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-   -   great takeout article (http://www.derbytrail.com/forums/showthread.php?t=24040)

Cannon Shell 07-19-2008 09:48 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by The Indomitable DrugS
I would be in complete agreement with every word Cannon typed...

But Freddy says he makes good money playing poker. So Poker has to be the much easier game to win at.

People who make money playing poker never tell...

pgardn 07-19-2008 09:51 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Cannon Shell
People who make money playing poker never tell...

How about people who make money betting horses?

cmorioles 07-19-2008 10:20 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Cannon Shell
That is simply not true.

Please direct to one time where horsemen asked for takeout reductions. If I'm wrong, I'll apologize, but I can't think of it ever happening. I might even settle for something showing horsemen fought against an increase.

Mag 07-20-2008 07:41 AM

That article should be required reading for anyone entering the track and for every legislator, and every horseman, in a nutshell:

"The track exec-coached player
is almost broke - he has
around $2 left. He has bet in
total, around $24,000. Not too bad at all. He
played for a long time and he contributed a lot to
purses. 15 percent of $24000 is $3600. That is
$3600 to purses and profits.

The professionally coached player, with the 5
percent rebate did better. A whole lot better. That
small rebate helped the player win. He ended up
with over $4000, or $3000 profit. Well, of course
he did, you say. He took some of the tracks profit
and purses, so he had to have made money. He
made money at the expense of us! He took our
$3000 profit for himself!

Not so fast.

Our player, with that small rebate, bet over
$330,000 in those same 150 days of betting.
That's three hundred and thirty thousand dollars!
How about the proceeds to the track and
horse-owners for purses? Well we gave a 5 per
cent rebate, so instead of charging 15 percent we
charged 10 percent. 10 percent of 330,000 is
$33,000. That player, with a little help, contributed
$33,000 to purses instead of the player
we did not help, who contributed $3600 - almost
10 times more.

More importantly, (the winning) player is still
playing. Remember, the first player is broke. The
winning player will be playing for a long, long
time too. And ... he will tell friends."

Dunbar 07-20-2008 01:41 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Mag
That article should be required reading for anyone entering the track and for every legislator, and every horseman, in a nutshell:

"The track exec-coached player
is almost broke - he has
around $2 left. He has bet in
total, around $24,000. Not too bad at all. He
played for a long time and he contributed a lot to
purses. 15 percent of $24000 is $3600. That is
$3600 to purses and profits.

The professionally coached player, with the 5
percent rebate did better. A whole lot better. That
small rebate helped the player win. He ended up
with over $4000, or $3000 profit. Well, of course
he did, you say. He took some of the tracks profit
and purses, so he had to have made money. He
made money at the expense of us! He took our
$3000 profit for himself!

Not so fast.

Our player, with that small rebate, bet over
$330,000 in those same 150 days of betting.
That's three hundred and thirty thousand dollars!
How about the proceeds to the track and
horse-owners for purses? Well we gave a 5 per
cent rebate, so instead of charging 15 percent we
charged 10 percent. 10 percent of 330,000 is
$33,000. That player, with a little help, contributed
$33,000 to purses instead of the player
we did not help, who contributed $3600 - almost
10 times more.

More importantly, (the winning) player is still
playing. Remember, the first player is broke. The
winning player will be playing for a long, long
time too. And ... he will tell friends."

It should maybe be pointed out that if everyone followed Player 2 (lose at 4% but get a 5% rebate, then you can churn til doomsday and there will still be no money for purses, the state, the track or anyone else except the happy bettors. The comparison between the "contributions" to purses of the two players in the article is contrived.

The reason lowering the takeout percent could result in more overall takeout is not directly because of churning. It's because when people get a run for their money, they are more likely to come back with additional "bankroll". (and as the article suggests, they are more likely to tell their friends.) They will play more often and commit more funds to playing. Players who lose quickly are more likely to leave the game for extended periods or permanently.

Casinos learned this a long time ago. A row of slot machines that pay back just 80% of money bet is often less profitable than machines that pay back 90%. People get discouraged when they lose quickly. They are encouraged when they get to be ahead for awhile ("I should have quit when I was ahead!" type thinking), and they are more likely to experience being ahead with 90% payout than an 80% payout.

I'm not sure tracks have enough patience to wait for that kind of effect to take hold. If there is not an overnight jump in handle after a drop in takeout (and I'm not aware of anything to suggest that horse bettors are sharp enough to flock to a lower takeout), then the tracks will conclude that lowering takeout is pointless. If that happens, then the longterm benefits of lowering takeout will never be seen.

--Dunbar

chicken 07-21-2008 09:16 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Dunbar
I'm not sure tracks have enough patience to wait for that kind of effect to take hold. If there is not an overnight jump in handle after a drop in takeout (and I'm not aware of anything to suggest that horse bettors are sharp enough to flock to a lower takeout), then the tracks will conclude that lowering takeout is pointless. If that happens, then the longterm benefits of lowering takeout will never be seen.

The lower takeout can come from the ADW share via mandated player rebates (limiting ADW keep). The horsemen do control the signal, they are fully capable if they wanted to use that power for the forces of good, it seems to me. That's the logical choice if growing handle is the goal, rather than fighting over share of what currently exists.

hi_im_god 07-21-2008 09:49 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Cannon Shell
Your logic is unusual. If you want to stretch your "entertainment" dollar, rent movies. As for the gambling dollar, yeah horse racing is a much better bet than poker despite the takeout. Because you lose slower at Poker it is a better bet? What difference does it make if you are assuming a loss anyway. The thing is that there is virtually no way that you can make a big score at Poker. You can do that on pretty much any card at a semi major track pretty much everyday of the week. I agree that takeouts are too high in most cases but unlike poker there are a lot of other mouths to feed from the horseracing dollar and the comparison is kind of an apples and oranges thing.

which is why (for me) it is actually easier to make money playing poker than the horses.

i can play online where the rake is minimal because there's no brick and mortar, dealer salary, floor manager salary, shift supervisor salary, floor runner, or the expectation to tip any of them.

i can choose my table and assessing the talent of my opponents is easy with the tracking websites.

i can't choose to play against the worst horseplayers. i get the whole bucket. and i'm expected to pay the groom, hotwalker, jock, trainer, track operator, state licensing agency, and god knows who else off the rake.

all i have to do is put up with endless conspiracy theories as to why online poker is fixed by the losers. that and pay 5% on ring games and 10% on tournament entries. and there are ways to get rakeback.

you have to have a passion to crack horseracing. anyone with patience, minimal talant, and a 3 digit iq can win at poker.


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