Laying:
A
lot of new customers to Betfair are attracted by the prospect of a new
style of bet; namely, “Laying”, which is being allowed to
back the
loser of your chosen sport or event.
In
relation to horse racing, this is known as “Laying” a horse i.e.
Backing it to lose the race.
Laying
a horse to lose is effectively the direct opposite of backing it to win.
It
has actually always been possible to do this via a traditional
bookmakers by backing every horse in the race to win using a
“Dutching” mechanism, except excluding the horse that you want to
lose of course.
The
result being, that whichever horse wins the race, as long as it is not
the one you chose as the one you want to lose, you will make a set
amount of profit.
To
do this in a real life situation in a bookmakers as the horses are at
the post, you would have to be a mathematical savant or some other form of
genius, and you may also get a rather strange look from the staff at
Ladbrokes.
The
Betfair computers take all the aggro out of “Laying” your selection.
They do all the math and present you with a single decimal odd for
laying your selection.
Laying
horses can be attractive and profitable to seasoned professionals who
attend race meets and can visibly see a horse directly before a race.
Satellite
Information Services are available to assist, but they may not focus
directly on the horse you are interested in so may not give you any real
clues pre race.
Let me explain the problem with “Laying”
using an analogy.
You
have a favourite at 3/1 in your Maiden Handicap at Chepstow, the field
is large, 12 riders and there are 3 or 4 strong contenders in this race
all bunched at around 4’s and 5’s
This
is a terrible race to try and lay select and I will explain why.
The
professional lay punter will go to the paddock 15 minutes before the
race just as the horses are going down and will see that the favourite
in this race is displaying poor characteristics
including
|
Professionals Check list
-
LAY
-
The
horse is in fact very nervy,
-
The
horses eyes are jumping,
-
The sweat has
turned into white foam,
-
The head is down and
-
T he
horse refuses to canter or
gallop.
|
|
Professional Check
List -
DO NOT LAY
-
lightly sweating
-
glossy shiny coat
-
bright steady eyes
-
cantering and galloping
-
heads and ears pricked up.
|
A
professional punter now has about 2 minutes to phone Betfair or use his
wireless laptop and get a large lay on the “out-of-sorts” favourite
before the hobby punters, the on course bookies and TV cameras catch on,
and the price on this horse starts drifting, first with the on course
bookies, then Betfair and then the internet bookies.
This
is what you are up against trying to outwit the professionals, the
bookies, the market and Betfair. It can be done, but please heed my
words of caution.
Without
seeing the runners and riders before this race, it would be impossible
to say with any certainty which of the major contenders is going to win
and which will lose, and the main problem with laying is the enormous
cost of paying for the rest of the field
should your lay selection go on to win.
Always
remember the comparison with Dutching in that you are betting on every
other horse in the race to win with wagers that return an equal amount
whichever horse wins.
In
other words, should the horse you left out of the Dutch win you have to
pay for every other horse in the race.
Also
and this is a very serious point that many punters laying on Betfair are
totally missing.
Betfair
vaunts much of its success on its ability to provide punters with better
odds than they will get to “Back” events with traditional
bookmakers, and this they invariably achieve.
But
as I have discussed in article 3, due to the higher back prices and the
market “Spread” the lay prices are in fact far worse than what you
would get if a traditional bookies offered the option to lay horses.
To
back this up lets examine the fiscals:
Let’s
say, the favourite in our maiden at Chepstow is at 3/1 on course.
Betfair uses decimal odds to facilitate the Stock Market style trading
and hedging that helps make it so popular. To get the decimal odds add 1
and then 0.5 (for the favourite).
The
odds are better on Betfair as the bookies cannot factor their “cut”
or “over round” into the odds. The prices do reflect the Bookmakers
prices, but are more lenient as we are betting against other punters,
not the bookies.
Betfair
just takes a 5% commission from winnings and this percentage actually
diminishes the more bets you place.
So
the favourite will be at around 4.5 to back on Betfair in this example.
However
to “Lay” the horse, there is what is known as a “spread” in Stock
Market terminology.
The
difference between buying and selling a share equates to the difference
between backing and laying a horse as detailed in Part 3 of this series.
It
is always more expensive to lay a horse than to back it, this has to be
otherwise the book would not add up. So the lay price of a favourite at
traditional 3/1 will be around 4.7 decimal..
If
you lay this horse to lose for £1 at 4.7 and it does lose, you stand to
make £1 minus Betfair commission of 5% so you get your £1 stake back
and a profit of 95p. All very good.
However,
if perchance the contenders do not perform, your horse suddenly wakes up
and goes on to win, then you have to pay for every other horse in the
race that lost. So your loss would be your £1 stake* 4.7, minus
your £1 stake = £3.70
So
let us examine this data from another perspective;
It can be said that
you are going to need 4 of the above type of lays to make enough profit
to pay for 1 race where the horse you laid goes on to win i.e. a losing
bet.
And,
this example is for laying the favourite at the lowest odds of all the
horses in the race.
Just
to hammer the nails into the coffin of any “Lay”
strategy, lets examine Fate Of The Favourites statistics.
It
can be seen that across all flat races 33% of favourites go on to win
their races with the figure for flat handicaps at 25% Favourites win
their races in 38% of National Hunt races with the figure for Handicap
hurdles at 30%.
Averaging
these figures we could say that approximately 1 in 3 races are won by
favourites. Yet we would need to lay 4 favourites to lose at 3/1 to make
a profit.
Are
you that good at spotting weak favourites??
This
is the reality of laying
horses on the betting exchanges.
You
are ticking along nicely……bam! Just one predicted loser wins and you
are back to square one.
And
I can tell you it is more than just deeply irritating.
This
is one area of using Betfair that is usually passed over in the “Pot
of Gold” manuals.
The
amount of mental energy and anxiety that you can expend on the Betting
Exchanges is astonishing and really is something that should be factored
in by anyone thinking about using Betfair to make serious money.
Picking
horses to win or lose is mentally draining.
The
research, the form study, the angst, the mental debate and arithmetic
required to pick a horse to win or lose with any degree of certainty,
and follow it through the stalls round the course and through to the
finish will leave many punters thoroughly drained after a few races, and
then to see it all thrown away on the last race of the day can be
utterly soul destroying.
Obviously
the same scenario with a final race victory will be thoroughly
satisfying. But in either scenario DO NOT underestimate the amount of
mental work, anxiety and stress involved in making a living from
Betfair.
In
Part 5 I will talk more about “Laying, Backing and Dutching” horses
and will reveal some more excellent resources which will help you on
your way to Betting Exchange success.
Bet
Fair And Bet Well Folks!
Mike
J Davies