The Total Betting Club Review

by | Approved, Horse Racing, Reviews | 3 comments

The Total Betting Club is an Internet-based society centred around anything and everything to do with making a good second – or even full-time – income from sports betting, with an emphasis on horse racing. There’s even a section devoted to systems to beat the online roulette wheel.

It’s basically a club – the brainchild of professional bettor Louis Delay – which seeks to provide an online resource and forum for everyone wanting to develop their money making strategies when betting.

Upon joining The Total Betting Club – for a reasonable £19.95 a month (no money back guarantee) – you gain immediate access to a plethora of information about the betting world. First and foremost is access to interesting and seemingly successful betting systems including lots of articles proffering advice, different staking methods and the pros and cons of the various bookmakers available, monthly newsletters (all archived for the past four years), useful downloads and links and other resources to hone your betting experience.

The immediate thing I liked most about Total Betting Club was its relative transparency. It’s updated daily and different results for all the systems are proofed and published in the members’ area. Customer service is excellent with full email support offered and speedy replies, seven days a week.

Of course, if you’re anything like me, the main thing that you’d be forking out £20 a month for is access to the betting systems. The results claimed on the Total Betting Club website for these systems makes for very interesting reading. To name but a few of the systems and results for the whole of 2012:

The Junior LFM system is +504.63 points in 7 months, the LFM Original is +876.33 points for the year (in 2011 this made +439.65 points); the LFM Safer Version (which uses under half stakes) is +712.64 points for 2012 (in 2011, it made +579.99 points); the other LFM Safer Version (which uses double stakes – but still at a lower amount than the original) was up 1,425.28 points (making +1159.98 points in 2011); the SFFS is +206.18 points in just 3 months, the new and extended LFM system is +433.1 points in 3 months, the favourite Old Three Four system made +466.59 points in 2012 (2011 saw it making +790.87 points), the Second Is Best laying system made +75.38 points (in 2011 is made +55.97); the Selective Old One Two made +210.37 points in 6 months; the New Ikea system made a profit of 794.88 points (+800.98 points in 2011); and the Irish TOTF resulted in +137.36 points profit for its six-month lifespan. All these figures are taken from the sales-page of the website, but the results are proofed in the members’ area. Tantalisingly, the sales-page surmises: ‘Collectively, all of the above systems would have generated a huge profit of +3,704.82 points’ in 2012.

I trialled the All New Ikea Horse Racing system, using level stakes (some of the other systems implement various staking plans, even some that resemble loss-chasing plans – which is always a recipe for disaster that can only be likened to wading through a sticky quagmire – but a more thorough reading of these systems shows that loss-chasing is, thankfully, actually avoided and that the staking plan is merely to stop at a winner. Anyway, I digress. The All New Ikea Horse Racing system is not the easiest to get to grips with at first – indeed many of the systems require at least an intermediate knowledge of betting – but once it was understood, its workings made sense. With it, I made 37 bets and enjoyed 31 winners resulting in an 83.78% strike-rate and a very healthy profit of 57.34 points.

Total Betting Club has certainly got my attention and I urge you to check it out. The monthly membership is on the cheaper side and you are bound to find something of interest (and that’s an understatement). There’s so much knowledge to be accessed, and the systems are all apparently noteworthy – so many other clubs just put up any old system to serve as filler, but this is not the case here. The only problem you might find is that you won’t know which system to prefer over the others.