Horse Racing Betting: Major Races and Global Track Coverage
Horse racing represents the largest segment of the Gamwiz racebook. The platform covers both prestigious international races and routine race meetings from numerous tracks across several continents.
Among the most notable events available during the racing calendar are globally recognised races such as the Kentucky Derby in the United States, the Grand National in the United Kingdom, the Prix de l’Arc de Triomphe in France, the Melbourne Cup in Australia, the Dubai World Cup, and the Breeders’ Cup championships. These races attract worldwide attention and typically produce the largest betting volumes of the season.
Beyond these headline events, the racebook provides regular meetings from a wide network of tracks around the world. Australia is heavily represented, with races appearing from venues including Eagle Farm, Rosehill, Sandown, Hawkesbury, Ipswich, Muswellbrook, Oakbank, Pinjarra, Hamilton, York, and Sale. New Zealand contributes meetings from Avondale, Wanganui, and Riverton, maintaining steady coverage across the Australasian racing schedule.
The United Kingdom provides races from well-known tracks such as Kempton Park, Wolverhampton, Nottingham, Southwell, Catterick Bridge, Fontwell Park, Pontefract, Exeter, and Plumpton. French racing also appears regularly through tracks including Deauville, Compiegne, Toulouse, and Lignieres.
Asian racing is represented through Japanese tracks such as Kanazawa, Sonoda, Mizusawa, and Kawasaki, while North American meetings include venues such as Santa Anita Park, Parx Racing, Turf Paradise, Mahoning Valley, Sunland Park, and Will Rogers Downs. South American coverage includes Palermo and San Isidro in Argentina, alongside other jurisdictions such as Sha Tin in Hong Kong, Kenilworth in South Africa, Koln in Germany, Siracusa in Italy, Maronas in Uruguay, and Las Americas in Mexico among many others.
Because these jurisdictions operate across multiple time zones, bettors can follow racing events almost continuously as the global schedule progresses from region to region.