Horse racing systems may have evolved over the years, but one fact still remains: there are as many horse racing systems then as there are today.  Punters betting on horses to win have made use of just about every horse racing system imaginable, from those systems which relied on some form of clairvoyant ability, to those that were shrouded in the mysteries of science.  While some of these methods did have their degree of success, most of them were predominantly sold by people who were the racetrack version of snake oil salesmen.  Such people usually packaged methods that were inherently worthless and sold them to eager and often inexperienced punters who were anxious to make a buck.

Other than horse racing systems sold by these dupes, there were those genuine systems which had some measure of success, but were not as popular.  Their lack of immense popularity may be tied to the fact that they were not marketed with as much hype as their less trustworthy alternatives and they did not boast of the same unrealistic margins of profit that were advertised with such systems.

Both kinds of systems may have also involved a number of factors which are still characterized today among the most modern of racing systems.  Some of these factors include age, behaviour, class, coat appearance, condition, distances, equipment changes, family tree, form, jockey, owner, post position, track condition, trainer, weight, workouts, and a number of other conditions as well.  Due to the inclusion of these factors and a number of others, the systems turned out to be intrinsically complicated and rather difficult to use.  It is no surprise that the ratio of systems which didn’t work as advertised were in the 95th percentile.  Any buyers who didn’t have any success were merely told by vendors that they “weren’t doing something right”.

Nowadays, little has changed except for the mode of betting.  While other systems in the past may have required the punter to be at the track for the program in question, newer systems available over the Internet allow punters to place their bets on races anywhere and view the statistics in real-time and in a simplified and concise manner.

Arguably, with the wealth of information available at our fingertips, horse racing systems should have evolved and become much simpler, however the reverse is the case.  A new form of complexity has taken place in the sale of software-based horse betting systems.  They are advertised with glitz, formulas, and science that has no foundation in plain logic.  The ratio of systems that work to those that don’t still remains what it was in the pre-Internet racing era.

Some of these newer systems, however, come with a money back guarantee - allowing you to recoup your investment if the said horse betting system fails to produce the desired results.  The systems that actually work come form various sources and make use of various methodologies.  In the end the only way to know which system will actually end up working is to test it for yourself and assess its performance.

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