Greyhound Terminology UK Full Guide

Why the jargon matters

Look: you step onto a UK track and every chant, every odds slip is a secret code. Miss a term and you’re betting blind.

Core terms you can’t ignore

Trap

The starting box. If a dog is a “fast trap”, expect a burst off the line; a “slow trap” often means a late surge.

Greyhound

Simple, but in the UK we call them “hounds”. A “senior hound” is over three years old, a “juvenile” is under. Age changes weight allowances dramatically.

Box

Every trap has a corresponding box number. “Box 4” is the middle; “box 1” is the inside rail. Box bias can swing a race like a pendulum.

Form

Form is the dog’s recent performance record. “Good form” means a series of wins or placings; “poor form” signals trouble. Check the last five runs, not just the last.

SP (Starting Price)

That’s the odds at the moment the race begins. An “SP of 5/1” pays five pounds for every pound staked if the dog wins.

Win, Place, Show

Three basic bet types. “Win” pays if your hound finishes first. “Place” covers second, sometimes third. “Show” adds the third place. Choose based on risk appetite.

Greyhound Betting Glossary

By the way, if you need a one-stop reference, the greyhound terminology UK full guide has everything in a tidy sheet.

Advanced lingo for the savvy bettor

Quinella

Pick two dogs to finish first and second in any order. The payout is higher than a simple place bet, but you need both to be spot on.

Exacta

Similar to quinella, but order matters. “Exacta 3-5” means dog 3 must win, dog 5 must place second. High risk, high reward.

Trifecta

Three dogs, exact order. The ultimate test of reading form, trap bias, and pace.

Odds on

When a dog is “odds on”, its price is less than evens (e.g., 4/5). The market thinks it’s a shoo-in.

Long odds

Opposite of odds on. A “long shot” can be 20/1 or more. Expect a big payout if you hit, but the probability is tiny.

Going off

When a dog “goes off” it means it’s been withdrawn before the race. Always check the final card.

Practical tip

Here is the deal: combine trap bias with recent form, then overlay the SP to spot value. If a dog in a favorable box has a high SP, you’ve found a potential edge. Bet on that, and watch the board. Act now.

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