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Usenet Posted 23 years ago
Usage

'Prohibitive favorite' - fills a BrE lacuna?

In AmE, the meaning of 'prohibitive favorite', as I understand it, is a horse which is at such short odds (clearly, well beyond being merely odds-on) as to make betting on it unappealing to punters.

Is that right? And is there a BrE expression that covers precisely the same ground? (I'm no betting man: but I'm not aware that there is such an BLOCKED EXPRESSION
  

Top answer

[/nq] To punters? Hardly! No wise bettor should put money on an odds-on favorite, as they still lose with alarming frequency, often winding up out of the money entirely.

  • [/nq] To punters?
  • Hardly!
  • No wise bettor should put money on an odds-on favorite, as they still lose with alarming frequency, often winding up out of the money entirely.
  • Putting up large sums of money to have a chance of making a small profit is not exactly a smart thing to do.
  • When there is an odds-on favorite in a race, find the next most likely horse to have a chance of winning (do your own handicapping don't just go by the odds) and bet that horse across the board.
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1 Answers
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[nq:1]In AmE, the meaning of 'prohibitive favorite', as I understand it, is a horse which is at such short odds (clearly, well beyond being merely odds-on) as to make betting on it unappealing to punters.[/nq]
To punters? Hardly! No wise bettor should put money on an odds-on favorite, as they still lose with alarming frequency, often winding up out of the money entirely. Putting up large sums

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