they will repeat it unless it is in their interest not to do so.

You may have one or possibly two people you know you can trust. Even then, assume they will tell one other. It may be a relative, a close friend or the little old lady at the Post Office. But repeat it they will. And in turn, the little old lady will repeat it and before you know where you are, it is headlined in the Racing Post.

This does not mean you have to clam up completely. There is an art to revealing part rather than the whole of the entire picture. For example, rather than put someone away unless they deserve it, you can say in response to a question concerning a yard you are known to have an association with, that the horse has a chance. ‘I would not put you off backing it,’ is one of the best ways of doing just that. You do not need to be a secret squirrel the whole of the time, but it is important that you release sensitive information when it suits you. It is surprising how many friends one can suddenly acquire when a horse you are likely to know about is scheduled to run.

All I am saying here is to be cautious about to whom you reveal your secrets. And remember, timing is all important, not just to you but to your suppliers and others that may have a vested interest in the animal in question. Those that are paying the bills, directly or indirectly, are entitled to be first in the queue. I know it is hard to resist when flattered by the epithet that you are the man to settle a dispute as you know everything that happens at such-and-such yard but, bear in mind those doing the asking are portraying themselves to others as the man from the yard in question. This is a dog-eat-dog game full of potential freeloaders. Be aware of that. Also constantly reappraise what you are receiving in return for divulging your innermost confidences. Chances are, when you tot it up, you are receiving very little. Do not pass on sensitive information lightly. Due credit will not be accorded to you. Restrict what you know to your closest allies.

Otherwise, you will be including the undeserving in your plans.

And you don’t want to do that! No you don’t want to do that!

You don’t want your suppliers to make a complaint my lad!

I am not sure what benefit you will receive from this, but I feel so much better for finding a legitimate excuse to use so many forbidden phrases! Anyone unaware of the links here has my apologies. Naturally, I appreciate that any female readers were lost after the first two lines.

I ain’t bovered; I don’t need extra readers; I got loads of money!

Somebody stop me!

THE ART OF WINNER-FINDING

Bookies glean information from the bets they accept

THERE IS AN OLD story of the punter who liked to back short-priced horses. He seemed to believe that the shorter the price, the more market confidence it carried; so therefore the bigger certainty it was. He used to attend race meetings and had an entourage of different punters to place bets on his behalf. The story (not to be taken too literally) goes than one day he instructed his punter to, ‘Hurry up and take the 10/11 before if goes Evens,’ about a certain horse. Such thinking, if it ever existed in real life, has long been eclipsed by the value-seekers; those looking for odds they feel represent a cut above true odds. I have addressed this subject before; pointing out that Indefinite Odds as opposed to Absolute Odds [those that are incontrovertible], are based on opinion.

As a result it is very important that punters back horses they fancy rather than getting sucked into bets purely because of prices on offer. Overpriced horses are often overpriced for a reason. Some horses fail to win. Welsh Emperor is a prime example. He always has a greater chance in Listed and Group 3 events than his price suggests, but he rarely wins. In his case, although his technical chance is greater than his odds reflect, his track-record means he is an unlikely winner of whatever race he is contesting. Horses like him make up the numbers, take up a percentage, but invariably get in the way.

Be aware that the danger of seeking out value for value’s sake can mean you are about to step into a minefield.

Bookmakers know what they are doing most of the time. Vulnerability tends to exist when they are pricing races the day before. As race time approaches, the more likely they are to be correct even if they have to make several adjustments. Their vulnerability crumbles as bets start to trickle then flood in and before long, the position between punter and bookmaker becomes reversed. Whatever advantage you felt you had over the bookmaker a day before a race, dwindles as the bookmaker’s intelligence system kicks in. And as he starts to record bets, so a pattern unknown to you, emerges. Every customer that wins money (distinct from a winning account), or has a proven record of backing the right horses from certain yards, is tagged-up. That is to say, within seconds of certain bets being placed, traders are informed. The bet may be small it may be large. Some big punters have an incredible strike rate with certain yards. But once they get in front, they start having £100 Yankees and backing race by race, often with their thought processes considerably diluted by champagne or wine and can lose everything they won and more on a cleverly crafted coup by throwing money at hunches. Others can be small players – £5 or £10 a throw being all they risk – but the fact they have a 64% strike rate with a particular yard means their transactions will not go unnoticed. They could be a friend of the trainer’s family, a cleaner, the bloke who delivers the paper. The fact is that once a bookmaker has established a link, he is getting his card marked merely by laying a bet.

Consequently, a race you might have considered a three-horse affair may contain six serious contenders as far as the bookmaker is concerned. In blind ignorance, you stick to your theory that a certain horse is overpriced but if you knew what Jolly Joe knew, would you be so keen to take the odds? On such occasions, bookmakers hang on to their prices for a long time, confident that they will field enough money to be in a position to make a book. As the time goes on and their odds remain the same, it becomes increasingly obvious that, whilst there may be nothing wrong with your logic or information, your horse faces serious competition. When bookmakers slash a price, trying to wriggle out of their odds, you know they are genuinely worried.

Pricewise is a good indication of how the situation is developing. We all know that when Tom Segal is in form, which he is now, there will be money for anything he nominates. Everyone gets involved. Those that arb will take a price they know can be sold back later and Joe Punter will back the selection because it is the closest thing he gets to having an edge. So bookmakers are under siege. Storm troopers are busting down the doors to avail themselves of the 10/1 and the expectation is that the horse will start in single figures. Now, there have been occasions when Tom Segal, just like the rest of us, has made a mistake or been forced to nominate a horse he thinks is a poor effort – a half-hearted attempt at coming up with something in a race he has no particular feel for. At first the odds tumble. Then, let us say someone with a connection to the yard comes on for a bet but it does not include the Pricewise selection. Even better, from the bookmaker’s standpoint, he actually backs against the horse. Ask yourself what you would do in such a position. Try if you can to see inside that thick hide beneath which lurks the bookmaker. Instead of shortening the horse further, now he is prepared to stand up to it. He is not going to risk going skint. If he has been in the game five minutes, he knows what can go wrong, but he has a major mark against the horse – a big clue that it may not win. There have even been occasions when Ladbrokes have pushed out a Pricewise selection. Like them or love them, they are the best in the business. Their information is the best. No doubt, they pay for it one way or another – either by lavish entertainment, or by allowing widespread facilities to those who bet with them and whose bets can be used as cast iron marks. We know they are in cahoots with several high profile stables and I make no comment on that. It is their business and they run it well.

But with the advent of Betfair, all be it a depleted market these days, punters do not have to be railroaded into showing their hands quite so early. At one time bookmakers would see a tremendous amount of warm business between 8.30 and 9.30 am. It was almost a game of musical chairs. Those with the information would be on to the traders, shopping their business in return for an inflated price for a few hundred pounds. The bookmakers had the mark for little potential outlay and could protect their morning business by ensuring the 16/1 laid was no longer available. That was the way it used to work. These days, times have changed. But the principle is the same. With the slow advance of the hands on the clock, so the bookmaker becomes better informed. Most information is like water; it will leak. Some, however, known to perhaps only the owner or trainer, does not enter the public domain until much later and can, at times, wreck the best-laid plans of the layers.

This leads me to mention the information trail that most novice punters are so desperate to pursue. Information is useful in a wide range of capacities. Often what you are not told (unfancied horses) can be more useful that what you are. Never forget though that information is only someone else’s opinion. And very often that opinion, unless it concerns something of such magnitude you could not possibly know, is not as good as your own. Some yards are very good yards. They churn out winner after winner and you might be empted to believe that if only you had someone who could help you with such messages, you would have it made. You may be surprised that some of these yards, good though they undoubtedly are, will iron you out if you listen to what they actually tip. Some stables, like the Richard Hannon yard, send out horses fit and ready to win 90% of the time. If they are not fit, they don’t run. So it is a good yard from a punting point of view and one where you are capable of marking your own card. Form an opinion about one their horses and invariably you will get a run for your money and if it fails to win, it is more likely to be you that has called it incorrectly. Sadly, not all yards operate in such an open and straightforward way. When I have worked out how to ensure I am not leading our lawyers down the Private Eye route, I shall return to this issue and make a few observations you may find helpful.

THE INFORMATION TRAIL

IT MAY NOT HAVE escaped your notice that the procurement of information for betting purposes is against BHA policy. I cannot say it is against the law because an organisation like the BHA cannot pass laws, they can only regulate. In this respect, they are the same as any private organisation or club that can only state the conditions of membership. Parliament passes laws. As far as I am aware, no law stating that it is illegal to receive horseracing information has crossed the despatch boxes.

Racing is entitled to establish its own rules, as is the Lawn Tennis Association.  White’s Gentlemen’s Club has the same privilege but, although they doubtless invoke a dress code within their premises, it is not against the law to walk along St James Street minus a tie.

Horse Racing Pro needs a degree of policing but in its present desperate attempts to portray itself as being beyond reproach, it is starting to resemble a man who is floating in water but in danger of drowning due to a thrashing panic.

Before the passing of rules, it is important for the legislators to work out how to enforce them. If certain areas are black, certain white, but most are grey, there could be a problem. The BHA finds itself in such a position, hence its latest letter to trainers, attempting to turn grey to black, or indeed white. In this country, betting props up horseracing. Short of instigating a Tote Monopoly, certain facts need facing if the current situation prevails. Wherever there is money to be made – be it in politics, business, or gambling – there will always be those who seek to grab an unfair advantage. That means serious punters use their individual skills to pinpoint what is not generally known or considered and also enlist help. Most combine the two.

I am not talking about the sort of Dick Francis plots outlined on Panorama. Most professional punters have informants, as do racing journalists, jockeys’ agents, trainers and owners. They are not seeking to receive information construed as being illegal. So just how far does the BHA wish to extend the arm that threatens to crack the whip? I make these points because by addressing the subject of information I submit I am not encouraging or promulgating skulduggery.

Let us look at the ways information, in all its various forms, can be obtained. As far as I can determine there are five options.

The first is to become Michael Tabor and own a sufficient number of horses, and pay so many training bills, that the attention of a trainer is only a phone call away.

The second is to spearhead various owner syndicates. Once again, in collusion with an assortment of trainers, you will be plotting the course horses will be taking and, doubtless, during conversations with said trainers other horses in the stable are liable for a mention.

The third is to use contacts within racing to help in your assessments of races. These contacts could be friends who work for stables in sundry guises, bookmaker’s employees who are in key positions or anyone that is close to the action. I will leave you to define how you become acquainted with such friends if you do not know them already.

The fourth is to act as an intermediary for any of the above. That is to say, you handle their betting business. As most backers discussed are high rollers that are victims of their own success, they have difficulty placing bets and are always on the lookout for agents. However, there are a couple of drawbacks with this sort of arrangement. Firstly, there is no guarantee you will get all their business, meaning by pure coincidence you could be handling mostly losers. High rollers are not exempt from losing runs and there are times when you could find yourself having to subsidise such runs whilst awaiting payment. That requires a substantial tank.

The fifth option is to let someone else handle betting plans on your behalf. This man assimilates all the information he receives then, in collusion with a team of form experts, decides when to make a major move as opposed to a minor one. He will expect to receive a fee for masterminding such arrangements. Often this is the best option, as the alternatives can be costly and difficult to initiate. This assumes of course that the person entrusted to make the final verdict has a proven track record and can make what are often difficult and borderline decisions accurately.

These 3 signals tell you when to jump in on a Gamble

Winning Ways

Bob Rothman’s Tips, Tactics and Techniques to bet more winners

How do you know you can Jump in on this Gamble as soon as you see the money?

A teenage hacker helped a criminal network to infiltrate over 1.3 million computers worldwide and skimmed bank accounts or damaged computers to the tune of over £15m

Owen Thor Walker wrote BOTNET infiltration programs for the crime bosses when he stood trial in July he was 18 years old. The charges were dismissed and he was released with no criminal record after giving up the cash paid by the criminal network and paying a fine.

Since then he has been hired by a company called Telstraclear as a cyber-security consultant and has been paid well to deliver a series of seminars for the company. The company specialise in anti crime internet security said that having Walker on their side helped them understand how cyber criminals acted and how to defend against such attacks.

Maybe that old wives tale is true? The best gamekeepers are ex-poachers.

There are many ways to set up a horse for a gamble. Having an understanding of these can help you identify many great bets.

Think like a Poacher to bet the “plotted up” Winners

Here’s an example from today.

McBirney was a classic “plot” horse and we bet him at 5/1 as soon as I got the word from the track connections were investing. That sort of information costs me a small fortune.

But you could have easily bet him at 7/2, 3/1 or 11/4 with some confidence … without any inside knowledge … and without it costing anything other than maybe 20 minutes to half an hours analysis.

 We were able to bet it at the bigger odds because we had that inside knowledge but that costs. For me it was worth the cost to gain an extra 2 points. But unless you’re betting say £100 a race 2 points may not be worth a lot or not matter that much to you. Yet you can still have the pleasure of confidently betting a gambled winner. This is what you look for.

3 Runs, straight into a handicap

Run Him over the wrong Trip

The Racing Rules state a horse must have 3 runs or win a race before it’s eligible for a handicap mark.

Now if you’re plotting up a horse to win a race when your money’s down what sort of handicap mark do you want? High or low?

Low of course. So you do everything to make the horse look poor so the handicapper will give him a low mark. I’ll deal with all of these in future article but here’s  a  quick selection of popular techniques

1.      Run him over the wrong trip

2.      Run him on ground he hates

3.      Give him 3 quick runs while he’s unfit

4.      Blatantly cheat. Ie get the jockey to “bury” him

5.      Burst him from the front

6.      Miss the break and get into an awful position (Is this a Hills speciality?)

Run Him over the wrong Trip

MCBIRNEY stood out as a potential plot because he’d had 3 runs over the wrong trip and today for the first time was stepped up in distance. The question was is today the day or another “feeler”?

Note despite being bred by two milers (DANEHILL DANCER and DEAR GIRL)MCBIRNEY ran twice over 6f and once over 7f. 8/1 on debut implies he showed something at home. But then 20/1 and 66/1 tells you he was “not expected” on those days.McBirney-Race-History_600x400

Handicap debut steps up massively in trip

When horses run at the wrong trip they “handicap” themselves. If you’re a sprinter you’ll never be truly competitive in a marathon. Flyweights don’t box in heavy weight class. The beauty is you don’t have to do too much to make the horse look terrible. He does it for you!

This is the technique made famous by Sir Mark Prescott. Just take a look at how many of his 2YO have 3 runs over sprint trips , then come out and run up a sequence as 3YO over longer trips because they’re so well handicapped.

Study those 3 runs above for a second longer. Because usually the trainer wants one run to give him an idea if the horse has enough ability. If you stop a horse too many times it will “forget” how to compete ie win!

The giveaway is one of the 3 runs will be a “sighter”

Here you see it on the last race on 21st Feb 2011. The horse is stepped up to 7f from 6f and runs a 63 versus a zero and a 32! The horse’s long term aim is clearly to be stepped up in trip and the trainer satisfied himself with that run that the horse would run better over further.

This trainer has also used another technique in tandem.   Double whammy! This horse could be seriously well handicapped! They’ve been very professional.

Run the horse quickly 3 times while he’s not fit.

You have to run it quickly because you don’t want to waste too much time and you have to start getting him ready sooner or later.

Then get it handicapped.

Then train it to win!

How do you know today is the day?

Just watch the market.

If today’s the day they will eventually bet the horse and the money will surface. I know where to look and who to ask but you can see it for yourself a little while later as the bookmakers shorten the odds.

Study the history below

Mcbirney-Early-Odds-history_589x600

Very early on this horse was available with a couple of bookies at 13/2 and 7/1. But serious money doesn’t go down until more bookies offer prices. The prices above show the earliest price at the bottom and the latest at the top. So with bet365 he opened at 5/1 and ended up 11/4.

Once I’d seen the small early move from 13/2 to 11/2 with Blue Square and from 7/1 with Boyle I suspected connections might be trying to sneak money on so I made investigations to see if it was “guessing” money or “real” money ie from connections.

Once I validated it was connections money we jumped in at 5/1 and bet him heavily ourselves. Generally it’s a good idea to either handle connections money or part of it yourself or have trusted partners and spies throughout the betting industry who can tell you who’s betting what.

The initial move would not have been enough to give you confidence he was “off” today. You’d need to wait a bit longer and see if the gamble was sustained.

Sustained Gambles are worth serious investigation

Sustained gambles ie when the horse shortens … and then shortens again …are a good indicator of connections money and not guessing money

So what happened?

He shortened from 5/1 to 9/2 and 4/1. You’d be considering bet now. But if you’re still wondering the betting shows in the last 10 minutes would convince you. Here they are below

Mcbirney-betting-Shows_587x600

Many horse will be the subject of “moody” gambles or bluffs to put the average punter off the scent.

But when the horse shortens in the Early price market … and then opens shorter still … and then is bet even shorter still … you KNOW serious money is down.

Now ask yourself the question …

The horse is not tipped in the paper so it’s not mug newspaper reader’s money.

There’s a potential doubt about the trip (maybe it wants a mile like it’s parents and this is a BIG step up to 1m 4f) So it’s not form money. Not in this volume.

The only people betting this must be the people connected to the horse.

Now if they’re betting it and betting it heavily … it stands to reason the previous runs were runs to get a handicap mark and not a true reflection of its ability.

 

But look at this!

mcbirney-handicap-mark_449x600

The Official handicapper has decided McBirney merits a rating of 64. On those 3 rubbish runs!

Now you know they were “prep” runs you know the horse is way better than a 64 horse. Now what’s it running against?

0-65 horses!

This is great! He’s got nothing to beat.

Imagine you’re back at school and sports day is coming up and the teachers decide to grade the kids to make the races more even. You have various races with the other kids to find where you stand in the school pecking order.

But there’s a kicker. They run normally but you have to hop (you’re doing this intentionally of course!) You tell the school your foot hurts or some blarney! The school grade you and place you with people of “similar ability”

Now it’s Sports Day and you’re now racing against kids you finished level with … when they were running and you were hopping! But now your foot is “better” and you can use both legs to run!

How far are you going to win by?

That’s how racehorse handicapping works!

The race conditions (at the top) show it for horses rated 0-65. That means no horse rated above 65 qualifies!

McBirney is rated 64. That basically means he’s running against horses that have shown the same sort of ability he did when he wasn’t off!

This is a perfect plot, well executed and deserves a decent bet. We had £1,000 at 5/1 and won £5,000. Lovely thank you!

Now you may not be able to find out whose money it is when the horse starts shortening as we did and were happy to jump in at 5/1.

But you can read the plot as well as anyone and when you saw it open up 7/2 you could have jumped in with some confidence. When he went 3/1 you could double that confidence! And when he was punted into 11/4 you knew there was one hell of a serious trier with a stack up his sleeve! Connections don’t chuck their money down like that without a big edge.

I hope this chat may give you some ideas to use for your own winner finding techniques.

Warm Regards

 

Bob Rothman

Stacking the odds in Your Favour

An Odds Compilers View

Think like an  Odds Compiler

LAST WEEK we addressed horses in general. This week I thought we would look at odds and races. With the fixture-list reaching saturation point, it is becoming increasingly difficult to keep pace with all the racing. My advice is not to try. If you insist on keeping up it is my contention you will end up either burnt out or a jack-of-all-trades and master of none. You will be unable to spend the necessary time on races you can solve and you will be dizzy with a mish-mash of half-ideas, which have not been thought through to a satisfactory conclusion.

Target your meetings, then your races and use your time wisely. There used to be an advertisement on television, one of the few to make sense; its slogan was, ‘Don’t Work Harder – Work Smarter.’ That is excellent advice. Take it and apply it to racing!

Decide where your strengths lie. If you are a Flat man, then do not try to turn yourself into some sort of National Hunt aficionado. There is enough all-weather racing during the winter and you may always have the odd opinion over the jumps that you can utilise. If your expertise rests in the jumping code, that means no winter holidays for you and you will have to concentrate your efforts on the nine or ten-month period that suits best. I know some (a handful admittedly) that actually bet solely in hunter chases. Personally, I would rather try my luck in a casino, but those that major in such a discipline make it pay. The problem is they are dealing with a very small window of opportunity, but the bottom-line in this business is that if you can make a profit, then your approach cannot be argued with.

Whatever your strength, it is important you understand certain principles that apply to all forms of gambling. Before I move on to the specialised area of dissected races, it is worth spending some time on basic gambling rules.

There are two forms of odds: Absolute Odds and Indefinite Odds. I will make the distinction. Absolute Odds reflect the exact chances of any eventuality. The most obvious example is the spin of the coin. There are only two possibilities – heads or tails. Therefore, the odds are evens you do or do not name the spin correctly. There is a 50% chance of being right and the same about being wrong. Similarly, if you take ten boxes, randomly place white balls in nine of them and one black in the remaining box, the odds against you correctly identifying the box containing the black ball is 9/1. There are ten possibilities. By picking one, nine are against you and only one is in your favour.  This is incontrovertible. I have cited Absolute Odds in both cases. So would you be tempted if I were to offer you odds of 12/1 against correctly nominating the black ball?

Now I have changed the scenario. You are still unlikely to pick the black ball with the odds stacked so heavily against you but I am offering you a greater price than the proposition warrants. There is no strict answer to this poser. A mathematician would encourage you to take the bet. A gambler, despite the epithet, would probably conclude that, unless these odds are to be extended beyond one pick, the black ball is likely to remain elusive so the price should not influence a decision. This presents an interesting crossover between thought-processes of the mathematician (who merely pontificates) and the man who has to put his judgement into practice.

We are now in the realms of value. At this point, some of you may wish to refer back to an earlier article concerning a mythical game of Russian roulette that covers the weakness a pure, and blinkered mathematical approach in my view, contains. Value is the trap the bookmaker and punter use to ensnare each other. The bookmaker, confident you are unlikely to call correctly, is often prepared to offer over the odds on a proposition. In Godfather parlance, he will make you an offer you cannot refuse. Always beware of such generosity. Some punters are vulnerable to these offers, meaning they become duped into backing on an event or horse they would otherwise by-pass. Value is a complex issue. I will return to it.

So we have established what Absolute Odds are. They reflect an indisputable set of propositions. The problem is that by offering Absolute Odds on a regular basis, the layer cannot make a profit. A roulette wheel only makes the house a profit because it contains one, or two Zeros. One Zero and 36 numbers on a wheel offering odds of 35/1 against any particular number coming up, means a 2.5 percent profit to the house. Two Zeros gives it a five percent advantage. When you consider how many times a wheel is spun in any given session, that is enough to tilt the overall odds away from the player. So on a roulette wheel, the Zeros represent the margin of profit to the house. On one-armed bandits – the worst possible form of gambling there can be – the profit is even greater. In fact, it can be as great as the operator wishes. In some cases, these infernal machines keep 60% of turnover. Anyone playing such an item wants to have a brain scan. The object for serious punters is to obtain 5/4 about heads on a regular basis. Being offered it once is still a gamble.

Indefinite Odds are just that. They are someone’s interpretation of the possibilities that exist. Therefore, in any sporting event you are pitching yourself against the odds setter. It therefore follows that the odds offered on a horserace are not necessarily correct. Put bluntly they are largely a guess. This is especially true when the odds compilers are in the midst of a busy day. Maybe it is Friday afternoon and they have to produce odds for six races run on Saturday. The races are hard handicaps, full of runners. Despite various fail-safe techniques employed by bookmakers, they are vulnerable. They are working against the clock and unless they have a large contingent of compilers, they run the risk of overlooking a vital component or of events, such as a going change, conspiring against them.

As a punter, if you allow yourself to be under the same amount of pressure you are also likely to make mistakes. This is where you should be able to raise your nose to the wind and see if you can smell a hint of blood. You can afford to spend much more time on chosen races than the over-worked and stressed odds compilers. Use it wisely to see if you can unearth a mistake or two. But do not just back a horse because it is too big. Only back it if you fancy it. Remember the white ball/black ball example. If you are unlikely to be right, the price is incidental as it is more than likely you will strike a losing bet. By the same token, do not be tempted to strike a bet because you consider it is bombproof – the each-way double that cannot fail to produce a yield. You reason they may not win but they will both place. If that is your starting point then it is a poor bet to strike. Much better to strike an each-way bet as insurance when you think both horses will win. That way the place part of the bet will save you losing in the event of you having one winner and a short-head loser.

Do not allow the odds makers to dictate your betting patterns. They may influence them and there are undoubtedly times when a horse is too short for you to wish to back, even though you consider it will win. Well, we all have to live with that. But if you spend your time waiting for the perfect bet, you will spend a long time on the sidelines. There have to be occasions when, although the odds may not be ideal, you are so sure the horse in question will win that you bet. Let the odds on offer be the last thing you consider. If you take them as your first point of reference, the bookmaker is dictating your betting patterns. That is a situation that suits the bookmaking fraternity. You are on the receiving end of an offer of the bookmaker’s choosing. You are being made an offer you think you cannot refuse.  But you can refuse it and you should unless it was in you mind to back the horse in the first place. There is one person that should decide when you bet. That person is you!

If you wish to identify value in betting there are a couple of ways you can do this. Firstly, remember that we are not dealing with an absolute proposition but one that contains a variety of factors. That means there is no blueprint price but you can get close to such a thing. When evaluating a race, discard as many of the runners as you can. Don’t worry if you discard a horse, often as a result of perfectly sound reasoning only for it to win. That can always happen, 33/1 winners appear in the formbook, particularly early and late in the season. It does not mean your judgement is faulty. There is a random factor to be considered and it will kick in from time to time. That is the drawback with the Indefinite Proposition.

Competent odds compilers know how to break down a race. They start from the outside and work in. They price up the outsiders first, putting them as big as they dare. That way the percentage they are left with dictates the prices of the participants that really count. An odds-compiler that takes a stab at the price at the favourite and then builds the rest of the runners round that guess is likely to price races incorrectly on a regular basis. Assume the same method when you assess any race. Take out the horses you think won’t win, see how many you are left with, juggle with a few prices and that, roughly, will indicate what the winning chances of the leading protagonists are. But, and this is important, remember you are not dealing with the stony absolute of the flick of a coin or the balls in their boxes. The unforeseen can occur. Such issues as jockey error, horses breaking down, getting a poor run, being hampered, losing lengths at the start, can and do influence results. That has to be built in; horseracing is not decided by a computer. In case it has escaped your notice, horses are comprised of flesh and blood.

Note from Bob

If you’re interested in reading more about compiling odds and the thought processes an odds compiler goes through Spy will be discussing this subject in greater detail so check back here for updates.  If you have any specific questions you ‘d like answered about the odds compilers job drop us an email or call the ofiice

For many years Spy was actually paid by bookmakers for his skill in compiling the odds for races. While I don’t agree with all his comments about odds and value I certainly respect his opinion and can vouch for the fact he has an amazing ability to spot horses likely to win races and whose true odds are less than the odds available with bookmakers making them profitable betting opportunities.

He is now a gamekeeper turned poacher and we welcome his comments here on a variety of racing subjects and especially one of his pet subjects, that of the true odds of a horse.

Probability and Odds discussions

Special note from Bob Rothman

If you’re reading these series articles,  I imagine you’re interested in a Professional approach to calculating the true winning probabilities of horses, either by deriving your own bookmakers tissue or simply trying to estimate the true odds in a race.

Constructing your own betting tissue is a highly skilled job but we will be creating a step-by-step report on the procedure of  how to do this shortly as well as discussing the subject here.  You may also wish to consider subscribing to the Lunchtime Traders’ Service, which provides betting information based on my team’s own tissue.  Check out the results and see if it’s what you’re looking for.

Enjoy the articles. Most are written by a good friend and Racing Correspondent.  He actually produced a tissue for bookmakers for 20 years and now enjoys commentating on a wide range of gambling related topics for this website.  His insights can be extremely valuable.

Regards

Bob

Calculating True Odds

IT WOULD APPEAR yesterday’s article proved controversial. Well what a surprise!

I can denigrate the prime minister, slag off bookmakers, criticise the fixture list and those responsible for its draft, bemoan the state of prize-money, but mere mention of betting patterns provokes skeletons rattling their vociferous paths out of cupboards in my direction.

To recap, I outlined a fictitious event that involved six participants in a game of Russian roulette. There was one six-shot revolver containing a solitary live bullet. The chamber was spun only once and each player was required in advance to nominate the order of play that appealed most. To add a touch of spice, one million pounds was payable to each successful and therefore surviving participant.  Is survival a question of luck or the ability to calculate the true odds?

The important component in this was the preferred order of play. The mathematicians predictably claimed it made absolutely no difference, as the odds in the favour of each player were 5/1 irrespective of the order they chose. That seemed to be the majority view. But are they the true odds?

What is interesting in this conundrum is the introduction of the Theory of Probability, which crosses swords with mathematics. Those sticking to the mathematical claim that the sequence is irrelevant are not incorrect. But they have overlooked one vital aspect.

The absolute odds against being the unlucky member of the sextet who ends up minus a head are 5/1. That’s easy to calculate and requires no advanced mathematics degree.  You have one chance in 6 of surviving hence the odds are 5/1.  However, once the game is in progress, those odds change because we are in a position to observe what has happened. The first to try his luck is playing the true odds. Irrefutably those odds are 5/1 in his favour. Survival means the odds are 4/1 in the favour of the next to fire and then, providing he dodges the fatal bullet, the odds  become 3/1 in the favour of the next to pick up the revolver. Now the remaining players are in trouble. After three successful players, only three remain and the odds of the next being a survivor are narrowing, being only 2/1 in favour. If he puts down the revolver with his head intact, two players remain facing odds of even money.  Their probability of  survival is now only 50%.This pair, who gambled incorrectly on never reaching such a cliff-hanging situation, now stare death in the face.

The true mathematician will cling to his belief that it has been a 5/1 chance all along, but of course so far down the line that is no longer the case. The only certain way to ensure you face odds of 5/1 in your favour is to fire first. Then, without question, the odds are absolute. There is no guarantee after that so, if you have deferred your choice to later in the sequence, there is always going to be a shift in your chance of survival.

Probability suggests that if a proposition contains a one-in six chance, then it is mostly likely to manifest itself in the middle of the proposed sequence of events, not at the beginning or the end. Here, the true entrepreneur, the gambler who is always seeking an angle or edge in his favour, will invariably succeed over the man who relies on statistics. To be truly successful at gambling you must be prepared to swim against the mainstream of opinion. Following the herd means you will be paid accordingly – in other words you will share your dividend with the rest of the players. You must strive to seek out overlooked factors and therefore reap the rewards of originality.

Betting is a pool. The more tickets that have the same name on them, the less the winning dividend will be should that named selection win. The object is to seize on the flaw in the obvious argument, accepted by all except those with the foresight to see through it. Edges and angles are what differentiate the successful gambler from the loser. Such advantages are not always prevalent or obvious. But when they can be sniffed out, that is when the nose of the gambler who makes it pay starts to twitch.

Let us return to the mythical question of the order to play the Russian roulette game highlighted. You can try this for yourselves using six cards face down, five blank and one with a bullet drawn on its surface. Alternatively, you can take five ordinary playing cards and the ace of spades. Place them at random in a line and attempt to avoid the bullet or the ace. Please don’t buy a Smith and Wesson and a box of bullets to prove a point!

I have made my submission: Play first or last. Both require nerve but then so does the whole scenario. Personally, I would not risk my life against a 1/5 chance for an incentive of a million pounds.

And this raises another point which I am sure we can return to at a later date. That is the question of value. If you have concluded a bet is not a good one, the price should not alter your decision. Be it a million pounds, or ten million, I consider a 20% chance of losing my life to be an unacceptable risk whatever the reward.

The same should apply to any wager you strike. Always evaluate the winning chance of the selection first, its price second. If you feel the chance of a horse winning is unlikely, then 10/1 or 25/1, or, in these days of Betfair, an inflated price of 42/1, should make no difference to your betting plan.

Remember, a lime green Prada suit you see in the sales at a knockdown price that you will never wear is a waste of money at a pound!

Such seriousness in today’s piece perhaps warrants a joke. It is not normally my style to relate jokes but this did strike me as amusing and I would prefer to leave you with a smile rather than a bullet.

A professor in social studies is lecturing a class of students. The subject shifts to sex. To illustrate some vague point, the professor asks three students at random how many times a year they indulge. About fifty says the first. Thirty says the second. The last, an elderly man with a broad smile on his face, confesses that he has sex just once a year.

‘Once?’ questions the professor: ‘If you only have sex once a year, why the stupid grin on your face?’

‘It’s tonight,’ reveals the man.


Think like an  Odds Compiler

LAST WEEK we addressed horses in general. This week I thought we would look at odds and races. With the fixture-list reaching saturation point, it is becoming increasingly difficult to keep pace with all the racing. My advice is not to try. If you insist on keeping up it is my contention you will end up either burnt out or a jack-of-all-trades and master of none. You will be unable to spend the necessary time on races you can solve and you will be dizzy with a mish-mash of half-ideas, which have not been thought through to a satisfactory conclusion.

Target your meetings, then your races and use your time wisely. There used to be an advertisement on television, one of the few to make sense; its slogan was, ‘Don’t Work Harder – Work Smarter.’ That is excellent advice. Take it and apply it to racing!

Decide where your strengths lie. If you are a Flat man, then do not try to turn yourself into some sort of National Hunt aficionado. There is enough all-weather racing during the winter and you may always have the odd opinion over the jumps that you can utilise. If your expertise rests in the jumping code, that means no winter holidays for you and you will have to concentrate your efforts on the nine or ten-month period that suits best. I know some (a handful admittedly) that actually bet solely in hunter chases. Personally, I would rather try my luck in a casino, but those that major in such a discipline make it pay. The problem is they are dealing with a very small window of opportunity, but the bottom-line in this business is that if you can make a profit, then your approach cannot be argued with.

Whatever your strength, it is important you understand certain principles that apply to all forms of gambling. Before I move on to the specialised area of dissected races, it is worth spending some time on basic gambling rules.

There are two forms of odds: Absolute Odds and Indefinite Odds. I will make the distinction. Absolute Odds reflect the exact chances of any eventuality. The most obvious example is the spin of the coin. There are only two possibilities – heads or tails. Therefore, the odds are evens you do or do not name the spin correctly. There is a 50% chance of being right and the same about being wrong. Similarly, if you take ten boxes, randomly place white balls in nine of them and one black in the remaining box, the odds against you correctly identifying the box containing the black ball is 9/1. There are ten possibilities. By picking one, nine are against you and only one is in your favour.  This is incontrovertible. I have cited Absolute Odds in both cases. So would you be tempted if I were to offer you odds of 12/1 against correctly nominating the black ball?

Now I have changed the scenario. You are still unlikely to pick the black ball with the odds stacked so heavily against you but I am offering you a greater price than the proposition warrants. There is no strict answer to this poser. A mathematician would encourage you to take the bet. A gambler, despite the epithet, would probably conclude that, unless these odds are to be extended beyond one pick, the black ball is likely to remain elusive so the price should not influence a decision. This presents an interesting crossover between thought-processes of the mathematician (who merely pontificates) and the man who has to put his judgement into practice.

We are now in the realms of value. At this point, some of you may wish to refer back to an earlier article concerning a mythical game of Russian roulette that covers the weakness a pure, and blinkered mathematical approach in my view, contains. Value is the trap the bookmaker and punter use to ensnare each other. The bookmaker, confident you are unlikely to call correctly, is often prepared to offer over the odds on a proposition. In Godfather parlance, he will make you an offer you cannot refuse. Always beware of such generosity. Some punters are vulnerable to these offers, meaning they become duped into backing on an event or horse they would otherwise by-pass. Value is a complex issue. I will return to it.

So we have established what Absolute Odds are. They reflect an indisputable set of propositions. The problem is that by offering Absolute Odds on a regular basis, the layer cannot make a profit. A roulette wheel only makes the house a profit because it contains one, or two Zeros. One Zero and 36 numbers on a wheel offering odds of 35/1 against any particular number coming up, means a 2.5 percent profit to the house. Two Zeros gives it a five percent advantage. When you consider how many times a wheel is spun in any given session, that is enough to tilt the overall odds away from the player. So on a roulette wheel, the Zeros represent the margin of profit to the house. On one-armed bandits – the worst possible form of gambling there can be – the profit is even greater. In fact, it can be as great as the operator wishes. In some cases, these infernal machines keep 60% of turnover. Anyone playing such an item wants to have a brain scan. The object for serious punters is to obtain 5/4 about heads on a regular basis. Being offered it once is still a gamble.

Indefinite Odds are just that. They are someone’s interpretation of the possibilities that exist. Therefore, in any sporting event you are pitching yourself against the odds setter. It therefore follows that the odds offered on a horserace are not necessarily correct. Put bluntly they are largely a guess. This is especially true when the odds compilers are in the midst of a busy day. Maybe it is Friday afternoon and they have to produce odds for six races run on Saturday. The races are hard handicaps, full of runners. Despite various fail-safe techniques employed by bookmakers, they are vulnerable. They are working against the clock and unless they have a large contingent of compilers, they run the risk of overlooking a vital component or of events, such as a going change, conspiring against them.

As a punter, if you allow yourself to be under the same amount of pressure you are also likely to make mistakes. This is where you should be able to raise your nose to the wind and see if you can smell a hint of blood. You can afford to spend much more time on chosen races than the over-worked and stressed odds compilers. Use it wisely to see if you can unearth a mistake or two. But do not just back a horse because it is too big. Only back it if you fancy it. Remember the white ball/black ball example. If you are unlikely to be right, the price is incidental as it is more than likely you will strike a losing bet. By the same token, do not be tempted to strike a bet because you consider it is bombproof – the each-way double that cannot fail to produce a yield. You reason they may not win but they will both place. If that is your starting point then it is a poor bet to strike. Much better to strike an each-way bet as insurance when you think both horses will win. That way the place part of the bet will save you losing in the event of you having one winner and a short-head loser.

Do not allow the odds makers to dictate your betting patterns. They may influence them and there are undoubtedly times when a horse is too short for you to wish to back, even though you consider it will win. Well, we all have to live with that. But if you spend your time waiting for the perfect bet, you will spend a long time on the sidelines. There have to be occasions when, although the odds may not be ideal, you are so sure the horse in question will win that you bet. Let the odds on offer be the last thing you consider. If you take them as your first point of reference, the bookmaker is dictating your betting patterns. That is a situation that suits the bookmaking fraternity. You are on the receiving end of an offer of the bookmaker’s choosing. You are being made an offer you think you cannot refuse.  But you can refuse it and you should unless it was in you mind to back the horse in the first place. There is one person that should decide when you bet. That person is you!

If you wish to identify value in betting there are a couple of ways you can do this. Firstly, remember that we are not dealing with an absolute proposition but one that contains a variety of factors. That means there is no blueprint price but you can get close to such a thing. When evaluating a race, discard as many of the runners as you can. Don’t worry if you discard a horse, often as a result of perfectly sound reasoning only for it to win. That can always happen, 33/1 winners appear in the formbook, particularly early and late in the season. It does not mean your judgement is faulty. There is a random factor to be considered and it will kick in from time to time. That is the drawback with the Indefinite Proposition.

Competent odds compilers know how to break down a race. They start from the outside and work in. They price up the outsiders first, putting them as big as they dare. That way the percentage they are left with dictates the prices of the participants that really count. An odds-compiler that takes a stab at the price at the favourite and then builds the rest of the runners round that guess is likely to price races incorrectly on a regular basis. Assume the same method when you assess any race. Take out the horses you think won’t win, see how many you are left with, juggle with a few prices and that, roughly, will indicate what the winning chances of the leading protagonists are. But, and this is important, remember you are not dealing with the stony absolute of the flick of a coin or the balls in their boxes. The unforeseen can occur. Such issues as jockey error, horses breaking down, getting a poor run, being hampered, losing lengths at the start, can and do influence results. That has to be built in; horseracing is not decided by a computer. In case it has escaped your notice, horses are comprised of flesh and blood.

Note from Bob

If you’re interested in reading more about compiling odds and the thought processes an odds compiler goes through Spy will be discussing this subject in greater detail so check back here for updates.  If you have any specific questions you ‘d like answered about the odds compilers job drop us an email or call the ofiice

For many years Spy was actually paid by bookmakers for his skill in compiling the odds for races. While I don’t agree with all his comments about odds and value I certainly respect his opinion and can vouch for the fact he has an amazing ability to spot horses likely to win races and whose true odds are less than the odds available with bookmakers making them profitable betting opportunities.

He is now a gamekeeper turned poacher and we welcome his comments here on a variety of racing subjects and especially one of his pet subjects, that of the true odds of a horse.

CALCULATING ODDS (cont’d)

FROM TIME TO TIME, these articles provoke comment. The last piece attempted to make a distinction between Absolute Odds and Indefinite Odds. Not everyone seemed to appreciate the difference, so I thought I would elaborate in the hope of clarifying what was meant.

No one seemed to have a problem with Absolute Odds, which are self-explanatory. They are the odds that denote an absolute and incontrovertible event – the flip of a two-sided coin representing an even-money proposition being the most obvious example. However, I also gave an example of nine boxes containing white balls and one box hiding a black ball. The odds against identifying the black ball are 9/1. But to widen the argument I asked whether, if offered 12/1 about picking out the black ball, you should consider this a bet worth striking. As we have established, the offer means you will be paid over the odds if you call correctly. That said, what many of you seem to have overlooked was the conditions attached to this proposed wager.

Always read the small print or conditions! In this instance, the odds were available for one bet only. Therefore, if you felt lucky, you could chance your arm in the knowledge that if you pulled off the unlikely you would be overpaid. What the professional punter would ask before availing himself of this offer is: would this be a bet I would wish to strike irrespective of the odds? A bet that offers you only one chance in ten is not attractive. You are clearly unlikely to win. There is nothing you can do with a bet of this type to tilt the odds in your favour. It is an Absolute Bet, meaning no amount of homework, no amount of insider knowledge (unless you know the person who placed the balls in the boxes) is available to you. You are merely taking a stab at a 9/1 chance. Now, if someone would offer you odds of 12/1 for, let us say, three individual attempts, you would have a very real chance of winning and my answer would be different.

This game can be played two ways so let us examine each. If a losing box is removed each time it has been nominated, then the odds shift. After the removal of one box, the odds are 8/1, then if you call wrong again, they become 7/1. Your chance of naming the right box in this example, given three attempts, is, surprisingly, 15/8, so clearly, with the promise of the odds of 12/1 on offer for each attempt, it is a bet you should strike. Some of you might consider that the odds are three in ten, or 10/3. That is understandable but incorrect. Under these circumstances, the odds are on a sliding scale, marginally tipping the odds in your favour as you go. What was 9/1 becomes 8/1 and then 7/1. Put simply, with the withdrawal of boxes no longer relevant, the odds and percentages they represent alter.

However, if constantly switching around the boxes after each game, technically the odds remain at 9/1 for each pick. If the odds are an absolute 9/1, given enough chances, the player is likely to call correctly eventually. The mathematician will tell you that the odds are 9/1 add infinitum but that is wrong. Once a game is instigated, no set of odds remain constant. Probability dictates that you must reach a point when, having called wrongly for more than a set number, the odds tip in your favour meaning you will finally get it right. Remember no skill is required here. As the proposition gathers steam, we are talking about what is likely as opposed to what is unlikely. Probability has to be factored in and that is separate from Absolute Odds. Most people have trouble accepting this as a concept. Logic is fine when you are trying to solve a puzzle that involves shapes placed in a framework or the next number in a sequence but odds, although a puzzle of sorts, have set boundaries. If a proposition is established as being a 9/1 chance, then once you have had nine unsuccessful tries, odds tip in your favour, meaning you are probably set to randomly unearth the black ball or whatever is in hiding.

The key with the first example is that the offer of 12/1 was only available ONCE. In this instance, that is the difference between a bet that offers a chance of profit and one that does not. In offering the player 12/1, the layer is merely taking a chance or a gamble. But his gamble is far less than the one the player is required to make, so it is a bad bet to take.

As I stated in the original article, if you take advantage of inflated odds just because they are offered, you are allowing the layer to dictate your betting patterns.

For those of you that do not understand how I have arrived at the odds of 15/8, I will explain the composition of odds as transposed to a percentage in my next article on this subject.

Let me offer one more example. There is a universal game known as Find The Lady. Depending on where you are in the world, it presents itself under all sorts of different guises but essentially the principle is the same. In Las Vegas, it is Call The Spot.

As we are in England let us stick to our version. There are three cards – two numbered and one Queen. She represents the lady and the object is to pick her out of the three face-down cards as they are cleverly manipulated by the handler. At first, he takes the three cards, shows them to the crowd face-up, then reverses them and shuffles them around slowly before spreading them in a line. It is temptingly easy to identify the Queen as members of his gang display by slapping £20 notes on the cards and picking up the dealer’s money. So far so good: the Absolute Odds knowing nothing are 2/1 but the dealer looks like he is slow and inept and this is surely easy money. Yeah! Like hell it is!

As soon as you put your money down, the dealer suddenly acquires a newly found skill and is able to mix the cards with such rapidity that you have no idea where the Queen is. You might think you do, but of course, when your money is down, you discover you do not.

Knowing this, let us say the dealer shows you the cards as before, shuffles them and then states he will offer you the same odds less a bit, say 6/4, but with a twist. He is going to make the whole process easier. Once you have put your money down he will reveal one card, effectively leaving only two possibilities. If this game is above board then he is offering 6/4 about an even-money shot.

Tempted? Do not be. This is a conditional bet and the layer is setting the conditions. Examine what is going on. He knows where the Queen is. He always knows where the Queen is. By asking you to nominate her whereabouts after his sleight of hand and then removing a duff card, he is giving you nothing. However, when you look down at the two remaining cards in the knowledge that you are likely to be paid out at 6/4 for calling one against one, those odds seem attractive. The catch is that you made the bet when there were three possibilities and all the dealer has done is to remove a loser that he knew all along was a loser. It was 2/1 against you beating him when you struck the bet and, because of his insider knowledge, it is still 2/1 now even though only two cards remain.

For those of you who doubt this, I urge you to try it at home. Take the cards or three of anything, shuffle or rearrange them so that you know what is where and try it with a friend. Metaphorically speaking, you will take him to the cleaners by offering  6/4 about what appears to be a 2/1 chance. Of course, this only works as long as you know which card to reveal once he has made his bet. On the times the player is right, you are paying under the odds. When he is wrong, which will be twice in three even on a straight guess, more if you are misleading him into believing he knows the whereabouts of the Queen, he is being similarly fleeced.

Just to close this particular scam, punters catch on quickly that the dealer knows what he is doing. As a result, for the dealer this game has a limited life span so after a few marks have put themselves forward and lost their money, it is a case of, ‘Here comes the Law,’ the table is upended and the gang is gone only to set up somewhere else.

Next up, the variations of Indefinite Odds…

THE ART OF WINNER-FINDING

 ODD AND ENDS I

How the bookmakers look at odds and probability…

IN MY LAST ARTICLE on the subject of odds and probability, I mentioned the difference in odds that are absolute as against those that are indefinite. It is useful for punters to make the distinction because most odds offered are of the indefinite variety and require a fair degree of scrutiny.

                 A book can be made against any eventuality, but some eventualities are more likely than others. These days most bookmakers will bet on anything. However, some propositions are plain ridiculous, making their odds incalculable. How, for example, would you go about offering odds against a spaceship landing in Hyde Park? With no form to go on, other than it has never happened before; therefore it is highly unlikely ever to happen, what odds would one put on such a random possibility occurring? A million?

What if the bettor was Stephen Hawking? Could it be he had an edge of sorts? Might he at least know that an unidentified craft was on a collision course with our planet, and he has struck a similar bet that it would land in Central Park, Gorky Park or Tiananmen Square? On the face of it though, bookmakers offer odds on snow at Christmas, the proven sighting of UFOs, citizens reaching the age of a hundred, for publicity. They are silly bets to lay even so, because offering, let’s say 1,000/1 for any eventuality is bad business. No one wants a pound so badly he will, or should, risk a thousand to get it. In the case of the UFO, 1000/1 is almost certainly underpriced but that is not the point. The punter only has to risk a tenner to net £10,000. Long after the stake has been absorbed by day-to-day living, he is unlikely to lament its loss and there is a probably a greater chance of collecting than of winning the infernal lottery.

Indefinite odds vary from being odds that are hard to assess to downright impossible. Lightning striking certain areas, UFOs, the spotting of a flag on Mars, are all genuinely indefinite propositions. Under normal circumstances, the possibilities of such events occurring are so remote and random that no one is in a better position to ascertain the likelihood of these sorts of eventualities than anyone else. Bookmakers will of course flimp the punter with their odds but, to be fair, that is understandable for reasons explained: namely, there is nothing in it for the layer and plenty to be gained by the punter should only one of these unlikely occurrences actually occur in a literal blue moon.

But some implausible propositions are not as outlandish as they seem. Always, always beware of the man who says: ‘How much do you want to bet that I can’t…’ Whatever it is he is claiming to do, from walking upside down on his fingertips to producing a rabbit from his underpants, you can be pretty sure he can do it. Either that or he is a nutcase. From all the improbable feats in the universe, he has chosen to nominate these two. Most propositions have a clause attached. That is to say, in this case he has not specified how or where he will achieve the proposed feat. As far as the rabbit proposition is concerned, he did not specify the animal was to be hoisted from underpants he was wearing. That was assumed. If he were to open a case and pull a rabbit from a giant pair of undergarments in which it had been secreted, technically he has won the bet. The devil is in the detail. I have no idea how he would walk on his fingertips but would not bet against it if he proposed such a thing

A famous bookmaker once told me he was always reluctant to bet on anything that spoke. I guess that meant football was off his board but I take his point. Betting history is littered with incidents where insider knowledge has held sway. Snooker matches involving brothers, football matches where a lop-sided betting pattern on correct frames or scores suddenly emerges. The ridiculous proposition stating which colour dress the Queen is to wear at Royal Ascot is another notable example. It is inconceivable that someone somewhere does not know in advance what dress she is going to wear. Bookmakers have had their feathers ruffled here on more than one occasion. Frankly, it serves them right. This occurrence involves too many outsiders for it to be anything but an open secret in certain circles. Similarly, with television programmes like X Factor and Strictly Come Dancing, those on the inside know the voting patterns leading up to the closing stages of the competitions and are in a better position to make an educated guess than Aunt Hilda. These examples involve a degree of dishonesty or insider dealing. However, there are occasions when bookmakers know less than the punter. This makes them of legitimate interest.

Bookmakers have this all-consuming desire to bet on everything, even if they do not always know that much about the subject. Take golf, tennis, rugby and certainly other events like the Oscars. They are vulnerable to those that major in these sports and pastimes. In 1997, bookmakers offered odds on the number of Oscars the film Titanic would scoop. They got it spectacularly wrong because they underestimated the categories the film was likely to win: Best Special Effects, Costume, Sound, Visual Effects, Screenplay, Editing, being prime examples. I suspect they had not considered such categories. They may be minor awards in comparison to the biggies: Best Film, Director, Best and Supporting Actor/Actress and Producer, but they count and the misinformed bookmakers concentrated on the obvious, making six or seven their favourite, whereas the film took eleven Academy Awards and I some of their money.

When I worked as an odds-compiler, I only ever put my name to horseracing or events I knew anything about. That in itself was hard enough as there was many an occasion when I was forced to put prices to a race I had no feel for. But that was the job and, as a job it is one where you need to be right more often that you are wrong. In any event, bookmakers have a fail-safe device in that virtually all the prices you see are compiled by an industry man, which he sends to all the firms. He makes a tidy living out of this but has a top class team backing him up and their mistakes are minimal. As individuals, they as capable of getting it wrong as anyone else but, united, with mistakes picked up by other members of the team, they are on the money most of the time as it takes an across the board error for a horse to be wrongly assessed. So the task of beating them is not straightforward. However, there are occasions when they call it wrongly. This is why I advocate serious punters should maintain a system unique to themselves for evaluating the performances of racehorses.

Odds-compilers are well paid and have two masters to serve. Essentially, they wish to play it safe. They want to second-guess how punters will assess a race. Often, spurred on by hyperbole from Timeform or Raceform, they will under price a certain favourite on the assumption the betting public will (which they often do) fall over themselves to take 6/4 about what looks like a blot in a handicap. In-house odds-compilers are paid to produce their own prices but the emphasis is on them to sail pretty close to the ship charted by the industry men. This means, even if they feel a horse is too short, or too big, they will want to be seen by their employers as being in tandem with the industry men, whose record is proven.

This is why, when you open the paper or check the internet, the firms seem to have little variance in their prices. Independently compiled prices would create a vast difference from firm to firm, with many bookmakers often producing contrasting favourites. The reasoning behind this form of similitude is that bookmakers, even in the early days when such a term as arbitrage was unheard of, wished to avoid a situation where collectively they were betting over-broke. I could never follow this.

Privately I argued, as a firm, so long as your prices were right, that was what mattered; but no; bookmaking is little short of a cartel when it comes to pre-show prices. There are a few points difference here and there, when compilers talk their employers into extending the price of one horse and shortening the price of another, but we are only talking a minor variance. An in-house odds-compiler can price a horse up at 10/1, but if the industry price is 4/1, the ten is pie in the sky. The firm may extend the 4 to 9/2, 5/1 or even 11/2 if they have utmost faith in their man and he convinces them his price is a considered one and not a mistake. That is as far a they will go. All the firms tend to do is tinker with the prices they receive from the central source. The industry man and his band of helpers comprise the equivalent of the Glass’s Guide in the motor trade, where only dealers know the retail price of a second-hand car at any given time.

As a serious punter, little of this should concern you. For, in pricing up horses we are dealing with an indefinite proposition. The prices merely reflect an opinion. They do not represent the absolute generated by a heads-or-tails scenario. So-called professional opinion often gathers pace as others run with it on the assumption it is correct. Opinion in itself is a fragile commodity. Even when the most successful of players is expressing a view, it can be wrong. That presents an opportunity for those who believe in themselves to take on the consensus of opinion.

But when taking such a stance, be warned; if you disagree markedly with the prices on offer, you are pitching yourself against some clever people. That does not mean they are right and you are wrong. On the contrary, because odds-compilers understand there is safety in numbers, they are keen to come to the same conclusion. So the King Without Any Clothes On principle can creep in. But be aware, those with an edge, those possessing knowledge you do not have – such as the wellbeing of a leading participant – do have the drop on those without such information. In his case, bookmakers are the front line. Often, their reluctance to lay bets, combined with their eagerness to shorten a horse, betrays their knowledge. When they think they are right and you are wrong, they will soak up money on so-called fancied runners. They may alter the price but, the fact they do so on a sliding rather than a panicked scale, gives a clear indication as to how concerned they may be. When they know they have got it wrong, it is a case of whang, – now you see the price – now you don’t. When they are full up but prepared to continue laying bets, it is more a case of, Go ahead punk; make my day!

If we are on a level playing field, then only an expert knows, or has a darned good idea, when a proposition such as a horserace is likely to be correctly analysed.

As I said last time, there is also the time factor to consider. Odds- compilers are racing against the clock, having to produce prices by mid-afternoon for inclusion in an advert for the next day. Non-runners, ground changes, jockey changes, can often occur after they have gone to press, as can a vital piece of form, particularly now we have so much racing at night, that can alter the complexion of a race. As an individual, you are in a position to pounce on such mistakes when and if they occur. If a week is a long time in politics, twelve hours (often the time between pricing a race and its taking place) can be an eternity.

To a degree, I have become lost in my own rhetoric in this piece. It had been my intention to demonstrate how prices are constructed and what each fraction represents. I shall set myself that task for the next article, which I trust will make this issue somewhat clearer for those who may be struggling with the concept of odds in general and their impact on life as a whole. Everything has a price (except perhaps that flag flying on Mars) so the ability to weigh up the pros and cons in any given situation allow those that can perfect it something of an advantage.

THE ART OF WINNER-FINDING

ODDS AND ENDS II

I ENDED the last piece with the suggestion that everything has its price. In Godfather parlance, everybody has his or her price; although I am not convinced that is true. There must be some things that individuals would refuse whatever the reward.

Mathematics knows such moral divide. Prices are merely a basic form of arithmetic and can be simply broken down. They are fractions. 6/4 suggests that the punter has four chances in six, or two in three. 2/1 reflects his chance as being exactly that: one chance in two. 5/2 implies he has one two chances in five and 3/1 that he has one in three. And so it goes…Place £20 at 5/2 and you are betting what we call money-to-money. But of course, you don’t have to adjust the stake to suit the fraction.

The examples I have used are simple to follow. What if the fractions are more complicated? Let us say 13/8, or the ugly 85/40, or, as I contend it should be – 17/8. They present no problem to the man that deals with these figures every day of his life.

We are in a different age now, but at one time, when you struck a bet with a racecourse bookmaker, he would call out what you would win commensurate to your stake. Ask for £10 at 10/1 and he would shout: ‘£100 to 10; ticket number 776,’ before handing you one of those old-fashioned cards containing Jolly Jack’s photo.

Now we are in the age of the computer those days are gone. The ticket was your receipt and what he was indicating was that you had staked £10 and were liable to win £100. Like the man who can calculate the ever-decreasing amount left on a dartboard and what the player requires to win, the bookmaker gave an impression of being some kind of wizard with sums by converting each bet thrown his way. It was an example of an acquired knack I referred to in an earlier article. Here is a man that can convert odds to percentages in his head. Ask both him and the dart man to wrestle with a logarithm table and it will be a different story.

Odds and percentages represent the toolbox of a bookmaker’s business. Professional punters need to be equally conversant with their meaning.

So let us break them down, starting with the easy examples first. We all know that Evens represents just that – literally a fifty-fifty situation. We can prove that by converting the fraction. Evens is written as 1/1. To convert a fraction to a percentage, you add two noughts to the denominator [bottom part of the fraction], add the two figures together, that is the denominator and the numerator [top part of the fraction] and divide the sum into the denominator. Sound complicated? It does but it isn’t. A small demonstration will prove how easy it is. 1/1 becomes 1/100. Add the original 1 and 1 together, which gives you two, divide two into 100, you get 50.

Ready for another? Take 6/4, which we know represents a 40% chance. Add two noughts to 4 and you arrive at 400. Six plus four is ten; divide 10 into 400 – answer 40.

Last one, a tricky fraction, 13/8. The 8 becomes 800, divide it by 21 [13 plus 8] and we get a percentage of 38.

Follow exactly the same principal when calculating odds-on chances. Thus 8/13 becomes 1300 divided by 21. In this case, the odds tilt in favour of the player, meaning his winning chance is theoretically 62 percent. And here is a little tip. You may have noticed that the odds against 13/8 are 38 and the odds-on 62. Add the two together and you get 100 percent. That applies to all odds against and odds-on chances that match. 6/4 against is 40%, 4/6 is 60 percent. 5/4 against is 45 percent, 4/5 is 55 percent. So it follows that when you back a 7/4 chance it is 4/7 to lose and when you back a 4/7 shot it is 7/4 to lose. That is the mathematical theory, but that assumes the prices on offer represent a fair reflection of the selection’s chance.

This is where mathematics and chance collide. This is why I have been at pains to separate the absolute odds from the indefinite. Prices levelled against horses are indefinite, they are someone’s idea of the chance that horse has. As a punter, it is your job to decide how accurate that price is. There are no rights and wrongs here. You have to make that decision before a race and not after the result is known. There is nothing wrong with taking correct odds for a horse if you really think it will win. If you make a horse a 7/4 shot and that is the price on offer, there is a major margin for error to consider on both sides of the fence. What is more important than the price of a horse is whether you truthfully believe it will win. If you are unsure, the price should not come into the equation unless it is so massive that it becomes irresistible. But a knowledge of how to translate prices to percentages gives you a realistic opportunity to evaluate the chance you are about to take. Once you know the formula you can transform any price to a percentage, meaning you are now in a better position to establish whether you are betting to value or not.

Some punters do their own issues, or make their own prices. I used to do this for a living and have no wish to return to it now. But it is one way of identifying value, be it good or bad. Once again, it is a lot of work and only as effective as the person inputting the information. Sometimes, I feel these things can be diversions that tend to steer us away from the core of the issue, which, in this case, is to identify winners. On the other hand, I may just be getting lazy. Making a living at racing is a young man’s business and being truthful, I feel only the names have changed when going through some cards. Possibly that is because I am going through a barren spell, and under those circumstances confidence and enthusiasm do tend to slip. All gamblers know the sinking feeling associated with this, as do jockeys who cannot seem to ride a winner. They lose that edge, that wave of confidence and for a short time, seriously doubt their ability. This is especially true of jockeys; whereas, as a punter you can take the day, the week, the month off and forget the whole damn business – providing that is, your finances can stand it.

There is a hidden advantage in compiling a tissue and that is it makes you look at every horse and evaluate its chance. Therefore, surreptitiously, you become more and more conversant with the product you are handling – the formbook – and you are able to recall form lines in an instant. That is a desirable situation to reach and means you are on top of the business rather than it getting on top of you.

To give yourself the best chance of sorting a race out, you have to break it down. If you cannot do that, the race is of little use from a betting point of view. Start at the bottom of the handicap, or with horses you perceive as having little or no chance. Price them accordingly so that you are working outside in, rather than the other way round. Put the outsiders as big a price as you can. That way, when you come to the head of the market, you are left with the percentage that covers those with realistic chances. This enables you to price them more correctly than if used as your starting point.

Races of primary import are those that appear to contain some fragment of flawed logic. A favourite that is too short, too much emphasis placed on a piece of form you know to be suspect, an overpriced outsider that has been crying out for a step up in trip. The only way you will identify such inconsistencies is to watch plenty of races and to make notes. Compile a list of horses you are waiting to back if conditions appear right; do not rely on your memory as it will let you down.

We started this piece with an explanation of percentages, perhaps it is fitting to conclude it in a similar vein. Depending on your style of betting, you can only expect to bust the percentages by between two to five points. So, these figures are pretty much absolute. If you adopt the scatter-gun approach – that is to say to back and lay in most races on any given day – expect your winning percentage to be low. You will be betting at long odds-on when you consider your stake. So a profit of between six or seven percent on your turnover is probably as much as can be expected. The advantage with this type of wagering is that you are diluting your losses with a juggernaut-type approach to betting. By removing the need for pinpoint accuracy, you are spreading your liability thinner than the punter that backs on a more selective basis. As always, stake is important here. Even the best of players will have bad days. They go with the territory. You have to expect this, withstand them and not let the dark days, the long hours wasted, the feeling that you have lost your touch, get the better of you.

If you are the discriminating type who only bets when things appear to be cherry ripe, you have to aim for a higher strike rate – between thirty of forty percent – and be patient when a well-thought out bet goes astray. Depending on your degree of exactitude, you may only unearth between six and twenty bets a year. That matters not, so long as you achieve the required target of winners. And now that you understand percentages, you can see that if the best you can hope to achieve is a thirty-five percent strike rate, that does mean the average price of your winners must exceed 15/8. That is a break-even figure. To make money, 15/8 has to become 3/1 if you are to show a profit of 40% of your turnover. Back twenty horses a year, placing £500 on each, and you will make in the region of £4,000 per annum, providing you achieve the target. If you have another income and time on your hands, this is fine. Assuming you do not, one of three things must happen. You must increase your percentage profit, your stakes, or the price of your winners. The first option is unlikely. The last two are possible, with the easier being an increase in stakes so long as you possess the necessary finances. This enlarges your risk of losses but increases the chance of success. In the example quoted, you have staked £10,000 over a year to win £4,000. Following the same strike rate, to make £20,000, you will need a tank of £50,000 in order to stake £2,500 per selection. Increasing the average price of your winners may mean cutting your bets down even further but, believe me, 6, 7 and 8/1 winners are out there and often they only have one horse to beat. But, the less horses you back, the higher your strike rate needs to be.

So we have travelled full circle. The options are, back a lot win a little but make a steady income. Back a little, stake big and be extremely selective. Go the arbitrage route, which means an awful of work for a potentially small amount.  Alternatively, see if your local council requires drivers for their  road gritters.

 

THE ART OF WINNER-FINDING

ODDS-ON YOU DO – ODDS-ON YOU DON’T

THE CONCEPT OF VALUE is all-consuming for many. Allow me to make a statement before continuing. I am not exempt from many of the pitfalls I detail in these pieces. There is nothing worse than some know-it-all espousing theory and then demonstrating that he is incapable of following his own advice. We all struggle in this business and are vulnerable to the same mistakes, but at least if you are aware of the elephant trap laid, you tread a path with your eyes wide open.

So, let us get a few essentials out of the way before we continue. Firstly, over time, we all bet at odds-on. It is no different from investing in stocks and shares. Unless you hit the jackpot (in the case of betting on horses, win the wretched Scoop Six or whatever it is called) or in your stocks and shares dealings, sell Woolworth just before the whole company becomes worth an estimated one pence, you are playing to win a fraction of your overall stake.

Discounting the improbable and the downright impossible, let us concentrate on the possible. If you bet on a regular basis and your returns are less than your turnover (which under normal circumstances they will be), then it follows that the more turnover you generate, the higher your overall dividend. This assumes you will be able to make a profit of anywhere between three and eight percent, which I might add is not a given. Therefore, at the higher figure, a turnover of £100,000 per annum means a paltry return of up to £8,000. Double your turnover, and in theory you double your profit to £16,000, which, depending on your circumstances, will keep the wolf from the door and little else. To put that figure into perspective, it is the equivalent of driving a van for one of those door-to-door delivery firms. Such a job does not require you risking up to £200,000 (you will not lose the lot unless you are a complete idiot, and even then the law of averages states you must enjoy a few returns along he line). But you are risking capital. If you are to put such a sum on the line, it does help if you have an idea what you are doing.

So let us take a closer look at the proposition. If you agree that your profit is only going to be a percentage of your betting tank, or turnover – £200,000 is not actually required as that is a turnover figure, as opposed to one invested up front – you are still potentially putting a sizeable sum at risk. Therefore, it is important to pick your bets carefully. Value is not backing a horse at a bigger price than you think its chance warrants unless you think it can win. I have covered this before – essentially a horse you think should be 10/1 that is available at 20/1 is of no use. By assuming it is a 10/1 chance, you have already admitted it is an unlikely winner.

Similarly, backing a horse at 4/1, which is a perfectly acceptable price, becomes less acceptable when you are backing the likes of Big Buck’s in a Hennessy, where anything can happen to sabotage the best thought out reasoning. With the weight-rise it already has! You may fancy Big Buck’s for your life, but is he value as opposed to taking 4/1 about a horse in a maiden at Lingfield that has only one to beat and you think should be favourite?

Plenty of punters fall into the trap of backing horses in high profile races just because they enjoy the kudos of being right. Satisfying though that is, pursuing such vanity allows the wolf to get a paw inside the door followed by a slavering mouth. For every Big Buck’s you get right, you will get six wrong, meaning you will lose overall. There is nothing wrong with trying to solve races like the Hennessy or the Paddy Power or the Derby; but 4/1 is 4/1 whether at Lingfield, Epsom or Cheltenham. This does not mean you have to target 10/1 chances in such races. What it does mean is that unless you can find one you genuinely fancy, as opposed to a horse you are prepared to back because of its attractive odds, it is probably a race to sit out. Should Big Buck’s win, cheer it home. Do not be unsporting and bad-tempered about the loss of a winning bet. Rejoice in your exact judgement and in the knowledge that over a time, backing such horses will lose you money.

Targeting punter-friendly races is as important as finding winners. But there are occasions when two or three results can swing a season completely round.

Two years ago, I came close to winning big amounts on two occasions in high-profile handicaps. Had the horses in question won, they would have made a big difference to my bank account, but both lost. In between their running, there was the usual put-and-take associated with gambling: winning a bit, losing a bit, paying the mortgage, topping up the wine cellar, managing to get the car serviced, spending days with my head down, others with a spring in my step. The two horses in question were chancy bets but I thought they had excellent prospects. Firstly, there was Dhuluar Dhar in the Bunbury Cup. I backed it to win with the books at 33/1, 40/1 and got a small amount on at odds around 80/1 with Betfair. It was beaten into fourth place, finishing half-a-length behind the winner. Great shout; but a losing bet!

The other was Shevchenko in the Tote International at Ascot, a horse that ended up as Pricewise on the day. I took odds varying between 14/1 and 10/1. He finished second and again, not being an each-way punter, I lost. Losses were absorbed by other transactions, but had either or both won; it would have made an incalculable difference to my betting year. I did not back either horse because of being drawn in by the price, but because I considered they were bets. That is the point I wish to illustrate here. The price one is prepared to take must depend on the complexity of the race. Your Bankables in the Hunt Cup, your Kauto Stars in the King George are horses to fancy, but not horses to bet. Not enough of them win; meaning in the end you lose! Horses do not represent football teams. You are not obliged to support them. They will not take exception if you do not and your bank balance will be healthier.

If you cannot find alternatives to the obvious in certain races, wait until you can. By backing big-priced horses you actually fancy, you are tipping the scales in your favour. As I said, you only need to pull off one or two chunky-priced winners in a season to put all that 7/4, 9/4 stuff (that we all back) into perspective. Finding such contenders is not easy; but there are an awful lot of races run in a season. You should be capable of unhooking ten or so horses that are double-priced fancies that you are prepared to open your shoulders over. I am not talking about having small covering bets here, or going for a week’s wages, what I am advocating is having the courage and the self-belief to go for a crack at a big pot.

Personally, although I know plenty of professionals that state the Tote Scoop is a great bet when the pot is big enough, I think that is balderdash and this is a much better alternative. If you have to risk £10,000 in various perms to receive a potential return of £100,000 for backing six winners in the hardest races of the day, and need to find the inevitable 20/1 0r 33/1 shot in the process, for overall odds of 10/1 you might as well stand in  Caesar’s Palace and pick a gaming table.

Anyone who has a contrary opinion and can elucidate a clear case suggesting I am wrong is more than welcome to get in touch. I will not take cover behind the fact that I am in a position to shelter behind the editorial advantage I have. Your case will be put in a proper and fair manner and should you be able to back it up, I will be the first to admit it.

Oddschecker

Oddschecker

So what is oddschecker?

Oddschecker is an odds comparison website and a great tool for any serious investor whether you are betting on horses football or sport.  If example you are betting on horseracing then select the  horse racing tab on the left-hand side. It’s usually the second one down. The makes plans to give you various options including each meeting for that day as well as ante-post betting, international horse racing, and sometimes the next day’s racing.  Simply select at the meeting for which you are interested and you’ll get the overview screen showing the first half-dozen runners for each race with the best odds available in brackets.

If the odds are in green it means there’s been no price movement so far today.

If the odds are shown  in blue it means that the odds are shortening and the horse is a steamer.  In other words it’s been attracting money and has been well bet.  It’s a good indication the horse is fancied and likely to run a good race today.

And if the odds show and in red it means the horse has been drifting in the betting and the likely conclusion is that it’s not particularly fancied today.

However the real value of odds checker or any similar odds comparison website is the speed at which you can check to see which bookmaker is offering the best odds for your selection. If you’re investing any sort of significant money, perhaps £100 or more a race getting an extra point or even half a point for your selection is worth £50 to £100 every time you win.  Lets say you bet one horse a day and average just 2 winners a week. That’s an average £5,000 to £10,000 a year additional profit! Let no one kid you, getting good odds is art of the key of professional Betting.

To use oddschecker in detail simply select the race that you are interested in and the detailed screen loads per with the bookmakers at the top and the horses down the side in a matrix with every price shown for each bookmaker and every horse.

The bets odds for any horse is shown in bold so you can easily scan and immediately see which bookmakers offering the best odds.

A quick word of warning!

Oddschecker collects   its data by screen scraping the bookmaker’s sites so as a result sometimes it’s price changes are delayed and in the odds displayed by Oddschecker are out of date and had already changed especially in rapidly moving markets.  It can be very frustrating to see good odds available and then when you ring the bookmaker you discover the odds have changed a couple of minutes ago.  We are currently developing a faster version of this data collecting software and will be making it available on this website shortly.

It’s also good to be aware that If you click on the odds you will conveniently be taken through to that bookmakers’ website so you can place a bet at that price.

However if it’s a bookmaker you don’t already have an account with … remember  you would qualify for a free bet when you open a new account so don’t waste this bet.  Open a an account and claim your free bet!  If you do not have an account with that’s bookmaker check on the free bets available on this website  to see if the bookmaker is offering a free bet when you open an account.  Most do offer something in the region of £25 to £50 as a matched free bet to your first bet, although some of as much hair is £200.  You certainly don’t want to be missing out on a free £200 do you?

Conclusion

Oddschecker is overall an excellence odds comparison website and one that you should certainly consider adding it to your betting tool chest. It also has some neat tools such as a steamers tab showing you the biggest shorteners of the day. Personally I find it useful to to open two or three web browsers simultaneously so I can monitor several markets at the same time. Admittedly  I do have the luxury of a multiscreen trading station to help me do this but if example you were looking at plcing bets in a couple of races and are monitoring teh market to see what odds are available you might like to open up both races and have them minimised so you can rapidly access them and decide the right time you want to place your bets.