![]() |
$20.......5 exacta 1-2/1-2-3
|
Quote:
or i've seen some do 1,2/over one or more picks. but, if you have $20 to play, why would you go 1-$10, 2-$10? i guess like some said, it would depend on the odds and how it would pay off. i just didn't think it was the best way to play $20. |
If you like two horses in most cases you have not finished capping. I'd keep at it and narrow to one and bet W/P. Not keen on the double thing unless you have a strong opinion.
To me the worse thing is not cashing when you're right about a $20 horse. Albeit, I'm a small time better so I can't afford to take too many chances. Sometimes I'll bet an exacta box and W/P. Spyder |
Quote:
|
Quote:
|
Quote:
--Dunbar |
Quote:
--Dunbar |
I almost never bet two to win, but I don't necessarily disagree with the practice of doing it. If the price is right, bet them. The Sartain guys were famous for dutching win bets and created a whole movement of play that did just that by winning an extremely high percentage of races. You would really have to hit big percentages to cover the lost ticket.
The example of boxing and wheeling exotics is a good analogy. If the payout is right, you can absorb the cost of losing tickets and still come out ahead. |
Quote:
I will have to disagree here. The objective is to maximize our profits. To choose a two horse win bet over DD, or pick 3 just because you are comfortable with it will have you end up in the negative in the long run. Of course, a DD is a slightly higher risk but its payoffs is typically higher than a $10 win bet. You will need to compare your probale payoffs of your DD to your payoff on your win bet and determine if its worth the slightly higher risk. A determinate for me will be if the DD pays 1.5 times more than the win bet then its a go. |
Betting two or more horses in a race has been around as a 'betting tool' for a long time. It is called dutching and there are dutching calculators. There was a dutching thread here at one time. I'll try and find it.
|
Quote:
|
|
Quote:
When you bet on more than one horse in the same race, you have increased the chance you will cash a ticket. That lowers your risk. When risk is lowered, you can and should bet more (assuming you are correct that you have an edge). A bettor finding 2 horses with value in the same race should bet more (total) on the 2 horses than he/she would have bet on just one of those horses. That reduced risk effect is dramatic if you use something like Kelly betting. The original poster mentioned horses that were 8-1 and 10-1. He didn't mention his estimate of fair odds, so let's just say 7-1 would be fair odds on each of those horses. Let's also assume that the total bankroll for betting horses is $1000. There's a Kelly calculator at Sportsbookreview.com: http://www.sbrforum.com/Betting+Tool...alculator.aspx According to that tool... If you only bet the 8-1 horse, your optimal bet for bankroll growth is $16, and your expected win is $2. If you only bet the 10-1 horse, your optimal bet for bankroll growth is $37, and your expected win is $14. BUT, if you bet both horses, your optimal bets are $21 on the 8-1 horse and $40 on the 10-1 horse; your expected win is $17, which is more than you'd have from betting either of the horses alone. --Dunbar caveats: 1. Kelly betting results in dramatic up and downs in bankroll. Most serious bettors DO bet proportionally, but they use a fraction (often 1/4 to 1/3) of full Kelly betting. This would apply both to singled bets and dutch bets. 2. I'm assuming the SBR Kelly calculator is correct without totally checking it out. 3. Obviously, if you are betting without an edge, the optimal bet is $0. So how you spend your money on a race is based on how you perceive the entertainment value, not on math. |
I think that you must have an opinion and bet the one horse you think is the most likely to win. If you really think the other horse has a chance, then bet him in some doubles or exacta's just to hedge yourself.
|
Never been to that site. Now I have something to do tonight.
Thanks Dunbar I think? LOL |
To me, dutching in the win pools is the most direct answer to the original poster's question. Given his parameters
$11 on the 8-1 $9 on the 10-1 that would yield about 4-1 on the blend, so you can figure the fair likelihood for that. There are some adw houses that allow conditional dutching. Of course, outside the win pool, it depends how you handicap the race. Given the vertical or horizontal wagers available, they depend on what else you feel will occur. I have had many cases where a put a horse only in the top of my intra-race exotics as a non-single. |
Quote:
Anything other than a straight wager is guaranteed to have losers in it. The idea is to maximize ROI when you don't have a super narrowed down opinion. |
Quote:
|
Quote:
|
All times are GMT -5. The time now is 07:12 AM. |
Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.6.8
Copyright ©2000 - 2025, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.