The Lucky 63 is a big bet, no doubt about it. Six horses, 63 combinations, and plenty of ways to come out ahead if your form reading is sharp. But like any full-cover multiple, it’s only as strong as the thinking behind it. David Dooley doesn’t play for fun. I build every Lucky 63 to land with purpose.
With this many legs, you’ve got more room for error than in a straight sixfold. Even two or three winners can return a decent chunk if you’ve picked your prices right. But it’s not about covering everything. It’s about finding six horses that deserve to be there on form, ground, and setup.
Meeting | Time | Name | Bet Type | Bet Slip |
---|---|---|---|---|
Chelmsford City | 18:15 | Colors Of Freedom | Lucky 63 Tips | Add to BetSlip → |
Chepstow | 17:15 | Pure Artistry | Lucky 63 Tips | Add to BetSlip → |
Salisbury | 15:25 | Merapi | Lucky 63 Tips | Add to BetSlip → |
Salisbury | 17:10 | King Of The Sea | Lucky 63 Tips | Add to BetSlip → |
Windsor | 19:00 | Jimmy Speaking | Lucky 63 Tips | Add to BetSlip → |
Windsor | 19:30 | Night Breeze | Lucky 63 Tips | Add to BetSlip → |
Contents
What Makes a Lucky 63 Work
This bet gives you singles, doubles, trebles, fourfolds, fivefolds and a sixfold across six horses. That’s full coverage. If you’ve got strong confidence across the card, the Lucky 63 turns your selections into a series of connected opportunities.
It’s ideal for a Saturday or a big festival day when you’ve been following multiple meetings and the form stacks up. I won’t build one just because there are six races. I wait for the card to give me six reasons to back it.
How I Select Horses for a Lucky 63
Every leg starts as a single. If I wouldn’t back the horse alone, I won’t use it in the multiple. I want clear reasoning on each runner. That might be course form, trainer intent, ground preference or a strong pace angle. Nothing makes it in by default.
Sometimes I’ll go with a mix of solid favourites, value mid-rangers, and one or two dark horses if the data supports it. The idea is balance. I’m not looking for six huge prices or six odds-on shots. I want six chances, each with a clear edge.
Staying Smart with Stakes and Structure
The risk with a Lucky 63 is going in too heavy. It’s 63 bets, after all. That’s why I stake smaller and smarter. Let the bet breathe and give the horses the space to do their job. I don’t chase big returns with longshots unless they’ve earned it.
Bonuses on one or more winners help with damage control, but I don’t rely on them. If you pick the right horses and trust the form, you won’t need gimmicks to come out ahead.
FAQs About Lucky 63 Horse Racing Tips
What is a Lucky 63 bet?
A Lucky 63 is a full-cover multiple consisting of six selections across 63 bets. It includes singles, doubles, trebles, fourfolds, fivefolds and a sixfold.
How many winners do you need to return a profit?
It depends on the prices, but three winners at decent odds often gives you a return. Four or more usually means profit, especially with one or two bigger prices.
Should you back win or each way in a Lucky 63?
That depends on the prices and the fields. If your horses are each-way value, I’ll split the stake. For stronger fancies, I go win only.
When is the best time to place a Lucky 63?
Big race days or busy weekend cards are ideal. I wait until I’ve got six well-researched picks before placing it.
Is a Lucky 63 better than a straight sixfold?
A Lucky 63 gives you more coverage. If one or two legs fall short, you still get returns from the other combinations. That makes it far more flexible than a single sixfold.
Summary
The Lucky 63 is a bet for punters who put the time in. David Dooley doesn’t throw together six names and hope for the best. I build with focus, using form, timing and strategy to give myself the best shot. If you’ve got six solid runners across the day, this bet turns a good read into real return potential.
Stay sharp, keep the stake sensible, and trust your logic over the odds board. That’s how you make a Lucky 63 work for you.