
01-26-2011, 01:09 PM
|
 |
Idlewild Airport
|
|
Join Date: May 2006
Location: USA
Posts: 9,687
|
|
Quote:
Originally Posted by The Indomitable DrugS
I did it both on thoroughbreds as a teller when I was 18 - and I still do it everytime I visit a dog track.
It was not uncommon for me to have at least over ten thousand dollars worth of canceled tickets on my cash position at the end of a shift. In fact, I might have had a Joe DiMaggio like streak of it going. No one ever said a single thing about it ... and I doubt it even made much difference in helping me get an edge.
One day - all the machines froze and betting was down for a couple of minutes. I had like a couple thousand dollar win bet on a horse I hated in a race coming up in like 15 minutes. I was about to crap my pants and I went back to the money room to see if I could get the ticket canceled by computer when the machines came back up. I canceled the ticket and never did it again.
No sense taking a risk - when you're not sure an edge is even being created from it.
With dog racing - the strategy is to go up and make four win bets of $50 apiece on the four dogs I like least. This drives down the win odds - I go to a teller with 0 MTP - bet about $70 on quinella and trifecta combos involving the dogs I like... cancel the $200 in win tickets and ask for like a $130 voucher back. Basically - I think it's a good way of getting overlayed quinella and trifecta prices. The odds come back to reality right before the rabbit starts moving.
A simple misdirection of my betting competition in an effort to possibly gain an edge. A fine, upstanding tactic to be sure.
|
GA in your future.
|