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Horse
Racing Information |
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Horse Betting Glossary
Below is an A-to-Z glossary
of horse betting terms. We have created and organized
the following betting terminoliogy for your convenience
while betting on horses. With these terms defined
it will serve as an introductory explanation of
how to bet on horse racing. This is an interactive
guide to the jargon, key phrases, and slang of horse
betting - both sides of the pond. Learn to talk
like a proffesional horse bettor and bet like the
pros.
- Abandoned
- A race meeting which has been cancelled because
a club did not receive sufficient nominations
to be able to stage it, or because of bad weather
which made racing on the track unsafe. All bets
placed on abandoned races are fully refunded.
- Acceptor
- A runner officially listed to start in a race.
- Accumulator
- (Also, Parlay) A multiple bet. A kind
of 'let-it-ride' bet. Making simultaneous selections
on two or more races with the intent of pressing
the winnings of the first win on the bet of
the following race selected, and so on. All
the selections made must win for you to win
the accumulator.
- Across
The Board - (See 'Place') A bet on a
horse to win, place or show. Three wagers combined
in one. If the horse wins, the player wins all
three wagers, if second, two, and if third,
one.
- Age
- All thoroughbreds count January 1 as their
birth date.
- Ajax
- UK slang term for 'Betting Tax'.
- All-age
Race - A race for two-year-olds and up.
- All
Out - A horse who is trying to the best
of his ability.
- Allowances
- Reductions in weights to be carried allowed
because of certain conditions such as; an apprentice
jockey is on a horse, a female horse racing
against males, or three-year-olds racing against
older horses.
- All
Weather Racing - Racing that takes place
on an artificial surface.
- Also
Ran - Any selection not finishing 1st,
2nd, 3rd or 4th in a race or event.
- Ante
Post - (Also, Futures) Bets placed in
advance predicting the outcome of a future event.
Ante-post prices are those on major sporting
events, usually prior to the day of the event
itself. In return for the chance of better odds,
punters risk the fact that stakes are not returned
if their selection pulls out or is cancelled.
- Apprentice
- A trainee jockey. An apprentice will usually
ride only flat races.
- Approximates
- The approximate price a horse is quoted
at before a race begins. Bookmakers use these
approximates as a guide to set their boards.
- Arbitrage
- Where a variation in odds available allows
a punter to back both sides and guarantee a
win.
- ART
- Artificial Turf.
- ATS
- Against The Spread.
- AWT
- All weather track.
- Baby
Race - A race for two-year-olds.
- Back
- To bet or wager.
- Backed
- A 'backed' horse is one on which lots of bets
have been placed.
- Backed-In
- A horse which is backed-in means that
bettors have outlaid a lot of money on that
horse, with the result being a decrease in the
odds offered.
- Back
Marker - In a standing start event, which
is handicapped, the horse who is given the biggest
handicap is known as the backmarker.
- Backstretch
- The straight way on the far side of the track.
- Back
Straight - The straight length of the
track farthest away from the spectators and
the winning post.
- Backward
- A horse that is either too young or
not fully fit.
- Banker
- (Also, Key) Highly expected to win. The strongest
in a multiple selection in a parlay or accumulator.
In permutation bets the banker is a selection
that must win to guarantee any returns.
- Bar
Price - Refers to the odds of those runners
in a race not quoted with a price during early
betting shows. The bar price is the minimum
odds for any of those selections not quoted.
- Barrier
- (Also, Tape) A starting device used in steeple
chasing consisting of an elastic band stretched
across the racetrack which retracts when released.
- Barrier
Draw - The ballot held by the race club
to decide which starting stall each runner will
occupy.
- Bat
- (Also, Stick) A jockey's whip.
- Beard
(US) - A friend or acquaintance or other
contact who is used to placing bets so that
the bookmakers will not know the identity of
the actual bettor. Many top handicappers and
persons occupying sensitive positions use this
method of wagering.
- Bearing
In (Out) - Failing to maintain a straight
course, veering to the left or right. Can be
caused by injury, fatigue, outside distraction,
or poor riding.
- Beeswax
- UK slang term for betting tax. Also known
as 'Bees' or 'Ajax'.
- Bell
Lap - In harness racing, the last lap
of a race, signified by the ringing of the bell.
- Bet
- A transaction in which monies are deposited
or guaranteed.
- Betting
Board - A board used by the bookmaker
to display the odds of the horses engaged in
a race.
- Betting
Ring - The main area at a racecourse
where the bookmakers operate.
- Betting
Tax - Tax on a Bookmaker's turnover.
In the UK this is a 'Duty' levied on every Pound
wagered. Common methods of recouping this by
the punter are to deduct tax from returns (winnings)
or to pay tax with the stake/wager. In the latter
case, no tax is deducted from the punter's winnings.
- Bettor
(US) - Someone who places or has a bet.
A 'Punter' in the UK.
- Beyer
Number - A handicapping tool, popularized
by author Andrew Beyer, assigning a numerical
value to each race run by a horse based on final
time and track condition. This enables different
horses running at different racetracks to be
objectively compared.
- Bismarck
- A favourite which the bookmakers do not expect
to win.
- Blanket
Finish - When the horses finish so close
to the winning line you could theoretically
put a single blanket across them.
- Blind
Bet - A bet made by a racetrack bookmaker
on another horse to divert other bookmakers'
attention away from his sizeable betting on
his/her main horse thus to avoid a shortening
of the odds on the main horse.
- Blinkers
- A cup-shaped device applied over the sides
of the horse's head near his eyes to limit his
vision. This helps to prevent him from swerving
away from distracting objects or other horses
on either side of him. Blinker cups come in
a variety of sizes and shapes to allow as little
or as much vision as the trainer feels is appropriate.
- Board
- Short for 'Tote Board' on which odds, betting
pools and other race information are displayed.
- Bomb(er)
- A winning horse sent off at very high
odds.
- Book
- A bookmaker's tally of amounts bet
on each competitor, and odds necessary to assure
him of profit.
- Bookie
- (U.K.) Short for bookmaker. The person or
shop who accepts bets.
- Bookmaker
- Person who is licensed to accept bets
on the result of an event based on their provision
of odds to the customer. (Sportsbook US).
- Bottle
- UK slang, odds of 2 to 1.
- Box
- A wagering term denoting a combination bet
whereby all possible numeric combinations are
covered.
- Boxed
(in) - To be trapped between other horses.
- Bobble
- A bad step away from the starting gate, sometimes
caused by the ground breaking away from under
a horse and causing him to duck his head or
go to his knees.
- Bolt
- Sudden veering from a straight course.
- Book
- A collection of all the bets taken on fixed
odds betting events.
- Bookmaker
(Bookie) - A person registered and licensed
to bet with the public.
- Breakage
- Those pennies that are left over in
pari-mutuel payoffs which are rounded out to
a nickel or dime.
- Breeders'
Cup - Thoroughbred racing's year-end
championship. Known as Breeders' Cup Day, it
consists of eight races conducted on one day
at a different racetrack each year with purses
and awards totalling $13 million. First run
in 1984.
- Bridge-Jumper
(US) - Bettor who specializes in large
show bets on odd-on favourites.
- Buck
(US) - A bet of US$ 100 (also known as
a 'dollar bet').
- Bug
Boy - An apprentice rider.
- Bull
Ring - Small racetrack less than one
mile around.
- Burkington
Bertie - 100/30.
- Buy
Price - In Spread or Index betting, the
higher figure quoted by an Index bookmaker.
- Buy
the Rack (US) - Purchase every possible
daily-double or other combination ticket.
- Canadian
- Also known as a Super Yankee. A Canadian is
a combination bet consisting of 26 bets with
5 selections in different events. The combination
bet is made up of 10 doubles, 10 trebles, five
4-folds and one 5-fold.
- Card
- Another term for fixture or race meeting.
- Carpet
- UK slang for Odds of 3 to 1 (also known
as 'Tres' or 'Gimmel').
- Caulk
- Projection on the bottom of a shoe to give
the horse better traction, especially on a wet
track.
- Century
- GBP£ 100 (also known as a 'Ton').
- Chalk
- Wagering favorite in a race. Dates from the
days when on-track bookmakers would write current
odds on a chalkboard.
- Chalk
Player - Bettor who wagers on favorites.
- Chase
- See 'Steeplechase'.
- Checked
- A horse pulled up by his jockey for an instant
because he is cut off or in tight quarters.
- Chute
- Extension of the backstretch or homestretch
to allow a longer straight run.
- Client
(US) - Purchaser of betting information
from horseman or other tipster.
- Close
(US) - Final odds on a horse (e.g. 'closed
at 5 to 1'). Confusingly equates to 'Starting
Price' in the UK.
- Closer
- A horse that runs best in the latter part
of the race (closing race), coming from off
the pace.
- Co-Favorites
- Where three or more competitors share
the status as favorite.
- Colors
(Colours) - Racing silks, the jacket
and cap worn by jockeys. Silks can be generic
and provided by the track or specific to one
owner.
- Colt
- An ungelded (entire) male horse four-years-old
or younger.
- Combination
Bet - Selecting any number of teams/horses
to finish first and second in either order.
- Conditional
Jockey - Same as 'Apprentice' but also
allowed to jump.
- Correct
Weight - Horses are allocated a weight
to carry that is checked before and, for at
least the placegetters, after a race. Correct
weight must be signaled before bets can be paid
out.
- Daily
Double - Type of wager calling for the
selection of winners of two consecutive races,
usually the first and second. See 'Late Double'.
- Daily
Racing Form - A daily newspaper containing
racing information including news, past performance
data and handicapping.
- Daily
Triple - A wager where the bettor must
select the winner of three consecutive races.
- Dead
Heat - A tie. Two or more horses finishing
equal in a race.
- Dead
Track - Racing surface lacking resiliency.
- Declaration
Of Weights - The publication of weights
allocated to each horse nominated for a race
by the handicapper.
- Declared
- In the United States, a horse withdrawn from
a stakes race in advance of scratch time. In
Europe, a horse confirmed to start in a race.
- Deductions
- When a horse is scratched from a race after
betting on that race has already started, deductions
are taken out of the win and place bets at a
rate in proportion to the odds of the scratched
horse.
- Derby
- A stakes event for three-year-olds.
- Dime
(US) - A bet of USD$ 1,000 (also known
as a 'dime bet').
- Distanced
- Well beaten, finishing a long distance
behind the winner.
- Dividend
- The amount that a winning or placed horse
returns for every $1 bet by the bettor.
- Dog
(US) - The underdog in any betting proposition.
- Dog
Player (US) - A bettor who mainly wagers
on the underdog.
- Double
- Selecting the winners in two specific races.
- Double
Carpet - UK slang for Odds of 33 to 1,
based on 'Carpet'.
- Draw
- Refers to a horse's placing in the starting
stalls. For flat racing only. Stall numbers
are drawn at random.
- Drift
- (Also, Ease) Odds that 'Lengthen',
are said to have drifted, or be 'On The Drift'.
- Driving
- Strong urging by rider.
- Dual
Forecast - A tote bet operating in races
of 3 or more declared runners in which the punter
has to pick the first two to finish in either
order.
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