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Tópico: Racing Glossary  (Lida 6144 vezes)

Offline Hugo Gomes

  • Mensagens: 9117
  • Moderador AcademiadasApostas
Racing Glossary
« em: Janeiro 05, 2011, 05:02 »
Racing Glossary A to C

If you've ever looked at a formguide, particularly one from outside your home country, then you have probably been confused at some of the terminology used. This definitive guide covers racing terms you are likely to find in Australia, the UK and the US. For the sake of simplicity, please note abbreviations for the UK also include Ireland, the US includes Canada and Australia includes New Zealand.

A

Abandoned - a race meeting which will not go ahead due to bad weather, lack of nominations or unforeseen circumstances.

Acceptor - a horse officially listed to start in a race.

Accumulator (UK) - refers to a single bet with selections in several events or races. All selections must win for the bet to be successful. Every time a selection wins, the stake plus winnings is then invested onto the next selection. Any loser means the whole bet loses. Accumulators are also referred to as doubles, trebles, four-folds etc. A winning accumulator can turn a small stake into a big payout, however the odds are remote and bookmakers make a big margin on these bets. Also known as All-up (Aus)

Across the Board
(US) - betting on a horse to Win (1st), Place (1st or 2nd - US only) and Show (1st, 2nd or 3rd). Three bets in all.

Age - in the northern hemisphere, all thoroughbreds count January 1 as their birthday so races can be run according to age groups. In the southern hemisphere, the breeding season is different, so August 1 is the common birthday for thoroughbreds.

All-age Race - as it sounds, a race for all-aged horses, from two years (minimum racing age) upwards. Usually held in the latter half of the season when younger horses are mature enough to compete against older runners.

All Out - a horse giving absolutely everything, usually in the latter stages, in order to win the race.

Allowance
- reduction in weight to be carried by the horse because of certain conditions - apprentice jockey, young horse competing against older rivals, female horse facing male rivals etc. Also a type of US race restricted to certain types of horses.

All-up (Aus) - see Accumulator.

All-Weather Racing - racing which occurs on an artificial surface, i.e. neither dirt nor grass.

Also-Ran - horse that finished well back in the field, gaining no prizemoney for connections or returns for punters.

Amateur - jockey who is not professional. Usually only rides in races restricted to amateur jockeys. Usually denoted by Mr, Miss, Captain etc.

Antepost (UK) - long-term racing markets, such as betting on next year's Derby or Grand National. The prices on offer are generally higher than will occur on the day of the race because part of the risk is that the horse won't start in the race. No refunds are given on horses which do not compete in the race. See Futures (Aus).

Apprentice - inexperienced jockey competing on the flat. In most races, the horse will be given an allowance (less weight) to compensate for the apprentice's lack of experience, otherwise trainers would rarely use them. The size of the allowance/claim depends upon how many winners the apprentice has ridden.

Approximates - tote pool prices. As these dividends are not fixed until after the race, any price/odds seen before the race are only approximate.

Arbitrage - also known as risk-free betting. A type of betting which aims to lock in a profit by betting on all options across various betting companies (bookmakers, exchanges, totes) and taking advantage of price variations. If done correctly, the 'arber' doesn't care who wins the event.

AWT - All Weather Track

B

Back - to bet on something to happen/win, to place a wager.

Backed - a horse that has been supported, popular in the betting.

Backed in - a horse whose odds have decreased due to the number of bets placed on it to win the race.

Back straight
- straight part of the track on the far side from the finish line. Also known as Back stretch (US).

Backward - a horse that has not developed as much as expected or is not as fit as expected to be e.g. the horse was backward in its preparation.

Banker
- a heavily-favoured selection. In multiple bets, the banker is included on its own as a leg of an accumulator or in trifectas etc.

Bar Price - not the price of beer. In big fields, the longer-priced runners may be listed as 25 bar, meaning every other horse at least 25/1. Usually shown in media when space is limited.

Barrier - starting stall, a framework used to separate horses at the start of a race. Used only for flat races in the UK and Ireland, barriers are drawn randomly when the final field is declared. The importance of which barrier the horse starts from varies according to track and distance.

Beard - person used to place bets for a punter who wishes to keep his identity concealed due to publicity, not wanting to give away secret information or the bookmaker may otherwise restrict his bets. Also known as a bowler (Aus).

Bearing In (Out) - going wide on the turn (out) or moving towards the inside rail (in). Failing to maintain a straight course, veering to the left or right. Also known as Hanging In/Out. Can be caused by fatigue, injury, aversion to the whip or other factors.

Bell Lap
- harness racing term for one lap to go, acknowledged by a bell as the leader passes the finishing post with one lap remaining.

Bet - a transaction of risk where the punter places money on a selection in order to win more money should the selection win.

Betting Board - a board used by a bookmaker to display their odds at a racetrack.

Betting Ring - the main area of a racecourse where bookmakers operate.

Bettor (US) - someone who places a bet. Known as a punter in most other countries.

Beyer Number
(US) - a handicapping (form analysing) tool, devised by 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. Specific to US racing where early speed on dirt is a crucial factor.

Bismarck - a heavily-favoured horse which a bookmaker or media pundit does not expect to win. Named after a famous battleship sunk in World War II.

Black-type - bold type in a sales catalogue. Horses which have won or been placed in stakes races are said to have achieved 'black-type' which distinguishes them from lesser horses.

Blank day - a day with no racing scheduled.

Blanket Finish
- when the horses finish so close together on the winning line that you could theoretically place a single blanket across them.

Blinkers - a cup-shaped device applied over the sides of the horse's head near the eyes to limit vision. This helps the horse to concentrate and avoid being distracted by horses or objects close by. Putting blinkers on a horse for the first time can result on a sharp improvement in form. Horses by certain sires react better than others to wearing blinkers.

Blow-out - a longshot winner, a race where very few punters won.

Bolt
- going away very fast, eg the winner bolted in (won easily) or the loose horse bolted away (ran freely without a jockey).

Book
- a bookmaker's tally of bets on a race. The bookmaker tries to attract equal business on each horse in order to guarantee a profit, though this is rarely achieved by taking bets alone.

Bookmaker - person/company who is licensed to accept bets on the result of an event based on their provision of odds to customers. Most commonly found on racecourses, but also in licensed betting shops in Britain and Ireland. Also know as a Bookie.

Bottle - UK slang for odds of 2 to 1.

Bowler
(Aus) - see Beard.

Box - a wagering term denoting a combination bet with all possible numeric combinations covered, e.g. a box trifecta with three horses covers all six possible combinations of those horses running first, second and third.

Boxed In
- being trapped by other horses and unable to accelerate when the jockey wants to.

Break down - when a horse suffers a serious injury, potentially ending its career.

Breeders' Cup - North America's 'World Championship' of racing, now conducted over two days with very big prizemoney. Races are conducted across a variety of age groups and distances, with both sexes catered for.

Breeze
- easy workout, often used in sales, eg 'Breeze Up Sales' when young horses are given a short gallop in front of potential buyers.

Bridge jumper
(US) - a punter who invests vast sums of money on heavy favourites to run a place (show in US). So named because of the 'only' option remaining if the unthinkable happens. Also known as a 'bank teller bet' in Australia, where bank tellers back in the 1930s would allegedly take the cash out of the drawer on Friday night, invest in a very short-priced favourite, pocket the winnings and put the cash back in the drawer on Monday. This system famously came unstuck when champion horse Ajax was beaten at prohibitive odds of 1/40.

Bug boy
(US) - apprentice jockey

Bull ring (US) - small racetrack less than one mile in circumference.

Burlington Bertie - UK slang for 100/30.

Buy price
- in Spread or Index betting, the higher price quoted by the bookmaker.


C

Canadian - also known as a Super Yankee. A combination bet comprised of 26 bets linking five selections in 10 doubles, 10 trebles, five four-folds and one five-fold.

Card - fixture or race meeting.

Carpet - UK slang for 3 to 1.

Chalk - betting favourite in a race. Many years ago bookmakers would write their odds on a blackboard with chalk.

Chalk player - favourite backer

Chase - type of race over thick, brush fences. Also known as a Steeplechase.

Checked
- when a jockey has to briefly pull up a horse because it has been cut off or blocked for a run.

Chute
- extension of a racecourse to allow a longer straight run from a particular starting position.

Claimer
- a race in which all horses are entered subject to claim at a specified price. The price set determines the class of the race and the weight the horse will carry, but each horse can be purchased before the price, thus deterring owners with a good horse entering it into a weak race, because it may be claimed by someone else. Also known as a Claiming Race.

Closer
(US) - horse that runs on late, coming from off the pace. Known as a hold-up horse in the UK or swooper in Australia.

Co-favourite
- UK term for when three or more horses share the status as favourite.

Colours
- racing silks worn by a jockey, usually specific to the owner(s) or trainer.

Colt
- an ungelded (entire) male horse aged four years old or less (UK, US), three years or less in Australia.

Combination bet - a bet with multiple options taken, e.g. Scoop6 ticket with more than one horse in each race, or a forecast bet combining three runners.

Conditional jockey - the National Hunt version of an apprentice jockey.

Correct weight
- signal given after a race (Australia, US) to announce all bets can now be paid. This is given after horses have returned to scale and the jockeys of the placegetters have carried their correct weight. Known as 'Weighed In' in the UK. If a jockey weighs in light (i.e. the horse has carried less than it should have), the horse will be disqualified.

Cracking pace - very fast early speed in a race.

Crossing to the fence - when a horse drawn wide shifts closer to the rail.

Crossing to the lead
- when a horse drawn wide pushes forward and takes the lead by crossing to the fence.

Offline +EV

  • Mensagens: 302
Re: Racing Glossary
« Responder #1 em: Junho 29, 2011, 23:12 »
Não é possível postar apartir da letra C?  :P

Offline Hugo Gomes

  • Mensagens: 9117
  • Moderador AcademiadasApostas
Re: Racing Glossary
« Responder #2 em: Junho 29, 2011, 23:13 »
Posso tentar encontrar o resto do tópico.

Mas na altura só havia isto...

Offline Edas

  • Mensagens: 77
Re: Racing Glossary
« Responder #3 em: Julho 03, 2012, 12:58 »
1 ano depois...há novidades sobre isto? (leia-se: da letra c em diante?)

Offline rickmpr

  • Mensagens: 268
Re: Racing Glossary
« Responder #4 em: Agosto 17, 2012, 21:18 »
Se me permitem:

D

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.

Dark Day - A day when no racing is scheduled.

Dark Horse: A horse whose chances of success are not known, and whose capabilities have not been made the subject of general comment or of wagers.

Dead Heat - A tie. Two or more horses finishing equal in a race.

Dead Track - Racing surface lacking resiliency.

Death (The) - Also known as the death seat. The position outside the leader, one horse off the rails or fence. The death is considered to be the toughest run in a race because the horse in the 'death position/seat' will have to cover more ground than the inside competitor.

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').

Distance - The length of a race: 5 furlongs is the minimum and the 4 1/2 miles of the Grand National the longest. Also, the margin by which a horse wins or is beaten by the horse in front; this ranges from a short head to 'by a distance' (more than 30 lengths); a 'length' is measured from the horse's nose to the start of its tail.

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.

Dogs Up - Or 'The dogs are up', referring to the rubber traffic cones placed at certain distances out from the inner rail when the track is wet, muddy, soft, yielding or heavy, to prevent horses during the workout period from churning the footing along the rail.

Dosage - A mathematical analysis of a horse's pedigree based on sires being placed in one or more of five categories: brilliant, intermediate, classic, solid, professional.

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.


E

Each Way - UK term for betting on a horse to win and/or 'Place'. An each way bet is when you have the same amount on the horse for a win and for a place. Bookmakers will give you one quarter of the win odds for a place in fields of eight or more and one third of the win odds in fields of six or seven horses.

Each Way Double - Two separate bets of a win double and a place double.

Each Way Single - Two bets. The first is for the selection to win; the second for it to be placed (each way).

Eclipse Award - Thoroughbred racing's year-end awards, honoring the top horses in 11 separate categories.

Enclosure - The area where the Runners gather for viewing before and after the race.

Entry - A horse entered in a race.

Entries - A listing of all horses entered in a race, often including additional information and statistics on each horse (like programs or racecards, but usually with slightly less data).

Equibase (Company) - A partnership between The Jockey Club and the Thoroughbred Racing Associations to establish and maintain an industry-owned, central database of racing records. Equibase past-performance information is used in track programs across North America.

Equivalent Odds - Mutuel price horses would pay for each $1 bet.

Evenly - Neither gaining nor losing position or distance during a race.

Even Money Bet (or Evens) - A 1:1 bet. A $10 wager wins $10.

Exacta - (Also, Perfecta) A wager that picks the first two finishers in a race in the exact order of finish. (Straight Forecast in the UK.)

Exacta Box - A wager in which all possible combinations using a given number of horses are covered.

Exotic (wager) - Any wager other than win, place or show.

Exposure - The amount of money one actually stands to lose on a game or race.

Extended - Forced to run at top speed.


F

False Favorite - A horse that is a race favorite despite being outclassed by others.

Faltered - A horse that was in contention early in the race but drops back in the late stages.

Fast (track) - Optimum condition for a dirt track that is dry, even, resilient and fast.

Favorite - The most popular horse in a race, which is quoted at the lowest odds because it is deemed to have the best chance of winning the race.

Feature Races - Top races.

Fence - The inside fence is the inside running rail around the race track, while the outside fence is the outside running rail.

Field - 1) All the runners in a race. 2) Some sportsbooks or bookmakers may well group all the outsiders in a competition under the banner headline of 'Field' and put it head to head with the favorite. This is known as favorite vs the field betting and is common in horse and golf betting.

Field Horse - Two or more starters running as a single betting unit, when there are more entrants than positions on the totalisator board can accommodate.

Filly - Female horse four-years-old or younger.

Final Field - The total list of available competitors. The list of horses competing is the final one and there are no more runners to be added.

Fire - A burst of acceleration by a horse in a race. Example: 'The horse did fire (or didn't fire) when asked'.

Firm (track) - A condition of a turf course corresponding to fast on a dirt track. A firm, resilient surface.

First Up - The first run a horse has in a new campaign or preparation.

Fixed Odds - Your dividend is fixed at the odds when you placed your bet.

Fixture - See 'Meeting'.

Flag/Super Robin - A bet consisting of 23 bets on 4 selections in different events (6 Doubles, 4 Trebles, 1 Fourfold, plus 12 single stake cross bets).

Flash (US) - Change of odds information on tote board.

Flat race - Contested on level ground as opposed to a steeplechase.

Flatten Out - When a horse drops his head almost in a straight line with his body, generally from exhaustion.

Float - 1) An equine dental procedure in which sharp points on the teeth are filed down. 2) The instrument with which the above procedure is performed.

Floating - Flat plate or wooden implement dragged over the surface of a wet track to aid in draining water.

Foal - A baby horse, usually refers to either a male or female horse from birth to January 1st of the following year. All racehorses are given the nominal birthday of January 1st. Thus a two-year-old born in June and one born in January of the same year are considered to be of the same age for the purposes of satisfying the conditions of some races re: weight carried. In reality, the January horse may be considered to have a significant advantage in terms of physical development at this early stage in its career.

Fold - When preceded by a number, a fold indicates the number of selections in an accumulator (e.g. 5-Fold = 5 selections).

Forecast - A wager that involves correctly predicting the 1st and 2nd for a particular event. This bet can be straight, reversed or permed. (USA, Perfecta or Exacta).

Form - Statistics of previous performance and comment as to the expected current performance of a runner, useful in deciding which runner to bet on.

Form Player - A bettor who makes selections from past-performance records.

Fresh (Freshened) - A rested horse or a freshened horse.

Front-runner - A horse whose running style is to attempt to get on or near the lead at the start of the race and stay there as long as possible.

Frozen (track) - A condition of a racetrack where any moisture present is frozen.

FTL - FTL stands for 'First Time Lasix'. Lasix is a brand name for "furosemide" or "frusemide". The name 'lasix' is derived from 'lasts six' (hours) - referring to its duration of action. Lasix is used in the treatment of high blood pressure. Lasix acts quickly, usually within 1 hour. In racing, it is used to prevent thoroughbred and standardbred race horses from bleeding through the nose during races.

Full Cover - All the doubles, trebles and accumulators involved in a given number of selections.

Furlong - One-eighth of a mile or 220 yards or 660 feet (approx. 200 meters).

Futures - (Also, Ante Post) Bets placed in advance predicting the outcome of a future event.

Offline dragonblue

  • Mensagens: 49
Re: Racing Glossary
« Responder #5 em: Julho 06, 2014, 11:13 »
Horse Racing Terms & Glossary

 

    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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    Each Way - UK term for betting on a horse to win and/or 'Place'. An each way bet is when you have the same amount on the horse for a win and for a place. Bookmakers will give you one quarter of the win odds for a place in fields of eight or more and one third of the win odds in fields of six or seven horses.
     
    Each Way Double - Two separate bets of a win double and a place double.
     
    Each Way Single - Two bets. The first is for the selection to win; the second for it to be placed (each way).
     
    Eclipse Award - Thoroughbred racing's year-end awards, honoring the top horses in 11 separate categories.
     
    Enclosure - The area where the Runners gather for viewing before and after the race.
     
    Equibase (Company) - A partnership between The Jockey Club and the Thoroughbred Racing Associations to establish and maintain an industry-owned, central database of racing records. Equibase past-performance information is used in track programs across North America.
     
    Equivalent Odds - Mutuel price horses would pay for each $1 bet.
     
    Evenly - Neither gaining nor losing position or distance during a race.
     
    Even Money Bet (or Evens) - A 1:1 bet. A $10 wager wins $10.
     
    Exacta - (Also, Perfecta) A wager that picks the first two finishers in a race in the exact order of finish. (Straight Forecast in the UK.)
     
    Exacta Box - A wager in which all possible combinations using a given number of horses are covered.
     
    Exotic (wager) - Any wager other than win, place or show.
     
    Exposure - The amount of money one actually stands to lose on a game or race.
     
    Extended - Forced to run at top speed.
     
    False Favorite - A horse that is a race favorite despite being outclassed by others.
     
    Faltered - A horse that was in contention early in the race but drops back in the late stages.
     
    Fast (track) - Optimum condition for a dirt track that is dry, even, resilient and fast.
     
    Favorite - The most popular horse in a race, which is quoted at the lowest odds because it is deemed to have the best chance of winning the race.
     
    Feature Races - Top races.
     
    Fence - The inside fence is the inside running rail around the race track, while the outside fence is the outside running rail.
     
    Field - 1) All the runners in a race. 2) Some sportsbooks or bookmakers may well group all the outsiders in a competition under the banner headline of 'Field' and put it head to head with the favorite. This is known as favorite vs the field betting and is common in horse and golf betting.
     
    Field Horse - Two or more starters running as a single betting unit, when there are more entrants than positions on the totalisator board can accommodate.
     
    Filly - Female horse four-years-old or younger.
     
    Firm (track) - A condition of a turf course corresponding to fast on a dirt track. A firm, resilient surface.
     
    First Up - The first run a horse has in a new campaign or preparation.
     
    Fixed Odds - Your dividend is fixed at the odds when you placed your bet.
     
    Fixture - See 'Meeting'.
     
    Flag - A bet consisting of 23 bets (a 'Yankee' plus 6 'Single Stakes About' bets in pairs) on 4 selections in different event.
     
    Flash (US) - Change of odds information on tote board.
     
    Flat race - Contested on level ground as opposed to a steeplechase.
     
    Flatten Out - When a horse drops his head almost in a straight line with his body, generally from exhaustion.
     
    Foal - A baby horse, usually refers to either a male or female horse from birth to January 1st of the following year.
     
    Fold - When preceded by a number, a fold indicates the number of selections in an accumulator (e.g. 5-Fold = 5 selections).
     
    Forecast - A wager that involves correctly predicting the 1st and 2nd for a particular event. This bet can be straight, reversed or permed. (USA, Perfecta or Exacta).
     
    Form - Statistics of previous performance and comment as to the expected current performance of a runner, useful in deciding which runner to bet on.
     
    Form Player - A bettor who makes selections from past-performance records.
     
    Front-runner - A horse whose running style is to attempt to get on or near the lead at the start of the race and stay there as long as possible.
     
    Frozen (track) - A condition of a racetrack where any moisture present is frozen.
     
    Full Cover - All the doubles, trebles and accumulators involved in a given number of selections.
     
    Furlong - One-eighth of a mile or 220 yards or 660 feet (approx. 200 meters).
     
    Futures - (Also, Ante Post) Bets placed in advance predicting the outcome of a future event.
     
    Gait - Harness horses are divided into two distinct groups, pacers or trotters, depending on their gait when racing. The gait is the manner in that a horse moves its legs when running. The pacer is a horse with a lateral gait, whereas a trotter or square-gaiter has a diagonal gait.
     
    Gate - Another term for barrier, or position a horse will start from.
     
    Gelding - A male horse that has been castrated.
     
    Gentleman Jockey - Amateur rider, generally in steeplechases.
     
    Going - The condition of the racecourse (firm, heavy, soft, etc.).
     
    Good (track) - Condition between fast and slow, generally a bit wet. A dirt track that is almost fast or a turf course slightly softer than firm.
     
    Graded Race - Established in 1973 to classify select stakes races in North America, at the request of European racing authorities, who had set up group races two years earlier. Always denoted with Roman numerals I, II, or III. Capitalized when used in race title (the Grade I Kentucky Derby). See 'Group Race' below.
     
    Graduate - Winning for the first time.
     
    Grand - GBP£ 1,000 (also known as a Big'un).
     
    Green - An inexperienced horse.
     
    Group Race - An elite group of races. Established in 1971 by racing organizations in Britain, France, Germany and Italy to classify select stakes races outside North America. Collectively called 'Pattern Races'. Equivalent to North American graded races. Always denoted with Arabic numerals 1, 2, or 3. Capitalized when used in race title (the Group 1 Epsom Derby). See 'Graded Race' above.

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    Hand - Four inches. A horse's height is measured in hands and inches from the top of the shoulder (withers) to the ground, e.g., 15.2 hands is 15 hands, 2 inches. Thoroughbreds typically range from 15 to 17 hands.
     
    Handicap - 1) Race for which the track handicapper assigns the weights to be carried. Each horse is allocated a different weight to carry, the theory being all horses then run on a fair and equal basis.. 2) To make selections on the basis of past performances.
     
    Handicapper - The official who decides the weights to be carried in handicap events, and the grading of horses and greyhounds.
     
    Hand Ride - The jockey urges a horse with the hands and arms without using the whip.
     
    Hard (track) - A condition of a turf course where there is no resiliency to the surface.
     
    Head - A margin between horses. One horse leading another by the length of its head.
     
    Head Of The Stretch - Beginning of the straight run to the finish line.
     
    Heavy (track) - Wettest possible condition of a turf course, similar to muddy but slower; not usually found in North America.
     
    Hedge - The covering of a bet with a second bet.
     
    Hedging - A bet made by a cautious bookie on a horse on which he has accepted large bets - in order to cut his losses if the horse wins (also known as a 'lay-off bet').
     
    Heinz - A Heinz is a multiple bet consisting of 57 bets involving 6 selections in different events. The multiple bet breakdown is 15 doubles, 20 trebles, 15x4-folds, 6x5-folds and one 6-fold.
     
    High Weight - Highest weight assigned or carried in a race.
     
    Home Turn - The final turn a horse must travel around before entering the home straight in the run to the finish line.
     
    Horse - When reference is made to sex, a 'horse' is an ungelded male five-years-old or older.
     
    Hung - A horse holding the same position, unable to make up distance on the winner.
     
    Impost - Weight carried or assigned.
     
    In Hand - Running under moderate control, at less than best pace.
     
    Inquiry - Reviewing the race to check into a possible infraction of the rules. Also, a sign flashed by officials on the tote board on such occasions. If lodged by a jockey, it is called an objection.
     
    In The Money - Describes the horses in a race that finish 1st, 2nd and 3rd (and sometimes 4th) or the horses on which money will be paid to bettors, depending on the place terms.
     
    In The Red - Are odds shown in red on the betting boards because they are Odds-On bets.
     
    Investor - A bettor. A person at a licensed race meeting who bets with a bookmaker or the totalisator, or a person not present at the meeting, but places bets on the horses engaged at that meeting with the off-course totalisator.
     
    Joint Favourites - When a sportsbook or bookmaker cannot separate two horses or teams for favouritism, they are made joint favourites.
     
    Judge - The person who declares the official placing for each race.
     
    Juice - The bookmaker's commission, also known as vigorish or vig.
     
    Jumper - Steeplechase or hurdle horse.
     
    Jolly - The favourite in a race.
     
    Judge - The official who determines the finishing order of a race.
     
    Juvenile - Two-year-old horse.
     
    Key Horse - The main expected winning horse used in multiple combinations in an exotic wager.
     
    Kite - UK slang for a cheque ('Check' in the US).
     
    Late Double - A second daily double offered during the latter part of the program. See 'Daily Double' above.
     
    Lay Off, Layoff - Bets made by one bookmaker with another bookmaker, in an effort to reduce his liability in respect of bets already laid by him with investors.
     
    LBO - Acronym for 'Licensed Betting Office' in the UK.
     
    Leg In - To nominate one runner to win with a selection of other runners. This is possible on Forecast, Quinella, Trifecta, Quartet and Superfecta (eg. Quinella bet with selection 4 to win, from runners 5, 7, 8 and 9 to come second, in any order).
     
    Length - A measurement approximating the length of a horse from nose to tail, about 8 feet, used to denote distance between horses in a race. For example, "Secretariat won the Belmont by 31 lengths".
     
    Lengthen - The opposite of 'Shorten'. Referred to odds getting longer, that is, more attractive to the bettor.
     
    Listed Race - A stakes race just below a group race or graded race in quality.
     
    Lock - (As in 'Banker') US term for an almost certain winner. Easy winner.
     
    Long Odds - More than 10:1.
     
    Long Shot - (Also, Outsider) An runner is often referred to as being a long shot, because of the fact it is returning high odds and is therefore deemed to have little chance of winning the race.
     
    Lug In (Out) - Action of a tiring horse, bearing in or out, failing to keep a straight course.
     
    Maiden - 1) A horse or rider that has not won a race. 2) A female that has never been bred.
     
    Maiden Race - A race for non-winners.
     
    Mare - Female horse five-years-old or older.
     
    Market - The list of all horses engaged in a race and their respective odds.
     
    Meeting - A collection of races conducted by a club on the same day or night forms a race meeting.
     
    Middle Distance - Broadly, from one mile to 1-1/8 miles.
     
    Mile Rate - In harness racing it is the approximate time a horse would have run per mile (1609 meters).
     
    Minus Pool - A mutuel pool caused when a horse is so heavily played that, after deductions of state tax and commission, there is not enough money left to pay the legally prescribed minimum on each winning bet. The racing association usually makes up the difference.
     
    Money Rider - A rider who excels in rich races.
     
    Monkey - GBP£ 500.
     
    Morning Glory - Horse who performs well in morning workouts but fails to fire in actual races.
     
    Morning Line - Approximate odds quoted before wagering begins.
     
    Mudder - A horse that races well on muddy tracks. Also known as a 'Mudlark'.
     
    Muddy (track) - A condition of a racetrack which is wet but has no standing water.
     
    Mutuel Pool - Short for 'Parimutuel Pool'. Sum of the wagers on a race or event, such as the win pool, daily double pool, exacta pool, etc.

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    Nap - The selection that racing correspondents and tipsters nominate as their strongest selection of the day or meeting. Reputed to stand for 'Napoleon'.
     
    National Thoroughbred Racing Association (NTRA) - A non-profit, membership organization created in 1997 to improve economic conditions and public interest in Thoroughbred racing.
     
    Neck - Unit of measurement about the length of a horse's neck.
     
    Nickel - A $500 wager.
     
    Nod - Lowering of head. To win by a nod, a horse extends its head with its nose touching the finish line ahead of a close competitor.
     
    Nominations - The complete list of runners entered by owners and trainers for a race.
     
    Nose - Smallest advantage a horse can win by. Called a short head in Britain.
     
    Nursery - A handicap for two-year-old horses.
     
    Oaks - A stakes event for three-year-old fillies (females).
     
    Objection - Claim of foul lodged by rider, patrol judge or other official after the running of a race. If lodged by official, it is called an inquiry.
     
    Odds - The sportsbook's or bookmaker's view of the chance of a competitor winning (adjusted to include a profit). The figure or fraction by which a bookmaker or totalisator offers to multiply a bettor's stake, which the bettor is entitled to receive (plus his or her own stake) if their selection wins.
     
    Odds-against - Where the odds are greater than evens (e.g. 5 to 2). When the bookmaker's or totalisator's stake is greater than the bettor's stake. For example, a horse that is quoted at 4:1 would be odds against, because if it wins a race, the bookmaker or totalisator returns $4 for every dollar a bettor places on that horse, plus his or her original outlay.
     
    Odds Compiler - Same as 'Oddsmaker' below.
     
    Oddsmaker - A person who sets the betting odds. (Sportsbooks or Bookies don't set the odds. Most major sportsbooks use odds set by Las Vegas oddsmakers.)
     
    Odds Man (US) - At tracks where computers are not in use, an employee who calculates changing odds as betting progresses.
     
    Odds-On - Odds of less than even money. This a bet where you have to outlay more than you win. For example if a horse is two to one Odds-On, you have to outlay two dollars to win one dollar and your total collect if the horse wins is three dollars. That is made up of your two dollars and the one dollar you win.
     
    Official - Sign displayed when result is confirmed. Also racing official.
     
    Off the Board (US) - A horse so lightly bet that its pari-mutuel odds exceed 99 to 1. Also, a game or event on which the bookie will not accept action.
     
    Off-Track Betting (OTB) - Wagering at legalized betting outlets.
     
    On The Board - Finishing among the first three.
     
    On The Nose - Betting a horse to win only.
     
    Open Ditch - Steeplechase jump with a ditch on the side facing the jockey.
     
    Outlay - The money a bettor wagers is called his or her outlay.
     
    Out Of The Money - A horse that finishes worse than third.
     
    Outsider - A horse that is not expected to win. An outsider is usually quoted at the highest odds.
     
    Overbroke - Where the book results in a loss for the bookmaker.
     
    Overlay - A horse going off at higher odds than it appears to warrant based on its past performances.
     
    Overnight Race - A race in which entries close a specific number of hours before running (such as 48 hours), as opposed to a stakes race for which nominations close weeks and sometimes months in advance.
     
    Over The Top - When a horse is considered to have reached its peak for that season.
     
    Overweight - Surplus weight carried by a horse when the rider cannot make the assigned weight.
     
    Pacesetter - The horse that is running in front (on the lead).
     
    Paddock - Area where horses are saddled and kept before post time.
     
    Panel - A slang term for a furlong.
     
    Parimutuel(s) - A form of wagering originated in 1865 by Frenchman Pierre Oller in which all money bet is divided up among those who have winning tickets, after taxes, takeout and other deductions are made. Oller called his system 'Parier Mutuel' meaning 'Mutual Stake' or 'betting among ourselves'. As this wagering method was adopted in England it became known as 'Paris Mutuals', and soon after 'Parimutuels'.
     
    Parlay - (Also, Accumulator) 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 parlay.
     
    Part Wheel - Using a key horse or horses in different, but not all possible, exotic wagering combinations.
     
    Pasteboard Track - A lightning fast racing surface.
     
    Patent - A multiple bet consisting of 7 bets involving 3 selections in different events. A single on each selection, plus 3 doubles and 1 treble.
     
    Penalty - A weight added to the handicap weight of a horse.
     
    Permutations - It is possible to Perm bets or selections (e.g. on 4 selections all the possible doubles could be Permed making 6 bets).
     
    Phone Betting - A service enabling punters to bet on horses with bookmakers by using telephones.
     
    Phone TAB - Another phone betting service, provided by a totalisator which allows people with special betting accounts to place bets via the telephone. Much the same as a bank account, you must have a credit balance to be able to place a bet. The cost of the investment is debited to your account, and winning dividends and refunds are automatically credited to your account.
     
    Photo Finish - A photo is automatically taken as the horses pass the winning line and when the race is too close to be judged the photo is used to determine the order of finish.
     
    Picks - Betting selections, usually by an expert.
     
    Pick Six (or more) - A type of wager in which the winners of all the included races must be selected.
     
    Pitch - The position where a bookmaker conducts his business on a racecourse.
     
    Place - Finish in the top two, top three, top four and sometimes also top five in a competition or event. A Place bet will win if the selection you bet on is among those placed. Usually, a horse runs a place if it finishes in the first three in fields of eight or more horses. If there are only six or seven runners the horse must finish first or second to place. Different sportsbooks have different Place terms and you should check their rules before placing a bet. In US, 2nd place finish. (See 'Each Way' UK)
     
    Point Spread - (Also, Line or Handicap) The points allocated to the 'underdog' to level the odds with the 'favorite/favourite'.
     
    Pole(s) - Markers at measured distances around the track designating the distance from the finish. The quarter pole, for instance, is a quarter of a mile from the finish, not from the start.
     
    Pony - GBP£ 25.
     
    Pool - Mutuel pool, the total sum bet on a race or a particular bet.
     
    Post - 1) Starting point for a race. 2) An abbreviated version of post position. For example, "He drew post four". 3) As a verb, to record a win. For example, "He's posted 10 wins in 14 starts".
     
    Post Position - Position of stall in starting gate from which a horse starts.
     
    Post Time - Designated time for a race to start.
     
    Price - The odds.
     
    Protest - When a jockey, owner, trainer or steward alleges interference by one party against another during a race that may have affected the outcome of a race. If a protest is upheld by officials, the runner that caused the interference is placed directly after the horse interfered with. If a protest is dismissed by officials, the original result of the race stands.
     
    Punt - Another term for bet or wager.
     
    Punter - Bettor or investor.
     
    Pull Up - To stop or slow a horse during or after a race or workout.

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    Quadrella - Selecting the winner of four specifically nominated races.
     
    Quiniela (Quinella) - Wager in which the first two finishers must be picked in either order. Payoff is made no matter which of the two wins and which runs second. ('Reverse Forecast' in the UK. See Wagers for Quiniela variants.)
     
    Race Caller - The person who describes the race at a racecourse.
     
    Racecard - A programme for the day's racing.
     
    Rail Runner - Horse that prefers to run next to the inside rail.
     
    Ratings - Tipsters may determine a set of ratings which reflect, in their opinion, each runner's chance of winning a particular race taking a number of factors into account when preparing them.
     
    Restricted Races - Races which only certain horses are eligible.
     
    Return - The dividend you receive on a particular bet.
     
    Reverse Forecast (UK) - See 'Quinella' above.
     
    Ringer - A horse (or greyhound) entered in a race under another's name - usually a good runner replacing a poorer one.
     
    Roughie - A horse which is considered to have a 'rough' chance of winning a race.
     
    Roundabout - A bet consisting of 3 bets involving three selections in different events (i.e. 1 single any to come and double stake double on remaining two selections, 3 times).
     
    Rounder - A bet consisting of 3 bets involving three selections in different events (i.e. 1 single any to come a single stake double on remaining two selections, 3 times).
     
    Round Robin - A bet consisting of 10 bets (3 pairs of 'Single Stakes About' bets plus 3 doubles and 1 treble) involving three selections in different events. (US, A series of three or more teams into two-team wagers).
     
    Route - Broadly, a race distance of longer than 1-1/8 miles.
     
    Router - Horse that performs well at longer distances.
     
    Run Free - A horse going too fast.
     
    Runner - A participant in a race. In US, a sportsbook's employee who gathers information on the progress of betting elsewhere on the course. Also, a messenger 'running' to and from pari-mutuel windows for occupants of clubhouse boxes.
     
    Scale Of Weights - Fixed weights to be carried by horses in a race according to age, distance, sex, and time of year.
     
    Scalper - One who attempts to profit from the differences in odds from book to book by betting both sides of the same game at different prices.
     
    Schooled - A horse trained for jumping.
     
    Scope - The potential in a horse.
     
    Score - GBP£ 20. In US, to win a race or a bet. Also, a victory.
     
    Scratch - To be taken out of a race before it starts. Trainers usually scratch horses due to adverse track conditions or a horse's adverse health. A veterinarian can scratch a horse at any time.
     
    Scratch Sheet - Daily publication that includes graded handicaps, tips and scratches.
     
    Second Call - A secondary mount of a jockey in a race in the event his primary mount is scratched.
     
    Selections - The horses selected by a knowledgeable person (Tipster) to have the most likely chance of finishing in first, second and third place. This may also refer to a person's own selections - the horses they have chosen to back.
     
    Selling Race - A race where the winner is sold by auction immediately afterwards.
     
    Settler - A bookmaker's expert who calculates payouts.
     
    Shadow Roll - Usually a lamb's wool roll half way up the horse's face to keep him from seeing his own shadow.
     
    Shorten, Shortening the Odds - When the odds of a horse decrease, usually because a lot of money has been wagered on that horse.
     
    Short Runner - A horse who barely stays, or doesn't stay, the full distance of a race.
     
    Short Price - Low odds, meaning a punter will get little return for their initial outlay.
     
    Show - Third position at the finish.
     
    Show Bet - Wager on a horse to finish in the money; third or better.
     
    Shut Out (US) - What happens to a bettor who gets on the betting line to late and is still waiting in line when the window closes. Also, in sports betting, when the losing team do not score.
     
    Silks - See 'Colors'.
     
    Simulcast - A simultaneous live television transmission of a race to other tracks, off-track betting offices or other outlets for the purpose of wagering.
     
    Single - A Straight bet on one selection to win one race or event, also known as a straight-up bet.
     
    Single Stakes About (or SSA) - A bet consisting of 2 bets on two selections (1 single on each selection any to come 1 single on the other selection reversed).
     
    Sire - Father of a horse.
     
    Six-Dollar Combine (US) - An across-the-board bet in racing.
     
    Sloppy (track) - A track that is wet on surface, with standing water visible, with firm bottom.
     
    Slow (track) - A racing strip that is wet on both the surface and base. Between good and heavy.
     
    Smart Money - Insiders' bets or the insiders themselves.
     
    Soft (track) - Condition of a turf course with a large amount of moisture. Horses sink very deeply into it.
     
    Spell - The resting period between preparations or racing.
     
    Sportsbook - The person, shop or website who accepts bets.
     
    Spot Play (US) - Type of play in which bettor risks money only on types of races and horses which seem relatively worthwhile risks.
     
    Sprint - Short race, less than one mile.
     
    Stake - The prize money for the winning horses paid to the owner (eg. trophy or prize money).
     
    Stakes - The sums of money deposited or guaranteed by the parties to a bet.
     
    Stakes-Placed - Finished second or third in a stakes race.
     
    Stakes Horse - A horse whose level of competition includes mostly stakes races.
     
    Stallion - A male horse used for breeding.
     
    Standing Start - In harness racing, starters start from a standing position, once the barrier across the track is released.
     
    Starter - The person responsible for starting a race.
     
    Starting Gate - Partitioned mechanical device having stalls in which the horses are confined until the starter releases the doors in front to begin the race.
     
    Starting Price (or SP) - An estimation of odds available when the race starts.
     
    Starting Stalls - Mechanical gates that ensure all horses start in unison.
     
    Stayer (Also, Slayer) - A horse that can race long distances.
     
    Steam - When a betting selection starts to move quite rapidly, usually caused by many bettors betting on it.
     
    Steeplechase - A race in which horses are required to jump over a series of obstacles on the course. Also known as a 'Chase'.
     
    Stewards - The group of people who control the day's racing by ensuring that every runner competes on its merits and imposing penalties for any breach of the rules of racing.
     
    Stewards Enquiry - An enquiry by the stewards into a race.
     
    Stick - (Also, Bat) A jockey's whip.
     
    Stickers - Calks on shoes which give a horse better traction in mud or on soft tracks.
     
    Stipes - Another term for the Stewards. (Or Stipendiary Stewards)
     
    Stooper (US) - Those who make a living picking up discarded mutuel tickets at racetracks and cashing those that have been thrown away by mistake.
     
    Store (US) - A sportsbook or a bookie.
     
    Straight - Betting to win only.
     
    Straight Forecast (UK) - A tote bet operating in races of 3 or more declared runners in which the punter has to pick the first and second to finish in the correct order. See 'Exacta'.
     
    Straight Six - A wager to correctly select the winner of each of six consecutive nominated races.
     
    Strapper - Also known as an attendant. A person who assists the trainer, cares for the horse or helps to put on its equipment.
     
    Stretch (home-Stretch) - Final straight portion of the racetrack to the finish.
     
    Stretch Runner - Horse that runs its fastest nearing the finish of a race.
     
    Stretch Turn - Bend of track into homestretch.
     
    Stud - 1) Male horse used for breeding. 2) A breeding farm.
     
    Superfecta - A bet placed on four horses to cross the finish line in exact chosen order.
     
    Super Yankee - Alternative name for a multiple bet known as Canadian, a Super Yankee is a Yankee type bet with five selections instead of four.
     
    Sure Thing - A horse which a punter or tipster believes is unbeatable in a race.
     
    Sweepstakes - Type of betting whereby each horse in a race is drawn out of a hat by a particular person (who pays a set amount of money for the privilege of buying a horse). The people which chose the winner and placegetters will receive a percentage of the total money pool.
     
    System - A method of betting, usually mathematically based, used by a punter or bettor to try to get an advantage.

    Back to Top

    TAB - Totalisator Agency Board. The body appointed to regulate off-course betting (bets made by people who are not present at the race track).
     
    Take (Takeout) - Commission deducted from mutuel pools which is shared by the track, horsemen (in the form of purses) and local and state governing bodies in the form of tax.
     
    Taken Up - A horse pulled up sharply by his rider because of being in close quarters.
     
    The Jockey Club - An organization dedicated to the improvement of Thoroughbred breeding and racing. Incorporated Feb. 10, 1894 in New York City, The Jockey Club serves as North America's Thoroughbred registry, responsible for the maintenance of 'The American Stud Book', a register of all Thoroughbreds foaled in the United States, Puerto Rico and Canada; and of all Thoroughbreds imported into those countries from jurisdictions that have a registry recognized by The Jockey Club and the International Stud Book Committee.
     
    Thick'un - A big bet.
     
    Thoroughbred - A Thoroughbred is a horse whose parentage traces back to any of the three 'Founding Sires' the Darley Arabian, Byerly Turk and Godolphin Barb, and who has satisfied the rules and requirements of The Jockey Club and is registered in 'The American Stud Book' or in a foreign stud book recognized by The Jockey Club and the International Stud Book Committee. Any other horse, no matter what its parentage, is not considered a Thoroughbred for racing and/or breeding purposes.
     
    Thoroughbred Racing Associations (TRA) - An industry group comprised of many of the racetracks in North America.
     
    Ticket - The betting slip or ticket which is received by the bettor from the bookmaker or totalisator, as proof of his or her wager. The ticket is necessary to collect the dividends.
     
    Ticketer (US) - A forger of bookmakers' tickets.
     
    Tic-Tac - The secret and complex sign language used by bookmakers at racecourses to indicate movements in the price of a horse. See BBC's Tic-Tac guide.
     
    Tierce - A French combination bet in which the bettor predicts the horses that will finish 1st, 2nd and 3rd.
     
    Tips - The selections chosen by an expert to bet on (also known as Picks). See 'Selections'.
     
    Tipster - A person who makes selections for a race, providing tips on which horses they believe will win the first three places.
     
    Top Weight - See 'High Weight'.
     
    Totalizator (Totalisator) - The system of betting on races (an automated system that dispenses and records betting tickets, calculates and displays odds and payoffs and provides the mechanism for cashing winning tickets) in which the winning bettors share the total amount bet, minus a percentage for the operators of the system, taxes etc. Synonyms: Tote, Parimutuel.
     
    Tote - Totalizator. The organisation appointed to receive bets and supply dividends in proportion to the amount of the investment. A body in the UK set up to operate pool-betting on all racecourses.
     
    Tote Board - The (usually) electronic totalizator display in the infield which reflects up-to-the-minute odds. It may also show the amounts wagered in each mutuel pool as well as information such as jockey and equipment changes, etc. Also known as the 'Board'.
     
    Tote Returns - Returns from a tote pool (also known as a Dividend), calculated by taking the total stake in each pool (after the take out) and dividing it by the number of winning tickets. A dividend is declared to a fixed stake, for various win, place and forecast pools.
     
    Tout - Person who professes to have, and sells, advance information on a race. Also used as a verb meaning to sell or advertise.
     
    Track Condition - Condition of the racetrack surface. Slow; Fast; good; muddy; sloppy; frozen; hard; firm; soft; yielding; heavy.
     
    Track Record - Fastest time for a distance at a particular track.
     
    Trail - Racing immediately behind another horse. A trail is also known as a sit.
     
    Trainer - The person responsible for looking after a horse and preparing it to race. A trainer must hold a license or permit to be entitled to train.
     
    Treble - A bet consisting of 3 selections, all of which must win for the wager to be successful.
     
    Tricast (UK) - See 'Trifecta' below.
     
    Trifecta - A wager picking the first three finishers in exact order. Called a 'Triactor' in Canada and a 'Triple' in some parts of the U.S. ('Tricast' in the UK.)
    Trifecta Box - A trifecta wager in which all possible combinations using a given number of horses are bet upon. The total number of combinations can be calculated according to the formula (x3)-(3x2)+(2x), where x equals the amount of horses in the box. The sum of the formula is then multiplied by the amount wagered on each combination.
     
    Triple - (Also 'Treble') See 'Trifecta' above.
     
    Triple Crown - Used generically to denote a series of three important races, but is always capitalized when referring to historical races for three-year-olds. In the United States, the Kentucky Derby, Preakness Stakes and Belmont Stakes. In England the 2,000 Guineas, Epsom Derby and St. Leger Stakes. In Canada, the Queen's Plate, Prince of Wales Stakes and Breeders' Stakes.
     
    Trixie - A Trixie consists of 4 bets involving 3 selections in different events, i.e. 3 doubles plus 1 treble.
     
    Trotting - A term for harness racing in general. It also describes the specific gait of a trotter.
     
    Turf Accountant - The UK euphemism for a bookmaker.
     
    Turf Course - Grass course.
     
    Unbackable - A horse which is quoted at short odds that punters decide is too short to return any reasonable amount for the money they outlay.
     
    Underlay - A horse racing at shorter odds than seems warranted by its past performances.
     
    Under Starters Orders (or Under Orders) - The starting of a race.
     
    Under Wraps - Horse under stout restraint in a race or workout.
     
    Union Jack - A bet consisting of 8 trebles on 9 selections A to I: ABC, DEF, GHI, ADG, BEH, CFI, AEI, and CEG.
     
    Value - Getting the best odds on a wager.
     
    Wager - Another term for bet.
     
    Walkover - A race in which only one horse competes.
     
    Warming Up - Galloping horse on way to post.
     
    Weigh In (Out) - The certification, by the clerk of scales, of a rider's weight before (after) a race. A jockey weighs in fully dressed with all equipment except for his/her helmet, whip and (in many jurisdictions) flak jacket.
     
    Welsh/Welch - To fail to pay a gambling bet.
     
    Wheel - Betting all possible combinations in an exotic wager using at least one horse as the key. See 'Part Wheel'.
     
    Wheeling - A racing system devised for the daily double bet in which the bettor backs one horse in the first race and every horse in the second (also known as Baseball or Locking).
     
    Weight-For-Age - The purpose of weight-for-age is to allow horses of different age and sex to compete on equal terms. The weight a horse carried is allocated on a set scale according to its sex and age.
     
    Whip - Instrument or a stick, usually of leather, with which rider strikes horse to increase his speed.
     
    Win - The term used to describe a 1st place finish.
     
    Win Bet - Wager on a horse to finish first.
     
    Winning Post - The finishing line of a race. (Also, The Post.)
     
    Wire - The finish line of a race.
     
    Wise Guy - A knowledgeable handicapper or bettor.
     
    With the Field - Having one horse linked with all the other horses in an event. It can apply to forecasts or in doubles.
     
    Yankee - A multiple bet consisting of 11 bets (6 doubles, 4 trebles and 1 4-fold) on 4 selections in different events.
     
    Yap - Yankee Patent. The same 11 bets as a Yankee, but with singles on each of the 4 selections as well, making 15 bets in all (also known as a 'Lucky 15').
     
    Yearling - A horse in its second calendar year of life, beginning January 1 of the year following its birth.
     
    Yielding - Condition of a turf course with a great deal of moisture. Horses sink into it noticeably.

 (horse)

Offline baph

  • Dr. baph
  • Mensagens: 464
  • ainda a espera da betfair !
Re: Racing Glossary
« Responder #6 em: Setembro 02, 2014, 13:18 »
 ;)



yard(y) = 0.9144 meters
furlong(f) = 201.16800 meters
milha(m) = 1.0609344 Km

1 milha tem 8 furlongs
1 ferlong tem 220 yards

 (hello)

corrigidas as medidas exactas da yard e do furlong , com a ajuda do user Bebezolas (a quem eu agradeço a correção)

 (friends)
« Última modificação: Setembro 06, 2014, 22:07 por baph »
morri a espera da lei ...

Offline dragonblue

  • Mensagens: 49
Re: Racing Glossary
« Responder #7 em: Outubro 04, 2014, 09:56 »

ALL BETTING TERMS
Betting TerminologyAccumulator

A bet that requires several different selections all to win, often to provide a large payout.

All In

A bet where all of the bank is staked.

All Out

When a horse is trying its hardest.

All Weather Racing

Horse racing that takes place on an artificial surface. Lingfield, Kempton and Wolverhampton provide a polytrack surface whilst Southwell provides a fibresand surface.

Ante Post Betting

Betting that takes place well before an event which includes all possible participants. If the selection becomes a 'non-runner' the bet is lost.

Apprentice

A young jockey who gains a weight allowance over more experienced jockeys. The weight allowance decreases as the jockey gains more victories.

Arber

A punter who locks in profit through exploiting a market by backing all outcomes of an event at a combined book of less than 100%

Arbitrage

A bet that locks in a guaranteed profit, whatever the outcome.

Asian Handicap

A football bet that gives the least likely winner a head start to make betting more competitive.

Backward

A horse that is not fit enough or developed enough to do itself justice.

Bags

Bookmakers’ Afternoon Greyhound Service

Banker

A bet that is considered to be a near certainty.

Bar

The shortest of the odds not mentioned in a betting summary or forecast.

Betfair Commission

A small percentage of winnings the company takes for providing their service

Bismarck

A horse that someone strongly thinks will be beaten (sunk).

Blinkers

A device fitted to a horse's head which restricts it's field of vision in order to help it's concentration.

Blanket Finish

Several horses finish a race very close together

Bottle

A 'tic-tac' term used in the betting ring for 2/1.

Bumper

A national hunt race run over the flat (no hurdles or fences)

Burlington Bertie

A 'tic-tac' term used in the betting ring for 100/30.

Canadian

A bet on five selections covering doubles, trebles, fourfolds and a fivefold

Carpet

A 'tic-tac' term used in the betting ring for 3/1.

CD / C&D

Course and Distance. A sign that a horse has won over the course and distance a race is taking place.

Chasing

Betting on things you normally wouldn't in order to recover losses.

Cheek Pieces

Head gear worn by horses to help performance

Clerk of the Scales

The official responsible for ensuring all jockeys weigh in correctly at the end of a race.

Co-Favourite

A favourite who is joint favourite with at least two other horses.

Dam

The female parent of a horse.

Dead-Heat

When two or more horses’ finishing positions cannot be separated

Double

A bet on two horses where both are required to win

Draw

Reference to the number of starting stall a horse will begin a race from.

Drifter

A horse whose odds are getting bigger due to lack of support in the betting.

Dutching

Backing two or more selections in an event to achieve the same profit whichever selection wins.

Each-way

A bet on a horse to place as well as win. Place terms depend on number of runners and type of race.

Exacta

A bet placed on the Tote that requires the first two finishing horses to be named in the correct order.

Ear'ole

A 'tic-tac' term used in the betting ring for 6/4.

Favourite

The selection in an event with the shortest price of winning.

Fourfold

A bet on four horses where all are required to win

Furlong

Standard distance unit in racing. A furlong is equal to 200m and there are eight furlongs in a mile.

Going

The condition of the ground at a racecourse. The going ranges from heavy to firm.

Green

Running excitedly and unecnomically associated with inexperience.

Handicap

A race where horses carry different weights based on their official rating or greyhounds get a head start based on their ability.

Hedging

Backing another outcome in an event you have already bet on to decrease the risk involved.

Heinz

A bet on six selections covering doubles, trebles, fourfolds, fivefolds and a sixfold

IBAS

A service that settles betting disputes between bookmakers and punters.

Jolly

Another name given to the 'favourite'.

Lay

Betting on something not to happen, for example a team not to win.

Layers Liability

How much a layer stands to lose if the laid selection wins.

LSP

Level Stakes Profit. The amount of profit that would have been made if all stakes had been 1 unit

Lucky 15

A bet on four selections covering singles, doubles, trebles and a fourfold

Lucky 31

A bet on five selections covering singles, doubles, trebles, fourfolds and a fivefold

Lucky 63

A bet on six selections covering singles, doubles, trebles, fourfolds, fivefolds and a sixfold

Maiden

A horse that is yet to win a race.

Monkey

A slang term used by bookmakers for £500.

Nap

A tipster's best bet of the day.

Nb

A tipster's second best bet of the day.

Non-Runner

A horse that was originally declared to run but is no longer participating.

NRNB

Non Runner No Bet - Bet on an antepost market where the stake is returned in the event of a non runner

Odds on

Betting on an outcome that is odds on results in the profit of the bet being less than the original stake.

On the Bit

When a horse needs no riding from the jockey

On the Nose

A bet on a horse to win

Over-round

The margin the bookmaker builds into their odds to ensure they make a profit on an event.

Overweight

An eventuality where the jockey weighs more than the weight one of his rides is supposed to carry.

Patent

A bet on three selections that covers seven bets, three singles, three doubles and a treble.

Placepot

A bet on the Tote where a placed horse must be named in the first six races on the card.

Pari Mutuel

A tote style betting system used in France (the only betting system in France)

Permutation

A bet that contains a large number of selections covering a large number of different outcomes

Pony

A slang term used by bookmakers for £25.

Rag

The complete outsider in a field.

ROI

Return On Investment

Round Robin

A bet on three selections containing ‘three pairs of singles stakes about’ bets, three doubles and one treble

Rule 4

A reduction in odds on bets placed before a certain time due to a fancied runner being withdrawn. The more fancied the runner, the bigger the rule 4 deduction.

Scoop 6

A bet placed on the Tote each Saturday on six televised races, where punters compete for massive dividends.

Silks

The colours worn by a jockey

Sire

The male parent of a horse.

SP

Starting Price - the price of a horse when the race starts broadly based on an average of the on course bookmakers odds for the horse.

Spread Betting

A type of betting devised by city traders where punters must decide to buy (bet higher) or sell (bet lower) on the spread (fancied outcome by the traders).

Steamer

An outcome that has been very well backed all day.

Stewards Enquiry

An investigation into on goings in a given race. Can result in place reversal or jockey suspensions.

Tic-Tac

A type of sign language used on a racecourse by bookmakers as a means of communication.

Tissue

A betting forecast designed to predict the odds of each runner in an event.

Tongue-Tie

A breathing aid used on horses that has a strip of cloth to stabilise the tongue and stop it from sliding over the bit.

Tote

Betting system that settles bets based on dividends rather than set prices.

Treble

A bet on three horses where all are required to win

Trifecta

A bet placed on the Tote that requires the first three finishing horses to be named in the correct order.

Trixie

A bet on three selection which covers the three doubles and the one treble.

Visor

A device fitted to a horse's head which restricts it's field of vision in order to help it's concentration.

Walkover

A race where there is only one runner left after a number of non runners.

Yankee

A bet on four selections that covers the six doubles, four trebles and one fourfold.

Espero que tenha ajudado !!! (y) (y)