"I have never had so much success (or fun) with the punt. Thanx heaps and great
punting to all!”
"I am very appreciative of the efforts that go into producing this outstanding information."
In
the final part of his absorbing series, PPM expert Statsman tells you
more about how to be a professional punter, using $5,000 as a bank.
I've
talked in my two previous articles about staking plan approaches to
professional punting. Now it's time to talk about selection. No staking
plan will work if your selections are poor. That's obvious. So you have
to work mighty hard at ensuring you are successful when it comes to
being your own tipster.
In the first of a 3-part series, PPM's expert
Statsman begins an absorbing probe into how a punter can turn $5,000
into a full-time betting bank and become, in fact, a professional
punter.
The series will examine a string of staking ideas, and
bring you the views of some of the world's leading bettors. It is
essential reading for any punter intending to turn professional-and any
punter happy to remain a keen amateur but also wanting to increase his
profits and end loss-making.
Last month I went on a bit of a
nostalgia trip in regards to the famous/infamous Royal Routine system,
which basically needs the selections of as many newspaper tipsters as
possible for it to be successful.
The broad aim of the system is
to win $x per race but rather than attempt to win that sum on one
tipster the premise of the system was to spread the risk over a number
of tipsters. In the long term the objectives of a tipster going poorly
were spread amongst those going well and it was assumed that with
judicious adjustments all objectives would eventually be cleared.
When I first became interested in
horseracing I was in my last year at Secondary College wayyyyy back in
1967 and when I could afford it I would buy a copy of The Sportsman,
which I still do twice a week nowadays.
Time after time I saw an
advertisement that used to attract my attention, like a moth to a
flame, as time after time the block ad depicted an astonishing number of
winners and, of course, my deepest wish was to do exactly that.
In the last issue of PPM, I went through
what could only have been the most brutal set of figures imaginable to
illustrate what would happen to a punter who started betting on the
Target Betting plan called The Six Point Divisor Plan.
No great
damage to the wallet or the psyche of the punter would have occurred in
the first losing streak of 10 losers, as only 32 units ($32) was lost.
Even after another 10 losers the loss was 182 units and I am sure most
punters would have felt “unlucky” by this stage, as I am equally sure
there would have been a couple of narrow defeats involved.
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