OK but we don't have the many-horses situation. Red is not mutually exclusive with either R-14 or R-16. I had to solve the Kelly equation the hard way, so I made the assumption that the bet on Red was exactly half of the betting fraction. This reduced the 16 unfavorable red outcomes to pushes, greatly simplifying the final equation.As it turns out, there is a well-known solution to this problem. See the "many horses" section in this article. In our particular case, the Red-16, Red-14, and Red can be thought of as 3 different horses, with the well-defined odds and edges. So, the Kelly criterion can be applied to this "multiple horses" situation as a combination bet just as well as it can be applied to just one horse as a single bet.
But let's not forget my point: Kelly trumps standard deviation!