5 Strategies for Betting and Winning on Horse Racing

When it comes to the fine art of horse racing you might notice that it is a very respectable sport as well as a successful business for some of the great ones.

There are several ways to master the art of horse racing. Winning a horse race can look to be quite a matter of luck, but it is not always so. In this article, we shall list several ways you can improve your senses and be better at spotting a winning horse in a race.

Research The Horses

Betting on a horse is no different than betting on your favorite sports team. In order to have a better chance at a successful bet, you need to make sure to have some kind of knowledge about the team or in this case the horse.

It is always a wise idea to look at much more than just the horses when researching your racing betting strategy. In a race, a wide range of factors can influence the outcome, and you need to take these factors into account as much as possible.

Whether your favorite horse wins its next race at the same track or at a different one doesn’t depend on whether it won its race a few weeks ago.

In other words, each time you bet on a race you should conduct your research.

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Do Not Pick Favorites

There is, however, a mistake most players make when betting in a horse race and that is picking a favourite horse and always placing bets on it. While it might sound very heart-touching it doesn’t always play out nicely.

In a game like this, there is no room for favourites, and the only thing you need to have your focus on is how to best secure your winning bet. You can accomplish this by doing the research and making sure you know the stats of all the horses, then placing the bet on the horse that by your calculations would have the biggest chance of winning.

Larger Races Equal More Profit

Another strategy you might consider using is the one where you keep track of the larger races. To make a large profit in this particular game you will need to not only research the horses but also keep track and be on top of all events connected to this sport.

Larger events will not only give you the opportunity for bigger winnings but also give you a higher percentage of landing a winning bet. In other words, the odds are in your favour.

Betting Record

If you want to know another way you can keep up with the pros at this game, you might want to get yourself a little notebook. All the great betting masters of horse racing have kept a proper betting record in order to keep track of their bets but also keep tabs on the horses and how their status shifts from race to race.

This comes in handy for every other bet you make, since you have a record of how far each horse can take you and literal evidence of what not to do when betting on a racehorse. With the right analysis, you can have a chance to land a large prize.

Dutching System

We have saved the most famous horse betting strategy for last and that is the ditching system. This system requires a mathematical knowledge of a higher level but makes sure you land a profitable win. You have a high probability to make winning cash out without worrying about the result, by placing a bet on a selection of horses.

With just a few mathematical calculations and a quick scan of the stats of the horses in the race, you have a high chance to score big. This is why the dutching system is most used by professional horse betting masters.

Where, and what is the Carholme?

The Carholme, or West Common, is a large area of common land to the west of the city centre of Lincoln, the county town of Lincolnshire, in the East Midlands of England. Nowadays, West Common, which is designated as an area of critical asset and nature conservation importance, constitutes 100 hectares or so of the Witham Valley Country Park. However, from a horse racing perspective, the Carholme was the site of Lincoln Racecourse which, between 1853 and 1964, played host to the race that would become the Lincoln Handicap.

Lincoln Racecourse moved to the Carholme in the late eighteenth century and was improved, including the addition of the first grandstand, at the cost of £7,000 to Lincoln Corporation, in 1826. In 1897, a new grandstand – parts of which, albeit disused, still stand – was built in brick, stone and cast iron to replace the earlier structure. Lincoln Racecourse served as an airfield during World War I, but the popularity of racing at the course suffered a steady decline throughout the twentieth century. Finally, in 1964, the Horse Race Betting Levy Board announced that it was withdrawing its subsidy for Lincoln Racecourse, thereby forcing its closure.

What are cheek pieces?

Once considered ‘a little bit of a fad’ by the Jockey Club, cheek pieces, otherwise known as ‘French blinkers’, have become commonplace in British horse racing. Nowadays, cheek pieces must, like other forms of headgear, such as blinkers, hoods and visors, be declared overnight. A horse wearing cheek pieces is denoted by a letter ‘p’ after the horse’s name on race cards.

Cheek pieces, as the name suggests, consist of strips of sheepskin, which are attached to the main strap, or crownpiece, of the bridle, on either side, such that they run down the side of the face along the cheekbone. Their purpose is to restrict how much a horse can see behind it and thereby help the horse to concentrate, on jumping and racing, for example.

Cheek pieces are less restrictive than standard blinkers, but can nevertheless help inexperienced, or unreliable, horses to avoid distractions and focus their attention on moving forward. Indeed, another horse moving into the field of vision of a horse wearing cheek pieces, unexpectedly from behind, typically causes the latter to surge forward.

Who is John McManus?

John Patrick McManus, almost invariably known in racing circles as ‘J.P.’, is an Irish billionaire, best known as the largest owner in National Hunt racing. At the last count, McManus had over 550 horses in training; in the 2019/20 National Hunt season, his familiar green and gold colours – ‘borrowed’ from his home Gaelic Athletic Association club, South Liberties – were carried to victory 79 times, earning £2.14 million in prize money and making him Champion Jumps Owner in Britain by £1.39 million.

His biggest single earner in 2019/20 was Epatante, trained by Nicky Henderson, who collected £79,467 for winning the Champion Hurdle at the Cheltenham Festival. Indeed, McManus is the leading owner in the history of the two-mile hurdling championship with nine winners, including the last four – namely Buveur D’Air in 2017 and 2018, Espoir d’Allen in 2019 and Epatante in 2020 – and a notable hat-trick by Istabraq in 1998, 1999 and 2000.

In fact, McManus is, far and away, the leading owner in the history of the Cheltenham Festival as a whole, with 66 winners. Of the main ‘championship’ races, aside from the Champion Hurdle, he has won the Stayers’ Hurdle three times, with Baracouda in 2002 and 2003 and More Of That in 2014, and the Cheltenham Gold Cup once, with Synchronised in 2012. He also famously won the Grand National with Don’t Push It – the one and only winner of the celebrated steeplechase for Tony McCoy – in 2010.

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