Having made a lot of money from laying over the years, I wanted to pass on some of my best lay tips on to you
Handicap Sprint Lays, for a Perfect Lay Bet.
At the start of each 5 & 6 Furlong dash, you can see the melee as the race begins to unfold, the dash to the line starts where every race starts - the stalls.
As these sprinters fly out of the traps, the bee-line for the best position is sought.
Often it wil lbe a jostling match with a lot of bumping & barging with perhaps the favourite sometimes getting the worst of it.
As these powerful sprinters go thundering down the track, you can often see the betting shop punters tearing their tickets in rage as early as the 4 or 5 furlong pole as their runner is hopelesssly outpaced or totally unbalanced in the early stages.
To say these races were somewhat erratic would be a somewhat understatement, of course, these races offer many opportunities to the streetwise layer.
Looking at a horses previous form, in a similar race can throw up many clues as to how it may perform in today's race
1) Does it often leave the stalls late or is it fast away?
2) Has it raced on this track before ?
3) Has it raced on this surface before
4) Has it raced left handed/right handed before ?
5) Does it have a favourable draw ?
6) Is it younger or older than other fancied horses?
7) How much weight is it carrying more or less than other fancied horses
8) Is it Male or Female ?
9) Is it a winner over the distance ?
You get the idea, obviously we are looking for a horse where on previous occasions it may not have had a straightforward
run, i.e is it a bit slower than others out of the stalls, what does it do at the finish, does it run on or does it seem to not
have much of a cruising speed.
Does it try at the finish to get it's head in front or does it hold it's head carriage up and flash
it's tail, (check the video form), does the form indicate it may be a not straightforward ride.
My perfect lay bet in a sprint would be a combination (not neccesarily all of these factors) of the above - perhaps with a horse
or filly that hasn't run in 2 or 3 weeks, carrying a fair bit of weight considering it may not have achieved much in the past,
badly drawn and not the quickest beast out of the traps - certainly not a course & distance winner.
I also like it when the favourite is a filly taking on the colts, some od go on to win but a heck of a lot of these lose
Here's your Perfect Lay System
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