Some horse racing handicappers make the mistake of assuming everyone knows how to understand them. “I like Gobbledygook and Crazy Verbs for a boxed exacta bet,” a track blogger recommends. “Each has an average Beyer, but their sires were fast on heavy.”
If that sounds like Greek, don’t despair. It sounds that way to most people. Imagine how many potential horse racing fans the sport loses each year thanks to such frustrating lingo!
But there’s a fine line between understanding and not understanding a sentence. It’s often a single word or phrase that throws the reader off.
What if all horse racing terms were explained in one big, fat glossary? That’s just what we’re thinking! Here’s a helpful list of definitions of words used at tracks and racebooks around the world.
Thoroughbred racing is so dominant in America that some bettors think any well-bred racehorse is called a Thoroughbred. In fact, Thoroughbreds are just one of many popular breeds around the world. Read below for a glossary of racehorse breeds, sexes, and genders.
The jargon you need to sound like an expert on the races can be found below.
Study these terms to better understand handicappers, horse racing blogs, and of course, the rules and calculations at the track when playing the ponies.