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Listed below, you'll find some Horse Racing Tips and betting angles that can make the difference between winning and losing when betting on horse racing.

Tip #1 - Betting Angle: Lone Speed

Front runners win more than their share of races at good odds, especially if they can get a clear lead early in the race and make their rivals play catch up. When you look at the running lines in the racing program, try to find a horse that has an abundance of 1s and 2s in its running lines. If you can find only one horse in the race with this type of running lines, there is a good chance that horse will be the lone speed.

Tip #2 - Angle: First and Second Time Lasix

There is no question that many horses improve when given the legal medication Lasix for the first time. But horses also improve when getting Lasix for the second time - and at better odds. Bettors who believe only in the first-time Lasix angle often disregard horses that show improvement on first-time Lasix without winning. This results in better odds for those who are playing the lucrative second-time Lasix angle.

Tip #3 - Angle: Layoff Specialists

Horses that show the ability to win off a layoff of four weeks or more will often continue to win off the shelf throughout their careers - especially when teamed with a trainer who has won with the horse off a layoff in the past.

Tip #4 - Angle: Big Win

If a horse has come from just off the pace in their most recent race and then drawn away through the stretch to win by more than four lengths, they will often perform well in their next start, even when moving up in class at good odds.

Tip #5 - Angle: Change in Running Style

When a horse who always runs from well back in the pack, as indicated by their running lines, suddenly flashes speed in a race, it can signal that the horse is ready to wake up and run a big race in one of their next few starts. Similarly, when a horse that always goes to the lead suddenly shows the ability to come from well off the pace - they too can be ready to wake up at a price.

Tip #6 - Angle: The Heart Factor

Always read the comment lines at the end of the running lines looking for comments that indicate a horse gave their best. Comments that include words such as "good try", "gamely", "game try", "good effort" or "gave best" indicate that the horses is a courageous sort - and these types win more than their share of races. Horses with numerous comments like the above in their racing lines are among the best bets in racing.

Tip #7 - Angle: Trouble

The comment lines at the end of the running lines may also include trouble-related words such as "checked", "steadied", "lacked room" and "stumbled start". These words indicate that the horse may have been prevented from winning due to some kind of bad luck or lack of running room. These horses should always be given a second look in their next three starts.

Tip #8 - Angle: Rider Switches

When a leading percentage trainer replaces a lower percentage jockey with a leading jockey, they are usually indicating that they are trying everything they can to win. Top riders often have their choice of the best horses and top trainers often have their choice of top riders. This makes for a powerful combination. Many trainers tend to win more often with certain jockeys - and those jockeys may not necessarily be among the leaders. Watch for hot jockey-trainer patterns.

Tip #9 - Angle: First Time Blinkers On or Off

When a horse gets the shades on for the first time they can improve dramatically - particularly if they are two or 3-year-olds who are still learning the horseracing game. Blinkers can shield a horse from distractions and help them perform to the best of their ability. Blinkers off for the first time can help a nervous horse relax enough to give a top effort. Blinkers on or off can also stimulate a mental boost to a horse that has been showing little interest leading to a better effort.

Tip #10 - Angle: Route Horses in Sprints off a Layoff

This angle produces some big longshots and is great to use in the spring when everyone seems to be betting speed. It is easier to get a natural distance horse fit to run a sprint of six furlongs than it is to get a sprinter ready to go the same distance. If you spot a horse who often runs a route of ground, making their first start off the layoff in a sprint, always give them a second look - especially when in the hands of a top trainer.


Sports Betting - A Game of Skill
Sports Betting - A Game of Skill


FootballSPORTS BETTING is a game of skill. The challenge is to gather and analyze as much information as you can about a game, weigh the probabilities of each team winning, and subsequently compare your opinion to the oddsmaker's. Make the right judgment and you win. It's as simple as that.

Basketball and BaseballWhile luck may be a deciding factor in the outcome of any single game, and will inevitably go against you on occasion, it will balance out in the long run. Being a consistent winner in sports betting is not about luck but whether you are prepared to invest the time and effort to become knowledgeable about the sports you bet on, whether you can weigh all the factors in a cool, objective fashion, and whether you adopt a consistent, disciplined, long-term approach to your betting. Do all these and you will come out a winner. Remember, it's you against the oddsmaker, not the bookmaker.

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Horse Racing
Horse Racing

Horse racing is among the most widely attended U.S. spectator sports. It is also a major professional sport in Canada, Great Britain, Ireland, Western Europe, Australia, New Zealand, South Africa, and South America. The most popular form of the sport is the racing of mounted thoroughbred horses over flat courses at distances from three-quarters of a mile to two miles.

Horse RacingHorse racing's beginnings can be traced back to the 12th century, when English knights returned home from the Crusades with Arab horses. Over the next 400 years, breeding between imported Arab stallions and English mares produced horses that combined speed and endurance.

Horse racing became a professional sport as early as 1702 to 1714. Racecourses sprang up all over England and offered large purses to attract the best horses. The British settlers brought horses and horse racing to America, with the first American racetrack built in Long Island in 1665. The development of organized racing did not arrive to America until after the Civil War. In 1894, the American Jockey Club was formed to govern the sport.

The introduction of pari-mutuel betting for the Kentucky DerbyHorse Racing signaled a renaissance for the sport after stumbling badly in the early 1900s. At the end of World War I, prosperity brought spectators flocking to racetracks.

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Greyhound Racing
Greyhound Racing

Greyhound Racing is one of the most popular animal racing sports in the world. The greyhounds chase a mechanical lure, typically an artificial bone, Greyhound which is traditionally called a hare. The hare is started about half a circuit behind the start. When it passes a point near the starting traps, it automatically triggers the gate and releases the dogs. Should the dogs catch or overtake the lure, the stewards declare the race void.

Greyhounds can cover 480 meters in approximately 28 seconds, twice the speed of a typical athlete. The minimum age at which a greyhound may run on all tracks is 15 months and will usually be at its best when 2 1/2 to 3 1/2 years old.

Although the dogs are normally docile creatures, they become very excited when they race, and there are times when a runner may turn its head aggressively on another runner. It is for this reason that the competitors wear muzzles when they race so that they can't do harm.

Greyhound RacingThe winner of a greyhound race is the dog whose nose first reaches the winning line. The position of the feet is not taken into account. Greyhound racing finishes are photographed and where the result is close the judge examines the negative or a print before declaring the order of the finish.

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Harness Racing
Harness Racing

Each year in North America, over 30 millions people attend harnessracing events. Harness Racing The Standard Bred is by far the fastest horse in harness, and the most popular trotting/pacing breed.

Harness racing is contested on two gaits, the trot and the pace. Trotters move with a diagonal gait; the left front and right rear legs move in unison, as do the right front and left rear.

Pacers, on the other hand, move their legs on one side of their body in tandem: left front and rear, and right front and rear. This action shows why pacers are often called "sidewheelers." Pacers account for about 80% of the participants in harness racing, and are aided in maintaining their gait by plastic loops called hobbles, which keep their legs moving in synchronization. Trotters are more popular in Europe while pacers are more popular the North America.

Harness RacingToday,there is a large concentration of harness racing tracks in the Northeast and Midwest United States. Virtually every major population center in these areas boasts one or more harness tracks. The sport is also popular in Florida, California, and throughout Canada.

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