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2006-10-18 09:37:42 · 5 answers · asked by charles b 1 in Sports Horse Racing

In search of the dutching math formula in detail steps to dutch two or more horses when the odds are right

2006-10-19 07:30:54 · update #1

5 answers

you back the number of selections to take out same amount so profit is = the same no matter which horse wins IE; to return $100 $5 chance stake 20 $10 chance stake 10 $8 chance stake12.5 outlay $42.5 return if any win $100 profit $57.5

2006-10-18 16:21:24 · answer #1 · answered by justamoment 1 · 0 0

1

2016-06-09 15:37:22 · answer #2 · answered by ? 3 · 0 0

Bet to Show any of the following: #1: the underlayed Morning Line Favorite (odds go down) or a horse that underlays below it so that IT becomes the favorite at post time (veto if a close two- or three-way tie for favorite); #2: the horse that underlays the most percentage (unless it goes from 50 to 1 down to 20 to 1 -- still a dog; or unless it was not the first or second favorite and is on the extreme outside of a large field); #3: unless its place and show pools are thin compared to the second favorite - the morning line favorite with the most win pool money - veto this if a close two- or three-way tie; #4: the horse with the average win/place/show pool $ (each pool weighted equally, so that #5 win plus #3 place and #4 show becomes average of: (5+3+4)/3 = #4 rank, etc., which would be average in a field of 8 or 9 but not so in a field of 5 as it is = #4 out of 5); #5: when a top jockey has not finished in the money for three successive races; #6: except if a maiden - a horse that has unjustifiably high odds because it missed finishing in the money last time by being blocked, stumbled out of the gate, faded or did not finish or because it was tried at an inappropriate distance or surface and its results for shorter (or longer) distances (or the other surface) are better; ok to do the bet regardless of if it's a maiden race as long as any of the above is true and the race is being run in rainy or muddy conditions or if being moved off the turf; #7: when NONE of the three-lowest post-time odds favorites has finished in the money for a race, bet the Morning Line first favorite (if underlayed; if not, bet the ML second favorite) Bet to win any of the following: #1: when NONE of the first two favorites (either Morning Line or Post Time odds) has won for two-three successive races, bet the bottom two post time odds to win if you can do that and make a profit (but do not dutch as it never seems to turn out right as the odds shift too much to get the percentages right); bet all three lowest favorites if the lowest Post Time odds is about 3-1; #2: (courtesy of a friend) the horse that missed winning last race by the smallest distance (unless it's a maiden or is running in a higher class, or different distance or surface than before); #3: in a Maiden race of the lower purse amounts (particularly Fillies and Mares Four years and higher) any horses with odds higher than 7-1 (but not higher than 50-1) when no longshots have won any maiden races (or ANY races) that day (ok to do multiple win bets of equal amounts but no dutching); this works extremely well in large $ tracks where professionals are underlaying several longshots in the same race, particularly when the horses being bet are next to each other in the field - which is a phenomenon that sometimes occurs after a longshot win streak. Races To Avoid: #1: whenever any entry (two or more horses running under the same number, such as 1 and 1-A) has very short odds; #2: if one of the first two favorites is next to a scratch (it helps the weaker horses get around them more than it helps the favorites get around the weaker horses); #3: a favorite is at the rail and next to a real dog like 99 to 1 -- it can block the favorite by being so bad; #4: any race that has multiple scratches (like 7 out of a field of 14), particularly if it leaves the favorite dangling in post position 12 next to five scratches; #5: show bets in a minus pool; #6: favorites win bets in the rain or mud; #7: betting the wrong horses in the wrong races - betting against the best in stakes, or betting just favorites in maiden races, etc.

2016-03-18 21:34:35 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

There is no system set in stone. 'Dutching' is splitting your bet to cover 2/3 or more horses to make an overall gain

2006-10-18 10:43:16 · answer #4 · answered by NagNagNag 2 · 0 0

2

2017-02-15 07:54:24 · answer #5 · answered by RobertS 3 · 0 0

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