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The Fibonacci system - Part 2

By: Terry Spader

The Fibonacci Race Selection Plan
The Fibonacci Staking System described above is a staking system only, and leaves the selection of runners and races up to you. However, there is a way of using the Fibonacci numbers sequence as the basis of a powerful race selection system.The plan outlined here is a strategy in which favourites are backed in a series of races which follows the Fibonacci sequence until a winner is found.
The first stage of using the Fibonacci Plan is to construct a daily grid. You can use any morning paper for this.
Make a column as shown below:
C1 C2 C3

Look up all the races taking place that day. In timed order put the first race of the day under C1, The next race of the day is put under C2, and the third race of the day is put under C3.

Race No 4 is the next race at meeting C1, race 5 is the next one at meeting C2 and race 6 is the next race at C3. Put them in a grid like that below, showing 20 races in timed order over the three separate meetings.
Then make note of the favourite in each race.
C1 C2 C3
1 2 3
4 5 6
7 8 9
10 11 12
13 14 15
16 17 18
19 20 -
You’ll notice that the numbers in the Fibonacci sequence are in bold - and these are the races (the ‘quad’) on which you bet on the favourites. The first two numbers in the sequence, 1 and 2, are not used in the race selection system. Just use the next four numbers, 3, 5, 8 and 13
You should not use any other races. You bet each day using the Fibonacci Staking sequence as described above, but always stopping at a winner.
Maximising Your Success
Nobody really knows why this Fibonacci sequence produces such excellent results when selecting races, but the overall performance of this race selection method speaks for itself.
Past results have shown that there’s a 90 per cent chance that the favourite in one of the Fibonacci numbered races will be a winner.
As the Fibonacci Plan focuses exclusively on favourites, the odds for the winning horses are usually very short. As an approximate guide, about a quarter of the bets will be odds on, but around a third of the horses will have prices of 2/1 or longer. However, there is a trade-off, because even if the odds are short the probability of winning is very high, so many small wins will soon add up to a healthy profit.

Article Source: http://gamblingarticlessite.com

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