Was wondering what are the stats on horses who hit evens in running and dont end up winning This obviously means the race begins with all horses odds against and does not apply to races where the favourite is odds on.
I tried this and many other strategies when I was playing on the dreaded geegees, sometimes I could lay 3 or 4 at evens in one race. Some people lay at 1.8 1.9, and some lay at 3.05 etc.
Another simple strategy I tried which showed the greatest success, was laying the field in short 5 and 6f races, simply to identify a back i.e. the first nag to catch your lay is the one you then quickly back. I was gob smacked at the amount of times 4 or 5 winners in a row would occur, but long term I didn't show a profit, although if I was forced to return to the nags that is the method I would use.
Ps. I gave up horse betting, and that was the best move I ever made!
I tried this and many other strategies when I was playing on the dreaded geegees, sometimes I could lay 3 or 4 at evens in one race. Some people lay at 1.8 1.9, and some lay at 3.05 etc.Another simple strategy I tried which showed the greatest succes
Barry is right.When viewed as a whole IR markets show quite remarkable efficiency, in this circumstance there is a basic principle of probability that defines how short horses go- it goes like this:
Let's say a horse is trading at 10 (decimal) before the off, the chances of that horse trading at 1 (I.E. winning) are 0.1 (or 10% if you prefer), you get that by the calculation 1/odds. So far so easy. The relevant question is how likely is that horse to trade at 2- well that's just as easy, it's 2/odds- in this case that's 0.2 (20%). Now, take any race you like, calculate the probability of each horse trading at 2, add them all together and hey presto- the answer is always 2, which means that if you place keep bets on every horse at 2 and then run that race over and over again, on average you will match 2 bets per race and therefore break even.
Barry is right.When viewed as a whole IR markets show quite remarkable efficiency, in this circumstance there is a basic principle of probability that defines how short horses go- it goes like this:Let's say a horse is trading at 10 (decimal) before
The horses are very appealing, being prime time sociable hours and tons of liquidity - millions changing hands every hour. I tried full time for 9 months to find someway of grabbing some of that money, but eventually had to admit defeat.
I now do mainly football, which allows much more thinking time as the markets move at a sensible pace, not manic like the nags! The drawback is there isn't that many in-play matches during week day normal hours.
The horses are very appealing, being prime time sociable hours and tons of liquidity - millions changing hands every hour. I tried full time for 9 months to find someway of grabbing some of that money, but eventually had to admit defeat.I now do main
Thanks for the reply robot. but what im working on is a little different and i cant post it here. I suppose i should have made the question clearer and what im looking for is the horses who hit evens first and then end up loosing .
Thanks for the reply robot. but what im working on is a little different and i cant post it here. I suppose i should have made the question clearer and what im looking for is the horses who hit evens first and then end up loosing .
i would imagine the first horse to be matched at evens would win more often than not - given the track boys and fast pic thieves wont take evs unless it's probably a 1.7 shot, might be wrong though
i would imagine the first horse to be matched at evens would win more often than not - given the track boys and fast pic thieves wont take evs unless it's probably a 1.7 shot, might be wrong though
The 1st horse to be matched @2.0 is less likely to win than the 2nd + 3rd i'd say , but there are just too many races where the only one matched will be the winner .
So you would need good filters to avoid just losing to commission .Certain types of tracks/ going /distances and particular horses/jockeys , but i wouldn't be suprised if all those things were pretty well factored in, so it sounds like a struggle to me.
The 1st horse to be matched @2.0 is less likely to win than the 2nd + 3rd i'd say , but there are just too many races where the only one matched will be the winner .So you would need good filters to avoid just losing to commission .Certain types of t
I dimly recall looking at things like this some time ago, although I don't have stats I recall that my data upheld what the theory would suggest- which is that any horse that hits 2 has a 50% chance of winning. The problem is that for there to be a "first" horse to trade at 2 there has to be a second, otherwise the first is really the "only". Clearly if only 1 horse trades at 2 then the chances of that horse winning are 100%, so the issue of how likely it is that 2 horses will trade at 2 is pretty critical. Assuming that 2 horses do trade at 2, the second is more likely to win than the first, but that's because by the time the 2nd horse is trading at 2 the first should no longer be (in theory if not always in practice). The problem is that you can't wait for a second horse to trade at 2 before betting on the first- and if you bet on the first before the second does come along you may well be laying an "only" rather than a "first". Hope that makes sense.
I dimly recall looking at things like this some time ago, although I don't have stats I recall that my data upheld what the theory would suggest- which is that any horse that hits 2 has a 50% chance of winning. The problem is that for there to be a "
I did this for a few dozen races , trying to match everything @1.60 i think it was, in one race there were 4 horses backed @1.35 or lower :) , but overall i finished level .
I did this for a few dozen races , trying to match everything @1.60 i think it was, in one race there were 4 horses backed @1.35 or lower :) , but overall i finished level .
I tried backing the first to hit evens, it doesn't work, unsuprisingly. I tried many many theories on the nags, if you have any more post them up and I may be able to save you some time.
I came to the conclusion that the punters who win on the nags are truly dedicated horse racing lovers, and are winning in-running by being damned good at reading horses as the race progresses, for instance the likes of Koo.
I tried backing the first to hit evens, it doesn't work, unsuprisingly. I tried many many theories on the nags, if you have any more post them up and I may be able to save you some time.I came to the conclusion that the punters who win on the nags ar
I also discovered that laying the field at 1.03 / 1.04 did actually pay a profit if you just lay on Friday afternoons and evenings, and Saturday afternoons not evenings. Sounds silly I know, but it appears to be that more mug money is available at those times, what with it being the end of the working week for many people, so perhaps a few more in the fast pic trading shops.
I also discovered that laying the field at 1.03 / 1.04 did actually pay a profit if you just lay on Friday afternoons and evenings, and Saturday afternoons not evenings. Sounds silly I know, but it appears to be that more mug money is available at th
watching the horse markets this week, was wondering, surely the reguar in running boys must have made a killing. seemed very friendly markets. i'm sure its not like this normally, lots of amateur money around.
watching the horse markets this week, was wondering, surely the reguar in running boys must have made a killing. seemed very friendly markets. i'm sure its not like this normally, lots of amateur money around.
Lay every horse in-running when it touches evens. You get at least 2 each race, on average 4 or 5, do the maths, keep it to yourself though, join me in barbados next week for a beer ;-)
Betfair, Ive sh it um :-) and yes, it can be done
Lay every horse in-running when it touches evens. You get at least 2 each race, on average 4 or 5, do the maths, keep it to yourself though, join me in barbados next week for a beer ;-)Betfair, Ive sh it um :-) and yes, it can be done