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2008 Top Race Horses In the World Rankings Published

By admin On December 3, 2008No Comments

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The list of the world’s top racehorses for 2008 has been released by RaceHorseOwner.com. The twelve leading thoroughbred race horses have been ranked according to their performances in races around the globe for the current year.

The Breeders’ Cup World Championships of horse racing are in the book for 2008 and now the question remains as to which horse will top this year’s list of the world’s best race horses? RaceHorseOwner.com, the leading global portal for horse racing information, reveals that answer today along with eleven other sparkling equine performances in their power rankings of the top racehorses in the world for 2008.

The thoroughbred horse races that carried the most impact this year were undoubtedly the Prix de l’Arc de Triomphe contested at Longchamp race course in France, the Breeders’ Cup Classic, which was run last weekend at Santa Anita racetrack in California, and the Dubai World Cup run earlier this season at Nad Al Sheba.

The Arc, as it is known familiarly by horse racing players, was won in brilliant style by the filly Zarkava. She defeated the best turf horses in Europe including Youmzain, Soldier of Fortune, Duke of Marmalade, Papal Bull, and It’s Gino.

The Breeders’ Cup Classic was won in a horse racing betting upset by Raven’s Pass, although it was only an upset on the course in America. In Europe Raven’s Pass was well supported in the betting as he came into the race with a fantastic record over shorter distances. Curiln, who won that race the previous year, had also won the 2008 Dubai World Cup in a rout, and who was the hot favorite to defend his title, could only finish fourth behind Raven’s Pass.

Another horse that certainly has claims to being the best in the world for 2008 was Big Brown, who was only beaten once in his career and who cruised home in the first two legs of the Triple Crown (the Kentucky Derby and the Preakness Stakes).

RaceHorseOwner.com’s senior editor, Marc Weinberg, explained the decision behind the final rankings: “Ultimately we decided that Zarkava was the best race horse in the world this season. Her performance in The Arc was sensational, and prior to that she proved how good she was in brushing aside Goldikova, who franked that form in Santa Anita. In fact, it was Goldikova’s Miesque-like effort in the Breeders’ Cup Mile that eventually convinced all of us that Zarkava was the worthy world champion for this year. We take nothing away from Curlin, who is one of the great racehorses to run in the past twenty years, but we feel that even at his best in 2008 he would not have been able to match her in Longchamp.”

RaceHorseOwner.com is a leading provider of global horse racing content, providing readers with information about horse racing from around the world. The site features race previews, top jockey and trainer biographies, exclusive photos, and racebook reviews.

If you need a horse betting software that used with my very own system allows me to make $3,288 each week from online betting exchange sites.This could be changing your life in a matter of months!

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The World of Horse Racing

By admin On December 2, 2008 No Comments

Horse racing is an equestrian sport that has been practiced over the centuries. Its origins date back to about 4500 BC among the nomadic tribesmen of Central Asia who first domesticated the horse. Since then, horse racing has flourished as the Sport of Kings.

Since the beginning of recorded history, horse racing was an organized sport for all major civilizations around the globe. The ancient Greek Olympics had events for both chariot and mounted horse racing. Then the Romans embraced the sport. In the Roman Empire, chariot and mounted horse racing were major industries with imported bloodlines, breeding programs, exhaustive training routines, and all the accoutrements of organized wagering like bookmakers, horse-racing tracks, scandals, hot tips, and most of all, excitement. The decline of the Roman Empire also saw a decline in organized public racing until well into more modern times.

Horse racing then became a professional sport as early as the 12th century, when the English knights returned from the Crusades with Arab horses. Over the next several hundred years, an increasing number of Arabian stallions were imported and bred to English mares, producing horses that combined endurance and speed. These are the breed of horses that are used in horse racing today.

With the arrival of better transport links and other technological innovations in the 19th century, horse racing became a sport that is watched by millions of people each year. Leading newspapers began to give horse racing far more coverage, and there was a significant increase in the volume of betting on races. The arrival of professional on-course bookmakers into the sport brought with it different challenges. The Jockey Club reacted by establishing high standards of order, integrity, and discipline to ensure that the sport will continue to prosper.

Racecourse attendance has become increasingly popular by the early 21st century. After a drop in attendance in the 1970s and 1980s, racing posted an attendance figure of 6 million in 2004. Now internet wagering has horse racing off and running in ways never imagined. With the emergence of online horse racing betting, the Sport of Kings has attracted new audiences who, rather than standing trackside studying the form guide, would prefer to place their horse racing bet from the comforts of their own homes. Wagering on the outcome of horse races has been an integral part of the appeal of the sport since prehistory and today is the sole reason horse racing has survived as a major professional sport.

Jack Robinson is a freelance content writer, specialising in sport and horse betting related matters. He has published many articles on online sport and horse games, and is partial to the world of horse race.

If you need a horse betting software that used with my very own system allows me to make $3,288 each week from online betting exchange sites.This could be changing your life in a matter of months!


Pick 3 Horse Racing Tips and Betting Strategy

By admin On November 24, 2008 No Comments

While I am often heard warning my fellow horse racing handicappers to avoid low priced runners (any horse going off at less than 2-1 odds) there is a situation when I feel it is a good horse betting strategy to wager on a horse going off at short odds. Horse racing tips may leave you cold, but this is not a tip on a specific horse but rather a situation to look for when playing the pick 3.

As I am sure you know, the pick 3 is an exotic bet that requires picking the winner of three consecutive races. Here is a situation I look for when I find a horse going off at a short price that I have spent some time handicapping and want to make a profit for the time I’ve invested handicapping the race. If you locate a horse that looks like it has a better than average chance of winning a race, but is going off at low odds, try to play it as one leg in a pick 3.

The ideal conditions are to have a horse that lays over the field in one race and then two very contentious races that make up the rest of the bet. A typical situation might be your short priced favorite in the first race. In the next race, there are 6 starters and each seems to have a chance to win. In the final leg of the pick 3 there are 8 runners, but only four seem to have legitimate chance to win.

Your bet would look like this…

in the first leg you key on the favorite whom you like to win

1/

In the second leg you wheel all six horses

1/all/

and in the final leg you key on the four horses that you think are contenders

1/all/1234

The bet will cost you $48 based on a $2 pick 3 bet and will cover 24 possible combinations. The fact that you have some long priced horses in your bet will provide a nice payoff if the favorite should happen to falter in either leg of the bet and that is likely to happen.

Of course, there are no sure things in life, but keying on a horse that lays over the field and using this betting strategy allows you to take advantage of an opportunity that might have been missed if you only place win bets and limit your bets to horses starting at 2-1 or better. This simple system has worked well for me as long as I make sure my horse that I single on is a rock solid bet.

The most consistent horse racing systems have to have the basics and a handicapper must understand the basics. I have been around horse racing for 50 years including as an owner. Without the basics the rest is not going to do any good. If you want to learn how a horse owner and insider handicaps just go to http://williewins.homestead.com/truecb.html and get the truth.

Bill Peterson is a former horse race owner and professional handicapper. He comes from a horse race handicapping family and as he puts it, “Horse Racing is in my blood.” To see all Bill’s horse racing material go to http://williewins.homestead.com/handicappingstore.html - Bill’s handicapping store.

If you need a horse betting software that used with my very own system allows me to make $3,288 each week from online betting exchange sites.This could be changing your life in a matter of months!


Free Racing Tips For Horse Racing

By admin On November 24, 2008 No Comments

So how do you choose the right horse to place a bet on? A lot of it has to do with trial and error, so you can take the long route and place little bets on each horse and not know why or what to look for.

Or you can read this article so you can make a better decision when placing your bets.
These tips are from people who have been betting on horses for years.

These tips should help you win more money and place better informed bets. 4 Horse Race Betting Tips:

1. Study all the horses in the race before the race begins, finding a winning product is just finding a winning horse, you have to study your product. In this case your product is the horse. So you have to check out the breeding of the horse as well as it’s living conditions and if they are fast and or won a race. Don’t fall in love with a horse and bet just because. You want to make sure they are well feed, live good and win races.

2. Winning Is In The Genes
If you were honest and you saw a thoroughbred horse standing next to a little horse half the thoroughbred size, would you bet on that horse?

The fact is if you pick horses that where bred to race. you will have a better chance of winning. Look for horses that have been bred to race form the beginning and you will be well on your way to picking a winner.

3. Become A Good Researcher
Think of your job as researching enough to be able to pick a win, just by research news TV, magazines about horse racing. You will know if you have a winner or a loser. Track horse races and different events, travel, study different patterns and other factors like history. If you do it correctly you should do great for the most part.

4. Different Horses For Different Races
When studying your horses, look at the way they run the track. Every horse is different the in way they run the track. No one horse can win all races so choose the right horse for the right race. By watching how they run.

By doing these tips you won’t waste your time or money and who knows you might even win some serious cash. So even though you’re betting and taking a risk, by doing research you will have a far better chance or success.

This article was brought to you by http://ProsOfGambling.com & Jason Szova If you would like more info on how to profit with your passion for Gambling & Horse Racing visit http://www.ProsOfGambling.com

If you need a horse betting software that used with my very own system allows me to make $3,288 each week from online betting exchange sites.This could be changing your life in a matter of months!


Horse Racing Tips, an Easy Way to Make Money - No Scam, This Works

By admin On November 24, 2008 No Comments

Everyone is looking for an easy way to make money, and all too often we find that those we are offered turn out to be a con. This isn’t, so read on for a great easy way to make money.

The truth is that making money always involves a gamble, and this one is based around doing exactly that - betting on the horses!

Don’t be put off, though, as I’m about to explain why there is such a thing as a ‘dead cert’. Yes, there is such a thing of course. Bookmakers work out their odds based on the overall quality of the field, and sometimes you may find races have large numbers of horses, with the best odds at an attractive three to one. These are not the dead certs we are looking for because they are already, as we say “in the numbers”

Scour the racing pages, and look for races where six horses, or less, are running, and look for one where the lowest priced horse is odds on - that is, pays out less profit than the total bet. Bookmakers give these horses such prices for a reason and, more often than not they turn out to be right. If the lowest priced horse is clear of the rest of the prices - particularly if it’s ‘odds on’ and the others are not - get your money on!

Back a horse with $100 at four to five on, and you make $80 profit when it wins. As I said, it’s easy money!

My name is John Anthony and I have developed an horse betting software that used with my very own system allows me to make $3,288 each week from online betting exchange sites.This could be changing your life in a matter of months!


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By admin On November 24, 2008 No Comments

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