Bet Slip
My Bet Slip
-
How to use My Betslip
Placing a Single Bet Placing a Multiple Bet Manage bookmakers

Simply click a price on Race Passes and we’ll take you off to place your bet with your favourite bookmaker. You can also place single bets from the Bet Slip – just click the price in the Bet Slip.

Our Bet Slip allows you to build up your selections before you begin placing multiple bets with your favourite bookmakers. Click the +BET button to add your selections and then, when you’re ready, hit ‘Bet Now’ to go to your chosen bookmaker’s site and place your bets.

Select the bookmaker prices you want to display on Race Passes by switching the toggles between show and hide in the Bookmaker Manager, or use the Currently Showing selection screen. We will automatically display the best odds from your chosen bookmakers.

Note that Betfair Exchange prices are available to logged in customers only and are not included in the best odds calculation.

Bets Odds
You currently have no selections.
timeform logo mini sign in to timeformSign In

register to timeformRegister Free Bets
timeform menu collapse

Timeform: A language of love, Royalty and squiggles

ArticleImage

Nic Doggett takes a look at the language behind Timeform.

Since Phil Bull – a man described to me recently by a local custodian as ‘notorious in these parts’ – founded Timeform in the late 1940s, the company has had its own unique relationship with the English language. Anyone who is familiar with our race reports may recognise and appreciate the economy of words used to describe the well-named Three Wishes (by Straight Deal out of Fairy Queen) in Racehorses of 1962:

'Attractive horse: very useful handicapper as a 4-y-o: made only one appearance in 1962, wearing bandages when well beaten in John Kennedy Cup at Ayr in July: stays really well: needs a sound surface, and acts well on hard going: game and genuine: presumably difficult to train. W. A. Stephenson'

Fast-forward several decades, and, whilst many things have changed at Timeform since (including the new, but, by all accounts, regally unused toilet installed for the visit of Princess Anne in 2007), the method and language used to describe each of the many thousands of horses in training has remained constant.

Though the exact numerical parameters may have fluctuated from decade to decade, Timeform has always divided horses up into interchangeable categories. Below are the current ratings bands.

Any of the terms listed above can be used as an adverb to describe a horse’s performance, as well as an adjective to describe a horse; i.e. top-class performance and top-class performer.

The benefits of such a grading system are two-fold.

  1. Horses can quickly be put into a bracket with other similarly-rated (numerically) runners, providing a useful overview of a race and the different tier of horses taking part.
  2. Readers, assuming they are familiar with the terms involved, can quickly ascertain how good a horse is from one adjective. If a Flat horse is described as ‘Very Smart’, the reader instantly knows that the horse is rated 120-124.

Each tier of the scale is logically titled. Much like remembering whether a flush beats a run in poker, the only tricky bits to recall are that ‘Smart’ is better than ‘Useful’ and that ‘Fair’ is better than ‘Modest’, which in turn is better than ‘Poor’.

Question: What is ‘decent’?

The answer: Nothing. Not at Timeform, at least.

That isn’t a critique of our ratings, tips or dress-sense, but a statement of intent which is enforced by chief correspondent Jamie Lynch with a rarely-seen forcefulness. In his own words:

“We hear it a lot in racing, decent ground, decent performance, decent horse, decent gallop etc, but what does it actually mean? It's so vague as to be worthless, hence you rarely see it at Timeform, and if you do you can be assured that somebody is down the job centre. We deal in accuracy, enabled by our pinpoint ratings.” [18/08/2016 12:11 PM]

A decent summation that needs no further comment. I’ll get my P45 on the way.

As well as using language in a purposeful manner, Timeform has also – when required - painted a picture with prose.

Each horse in the UK/Ireland has a rating, however a significant percentage also have an extra symbol alongside. Dipping back into Racehorses of 1962, the interpretations of the rating symbols were as follows:

  • §§ an arrant rogue or a thorough jade; so temperamentally unsatisfactory as to be not worth a rating.
  • § a horse who is somewhat ungenerous, faint-hearted or a bit of a coward; one who may give his running on occasions, but cannot be relied upon to do so.
  • p the horse is likely to make more than normal progress and to improve on his rating.
  • P there is convincing evidence, or, to say the least, a very strong presumption that the horse is capable of form much better than he has so far displayed.
  • + the horse may be rather better than we have rated him.
  • ? if used in conjunction with a rating this symbol implies that the rating is based upon inadequate or unsatisfactory data, upon form which it is impossible to assess with confidence. The use of a query without a rating implies that although the horse has form, its merit cannot be assessed on the data at present available.

The beauty of the images conjured up by the interpretations above is matched not only by the clarity of picture they produce, but the resulting lack of need for further description. A horse with a ‘P’ is capable of much better, a horse with a ‘§’ cannot be relied on. Fifty-four years later, that still remains as true now as it did then.

TIMEFORM RACE CARD PDF DOWNLOADS

GO
RACE-CARD-BUNDLE-TEST
  • Timeform Race Cards will appear here when available.

Horse racing free bet offers

  • Get £30 In Free Bets When You Place A £5 Bet

    New Customer offer - Use promo code YSKAST. Place a min £5 bet on the sportsbook at odds of min EVS (2.0) and get £30 in free bets. Free bet rewards valid for 30 days. Only deposits via Pay by Bank, Debit Cards & Apple Pay will qualify for this offer. T&Cs apply. Please Gamble Responsibly

    Read Paddy Power Review
  • Get £30 In Free Bets When you place a £10 bet

    Place a min £10 bet on Sportsbook on odds of min EVS (2.0), get 3x £10 in Free Bet Builders, Accumulators or multiples to use on any sport. Rewards valid for 30 days. Only deposits via Pay by Bank, Apple Pay or Debit Card will qualify. T&Cs apply. Please Gamble Responsibly.

    Read Betfair Review
  • Bet £10, Get £50 in Free Bets

    New customers only. Register with BETFRED50. Deposit £10+ via Debit Card and place first bet £10+ at Evens (2.0)+ on Sports within 7 days to get 3 x £10 in Sports Free Bets & 2 x £10 in Acca Free Bets within 10 hours of settlement. 7-day expiry. Eligibility & payment exclusions apply. Full T&Cs apply

    Read Betfred Review

LATEST HORSE RACING RESULTS

15:15 MUSSELBURGH

1st Billy Garritty silk 1. CAROLUS MAGNUS (IRE) 11/26.5
2nd Warren Fentiman silk nk 9. SUPREME CLARETS (IRE) 10/111
3rd Mark Winn silk 2. QAZAQ (FR) 9/43.25f
9 ran. NRs: 11  5 
FULL RESULT

15:00 CATTERICK BRIDGE

1st Jack Nicholls silk 4. TEES AGGREGATES (IRE) 15/82.87
2nd David Allan silk 7. ALBEGONE 11/82.37f
J: Jack Nicholls (5)  
5 ran. NRs: 1  3 
FULL RESULT

14:45 MUSSELBURGH

1st Pierre-Louis Jamin silk 1. AMANTHA (IRE) 11/112
2nd Sam James silk sh 4. LIVEADREAM 3/14
5 ran. NRs: 2 
FULL RESULT

14:30 CATTERICK BRIDGE

1st Clifford Lee silk 4. MINZELLE (IRE) 4/51.8f
2nd David Allan silk 8. WARBY 22/123
3rd Daniel Tudhope silk sh 2. CALEF (IRE) 10/111
J: Clifford Lee  
T: K. R. Burke  
All 8 ran.
FULL RESULT

14:15 MUSSELBURGH

1st Jason Hart silk 5. ONLY DREAM BIG 5/23.5
2nd Oliver Stammers silk ns 3. MERESIDE PRINCESS (IRE) 11/43.75
J: Jason Hart  
T: Tim Easterby  
All 7 ran.
FULL RESULT
Go to Horse Racing Results