Overall: Back up to €9.30 profit
Overall: Back up to €9.30 profit
Here’s how you can read the “Cricket Weather Report” on a warm summer night:
1. Count the number of chirps you hear in 15 seconds.
2. Take the 15-second-chirp-count number and divide it by 2 and then add 6. The number you get is the temperature in Celsius.
Sittingbourne
T5 T6
Sunderland
T3 T6
Here’s how you can read the “Cricket Weather Report” on a warm summer night:
1. Count the number of chirps you hear in 15 seconds.
2. Take the 15-second-chirp-count number and divide it by 2 and then add 6. The number you get is the temperature in Celsius.
Sittingbourne
T5 7.2 T6 14
Edit: T5 wins
Last edited by corban; 06-02-2010 at 18:33.
Here’s how you can read the “Cricket Weather Report” on a warm summer night:
1. Count the number of chirps you hear in 15 seconds.
2. Take the 15-second-chirp-count number and divide it by 2 and then add 6. The number you get is the temperature in Celsius.
Sunderland
T3 8.6 T6 5.6
Edit: no joy
Last edited by corban; 06-02-2010 at 18:37.
Here’s how you can read the “Cricket Weather Report” on a warm summer night:
1. Count the number of chirps you hear in 15 seconds.
2. Take the 15-second-chirp-count number and divide it by 2 and then add 6. The number you get is the temperature in Celsius.
Sunderland 18.49
T3 5.7 T6 8.2
Edit: T3 wins
Last edited by corban; 06-02-2010 at 18:53.
Here’s how you can read the “Cricket Weather Report” on a warm summer night:
1. Count the number of chirps you hear in 15 seconds.
2. Take the 15-second-chirp-count number and divide it by 2 and then add 6. The number you get is the temperature in Celsius.
Overall: €23.60 profit
Here’s how you can read the “Cricket Weather Report” on a warm summer night:
1. Count the number of chirps you hear in 15 seconds.
2. Take the 15-second-chirp-count number and divide it by 2 and then add 6. The number you get is the temperature in Celsius.
Here’s how you can read the “Cricket Weather Report” on a warm summer night:
1. Count the number of chirps you hear in 15 seconds.
2. Take the 15-second-chirp-count number and divide it by 2 and then add 6. The number you get is the temperature in Celsius.
Best of luck corban
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cheers hill,
just realised i never explained how i was picking trap numbers. i just checked the % success rate for the last 3 years at each track and go with the 2 highest. if there are more than 2 traps with the same success rate then i go with the trap most successful in the previous 3 months... the current "hot" trap.
Here’s how you can read the “Cricket Weather Report” on a warm summer night:
1. Count the number of chirps you hear in 15 seconds.
2. Take the 15-second-chirp-count number and divide it by 2 and then add 6. The number you get is the temperature in Celsius.
nice one corban, you can get some tasty odds on betfair compared to bookies when it comes to greyhounds. good luck
TIME I GOT BACK IN THE WINNERS ENCLOSURE
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