What happens if you have a non runner in an accumulator




















The general answer to whether you should accept lower odds in the case of an odds movement would be: no. With those non runners the doubles are treated as singles,trebles are treated as doubles,and all accumulators are calculated just the same with any non runners ignored. The remaining bets with your selections that do race are not affected,making 63 bets in total.

What happens if you have a non-runner in a Lucky 15? If you place a Lucky 15 and 1 of your selections is a non-runner the bet will stand on any remaining selections. This means any Singles on non-runners will be returned. Paddy Power reserves the right to refuse payment on any bet that cannot be substantiated by the Paddy Power EPOS system or void any bet which we are satisfied is not bona fide.

A Lucky 63 consists of 63 bets of equal value on selections in six separate events: six singles, 15 doubles, 20 trebles, 15 four-folds, six five-folds and one six-fold accumulator. Quadpots are also subject to a maximum payment of twice the total Tote pool, or twice the SP place accumulator returns, whichever is the lesser.

A Lucky 31 consists of 31 bets of equal value on selections in five separate events: five singles, ten doubles, ten trebles, five four-folds and one five-fold accumulator. Because a Lucky 31 bet contains single bets, only one win from the five selections is required for a return on the bet. It is extremely unlikely though that should only one selection win, that the original stake is covered. The 31 bets consist of: 5 singles.

A Super Yankee or Canadian consists of twenty-six bets on five selections i. A four fold bet explained would simply be a wager which has four selections in it. You would need all of these selections to win in the bet because even if just one of the four selections that you had picked loses, then there goes your stake. The advantage of an accumulator is that winnings are much higher at the expense of increased risk, only a single selection need lose for the entire bet to lose. A single bet: If your chosen horse is the non-runner then your stake at the bookmaker will be refunded to you and the bet voided.

No loss, no gain! An accumulator bet: That leg of your accumulator will become void. It will be removed from the multiple and your accumulator odds the price you got will be reduced accordingly. Ok, so when a horse is withdrawn from a race, the bookmaker has to re-price his book. They would all be priced at odds of 8. However, if one of those horses gets withdrawn, there are only 7 horses left in the race. Presuming they all still have the same equal chance of winning, that chance is now 1 in 7.

However, it hopefully explains why a reduction in the odds even has to occur. What the bookie actually does is apply a Reduction Factor to avoid doing complex calculations every time.

The Reduction Factor also called a Rule 4 Reduction is decided based on the price of the withdrawn horse. Non-runners are horses that are removed from the race before it gets underway. What happens to your bet is dictated by what sort of bet that it is.

Bets placed on the day of the race that are wagered after the horses have been declared, which is normally at about 10 am, then your stake will be returned to you in full as the bet will have been made void. If your bet is an ante-post wager, which is to say one that is placed days, weeks or even months before the race is due to occur, then your stake will be lost. There is a sense of risk-reward with ante-post bets and this is part of the reason why.

Some of you might well have added a horse to an accumulator that then gets withdrawn from the race it was supposed to take part in and therefore becomes a non-runner.



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