It depends on what you call "rigged." In the U.S., wagering on horses is parimutuel, so that bettors are wagering against each other rather than against "the house." The track gets a cut of monies bet, called the takeout. read more
It depends on what you call "rigged." In the U.S., wagering on horses is parimutuel, so that bettors are wagering against each other rather than against "the house." The track gets a cut of monies bet, called the takeout. So the track (house) doesn't have an incentive to rig any race; rather, the objective is to get as many people to bet as possible. read more
The breakdown can now be seen in apparently mundane things such as horse-racing. When the ruling elite "rigged" an important race in 2005, a bystander, so to speak, was caught up in the breakdown of the Virtual Reality. read more
Do not know about greyhounds, but i was just telling you how horse racing works. Remember they need jockeys to go along with it, and jockeys can control the horse. read more