
Heller shows a bottom line mentality: he wants you to be a better handicapper than you now are, regardless of your level of betting sophistication.
Rating:
(out of 5 reviews)
List Price: $ 11.95
Price: $ 37.46
[wprebay kw="sports+betting+bonus" num="0" ebcat="all"]
about 1 year ago
Review by for Overlay, Overlay
Rating:
I thought the book was pretty good. Some good straightforward advice that is good to take with you to the track. No systems or guarantees, just common sense. The only drawback is that the analysis is using older formats of the Racing Form that doesn’t include Beyers, and other newer things. The insight from the Mig, PG Johnson etc. was helpful.
about 1 year ago
Review by Robert P. Beveridge for Overlay, Overlay
Rating:
Vincent Reo, Finding Hot Horses (Bonus, 1993)
Bill Heller, Overlay, Overlay: How to Bet Horse Like a Pro (Bonus, 1990)
Bob McKnight, Eliminate the Losers (Citadel, 1962)
Before the Breeders’ Cup this year, I decided to forgo my usual re-read of Michael Pizzolla’s Handicapping Magic (judging by how badly I did that weekend, this was a very bad idea) and went back to some handicapping books I read years ago to see if they were actually the same way I remembered them. Back when I first read these books, my memory tells me, I found Eliminate the Losers to be by far the best of the bunch, with the other two mediocre at best.
Finding Hot Horses was exactly as I remembered it; there’s a bit of useful information here and there buried among stuff that most ten-year-olds could likely see through, a handful of long-disproven ideas, and writing that ain’t all that hot. Overlay, Overlay, on the other hand, was somewhat better than I’d remembered it, and I earmarked a few ideas to pursue over the next year to see if they had any merit. There wasn’t anything wrong with them on the surface, anyway.
The real surprise was Eliminate the Losers, which ended up being just another bad sixties handicapping tome. (My disdain for McKnight’s Pick the Winners, which I read a few years after this one, probably should have clued me in.) The title is promising; after all, half the battle of handicapping a horse race, and sometimes much more than that, is figuring out which horses you can discard out of hand–but McKnight spends surprisingly little time on this concept given the book’s title, instead spending more time on, yes, trying to pick the winners once you’ve eliminated the losers. Oh, well.
I’m going back to Pizzolla. At least I know the information in Handicapping Magic is worthwhile.
Overlay, Overlay ***
Finding Hot Horses **
Eliminate the Losers **
about 1 year ago
Review by K. Slape for Overlay, Overlay
Rating:
This one is ok, not one of the best, but not the worst either. It did have some decent tips and strategies for spotting an overlay and has been somewhat of a help to me in my handicapping.
about 1 year ago
Review by for Overlay, Overlay
Rating:
ilikethereviewu
about 1 year ago
Review by for Overlay, Overlay
Rating:
ilikethereviewu