Horse Racing Betting System - Designing a Simple System
Putting together a system is not as
difficult as it may sound, even for a beginner. The important thing, and
with any betting, is that you write down every rule and follow it for at
least 100 bets. You do not need to trade real money, paper trading is
best at first. If after 100 bets it is in profit, you can then give it a
betting bank and start gambling.
Starting an untested system with real
money, and packing it in on its first losing run, putting it down as
failed, will only cost you more and more money in the long term. Being
patient saves you money.
So let us get down to starting a system
eh? I’ll show you below how simple they are to put together, this
example is profitable, so no reason why you can not follow it with a
betting bank, but its yearly profits are not huge, but have a go at your
own, always making sure that you understand way a rule works.
The system below is designed for National
Hunt racing.
‘The NH High SR Non-Handicap Fav
System’
Rule 1: Non-Handicap races only.
This ensures that we do not include handicap races, which are more
difficult to get profitable systems out of. Although when you do they
are more profitable than non-handicap races.
Rule 2: Forecast Favourite only (if
joint VOID bet) Just to make sure we have one clear qualifier for our
non-handicap race.
Rule 3: Forecast price must be odds
on. I know that the lower the odds the more likely it is to win,
although the lower the odds the smaller the profit for a new bank.
The first 3 rules of any systems I
quantify as the main system rules, they ensure we have the main set of
qualifiers we are looking for. Those rules after, I regard as filters to
take out any facts I know are not profitable long term.
Rule 4: Horse age must be 6+ This
is because in the UK, horses are not generally full wound up for jumping
until they are at least 6, so those of a lower age have erratic results
that do not prove profitable, so no use including them.
Rule 5: Horse must have finished
2nd or worse on its last run. Horses that won last time out usually go
off at lower odds than they should, so an edge is taken away.
Rule 6: Must be a gelding. Geldings
win the majority of races over fences, and are generally have the most
consistent and reliable form.
Rule 7: Going must be Good-Soft or
better. Any softer than this and results can get a bit random.
That is it. Over the last 10 years it has
produced a 48pt profit even at those low odds, and a 63% SR overall. It
has had 3 losing years in that period, the worst being 5pts, but using
the betting exchange prices, they would also have shown a profit.. There
are around 100 bets per year.
So you can see by this example, it does
not profit every year, but long term it still shows a profit, and it is
long term that any professional gambler will tell you is the only time
span that matters.
(c) Win2Win Limited
Keith Driscoll has been a full time
professional gambler since 1998, and offers free advice on
staking & betting on his web site at
http://www.win2win.co.uk Access to the forum is also free.