Double Stakes About Calculator
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Double Stakes About Explained
A Single Stakes About (SSA) wager is a type of conditional bet involving two selections and two bets. Each bet consists of two connected single bets, where the second single bet uses double the stake of the first bet.
For the first bet, a single bet is placed on the first selection. If there is sufficient cash returned from the first selection, a single bet of the same stake is placed on the second selection.
The second bet does the same, but with the selections in reverse order. The second selection is bet on first, and if there is sufficient cash returned, a single bet of the same stake is placed on the first selection.
This is also known as an up-and-down, and can also be described as an any-to-come if-cash bet. It has the same structure as a Single Stakes About bet, witht he only difference being that the stake is double for the second part of each bet.
Try different combinations of selections on the Single Stakes About calculator to see how your bet could play out.
Double Stakes About Example
If we place a £5 Single Stakes About (£10 total stake) on selections A and B, it would be broken down as follows.
Bet 1 (£5 stake)
- Part 1: £5 single bet on selection A.
- Part 2: Any cash returned from part 1 is staked as a single bet on selection B, up to a maximum of £10. This is double the stake of part 1.
Bet 2 (£5 stake)
- Part 1: £5 single bet on selection B.
- Part 2: Any cash returned from part 1 is staked as a single bet on selection A, up to a maximum of £10. This is double the stake of part 1.
How Does an Each Way Double Stakes About work?
An each way double stakes about bet uses the same structure but each way bets are placed instead of singles. As an each way bet consists of two bets instead of one, the total number of bets is doubled.
Below is an example of a £5 each way double stakes about bet (£20 total stake).
| Part 1 | Part 2 | |
|---|---|---|
| Bet 1 | Each way bet on Selection A. – 1 bet to win (£5). – 1 bet to place (£5). | Any cash returned from part 1 is staked as an each way bet on selection B, up to a maximum of £10 per bet. This is double the stake of part 1. – 1 bet to win (maximum £10). – 1 bet to place (maximum £10). |
| Bet 2 | Each way bet on Selection B. – 1 bet to win (£5). – 1 bet to place (£5). | Any cash returned from part 1 is staked as an each way bet on selection A, up to a maximum of £10 per bet. This is double the stake of part 1. – 1 bet to win (maximum £10). – 1 bet to place (maximum £10). |
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What if there isn’t enough cash returned from part 1 to cover both the win and place of part 2?
There are two methods that can be applied in this scenario. The one used depends on the bookmaker, but is usually ‘win precedence’ unless otherwise stated. The calculator can handle both methods and is set to ‘win precedence’ by default. You can switch methods via ‘Settings’ > ‘Any To Come’.
Win Precedence
This method prioritises the win part of the second each way bet first. All cash is directed to the win first, with the remainder staked on the place part. Take these two examples:
Example 1: £14 returned from first £5 each way bet
Part 1 returns a total of £12. In part 2, £10 is staked on the win and £4 on the place.
Example 2: £6 returned from first £5 each way bet
Part 1 returns a total of £6. In part 2, £6 is staked on the win. There is nothing remaining to stake on the place.
Equally Divided
This method splits cash equally between the win and place parts. Take these two examples:
Example 1: £14 returned from first £5 each way bet
Part 1 returns a total of £12. In part 2, £10 is staked on the win and £4 on the place.
Example 2: £6 returned from first £5 each way bet
Part 1 returns a total of £6. In part 2, £6 is staked on the win. There is nothing remaining to stake on the place.
Double Stakes About Pros and Cons
Pros
✓ Easy to track your selection – Compared to some system bets with tens or hundreds of individual bets over multiple selections, Single Stakes About bets have a manageable number of selections that can be easily monitored.
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✓ Risk Management – Single Stakes About combines elements of both single and multiple bets. By using the same stake on the second part as on the first part, you limit your loss if the second part lets you down. In an accumulator bet, the whole of the returns from part 1 would be staked on part 2, so it would result in a total loss if part 2 let you down.
Cons
✘ Lower returns than an accumulator – Because a Single Stakes About bet only places the same stake on the second selection, the potential returns are lower.
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✘ Initial complexity – The structure is more complex than single or accumulator bets, so can take some time to get to grips with.
Similar Bets
If you’re interested in Single Stakes About bets and enjoy the concept of linked selections with conditional outcomes, you might want to explore these more complex variations. These combine Single Stakes About bets with full cover system bets.
- Single Stakes About – A similar bet but with a smaller portion of the returns used to fund the conditional bet.
- Round Robin – 3 selections, combining 3 doubles, 1 treble, and 3 Single Stakes About bets (total of 10 bets).
- Flag – 4 selections, includes all 6 doubles, 4 trebles, 1 fourfold, and 6 SSA bets (total of 23 bets).
- Super Flag – 5 selections, combining all possible doubles, trebles, fourfolds, one fivefold, and 10 SSA bets (total of 46 bets).
- Heinz Flag – 6 selections. A Heinz (57 bets) plus 15 SSA bets (total of 72 bets).
- Super Heinz Flag – 7 selections. A Super Heinz (120 bets) plus 21 SSA bets (total of 141 bets).
- Goliath Flag – 8 selections. A Goliath (247 bets) plus 28 SSA bets (total of 303 bets).
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