Sports
eg:
UK
or
Brides UK
or
Classical Art
or
Buy Music
or
Spirituality
Toggle navigation
eg:
UK
or
Brides UK
or
Classical Art
or
Buy Music
or
Spirituality
Business & Money
Technology
Women
Health
Education
Family
Travel
Cars
Entertainment
SD Editorials
Online Guide and article directory site.
Foodeditorials.com
Over 15,000 recipes & editorials on food.
Lyricadvisor.com
Get 100,000 Lyric & Albums.
Video on Beating The Bookies Nookie
View:
Similar Videos
Videos on A Game Of Golf
Videos on All The Football Teams
Videos on Drop Zone Great America
Videos on Fundamentals Of Residential Construction
Videos on Gold Coast Of Australia
Videos on How To Hit Long Irons
Videos on Lay Z Boy Recliner
Videos on Major League Back To The Minors
Videos on Play For Fun Bingo
Videos on Rich And The Famous
Videos on The Confidential Guide To Golf Courses
Videos on The Game Of Car
Videos on The Game Of Shadows
Videos on The Wisdom Of Snow
Videos on Von Zipper Snowboarding Goggles
Videos on The Grace And Agility Of Gymnastics
Videos on The Genesis of a Yarn and Fabric Junkie
Videos on The Facts About Kempo Karate Sparring Techniques
Videos on The Families of NASCAR
Videos on The Goodmans GTVL26W17HDF TV Does Have A Lot To Recommend It
.
Currently No Video Available
Beating The Bookies Nookie
Quentin Brown Brown
Lets
be honest, horse racing is an inexact sport (science?), horses are
unpredictable animals which don't always perform according to
expectations. Jockeys too have their good and bad days (wrong side of
the bed syndrome) and if doping and race fixing allegations are to be
believed these too add to the uncertainty of the outcome of the race.
No
trainer would deliberately race a horse which he didn't think was
'fit'. But being fit and the horse being at its peak are two different
things. Just because a horse won or performed well in it's previous
race doesn't mean it's going to do well in it's next race. Why? There
are a multitude of reasons, for example, it may just have gone off it's
peak or it could be that it's at its peak but so are the others and
they're just simply quicker on the day.
The truth is that each horse is 'capable' of achieving a certain level
of performance and will generally in each race, perform within a given
'band' or performance range. How wide that performance range is
determines how good the horse is and how often it will win.
Horses are often
'handicapped' or given 'extra weight' to carry during a race to try
even out their performance and bring it into line with the other horses
in the field. However, think about it. The horse weighs a few hundred
kilos and carries a jockey weighing around 7 or 8 stone. What
difference is a few extra pounds going to make? Ok, if the extra few
pounds are the equivalent of 'the straw that broke the camels back'. If
you took an Olympic runner and strapped an extra couple of pounds to
his back, would it really effect his performance dramatically?
Probably, not. What would have a greater effect would be if he had a
bit of a cold, a minor injury etc . Of course it is also true that
horses with the highest handicap generally win, despite the extra
weight, mainly because they are better racehorses.
What we're trying to say is that you
can't just take a few facts and figures about a horses previous
performance and base the outcome of future race on these. There are
other factors which have a greater effect but that no one takes into
account. There is no such thing as a perfect system, for all the above
reasons and many more. Anyone who claims they have one is telling
'fibs'.
As with casinos, bookmakers
have the odds stacked in their favour. What we need to be successful at
horse racing is an 'edge', to shift the odds from the bookmakers favour
to the 'punter'.
This is exactly what punters need, 'an edge'. How?, by running the race, BEFORE the race is run…..
www.racedaily.com
Next Paragraph..
A Guide to Business
|
Guide to Technology
|
Guide to Women
|
Guide to Health
|
Family Guide to
|
Travel & Vacations
|
Information on Cars