Greyhounds Are Smart, Flexible, And They're Built For Speed.
Monday, November 7th, 2011This naturally, gives us a marginally longer race than the championship pony races, although not much. It is indeed really incredible the final speed of the best friend of man, and while, the Cheetah, Pony , and Gazelle seem to be the quickest land animals, they aren't too miles ahead of the greyhound, which regularly clocks in at only under 35 mph. And were you aware that gambles as big as one-million greenbacks have been placed on greyhound race dogs in Britain ? Greyhounds are smart, flexible, and they're built for speed. One tip which has made me more cash than possibly any other is this one : handicap backwards. Surprisingly enough, these greyhounds can hit their max speed and sustain it rather well, and they totally love to run. No, that doesn't suggest that you should stand on your head or handicap the last race first. It implies that it’s simpler to pick winners if you lose the losers first. When you handicap, rather than attempting to pick the dog that is most certain to win, find the dogs who are most unlikely to win. Few of them rebound from this and run in the money. Then, bet the other dogs in a 4 dog quiniela box, a key trifecta or quiniela bet, or however you suspect you may have the highest chance of winning with the smallest amount of money spent.
This explains why I check over the programme in route races, attempting to find dogs who are probably going to finish up going off the turn at the start of the race. If I see one, I look at which dog or dogs it’s certain to take out with it. This is the type of set-up that will decide the result of a race in the initial few steps. Look for this situation when you handicap route races and avoid some bad gambles. If you did not always follow your techniques, but anticipated to win anyhow, fess up.
If you won but you do not know why, admit that too. Don’t take the credit for figuring something out if it was merely a random accident that helped you win, as you can not keep reproducing random events. You know that nobody wins each bet they make, but you also know that there are folks who win enough of the time to turn a profit, and those are the folks that find a good handicapping technique, use it habitually and also use serious money management. Whenever runners compete, there’s pace. I don't agree. It’s the way in which the speed flows in a race and it's especially tough to forecast, but still possible, in greyhound races. A few individuals think that you've just got to find the dogs that break and have early speed, which will be the speed of the race, because they will set the pace.
