Betting Salvation

Having purchased this system I’ve been asked to review it here. The first thing that sounded warning bells was the fact that before I could spend £57 on this system I was offered two more items at £57 each. The first was an advanced version of Betting Salvation that ensured even better results than the standard version, even though the hype in the ad said I would get all this guy’s secrets just for spending £57.

On http://www.bettingsalvation.com  you can go right to the bottom of the very long page and click on the Affiliates link. The resulting page tells you all about how they intend raking in fat commission for anyone promoting the system, and I guess that’s why so many system vendors emailed me with offers for BS (an apt abbreviation).

This sysem manual – the standard one, not the other two chunks they tried to sell me – consists of 33 pages, the first 16 of which cover what Betfair is etc. Towards the end of this section is a bit entitled “Punters Rules”. Now copyright law allows for fair extracts so I’ll give you three of the Do’s and three of the Don’ts. Oh, and if you see any spelling mistakes it’s because he wrote it that way. I’m meticulous about spelling so what you see is what you get in Betting Salvation; god bless author Williams Richardson’s teacher!

Do read your bookmakers rules especially the small print.
Do bet only when you are getting good value.
Do stay calm. Weigh up the odds for and against your fancy. Make your decision and stick to it.

Don’t drink too heavily at the races. Stay in control of your senses if you want In back winners.
Don’t bet unless the odds are good value.
Don’t worry about your losses. Remember morrow is another day.

Then we get to the system itself. As Williams Richardson says “a complete proven profitable system that has been tested and fine-tuned through years”. However there are no results whatsoever.

The system consists of 6 rules – no wait, 5 rules numbered 1,2,3.4 and 6. Geez, I hope number 5 wasn’t crucial.

These are the usual number of runners, must have been placed blah blah, must have run xx times this season, has to be top RP… oops nearly gave that bit away and a bit about the trainer.

Now for the betting rules. Apparently you mustn’t bet under Betfair odds of 1.5. As Williams says “You wouldn’t want to risk your money with too low rewards, and 1.3 is an acceptable threshold”. Whaaat? The criteria is on the steamer list. 1.5 or 1.3? Well, never mind because he says as an example that if the horse is on offer in the morning for 1.55 you should back it at around 1.85 to 2.05 – your choice – because “eventually your bet will get matched before the race starts”.

I’m sure he must mean place betting don’t you? But he never says so. I can’t do a live 30 day test of this because I have no idea what he means.

But wait. Next in the manual is a bit called Easy Profit Method 1. Why is it here? Williams says he came across this not long ago but has been impressed with its amazing results. Sorry, I can’t tell you what it is because I signed a confid…..no, I’m joking. I will tell you. Go to the Racing Post site and look at the naps table. As Williams Richardson says “the naps tipsters are ranked from the winningest on top to the most losing one at the bottom”. Back all the selections where the tipster is above 20 points profit and lay all the selections of tipsters who are less than -20 points. Wow. Genius.

Easy Profit Method 2 is just brilliant. Go to www.sports-punter.com and look at the tipster league tables. Find the best one and bet his selections. Williams says “There you have it. A simple easy-to-use, no effort required, yet powerful system for consistently generating profits to build up your betting account”. Yes, really. I paid £57 for this Williams guy to tell me that!

There are three staking plans. The first one is where you increase your bets to cover your losses, the second……sorry I’m losing the will to live.

Does anything in Betting Salvation work? One thing worked for me. Clickbank’s refund. Thanks very much guys.

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Comments

  1. JAG says:

    Hi Alan, Not seen you posting before so welcome to the blog capital dear chap.. It has to be said there is an absolute lorry load of crap out there at the moment and as the credit crunch bites the parasites come out of hiding to prey on the unsuspecting punter looking to make a few quid.. Sounds bitter but unfortunately is fact and if people were more patient and choosey I am sure they would all go away.. JAG.

  2. Sam says:

    ouch!

  3. Sam says:

    Ive just read this sales page and this extract is taken from the disclaimer

    “All information on this website or any e-book purchased from this website is for educational purposes only and is not intended to provide financial advise. Any statements about profits or income, expressed or implied, does not represent a guarantee. Your actual betting may result in losses as no betting system is guaranteed. You accept full responsibilities for your actions, bets, profit or loss, and agree to hold Laying Impact System and any authorized distributors of this information harmless in any and all ways. ”

    We can probably fail the laying impact system too if its from the same guys!

  4. jag says:

    I rest my case..

  5. Neil says:

    Actually it’s even worse than that! As bad as the main ‘system’ is (and it is truly awful by any standards), the biggest blunder lies within ‘Easy Profit Method 2′:

    Our friend ‘Williams’ would have us believe that an annual profit of more than 20 grand can be had merely by backing the selections of the top-rated tipster to a tenner a point. He theorises that if said tipster has achieved more than 2000 points to £1 per point, then 10 X 2000 = 20,000 (clever huh? do you think he worked that out in his head?)

    The problem is that ‘Williams’ hasn’t done his homework. Mathematics, much like English, doesn’t seem to be his strongest suit, because he has completely messed up his calculations. The profit of 2344.05 points credited to the tipster in question is already based upon stakes of… wait for it….£10 per point. To have earned more than £20,000 by following his selections would have involved £100 stakes, a total investment of £405,300 and a yield of 5.78%…..

    Oh, and I wonder if the missing Rule 5 (of the 6 to be followed for the main system) should be ‘Bet on the place market only.’ There again, that would be crediting ‘Williams’ with far too much sense…

    I think this entire publication probably qualifies for some kind of an award. To paraphrase one of the testimonials (punctuation intended.. if you’ve heard it, you’ll know what I mean): ‘Betting Salvation. is the WORST. betting. system I have. ever. tried. ‘

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