![]() Likewise, if you sold the spread and the winner won by three lengths, that bet would also be a scratch. Your bet would be a scratch – £50 times zero. If you bought the spread and the winner bested the second-place horse by exactly six lengths.If you sold the three to six spread and, God forbid, the winner won by 10 lengths. Your loss would be a whopping £350 – your £50 betting stake times seven units.If the winner only won by a single length.You would be selling the spread at three, betting that the winner wins only by less than three lengths – If the winner won by two lengths, your win would be £50 – your bet times one unit below the spread Your loss would be £250 – your £50 bet times five units below the buy spread number of six lengths ![]() You would lose £100 – your £50 betting stake times two units less than the six units that you bought the spread at If you bought the spread and the winning horse only won by four lengths.Your win would be £100 – your £50 bet times two units the spread was beaten by You would win £200 – your £50 bet stake times the four “units” over the spread the horse won by If you bought the three to six spread, and the winning horse won by 10 lengths. ![]()
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