L.P. 28 Staking Plan

The L.P. 28 Staking Plan is a sequence-based betting strategy designed for long-priced selections, systematically adjusting stakes to manage risk and potential returns.

Sequence Structure:

The plan comprises a 28-step sequence: 1111111111222222333344455667. Each digit represents the stake multiple for a given bet.

Operational Mechanics:

  • After a Loss: Advance to the next position in the sequence, increasing the stake according to the corresponding multiple.

  • After a Win: Reset to the beginning of the sequence, returning the stake to its initial multiple.

  • After 28 Consecutive Losses: The sequence restarts from the beginning, regardless of outcomes.

Example Scenario:

  1. Initial Bet: Stake 1 unit.

  2. First Loss: Move to the next sequence position; stake remains 1 unit.

  3. Subsequent Losses: Continue advancing through the sequence, adjusting stakes as follows:

    • Bets 1-10: Stake 1 unit each.

    • Bets 11-15: Stake 2 units each.

    • Bets 16-18: Stake 3 units each.

    • Bets 19-20: Stake 4 units each.

    • Bets 21-22: Stake 5 units each.

    • Bet 23: Stake 6 units.

  4. Upon a Win: Reset to the initial stake of 1 unit.

Advanced Configuration:

The plan allows for linking the point value to the cumulative total, enabling stakes to adjust in proportion to the bankroll’s size. This feature can be activated within the staking plan settings.

Frequently Asked Questions

Answer: The L.P.28 (Long Priced 28) Staking Plan is a slow, gradual progression system specifically designed for long-priced selections. It uses a fixed 28-step sequence that slowly increases the stake after losses and resets to the beginning after any win.

Answer: It follows this 28-step sequence: 1111111111222222333344455667

  • Each digit represents the stake multiple of your base unit.
  • After a loss: Move to the next position in the sequence (stakes stay at 1 unit for the first 10 bets, then slowly rise).
  • After a win: Reset immediately to the start of the sequence (1 unit).
  • After 28 consecutive losses: The sequence automatically restarts.

Answer: It provides very gentle recovery for long-odds bets. Stakes increase extremely slowly, making it one of the safest progression plans for systems with long-priced selections and occasional long losing runs.

Answer:
  • Recovery is slow — it can take many wins to offset a bad run.
  • Not suitable for short-odds or high-strike-rate systems (better plans exist for those).
  • Still requires sensible bank sizing and maximum stake limits.

Answer: It is a mild progression plan, much safer than aggressive systems like Labouchere, Fibonacci, or Certain Profit. It sits between Level Staking and moderate recovery plans, ideal for long-priced betting.

Answer: Yes, but it performs best with long-priced selections (typically 4.0+ decimal odds) and systems that can tolerate occasional long losing runs. It is popular for horse racing, greyhounds, and accumulator-style betting.

Answer : 

  • Base Unit (fixed amount or % of bank)
  • Link to Cumulative Total (recommended for compounding)

 

Answer: It’s ideal for:

  • Bettors focusing on long-priced (high-odds) selections
  • Users wanting very safe, slow progression
  • Horse racing, greyhound, or accumulator bettors
  • Those who prefer mild recovery over flat staking

Answer: It is considered low to medium risk — one of the safest progression plans available, especially for long-odds betting. The slow stake increases make it suitable for users who want controlled exposure.