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How to make £17,500 in 11 months from all weather venues

publication date: Dec 8, 2007
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What Really Wins Money Recommends:
The Lazy Lay System

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How to make £17,500 pure profit in 11
months backing horses to lose on all weather
venues


Hi

Last week I teased you about a cracking lay
system I'd been following . . .

. . . one that claimed to have turned £1,000
into a whopping £111,000 in 11 months. I've
now crunched the numbers and although you
can knock a zero off that claim, this is still
probably the best performing lay system I've
come across . . .

I mean, would you turn your nose up at
£17,500 pure profit in 11 months? You can
check it out in all its glory here (and yes, I
give this one a mighty WRWM thumbs up!):

http://www.laztlaycp.co.uk/

Before we crunch the numbers, first a bit of
background . . .

As you know, the jumps season is now well
and truly established and if you're a bit
squeamish about laying horses over obstacles
- fear not! The all weather is also the last
bastion of the flat horses and the great thing
about is there are NO obstacles that can
get in the way and skew results.

You see, the all weather venues offer us an
opportunity to play without jumps, without
excessive distances and without changes in
ground conditions.

When I look for a backing system, I look for a
niche - i.e. readers of my blog will know the
specifics I look for - 8 runner field - ideally 2
outsiders and so on. The idea here is that a focus
on a specific race type can pay great dividends.

So too with laying.

I have written time and again that the key to all
systems is finding a weakness and exploiting it
- that weakness could be ground conditions,
race size, the weight a horse carries, jockey and
trainer strike rate OR venue

Now let's get back to the all weather  . . .

The main all weather venues include
Southwell, Wolverhampton, Kempton and
Lingfield - what most people don't know is
that the surface at these tracks actually vary subtly.

And it's this potential weakness that can be
exploited from a lay perspective.

It may not seem like much but the subtle
differences in the polytrack and sand all
weather tracks can make all the difference to
the performance of the horses running. Those
perceived favourites (I say perceived because
their price is telling us they should scoot
home) tend to under-perform and we can lay
them to profit.

Time and again 10/11 and 4/5 favourites bite
the dust, but they also win. Now there must be
a way can we can distinguish between when
an odds on or short priced odds against
favourite will run well, and when the same
horse will lose a race he's expected to win?

I have been tracking The Lazy Lay System
since June: it uses the subtle difference
between the all weather venue surfaces and
pinpoints short-priced favourites or market
leaders who have a greater likelihood of losing
their races.

And I've been VERY impressed with the
results so far. You can check them out here:

http://www.laztlaycp.co.uk/

So what are the strong points to this lay
system?

Well I've already said that when we look to
lay, we are trying to find a perceived weakness.
However, with some lay systems, that perceived
weakness just doesn't produce the losers on a
consistent basis, OR the perceived weakness is
so obvious that the horses' limited chances of
winning that race are reflected in their inflated
prices.

This all weather system places a price
restriction on all selected horses, meaning we
will never over-expose our betting bank by
laying at big odds and our liability is
controlled.

More often than not, the horses selected to lay
are actually favourites, but fear not, over time
the number of short priced horses that lose far
outweighs the winners (and let's be realistic
here, there will be winners as we are
exclusively laying the more fancied horses at
the head of the market).

Here's another strength . . .

The system is really easy to use! You'll be left
in no doubt when there is a qualifying
selection. Simply follow the steps, make sure
the horses' odds are within the allotted price
band to ensure we are not risking too much
money as liability, place your lay bet and walk
away. And best of all there's no real need to
stay at your computer.

And yes it really works . . .

I've had testers checking out this system;
they've all found it to be easy to use and all
are in profit! In fact the most recent results
have been very impressive indeed.

Of course, like any system, there have been
back steps during the year as some of the
favourites have won, but if faith is kept with
the system and it's used as the rules show us
and on a daily basis, then, like the bookies, we
work through the losing days and come out
with a handsome profit.

There are consistent winning runs (ie: horses
losing!) of 3, 4, 5, 6 as high as 9 throughout
the year which really explode the growth of
the betting bank and ensure that any short
price loser is more than amply compensated
for.

In November, we've had clusters of 5 winners
twice, 4 winners once and even a winning run
of 8 which has made for an exceptional
month!

Check out the full 2007 track record here:
http://www.laztlaycp.co.uk/

The staking plan advises 10% of a rolling
bank as stakes only.

This is ideal for the prices and this year has
turned a nominal £1,000 betting bank into a
whopping £123,000+. Of course this is
impractical in the real world as we would not
be able to match our bets if they were
£12,300!

We can start off with a 10% of rolling bank
because the successful bets easily overcome
the short priced losers. Here's what I would do
assuming a nominal £1,000 bank:

1)      10% of a rolling bank until we reach
£5,000 betting bank

2)      Once we achieve £5,000 betting bank,
we stake 5% of the betting bank

3)      Once we reach £10,000 betting bank,
we stake 2.5% of betting bank

This ensures stakes remain at a level where
they can be safely matched. So this real world
performance would still have resulted in a
profit of £17,500, which is very impressive.
Again our good friend compounding is put to
work with this type of staking plan - we have
the selections to make it work - that's for
sure!

And you don't have to start with a £1,000
betting bank - for details of how much you
could have made with a £200 or £500 starting
bank take a look at this link:

http://www.laztlaycp.co.uk/

OK, so you may want to continue using the
10% of a rolling bank if your confidence in
selections is strong enough. This is an
aggressive plan. Mine is a conservative one
but still the returns are mighty impressive.

The bottom line: this is a cracking lay system
and has really delivered over 2007. The author
has found a weakness on the all weather and
with these tracks in full blossom this winter,
now is an ideal time to get stuck in and exploit
the system.

Nice small prices and favourites who lose
consistently makes this a potentially profitable
system.

Highly Recommended!

Check it out here:

http://www.laztlaycp.co.uk/

And do let me know how you get on!

Regards

Clive
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