Why Go For Betting Exchanges? Because They Yield Better Horse Racing Results Vis-A-Vis Earnings For You

Why Go For Betting Exchanges? Because They Yield Better Horse Racing Results Vis-A-Vis Earnings For You

Betting exchanges are increasingly popular among punters. There are many advantages in engaging in betting exchanges, not the least of which is the ease of placing your bets online. You also do not need to go to the racetracks and place your daily bets since software can do it for you. You can even get horse racing results delivered to you on real-time!

How Bet Exchanges can Increase your Earnings

Bet exchanges increase your earnings, oftentimes regardless of horse racing results, mainly because there are not bookmakers who demand higher shares of your earnings. Indeed, your odds increase by more than 20%!

You only need to recompense the bet exchange a small percentage of your winnings. Furthermore, you are allowed to act as bookmakers yourselves. You only bet against other punters online, as against the conventional bookmakers in the racetracks.

Back and Lay Betting Options

Unlike traditional racecourses, betting exchanges allow you the ability to lay. You can set odds about a racehorse not winning an event, which would have been cause for corruption and criticism in the racetracks. (You have easier opportunities to ensure that a racehorse will lose, as against the other way around.)

In fact, this ability to lay allows you to earn profits regardless of the direction the horse racing results has taken. You can lay at a lower price and back at a higher price; thus, ensuring that you have a profit either way. It is a win-win situation.

For example, you can bet that Racehorse A will win for $10 at 10/1 during his first race. You can then lay him at 2/1 in his subsequent race. To ensure profit whether he wins or loses in both races, you offer o30 of your probable earnings so as to win $15 if he fails. You are then covering your first $10 bet.

If he wins in the first race, you earn $100; if not, you lose $10. If he wins the second race, you lose $30; if not, you win $15. If you add up the two bets, you still gain profit either at $5 or at $70. Thus, regardless of how the horse places in the horse racing results, you still earn more money.

Better Odds Offered

Online punters can choose not to take the first offers on their bets. You can take the best odds available and settle for its potential winnings.

Better yet, you can ask for better odds. Sometimes, you have to depend on your gut instinct and experience to determine if there might still be better prices out there. Wait and be patient.

Non-Punishment for Winning

You will not be punished if you consistently win in online betting. This is in marked difference to the practice of bookmakers. They will discriminate against you after more than a few big wins – limited stakes and closing of accounts, among them.

The beauty of betting exchanges is their ability to let you earn big, and earn more and more, without limit. The horse racing results might show that your horse has lost but it will not matter – after all, you placed your lay bet! And even if you do lose now, you can still recover your money. Beautiful, is it not?

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Help answer the question about horse racing

If it came up, would you vote to ban horse racing?
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About Author


A very good horse racing tip is to shift your focus from on-track betting to online betting in bet exchanges. For the best horse racing system, go to Sure2Profit.com. The company guarantees that horse racing results will almost always be in your favor.

18 Responses to “Why Go For Betting Exchanges? Because They Yield Better Horse Racing Results Vis-A-Vis Earnings For You”

  1. monkeymanbob says:

    Nice work, you did pretty good.

  2. TheTroubadourMusic says:

    :O

    :O

    :O

    how is this not a real photo?

  3. champ0y says:

    You’re really good man. You’ve got excellent talent.

  4. Faithless863 says:

    hm i couldn’t tell the difference between photograph and painting comparing the final resault.

    This is sick

  5. barrel racer says:

    As I always say, there's a village missing it's idiot somewhere and they can usually find them trolling on here. They think that if they repeatedly ask the same question and rave their PETA misinformation, that someone might actually end up agreeing with them. Let's hope not!

  6. Johnny Carnage says:

    Most owners actually don't make money racing.

    Only about 70% of all Thoroughbreds ever get to the races, and only about 55% of all Thoroughbreds ever win a race. It costs about $25,000, give or take a few thousand, to keep a horse in training for a year; more for the major racing centers like New York or Southern California, less for tracks away from the major population centers. roughly 10-15% of all Thoroughbreds earn enough money during the course of a year to cover their training expenses.

    Some owners can recover the residual value of their horse at the end of its racing career by selling, but most racehorses– particular male racehorses– have residual value that is low or even zero at the end of their racing careers.

    Basically, most people who are in racing are in it for the excitement, the fun, the competition; and the hope that maybe they'll be the one to strike it rich with a horse like Mine That Bird– or one of his relatives. It's the hope of getting that one special horse, plus the love of racing in general, that keeps people going.

  7. warah110 says:

    Perfect.

  8. Christina says:

    http://www.xpressbet.com

    You have to sign up, but it's completely free. There's no fees for watching or betting. And they have like 60 tracks you can watch. It's a great service.

    Several tracks have their own broadcasts on their website, but xpressbet is great because you can get all the tracks in one place and place a bet if you'd like.

  9. Forbidia says:

    Brilliant Willy, Just Brilliant =D

  10. lidiabarbarita says:

    Very nice!!

  11. Richard says:

    I think this gives a good explanation of the definition of the various track conditions:

    http://www.ultimatecapper.com/track-conditions.htm

    That said, it's important to note that because there is no standard for track composition in terms of sand, silt, clay, loam, organic matter, and every track is different, each track plays differently. To cite one example, the track at Aqueduct has a high sand content because the dates run at Aqueduct are typically the wettest times of the year. So the track superintendent finds it beneficial to have a lot of sand in the track to assure fast drainage. The result is that when there has been a lot of rain, the main track at Aqueduct can be like a wet beach– it packs down and gets harder. You may get faster times on such a track than when the surface is rated "fast".

    Churchill Downs historically has had a high clay content in the track surface, with the result that the track can be very cuppy at best of times ("cuppy" means that when a horse strides on it, the hoofprint forms a "cup" on the surface of the track; it has depth, and it holds its shape rather than immediately crumbling) and can be really sticky and tiring when it gets wet.

    A lot depends, too, on how the track superintendent deals with rainfall. At Santa Anita and Hollywood Park in the pre-synthetic days, the superintendents had enough time in most cases to get out the heavy roller equipment and "seal" the track before rain came. Basically when they seal the track, they're rolling and compacting the surface so that instead of water penetrating and making the track muddy down deep, the water just runs off the surface and drains away. Of course, the problem with this is that even when they opened the track surface in preparation for the day's racing, there was some compaction and the track would tend to get harder. During some of our rare wet winters, the track superintendent would sometimes have to close the track to exercise in order to do deep harrowing and conditioning of the subsurface and base after the track had been repeatedly sealed.

    With synthetic surfaces, I think everyone, including the people who manufacture and install them, is still on a learning curve of what has to be done to keep the track consistant and safe in all kinds of weather.

    From a handicapping standpoint, the important thing to remember is that each track is unique, and that you have to become familiar with what the weather conditions do to the the individual track surface.

  12. Totally Wizard says:

    Hi,
    A jockey has a very dangerous job, but a very important one. He must guide the horse in the correct way as to know how his horse runs, and performs during a race. It is his responsibility to get his horse in the correct position, and know how to guide him through traffic going at very high speeds while the rest of the field is fighting to do the same. Jockey error has played a huge roll in injuries to other jockey's and horses. The horse does the running, but it is up to the jockey to know how fast the horse runs, and when to ask the horse for his best without compromising. So the roll of a jockey is very important. Without a jockey it would be like racing a car with no driver. Hope this explains it to you.

  13. connor_m_barr says:

    i don't like the gambling, the horse race is alright, mainly only good in the Kentucky Derby when you are really rooting for a horse to get the triple crown

  14. avb17018411 says:

    woww that’s really relax and beatiful soung .good picture of jhony depp !

  15. superchode20164 says:

    amazing! Willy teach me how to paint like you!

  16. mushy_69158 says:

    Its people like you, that pissin' an moanin', that ruin the world…………………..

  17. josejr226 says:

    You can go to the site for the Daily Racing Form at it should answer your questions also at any track the program will have instructions inside the cover explaining how to read the form and also how to make all wagers including the exotics.

  18. bc says:

    You need to go to a reputable trainer and tell him you're interested in buying a horse. Tell him how much you've got to spend and he'll do the rest. He might have a horse in his yard that's already for sale or he might go out and buy one for you.
    Don't go buying horses over the internet!

    The flat trainer Richard Hannon has had some good successes with cheaply bought horses in the past. He trains in Wiltshire.
    http://richardhannonracing.tv/

    Don't forget you'll have to contribute towards the horse's training expenses every week so the more people involved the cheaper it will be.

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