The First Step in Finding a Good Horse Racing System
Whatever system you use should allow for this.Level stakes betting This is the simplest system of them all. You place the same stake on each race that you bet on. Most tipster comparison charts use this method so that you can see at a glance how successful (or otherwise) the tipping services are.
Variable stakes method With this system you vary your stake according to the anticipated starting price. Your aim is to make the same amount of money each time your horse wins. So if your aim is to make 10 units profit per winning race, you would vary your stake to take account of this. If the horse is forecast to start at evens, you'd stake 10 units. If the forecast price is 2/1 then you'd only stake 5 units. And if your chosen horse is forecast to start at 10/1 then you'd only bet 1 unit. This can be a very effective method to maximise your winnings without risking too much money.
Martingale system This is riskier than the previous two methods described and can quickly break your bank if you don't pick winners on a regular basis. You double your bet after a loser with the idea that a winning bet recovers your previous lost stakes and shows a profit. It is quite a common betting plan for a number of systems you'll find online. Because of the possibility of stakes getting high, there is usually a stop loss built in where if the stake gets too big, you start over again although you'll obviously have lost the stakes you have placed until that point.
Stop at a winner A lot of systems use this approach. You place your bets throughout the day, possibly using the Martingale system, and when you get a winner that's the end of your betting for the day, regardless of whether your winner appears in the first race, the last race or anywhere in between. Apart from limiting your possible losses, there is no real logic in this system as each race is an independent event.
Variable stakes method With this system you vary your stake according to the anticipated starting price. Your aim is to make the same amount of money each time your horse wins. So if your aim is to make 10 units profit per winning race, you would vary your stake to take account of this. If the horse is forecast to start at evens, you'd stake 10 units. If the forecast price is 2/1 then you'd only stake 5 units. And if your chosen horse is forecast to start at 10/1 then you'd only bet 1 unit. This can be a very effective method to maximise your winnings without risking too much money.
Martingale system This is riskier than the previous two methods described and can quickly break your bank if you don't pick winners on a regular basis. You double your bet after a loser with the idea that a winning bet recovers your previous lost stakes and shows a profit. It is quite a common betting plan for a number of systems you'll find online. Because of the possibility of stakes getting high, there is usually a stop loss built in where if the stake gets too big, you start over again although you'll obviously have lost the stakes you have placed until that point.
Stop at a winner A lot of systems use this approach. You place your bets throughout the day, possibly using the Martingale system, and when you get a winner that's the end of your betting for the day, regardless of whether your winner appears in the first race, the last race or anywhere in between. Apart from limiting your possible losses, there is no real logic in this system as each race is an independent event.
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