Even after the Kentucky Derby, horse racing is still on the American sports radar, at least until the Preakness Stakes.
Then, it could go one of two ways: Derby winner Justify either wins the Preakness and takes his a Triple Crown quest into the Belmont, or he loses the Preakness and horse racing slinks back into obscurity.
The good news is that betting on horse racing is legal across the United States, unlike betting on other sports, so you won't have a problem getting picks down online.
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A parimutuel system is used in horse racing, which is different from betting on a basketball or football game against a point spread in Las Vegas. Bettors aren't wagering against the bookie or house, but against each other, and the house takes a cut. So these numbers could change plenty between now and Preakness post time (7:35 p.m. ET) on May 20. It also means odds aren't fixed at the time of the bet.
Preakness odds, post positions
Here are the post positions and morning line odds for the Preakness field, according to Vegas Insider. The morning line odds will be updated before the race.
Post | Horse | *ML Odds |
1 | Quip | 12/1 |
2 | Lone Sailor | 15/1 |
3 | Sporting Chance | 30/1 |
4 | Diamond King | 30/1 |
5 | Good Magic | 3/1 |
6 | Tenfold | 20/1 |
7 | Justify | 1/2 |
8 | Bravazo | 20/1 |
*Morning line odds set by Pimlico Race Course oddsmaker Keith Feustle as of May 18.
Preakness picks
Vinnie Iyer: The only question of Justify will be how quickly it can recover to win another strong race, but here's where the rest as a 2-year-old and nothing but wins as a 3-year-old will give it major boost to bring home an even more comfortable victory at Pimlico.
When Baffert believes so strongly in a horse, he is usually, well, justified. The Derby pull-away was expected and Justify should easily win in the shorter distance.
MORE: Facts to know before picking a horse
Bravazo will show a little more bravado with more room to operate against lesser horses, although Diamond King could push for a major upset.
Win: Justify |
Place: Bravazo |
Show: Diamond King |
-- V.I.
How to bet on horse racing
If you're betting at a window, whether it be at Pimlico or your local track simulcasting the Preakness, say the name of the track, the number race you're betting, how much you want to wager, the type of wager and the numbers (post positions) of the horses you're including in your bet.
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Horse racing wager types
There are tons of different ways to bet on a horse race, but here are some of the most common and ones you'll likely hear about come Preakness time on Saturday.
— Win, place, show, or first, second and third. When you bet on the winner, you simply get the horse at its odds and if it wins, you cash that amount. So $10 on a horse at 12-to-1 nets you $120. If you bet on a horse to "place," or come in second, the payout is less, and same goes for "show."
You can make an "across the board" wager on a horse — a bet on that horse to win, place and show. If the horse wins, you collect all three; if second, two ways; and if third, one way, losing the win and place bets.
— Exacta, trifecta, superfecta. These wagers force a player to pick the exact finishing order of the top two, three or four horses, respectively. The payouts are multiplied the more horses you put in these bets.
You can also "box" an exacta, trifecta or superfecta, which means you bet on all the possible combinations. So if I bet a trifecta box on Always Dreaming, Classic Empire and Irish War Cry in the Preakness, I'd actually be making six bets because I'm taking all six possible combinations.
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— Pick three (or four, or five, or six). This involves picking the winners of several different races at a track on a given day. It often pays out the entire pool.