# Odds: If a player is 10/1, this means that if the player wins you
get $10 for every $1 you bet, plus your original stake back. If a player
is 'odds-on' then the odds are expressed as 1/10. This means that you
for every $10 you bet you get $1 back if you win, plus your original
stake.
# Betting to Win: You place your bet on a player to win at 10/1. If
the player obliges, then you are in the money.
# Betting on a Place Finish: What counts as a place and the proportion
of the odds you receive varies from one bookmaker to the next. Place
finishes can vary from the first three to the first six places in a
tournament and
it is the same proportion of odds whether the player finishes 2nd or
6th. Say you place $1 on a player to finish in a 'place' at 20/1. If
the player
does this, you win a proportion of the 20/1 odds, plus your original
stake back. If the proportion is ¼, your place odds are ¼x20/1
= 5/1 and you would win $5 for every $1 you bet.
# Betting Each Way: This is a combination of Betting to Win and Betting
on a Place Finish. You pay the same stake for each part of the bet.
For example, $1 each way for a player winning at 10/1 would mean
you get
$10 for the win plus $2.50 for the place. If the player does not
win but finishes
in a place you lose the win bet, but win on the place bet.
# Match Bet: Bet on whether one player will beat or tie another over
a strokeplay tournament.
# Two Ball Bet: Bet on whether one player will outscore another
player over one round.
# Three Ball Bet: Bet whether one player will outscore another
two nominated players over one round.
# Group Betting: The bookmaker selects a group of players,
gives them odds of beating the rest in the group and you
have to pick
the winner.
# Combination Bet: As it sounds, a Combination Bet involves
combining more than one of the above bets. You must win
all the bets in
the combination to win. The value of the payout is equal
to all the
individual odds
multiplied together. For example if you bet Player A to
win at 10/1 and Player B
to
beat Player C in a Match Bet at 4/1 then the overall odds
would be 40/1 if both bets came through.
# Spread Betting: Spread Betting operates like a stock
market where you 'Buy' and 'Sell' against a predicted
outcome in
an event. The
bookmaker quotes a prediction, or 'Spread' on the final
outcome for a player
in
a particular event. You then place your bet according
to your view of this
prediction. If you think the player will perform better
than the prediction then you 'Buy' or 'Back' the bet.
If you think
the player
will perform
worse than the prediction then you 'Sell' or 'Oppose'
the bet. You will win, or lose, the difference between the
prediction and the
final result
multiplied by your stake. Therefore your potential win,
or loss, is unlimited. Spread Betting is applied to most
of
the
types
of bets mentioned
above.
However, unlike other bets, you can also place Spread
Bets during the tournament and, like the stock market, the 'prediction'
or
'Spread' will vary too.
This is not for the fainthearted and you should fully
understand
what
you are doing before flexing your plastic. Some bookmakers
offer 'stop loss'
schemes, so check carefully with each one before you take your chances.
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