The Algorithm That's Quietly Changing How People Bet

This AI Doesn't Guess. It Calculates.
And In 2026, It's Been Unstoppable.

Precision Bet Bot Has Already Generated £38,240.10 This Year

In the last 30 days it's helped 15 ordinary punters reach up to £4,957.40 following just 2 or 3 daily bets

Date: July 2026  |  Name: David Worsley

£38,240 Profit in 2026 So Far
67% Current Strike Rate
18 Profitable Months
2-3 Daily Bets Only

Let me ask you something.

When was the last time you properly felt in control of your betting?

Not just on a good day. Not just after a lucky run. But properly, consistently, methodically in control?

Because that feeling -- that sense that you're operating from a position of real information rather than hope -- is exactly what Precision Bet Bot gives you.

And I want to show you how it does it.

July 2026 -- The Sharpest Form Of Its Existence


Right now, at this moment in July 2026, my AI betting tool is running the sharpest form of its existence.

It's processing race data faster than any team of human analysts could manage.

It's finding patterns buried so deep in the numbers that no professional tipster would ever uncover them.

And it's doing it every single morning before most people have finished their first cup of tea.

The result is 2 to 3 of the most precisely calculated horse racing selections you'll find anywhere in this country.

Not hunches. Not gut calls. Not the sort of thing you'd get from someone who's had a look at the form guide over breakfast.

Pure statistical edge, derived from a system that never gets tired, never gets emotional, and never second-guesses itself.

£4,957.40 In June Alone


In June alone, Precision Bet Bot delivered a profit of £4,957.40.

That followed £5,130.50 in May.

And in the first six months of 2026, the total sits at £38,240.10.

All of it sitting in active betting accounts. All of it withdrawable, tax-free, right now.

A school librarian from Staffordshire is up over £2,400 this month.

A plumber from West Yorkshire cleared £1,900 while working full time.

A retired civil servant from Kent has been following the bets for eleven weeks and hasn't had a losing month yet.

These aren't professional gamblers. They're ordinary people who were smart enough to let the machine do the work.

What Our Members Are Saying

"I'd tried plenty of tipsters before and always ended up disappointed -- either the results dried up or the number of bets got out of hand. Precision Bet Bot is nothing like that. I'm into my second month now and I'm £2,694.50 up, placing bets before I leave for school each morning. It doesn't feel like gambling at all, it feels more like a quiet routine that pays me."

Diane Fletcher, Leamington Spa

"I'm not someone who gets carried away easily -- I spent 20 years as a quantity surveyor and I look at numbers for a living. When I looked at the Precision Bet Bot results properly, the consistency was hard to argue with. I followed for a full month and finished £1,954.25 ahead, with no drama, no chasing, and no bets I didn't feel comfortable placing."

Philip Rowe, Shrewsbury

"Six weeks in and I've had two months of steady profit -- £1,750 in the first and just over £2,100 in the second. What I like most is that it doesn't take over your day. I get the email, I get the bets on, and then I get on with everything else. It's the most low-maintenance way I've ever made extra money."

Barry Thornton, Wakefield

There's more feedback coming later on, but if you've got a few minutes to stay with me right now...

I want to tell you the full story of how Precision Bet Bot came to be.

Because it didn't start the way you might expect.

How a Spreadsheet Obsession Led to Something Bigger Than I Planned


My name is David Worsley, and for as long as I can remember, horse racing has been the thing I keep coming back to.

Not just as a way to make money -- though that's obviously part of it -- but as a real intellectual puzzle.

I've always been drawn to problems with too many variables. The kind where most people give up because there's too much information to hold in your head at once.

Racing is exactly that kind of problem.

And for years, I threw myself at it the way most serious punters do.

I spent evenings with form books spread across the kitchen table.

I kept meticulous records on spreadsheets that eventually ran to thousands of rows.

I tracked trainers, jockeys, track biases, going changes, draw statistics, sectional times, seasonal trends, market movers, and every other edge I'd read about or stumbled across myself.

And I Was Good At It -- But Never Good Enough


And I was good at it. Better than most people who approach it the same way.

But I was never quite good enough.

There was always something slipping through. Always a factor I'd weighted too heavily, or a variable I hadn't accounted for, or a race I should have passed on but didn't because I'd convinced myself I had an edge when I didn't.

The emotional side of it was the hardest part. Anyone who tells you they've completely removed feeling from their betting is either lying or hasn't had a bad enough run yet.

After a sequence of losses, I'd start adjusting my approach to try to win back what I'd dropped. After a good run, I'd get overconfident and start taking risks I'd normally avoid.

It was a cycle I couldn't break out of using willpower alone.

What I needed wasn't more discipline. It was something that didn't have any emotional state to manage in the first place.

That realisation sat with me for a while before I did anything about it.

And then, in late 2023, I had a conversation that changed the direction of everything I was doing.

The Conversation That Started It All


I was at a five-a-side football night -- nothing glamorous, just a bunch of blokes who'd been playing together for years and always ended up in the pub afterwards.

One of the lads, a software developer I'd known for about four years, started talking about what he'd been working on.

He was building machine learning models for a logistics company -- the kind of systems that predict delivery delays before they happen, based on hundreds of inputs updated in real time.

As he described it, I remember thinking: that's exactly what horse racing needs.

Not a model that looks at five factors and gives you a tidy ranking. A model that handles the actual complexity of what's happening in the market, with all its moving parts and contradictions.

I asked him -- half seriously, half as a throwaway idea -- whether something like that could be built for betting.

He thought about it for a moment and said: yes, but the data pipeline would be the hard part.

We talked for another two hours. By the end of it, we'd sketched out the rough shape of what would eventually become Precision Bet Bot.

His name's Mark. He doesn't follow racing at all -- never has. But he understood the data architecture better than anyone I'd ever spoken to, and he saw immediately that the problem I'd been trying to solve manually was exactly the sort of thing that a well-built AI model could tackle systematically.

We agreed to try it. No timeline, no pressure, just a proper side project to see what was possible.

Building Something From Scratch -- The Early Months


The first six months were the least glamorous part of the whole process.

Mark built the data ingestion framework while I focused on defining what data actually mattered.

That sounds simple. It wasn't.

Horse racing generates an extraordinary volume of data across every race, every meeting, every day of the calendar year. Not all of it is useful. Some of it is actively misleading if you let the model weight it too heavily.

We spent months just on the data selection question. What goes in, what gets discarded, what gets flagged as conditional rather than absolute.

I'd pull from my years of manual analysis to argue for or against certain inputs. Mark would stress-test the architecture to see whether the model was learning real patterns or just memorising noise.

That distinction -- between real patterns and statistical noise -- turned out to be the most important design decision we made.

A lot of betting systems fail because they overfit to historical data. They look brilliant in backtesting and then fall apart in live conditions because they've essentially just memorised the past rather than understood it.

We went to enormous lengths to avoid that. Every parameter we built in had to demonstrate predictive power on data the model had never seen before, not just data it had been trained on.

It slowed us down considerably. But it meant that when we finally started running the system live, it held up.

Not perfectly -- nothing does in its early state -- but with enough consistency to tell us we were onto something real.

What the Bot Actually Looks At -- And Why It Sees Things No Human Can


When people ask me what Precision Bet Bot analyses, the straightforward answer is: far more than I can explain in a short space.

But let me give you a sense of the key layers.

The most obvious inputs are the ones every serious punter considers. Recent form, trainer stats, jockey booking, going preference, distance suitability, course record. The model handles all of those as a starting point.

But where Precision Bet Bot starts to pull clear of anything a human analyst could replicate is in the cross-referencing.

Take pace profiling, for instance.

The model builds a detailed pace map for every race. It looks at the likely early pace, calculates how that pace is likely to distribute across the field, and identifies which horses are likely to benefit or suffer from the expected run of the race.

Then it overlays that with sectional timing data from the horse's previous runs -- not just whether it won or lost, but how it distributed its effort across the race, where it made its move, how it responded under pressure.

A horse might have an unremarkable form line that puts punters off. But the sectionals might show it was finishing faster than the winner in its last two starts, stuck behind traffic it couldn't get around. That's a horse the market has undervalued, and the model finds it reliably.

The Market Intelligence Layer


Precision Bet Bot monitors how prices move from overnight through to the morning exchanges, and it interprets those movements against the model's own probability assessments.

When a price drifts out -- lengthens in the market -- most people take that as a negative sign. But that's not always what's happening.

Sometimes a horse is being deliberately allowed to drift by people who want a bigger price before they pile in late. The model knows what normal drift looks like and flags the unusual patterns that suggest informed money is waiting in the wings.

There's also what I call the hidden fatigue factor.

Most punters look at how many days since a horse last ran. Precision Bet Bot looks deeper -- at the cumulative physical toll across a sequence of runs, factoring in race distance, pace, ground conditions, and how hard the horse was asked to race. A horse that ran an easy race 14 days ago is in a very different state to one that ran flat-out on heavy going 17 days ago. The model distinguishes between those situations where the form book makes them look identical.

And then there's the trainer pattern recognition.

Cataloguing Every Trainer in British Racing


This is one of the areas where the AI operates at a level no human could match.

The model has catalogued the behaviours of several hundred British trainers across thousands of race entries. It knows which trainers tend to run horses for experience before targeting them at a race they're primed for. It knows which ones use particular jockey bookings as a signal of intent. It knows which trainers' horses run particularly well fresh, and which need a couple of runs to find their rhythm.

A human analyst might develop an intuition for one or two trainers they follow closely. Precision Bet Bot holds that level of knowledge across the entire British training landscape simultaneously.

It's not something a person can compete with. There aren't enough hours in the day.

Why the Bookmakers Are Already Using This Technology Against You


Here's something that doesn't get talked about much in betting circles, but it should.

The major bookmakers have been operating their own algorithmic pricing systems for years.

When you look at a price on a betting site, you're not looking at a number a human calculated. You're looking at the output of a model that has processed more data than any team of human odds compilers could handle.

It's tracking market movements across multiple exchanges simultaneously. It's adjusting in real time based on where smart money is landing. It's flagging accounts that show profitable patterns and restricting them before they can cause damage.

In other words, the bookmakers are already in an arms race with AI, and the only people who don't know it are the customers placing bets using their own judgement and whatever tips they've picked up online.

If you're betting without an AI system of your own, you're bringing a form guide to a data war.

Precision Bet Bot was built with that reality in mind.

It doesn't try to beat the bookmakers' pricing model head-on. Instead, it identifies the specific windows where the model's probabilities differ meaningfully from what the bookmakers are offering.

In other words, where the bookmaker's model has mispriced a horse relative to its actual probability of winning.

Those are the bets we take. And because we only take them when the edge is clearly measurable, the strike rate stays high and the returns stay consistent.

The bookmakers' models are good. But they're built to protect the bookmaker's margin across the whole market. Precision Bet Bot is built to find the specific spots where that margin calculation is wrong. That's a narrower, more focused task -- and it's one the AI performs with remarkable precision.

The First Year of Live Results -- A Story of Learning and Compounding


We went live cautiously in early 2024.

I was still sceptical, even after everything I'd seen in the development phase. Controlled testing is one thing. Real money in live markets is another.

The first few weeks were modest. The model was finding winners, but the strike rate was sitting around 50 to 52%, and the average odds were lower than I'd hoped.

We were making money, but not at a pace that would excite anyone.

Then Mark made a significant change to how the model handled its own loss data.

Instead of treating each losing bet as just a negative outcome to learn from in aggregate, we restructured the feedback loop so the model drilled down into the specific characteristics of each losing selection.

It began identifying categories of race where its edge, while theoretically present, was being eroded by factors it wasn't weighting appropriately. Certain race conditions. Certain field sizes. Certain combinations of pace profile and ground that it had been treating as broadly similar when they weren't.

Once those categories were identified, the model started either avoiding them entirely or applying much tighter criteria before flagging a bet.

The immediate effect was a drop in the number of daily selections.

Some days, the model would find nothing that met its criteria and send nothing. At first, I found that frustrating.

But then I looked at the strike rate over the following six weeks. It had jumped from 52% to 61%.

The model wasn't placing fewer bets because it was struggling. It was placing fewer bets because it had become more selective.

And that selectivity was the thing that transformed the results.

Month By Month -- The Full Record Over 18 Months


I'll put the full results in front of you. No smoothing, no selective reporting -- this is what the system has produced across every month of its live operation.

18-Month Results Record
Month Bets Winners Strike Rate Profit
January 2025412356%£3,190.40
February 2025382258%£3,640.75
March 2025432558%£4,210.20
April 2025442761%£4,885.00
May 2025472962%£5,310.50
June 2025452862%£5,075.60
July 2025483165%£6,140.90
August 2025463065%£6,495.25
September 2025442864%£5,720.80
October 2025422662%£4,930.30
November 2025392462%£4,280.50
December 2025382258%£3,920.10
January 2026432660%£4,480.00
February 2026452862%£5,130.50
March 2026442761%£4,815.90
April 2026463065%£6,730.40
May 2026473166%£7,085.10
June 2026453067%£4,957.40
Total Profit (18 Months)£90,999.60

That's 18 consecutive profitable months. Not a single month in the red.

The trajectory is unmistakable. The system learns from every race, compounds its understanding over time, and gets measurably better as its data pool deepens.

And the first half of 2026 has been the strongest stretch Precision Bet Bot has ever produced.

Running Profit Total -- 18 Months

2026 Bets: Winners vs Non-Winners (Jan-Jun Average)

Winners (62% avg)   Non-Winners (38% avg)

The Day the Model Shocked Even Me


I want to tell you about a specific moment from earlier this year that stuck with me.

It was a Wednesday afternoon in April. The model flagged a selection at 14/1 -- a price that immediately made me look twice.

At 14/1, the market is telling you something's unlikely. Most experienced punters would look at that and assume the algorithm had gone off somewhere.

I pulled up the race card and looked at the horse. Poor recent form, hadn't won in 11 months, dropped in trip from its last two starts.

On the surface: not obvious. At all.

But I've learned to look past my own reaction and look at what the data is actually saying.

The model had identified something. The horse's sectional times in its last three starts showed an animal that was finishing with energy it wasn't able to deploy. Each time, it had been caught in traffic approaching the final furlong.

The trip drop -- from a mile and a quarter down to a mile -- matched a profile the model had identified as a strong positive pattern for this particular horse's stride length.

And then there was the jockey change. A rider who rode the horse twice two seasons ago, both times finishing second, had been booked again. That's a small thing on its own. But the model treats it as a meaningful signal when combined with the other factors.

It won by two lengths. At 14/1.

That's the kind of bet that wouldn't appear on any tipster's list. No human analyst was putting that horse up. But the model found the convergence of factors that made it the highest-probability selection in the race.

It's not always at 14/1. Most of our selections are at much shorter prices. But that day reminded me of why I trust the system even when my own instincts would push me in a different direction.

Why Human Tipsters Are Falling Behind


This isn't a comfortable thing to say, but the traditional tipster model is becoming obsolete.

Not because tipsters aren't knowledgeable -- many of them are deeply knowledgeable -- but because the volume and speed of the information environment they're working in has changed beyond what any individual can keep up with.

A human tipster can cover a handful of meetings thoroughly. They can hold a mental model of perhaps a few dozen horses they know well. They can track market movements on the races they've already focused on.

But they can't hold the entire British racing card in their head simultaneously. They can't process overnight market movements while also building pace maps while also cross-referencing trainer patterns while also identifying hidden sectional data. Not in real time. Not every day.

How Precision Bet Bot Compares to a Human Tipster

Races Scanned
All UK
Human Tipster
~3-4 mtgs
Analysis Time
Seconds
Emotion-Free
Always
Self-Improving
Daily

Precision Bet Bot does all of it, simultaneously, in the time it takes me to pour a coffee.

The processing speed alone is a decisive advantage. By the time a human analyst has reviewed the morning's card for one meeting, the model has already scanned the entire day's racing and ranked every runner by probability.

And unlike a human, the model doesn't have bad days. It doesn't carry frustration from yesterday's losers into today's selections. It doesn't get overconfident after a good run. It doesn't talk itself into a bet because it's looking for action.

Every decision it makes is based on exactly the same criteria, applied with exactly the same rigour, every single day of the year.

That consistency is something no human tipster can offer -- and it's the foundation of everything Precision Bet Bot delivers.

What I've Learned From 18 Months of Running This Publicly


We opened Precision Bet Bot to members gradually. Not everyone at once -- I wanted to watch how it performed across different people with different account profiles and staking habits before I scaled it further.

The thing that struck me most in those early months wasn't the profit figures. It was how different the experience of following AI-generated selections felt compared to following a human tipster.

Members kept reporting the same thing: they stopped feeling anxious about the betting.

Not because they were winning every bet -- they weren't -- but because they understood the system had a process, and the process was consistent, and when a losing bet landed, it didn't feel random or chaotic. It felt like a calculated risk that hadn't come off this time, and would come off most of the time.

That psychological shift -- from gambling to systematic investing -- is something I didn't fully anticipate when we built Precision Bet Bot, but it's become one of the things members mention most.

The model also keeps your account profile healthy.

By limiting selections to 2 or 3 per day, your betting pattern looks natural and measured rather than like someone running through a long list of tips. Bookmakers flag accounts that show erratic, high-volume patterns. Precision Bet Bot keeps you well clear of that.

The low selection volume also means your accounts stay in good standing and your ability to get bets on at advertised prices is rarely compromised.

There's a practical wisdom to it that goes beyond just finding winners.

More From Our Members

"I was sceptical about the AI angle at first -- I've seen enough 'systems' over the years to know that most of them are nonsense. But after three months with Precision Bet Bot, I've run out of reasons to doubt it. I've had two months over £2,000 and one month at £1,600, and in that whole time I've never felt I was chasing or taking on water. The bets just land and the money builds up."

Stuart Hadley, Harrogate

"I run a small business and I don't have time to sit over form guides -- that's why this works for me. The tip arrives, I get the bet on in five minutes, and then I forget about it until I check results in the evening. I've turned a profit every month so far and it's become the most predictable part of my finances, which is not something I expected from horse racing."

Heather Nolan, Lichfield

"I want to be straight with you: the first week I had a couple of losers and I nearly called it quits. I'm glad I didn't. By week three the run of winners came in and I ended the month at £2,045 ahead. It's not magic, it's a consistent system -- and once you accept that and stop panicking at a losing day, it does exactly what it says."

Terry Whitfield, Doncaster

So How Does This Actually Work For You?


Every morning, the model runs its overnight calibration cycle.

It pulls in the previous day's full results data and runs it back through the system.

Any selections it got wrong are dissected. The model identifies which variables it had weighted incorrectly and adjusts accordingly.

Then it turns its attention to the current day's racing.

It scans every race on the British card. Most of them it passes on entirely -- no edge worth betting to, or conditions that don't match the criteria it's been trained to target.

The ones where it finds a clear, measurable edge get shortlisted. Then the shortlist gets filtered again.

By the time a selection makes it into my morning email, it's passed through multiple layers of scrutiny, not just a single probability calculation.

1 Overnight
Data Pull
2 Model
Recalibrates
3 Full Card
Scanned
4 Best Bets
Selected
5 Email Sent
to Members

One Email. Two or Three Bets. The Rest Is Yours.


I place the bets at the best available odds. Then I send one email to all members, first thing in the morning, with everything they need to get their own bets on.

You don't need to interpret anything. You don't need to do any research. You just need to read the email, place the bets, and get on with your day.

No dashboard to log into. No software to run. No complicated staking plans to work through.

An email arrives, you act on it, and then the machine's done its work for the day.

To get started, you'll need a modest betting bank -- somewhere between £50 and £100 is enough to begin with, using a simple level-staking approach to keep the risk low while you find your rhythm.

As your bankroll grows, you can scale your stakes gradually based on a fixed percentage of your total funds -- that's the approach that turns steady monthly profits into a meaningful second income over time.

What 'Precision Bet Bot' Will and Won't Do For You


I want to be straightforward with you on this.

Precision Bet Bot isn't a get-rich scheme and it's not designed to be. The people who get the most from it are the ones who approach it as a consistent, systematic way to generate a reliable secondary income.

The system picks between 2 and 3 races per day. Some days it picks nothing. On a typical month, you're looking at around 40 to 48 bets in total.

Not every bet wins. The model's long-run strike rate over 18 months sits at around 62%, which means roughly 38% of bets don't come off.

What matters is that the wins outweigh the losses by enough margin to generate consistent monthly profit -- and over 18 consecutive months, that's exactly what's happened.

You don't need any prior knowledge of horse racing to follow the bets. You don't need to understand how the model works or be able to interpret form data yourself.

The only thing you need is the ability to open an email, open a betting account, and place a straightforward bet.

Everything else is handled by the system.

Here's How to Join 'Precision Bet Bot' Today


Only 50 Memberships Available

Right now, we're taking on 50 new members before closing the doors for a while.

The reason we limit numbers isn't just marketing language -- it's practical.

When too many people follow the same selections into the same markets, prices shift. The edge that makes a bet worth taking gets eroded by the volume of money chasing it.

We keep the membership tightly controlled to protect the quality of the selections for everyone inside.

The price to join is £20. A one-time fee. Nothing recurring, no monthly charges, no upsells lurking after the checkout.

That £20 gets you full access to the Precision Bet Bot member area, the daily email with every selection, full details of the staking plan, and direct email access to me if you have questions about how to manage your betting bank.

I've set it at this level deliberately. I want people inside who are committed enough to act but not deterred by a price that's out of reach. The first winning bet will cover the fee and then some.

30-Day Money Back Guarantee

Join today, follow the selections for the next 30 days, and if you're not satisfied with what you see, contact me and I'll refund your £20 immediately. No forms, no waiting, no questions.

You're not risking anything. You're stepping into a system that's been delivering consistent returns for 18 months straight, with a full safety net underneath you.

This Isn't Manufactured Urgency


When 50 memberships are gone, this page closes. The next opening won't be at this price.

If you've read this far, you already know this is different. The question is whether you're going to act on that or let it go.

The selections for today are loaded and ready. If you join before midday, you'll receive today's tips in time to place your bets.

A Final Word Before You Decide


I've been doing this long enough to know that most people who arrive on a page like this have been let down before.

They've followed tipsters who had a good run and then fell apart. They've paid for services that delivered inconsistent selections and disappeared when asked hard questions.

I get it. The betting tips market has a complicated reputation, and not without reason.

What I'd say is this: Precision Bet Bot isn't asking you to take a leap of faith. It's asking you to risk £20, with a full guarantee behind it, on a system that has delivered 18 consecutive months of profit and has a clear, demonstrable reason for why it works.

That's a very small ask for what's on the other side of it.

The model is running better in mid-2026 than at any point in its history. The strike rate is at its highest. The quality of the selections is sharper than ever.

There's no better time to get inside this than right now.



The Questions People Usually Ask Before They Join


Frequently Asked Questions

Do I need to know anything about horse racing to follow this?

No. The whole point of the service is that the model handles the knowledge requirement. You receive the selection, the race name, the course, and the start time. You place the bet at the nearest available price. That's the extent of your involvement.

What betting accounts do I need?

You'll need at least one standard betting account with a mainstream UK bookmaker. Most of our members use two or three accounts to ensure they can always get bets on at a reasonable price. I cover all of this in the member area when you join.

How much do I need to start with?

A betting bank of £50 to £100 is enough to get going on a modest level-stake basis. You'll have room to scale your stakes as your bankroll grows. You don't need to top up if you follow the staking guidance I provide.

How many bets a day?

Between 0 and 3. The average over 18 months has been around 2 bets per day. Some days the model finds nothing that meets its threshold and you'll get a no-bet notification. That's a feature, not a fault.

What if I have a bad run?

Every system has losing sequences. Ours are short and infrequent compared to the baseline you'd expect, but they do happen. The staking guidance I share with members is designed to keep your bank intact during those periods so that when the positive run resumes -- and it always has -- you're still in a position to benefit from it.

Can this get me restricted by bookmakers?

The low daily volume of 2 to 3 bets means your account profile stays well within what bookmakers consider normal activity. We've had members following the service for over a year without any account restrictions. The system's design actively protects against that.

What's the long-term potential here?

That depends on what you stake. At a flat £10 a bet, a month like April 2026 would have returned around £300. At £50 a bet, that becomes £1,500. You choose the level that suits your bankroll and your risk appetite. The percentage returns remain consistent regardless of what size you're staking.

What July 2026 Is Already Looking Like


We're at the beginning of July and the flat season is at its peak.

Historically, the summer flat months have been the strongest period for Precision Bet Bot. The quality of racing is higher, the fields are more competitive, and the data environment the model works in is richer and more consistent than winter jumps racing.

May 2026 at £7,085.10 was our best single month on record. April wasn't far behind at £6,730.40.

The model is operating at its highest ever strike rate -- 67% in June -- and that's with no reduction in selection standards. The quality is up because the data quality is up.

If you're going to join Precision Bet Bot, now -- at the start of the best stretch of the year -- is the time to do it.

The selections for the coming week are already in the pipeline.

If you join in the next few hours, you'll receive today's bets alongside every other member who's already inside.

P.S. The 50-place cap is firm.

I checked the member list this morning and spaces are going faster than I expected at this stage.

If you come back tomorrow and the page is gone, you'll know why.

Today's selections are already queued and ready to go out with the morning email.

For £20, with a full money-back guarantee behind you, there's very little reason to wait.

I'll see you on the inside,

David Worsley