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| When I opened this magazine, I saw his
ad. It stopped my eye. I had to call. And this is how I met
Marcel, one of the best handicappers in the world. Marcel
assured me that he was one of the best, and last April I went
to Daytona Beach to find out for myself. |
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| As Marcel began to seriously play the horses, two important
rules evolved, "First, you must be selective in which
race to wager or you will go broke. Second, the wager must
be right. It makes no sense to pick the winner then miss the
bet." |
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With 23 years of experience, Marcel is the best. He teaches
greyhound racing in a 30-hour, 4- to 5 day session. The
session begins with the client, then covers the program,
speed, handicapping, unique betting techniques, files, money
management and much more.
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| With Marcel's friendly approach, you learn without knowing
it. Except for the training session (which people record),
Marcel doesn't lecture. What captures your attention is his
honesty. |
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Upon arriving at the track, lots of people said hello
to Marcel. We went to our reserved seats right by the
wire. As the races began, I found out it was a hard card.
I couldn't hit a thing. I felt like a rookie starting
his first pro game....
What a record, 0 for 4. So then in the fifth I decided
to change from 3/78/all to 3/1/all, and wouldn't you know
it, the results were 3-8-6. Marcel smiled,"Didn't
you catch this?" Yikes! I had changed my bet and
lost while Marcel won....
Marcel just laughed and continued to wait for his play.
Then in the seventh Marcel started to yell,"Go 6!"
Afterwards, I noticed my quiniela was worth $32.20. "Marcel,
I won!" Marcel smiled. He won too. But instead it
was the trifecta. Marcel won $695.20 on a $1 ticket. I
was losing my shirt while ha was winning.
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With a handle of $75,518.00, Marcel caught over one percent
of it with a total of $807.70 won ($112.50 + $695.20 =
$807.70).
"I'll pick you up same time tomorrow night,"
Marcel said with that confident smile. "I'm glad
you finally hit a couple of quinielas." Back in the
room, I shook my head, "$373 gone- while Marcel is
up $807. Another four days like this and I'll be broke!"
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| Marcel's method is selective. "If
you only have enough money for one race, which race will you
choose?" Before meeting Marcel I would try to win each
race. |
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We took our seats and things got off wildly. As Marcel
watched the "red star" in the post parade, his
eyes became determined and he left for the automated teller.
While Marcel was working his wager, I played #4 Rosie's
Sweater for show, place, quiniela, perfecta and one tri
key. Rosie's Sweater won! The trifecta paid $36.70 and
Marcel had it 10 times for $367.00. Plus, in that race
there was also a superfecta, which I stayed out of, but
Marcel wagered it and he won $599.20 from this pool- just
80 cents under an IRS "signer."
I was happy- I had pulled some capital back- and Marcel
was grinning from ear to ear. "This is easy, isn't
it?" I was starting to catch on. But again, a little
knowledge can be dangerous. For as I seemed to win on
some tickets, I was losing on others.
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What's interesting is that Marcel doesn't say "Here,
play the 6," nor does he structure the wager for
you. Of course, I was too proud to ask for help-especially
on how to lose, as by the eighth, even with some quinielas
and a tri win in the sixth, I was nowhere near even. Between
races I began to ask questions. Slowly I began to feel
what Marcel is living- that he has a distinct advantage
over the crowd. And that bypassing on junk races and house
number betting he was getting ahead.
"Tommy, you visualize there isn't any short cut
to this other than being selective with races, playing
speed and betting at an expert level in order to get multiple
tri and super wins."
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| Later, in the 14th, Marcel invested just $9 and hit the
tri for $138.70. His total for the night was $1,104.90 minus
a $300 budget for a net profit of $804.90. In two days he
had grossed over $1,912 costing $400, for a net profit of
$1,512. And I still had three full days with him. My damage?
I cashed $320.60 that cost $74, leaving $246.60 in winnings.
But I also had $489 worth of losers, so I was actually down
$243. In just two days I had lost over $700. With air fare
and motel I was out $1,300! |
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| Up came Marcel's other star race. I let
Marcel play the tri, and I concentrated on the quiniela and
perfecta, as maybe the pool wasn't deep enough for both of
us to hammer on. Besides, I didn't want to change his win
payout by betting it down, too. However, at the last minute
I played a $20 tri key on the 7 dog also, the odds on her
were 4-5. Not a lot, but since the rest were slow closer,
1-9 would have been a lock. Of course I hit the perfecta and
quiniela several times, but lo and behold, the trifecta paid
$53.00 on a $1 ticket, and Marcel had it 10 times. |
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| Ninth- Marcel hit the tri with a pick for $174.20. It was
the fourth dog in the super that no one would have guessed
that blew the man's chance to win the huge pool. In the 14th
both Marcel and I hit for $178.90. By the end of the performance
Marcel had won $530.00, $174.20 & $178.90 for a total
of $883.10 minus $272 to leave a tidy profit of $611.10. |
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| Marcel played $30 on a race and won $180,
while I was betting races from three different parks, and
I was losing! Soon I realized that speed from just the form
was not enough. I was going under again. In the very next
race Marcel calmly played his "red-star" and, sure
enough, he hit the $40.50 tri 20 times for $810.00. |
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