Ive def. learned over a period of time that there is no right or wrong way to approach a horse race. There are many opportunities to make money with the different wagers offered BUT there are also many different ways to lose as well. Every race presents a new and much different opportunity. I think this fact goes WAY overseen in wagering the horses. In my opinion, this concept as well as understanding ROI and public money in the wagering pools are a PREQUEL and are 3 major factors to take into consideration doing this for a living. Without understanding these 3 things in conjunction with handicapping theres no point in even betting a race.
Before even doing this as a career I notice that by using the thorographs I was able to catch so many more horses that ran great at better odds in a race. Even though these horses did run well it didn\'t mean i was going to make money though! If i approached the race and said OK lets do a win wager and key the horse with others and it lost for whatever reason it would be really frustrating BUT i learned over time that just because I had lost money didn\'t mean I was wrong with my opinion or couldn\'t have made money. I think years ago it was almost a greed thing in a way cause if i saw 5-1 on a horse looking the best that i would always do a win wager trying to catch that $12 price. I cant even tell you in the past how many times Ive played a 5-1 horse at a track like Fairgrounds and I do win bet and doesn\'t win, but gets 2nd or 3rd and pays $4-$5 to show! Its really unreal. So thru my experience Ive learned that you can actually have the correct horse BUT its how you wager on it that would determine whether you made or lost money.
The best example about how much ROI plays a roll in getting money back would probably be the 2007 Haskell. Any Given Saturday wound up paying $5.60 $4.00 $2.10.. if you notice there is huge difference from his place to show money. Yea in all situations (W-P-S)you would\'ve made money doing any of them but its clear that Curlin was WAAAAY over-bet to show by the public. The win paid slightly more then the place. You wouldve gotten back a %5 ROI to show compared to the %100 place wager! THATS HUGE! The point is that by looking at the Tote Board you wouldve been able to see that the show wager was something to completely stay away from cause chances were Curlin was going to hit the board somewhere and no matter who u bet to show, even if you won the ROI would\'ve been very low. Weighing the tote board money with projected ROI to my handicapping I\'m able to weed in and out certain wagers that don\'t fit the race.
Public money and perception are everything. There is no horse race wagering obviously without pools or money. I think the biggest angle I could give about wagering is that in a majority of races (something like %90+, and I\'m not joking) the public uses the morning line of a race as a basis for how the race should or will run! It seems like, no matter what that ML fave \"opens up\" at with his odds, the money will eventually pour that way as post time gets closer! The other %10 i would say would be a \"betting fave\". Ive actually had people come up to me at the track and say \"LOOK MAN HES 8 TO 1 morning line and now hes 5-2, THEY KNOW SOMETHING\" LOL and i ALWAYS SAY \"Oh the horse knows hes 5-2 so hes going to run good today huh?\" its just silly. %99 of people who wager are clueless! what goes unseen and unspoken is that using the thoros we have a HUGE psychological edge over these people and on the public. That is something to utilize when determining what bet to wager, what horse to wager and what to stay away from!
I use these three things in corporation with my handicapping to determine my race. Ive learned recently for myself that the best way to make money is to seclude myself to ONE race a day (3-4 days a week), do a show wager in which the fave looks like hes not going to run and then walk away hit or miss. The average show fave at an aqueduct track seems to pay around %30-40 ROI from my experience. Clearly, I\'m not betting a fave so I am not getting this ROI. I usually average around %50-70 range. Now this may not seem like a lot but heres the idea..
I spend about $50 average when I go to the track (including sheets, program and gas). So thats an automatic expense and on top of that I need to make up for the takeout for the track I am playing. I tend to stick to NY or Cali tracks since they are the lowest take-outs. )Heres a list btw of the north american track takeouts...
http://www.sportsbettingacumen.com/horse-racing-track-takeout-chart.asp ) Anyway, after determining a good race to play and finding out where the public is wrong handicapping and money wise I place a $1000 wager to show. Making $500-700 a day average minus $50 is a damn good living! If i can manage to seclude myself to that situation and hit 3 out 4 races (3 days out of the 4 days) I will able to make about $850-1300 on average or more clean money for the week.
By doing one race, i am showing many important things in what is required to make money in the long run:
1. Discipline/ money management and consistent wagers
2. Patience - with this u cannot go on tilt
3. Focus - on the one race i am playing and have about 50 opportunities using the thoro book and taking the best one to give the best ROI
4. Time- giving myself the time to go through each situation and weed out whats not good.
The only negative thing i do see to this method is not making that big life changing score BUT over time ive been able to raise my wager amounts with profit made and confidence! i actually started doing this with $300-400 show wagers.
I know a lot of peoples mind frames for using the thoros are to weigh out a horses odds against its respective field that race. i dont think its a bad thing at all cause profit is profit but there is a better approach in my opinion:
if you narrow your race to 3 horses (assuming 8 horses)and your getting 10 to 1 win odds on the fastest horse of the 3, the typical player would play that bc according to the thoros you are making out in the long run doing a win wager. I agree with this idea but you are giving yourself only a %33 in this situation. assuming you do win 1 out of 3 times you are making money but about 3.5 to 1 overall profit back cause your going to lose %66 of the time. The idea is that YES this is profit BUT you are getting 3 to 1 on %33 chance each time you wager.
In the same sentence if you narrow your race to 3 your opinion is saying that its a 3 horse race and you are virtually guaranteeing to yourself on paper that the horse will show. You are getting a show price on a 10-1 which is usually %100-150 ROI average(of course check the toteboard for irregular wagering like curlin above) BUT you are giving yourself a %100 chance \"on paper\" to win. YES there is no such thing as %100 BUT with what I personally do all you would need is %75 or more a week (3 out of 4 races a week to SHOW) in order to make money. AND assuming u made %100 ROI at %75 hits with that situation your overall return would be 7.5 to 1 rather than 3.5 to 1 doing the win wager. Youd have a bigger chance to make more money in the long run since you would be giving yourself a large chance to show each race rather than %33 to win. Playing like this will also give you room for error with anything that may happen in the race (bumping, losing the race by a nose, etc) which means u will win more over time.
Guess thats about it Im not trying to sell u guys anything but just giving you my view on what I do and i really appreciate you all giving your feedback! Il be around!
nyc1347