4250 races
handicapped and analyzed. Over those 4250 races, a method was developed that with
amazing regularity was able to generate profits even while at the same time other methods
based on the same exact data were performing miserably.
The focal point of any potentially successful method of wagering on the outcome of
horse races is the construction of an odds line that enables the handicapper to
confidently wager on the outcome of a race. This confidence in the odds line has its
foundation in knowing that the handicapper will be getting a reward, should he or she win,
greater than the risk involved should he or she lose. Over the long run, this reward
will outweigh the risk more often than not in order to generate profits on a consistent
basis.
Now, I by no means am about to claim that I have perfected and validated the
greatest odds line known to man. However, I do believe that I have discovered a
method of using a very good odds line in a way few others have every dreamed of, allowing
me to profit not only from the concept known as an overlay, but also from a concept known
as market efficiency.
As we all should know by now, the wagering public that sets the odds in any given
horse race is collectively one heck of a handicapper. They pick the winner of every
race, on average, somewhere between 29 and 34 percent of the time correctly. This
racing constant has remained true for ages, and is quite a remarkable feat when you
consider how so called expert handicappers can usually never attain a hit percent of that
magnitude over a long enough period of time over every single race run.
Our job, as savvy handicappers, is to pick up on the times when the crowd is
collectively in error -- to bet on a horse whose post time odds are greater than we rate
them to be on our own personal, and hopefully accurate odds line. Of course the rub
is in the fact that the crowd produces what can be termed a generally efficient market.
That is, the win pool on every race collectively taken as a whole, will show that
the crowd favorite will win more often then the crowd's second wagering choice, which will
win more often then the crowd's third wagering choice, which will win more often then the
crowd's fourth wagering choice, and so on. Because of this efficient market of
sorts, there are, in reality, relatively few opportunities when the crowd is in error
enough for us to notice and pounce on the opportunity.
But, enough handicapping and wagering theory for now, lets get into some of the
details of Pace Advantage 2000 Internet Edition and why you'll want to use this exciting
new data method. Click the blue button below to continue: