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  #1  
Old 07-11-2010, 01:04 PM
hockey2315 hockey2315 is offline
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I know why they did it, but strongly disagree.
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  #2  
Old 07-11-2010, 01:09 PM
blackthroatedwind blackthroatedwind is offline
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Originally Posted by hockey2315 View Post
I'm pretty sure I know why they did it, but I don't think they should have done it.

So, Pickapocket and Trickmeister should have gotten 75s....or Blind Luck and Havre de Grace should have gotten 115s.

OK, feel free to expound on either scenerio....because clearly you believe in one of them.
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  #3  
Old 07-11-2010, 01:26 PM
hockey2315 hockey2315 is offline
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I'm fine with them playing with the figures to a certain extent. It was obviously a tricky day with the track condition, DEL's a quirky track for making figures in general, and the paces of the two races for males were very different from Blind Luck's race.

None of the figures even seem off to me from what I would expect any of those horses to run.

However, last I checked, Beyers aren't supposed to incorporate pace like that. There's no way that you can give a horse who ran two seconds faster a lower fig without splitting the variant or something (which they didn't do). It's just too big of a gap to justify what they did.

I expected BL's fig to be a little higher, and the other two's to be a little lower. I don't even think much of BL talent-wise, although I respect the fact that they haven't kept her in the barn.

The spirit of Beyers--what set them apart from the more "sophisticated" figures--was their objectiveness and room for interpretation by handicappers. That has been completely lost. Maybe they can come with Joe Cardello's personal trip notes from now on.
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  #4  
Old 07-11-2010, 01:31 PM
blackthroatedwind blackthroatedwind is offline
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Originally Posted by hockey2315 View Post
I'm fine with them playing with the figures to a certain extent. It was obviously a tricky day with the track condition, DEL's a quirky track for making figures in general, and the paces of the two races for males were very different from Blind Luck's race.

None of the figures even seem off to me from what I would expect any of those horses to run.

However, last I checked, Beyers aren't supposed to incorporate pace like that. There's no way that you can give a horse who ran two seconds faster a lower fig without splitting the variant or something (which they didn't do). It's just too big of a gap to justify what they did.

I expected BL's fig to be a little higher, and the other two's to be a little lower. I don't even think much of BL talent-wise, although I respect the fact that they haven't kept her in the barn.

The spirit of Beyers--what set them apart from the more "sophisticated" figures--was their objectiveness and room for interpretation by handicappers. That has been completely lost. Maybe they can come with Joe Cardello's personal trip notes from now on.

So they can fudge them a little....but not a lot?

You do realize this is more inaccurate and/or more disingenuous?

Maybe you should discuss projection with Jerry Brown some time ( to take Beyer out of the equation ). Honestly, I think you would find it very enlightening.
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  #5  
Old 07-11-2010, 01:34 PM
hockey2315 hockey2315 is offline
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If I see a time that seems "off", my first inclincation is not to go directly to the opposite end of the spectrum. Unless it points to a timing malfunction.
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  #6  
Old 07-11-2010, 01:36 PM
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cmorioles cmorioles is offline
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Originally Posted by hockey2315 View Post
If I see a time that seems "off", my first inclincation is not to go directly to the opposite end of the spectrum. Unless it points to a timing malfunction.
Enlighten us, give us your figures and most importantly, WHY.
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  #7  
Old 07-11-2010, 01:43 PM
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If I see a time that seems "off", my first inclincation is not to go directly to the opposite end of the spectrum. Unless it points to a timing malfunction.

Your first inclination? Do you actually make your own figures?
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  #8  
Old 07-11-2010, 01:54 PM
parsixfarms parsixfarms is offline
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If one was going to question a figure, wouldn't it be the figure given to Gio Ponti for the Man O' War? The final time was six seconds off the course record, but the sun-baked course could not be deemed "slow." I understand that the final running time was a function of the very slow pace and the figure may not be an accurate reflection of the quality of the performance, but isn't that the reason why interpreting the numbers often produced in slow-paced synthetic races has proven so vexing?
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  #9  
Old 07-11-2010, 02:01 PM
hockey2315 hockey2315 is offline
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Your first inclination? Do you actually make your own figures?
Nope. . . I've never bothered to make my own figures because I have always respected the philosophy behind Beyers and the application of that philosophy into their calculations. I think there are much better places to find value in handicapping than speed figs, but I rely on them to put those other variables into context. I've only been handicapping for five years, and would never claim to be an expert in any area of the game, but I think I'm plenty intelligent enough to see that something here just doesn't make sense. More and more, we've been expected to "believe" in figs that are constantly re-adjusted and seem incongruous with logic. I know it's not easy to explain abberant figures/results--and maybe I'd run into the same problems that Beyer + Associates do if I made my own calculations--but how can we possibly believe that two horses turned in basically the exact same performances with extremely different final times without any semblance of an explanation for the abberation? Did the length of a second change for a half hour in Delaware yesterday? Like Phil said, I'd rather be given the crazy looking figs--a 115 and a 75 or whatever--and allowed to decide for myself, than to be forced to swallow a forced reconciliation made to make everything look neat and clean.
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  #10  
Old 07-11-2010, 01:32 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by hockey2315 View Post
I'm fine with them playing with the figures to a certain extent. It was obviously a tricky day with the track condition, DEL's a quirky track for making figures in general, and the paces of the two races for males were very different from Blind Luck's race.

None of the figures even seem off to me from what I would expect any of those horses to run.

However, last I checked, Beyers aren't supposed to incorporate pace like that. There's no way that you can give a horse who ran two seconds faster a lower fig without splitting the variant or something (which they didn't do). It's just too big of a gap to justify what they did.

I expected BL's fig to be a little higher, and the other two's to be a little lower. I don't even think much of BL talent-wise, although I respect the fact that they haven't kept her in the barn.

The spirit of Beyers--what set them apart from the more "sophisticated" figures--was their objectiveness and room for interpretation by handicappers. That has been completely lost. Maybe they can come with Joe Cardello's personal trip notes from now on.
Wow, that is as clueless a post on making Beyers as I have seen. Where has pace been mentioned? You are saying the figures were a little high for two races and a little low for one, but that is doing exactly what Beyer did. "A little" is certainly not 21 points.

I think the problem is with the clock in this case. It is doubtful track maintenance sped the track up and then it immediately reverted back to its previous speed for the next race.
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  #11  
Old 07-11-2010, 01:36 PM
hockey2315 hockey2315 is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by cmorioles View Post
Wow, that is as clueless a post on making Beyers as I have seen. Where has pace been mentioned? You are saying the figures were a little high for two races and a little low for one, but that is doing exactly what Beyer did. "A little" is certainly not 21 points.

I think the problem is with the clock in this case. It is doubtful track maintenance sped the track up and then it immediately reverted back to its previous speed for the next race.
So you don't think the stark difference in paces came into play in their calculations?
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  #12  
Old 07-11-2010, 01:40 PM
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cmorioles cmorioles is offline
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So you don't think the stark difference in paces came into play in their calculations?
No, because there wasn't that big a difference when the pace of each race is related to its final time.
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  #13  
Old 07-11-2010, 02:01 PM
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philcski philcski is offline
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Originally Posted by blackthroatedwind View Post
You went 0 for 3.....but you knew that.
Dude, I don't know what's gotten into you, but this is way too typical these days. I get that you're an opinionated person. But YOUR opinion isn't necessarily the beliefs of everyone else. Enlighten me on why or what I'm "wrong" on.

Quote:
Originally Posted by cmorioles View Post
Wow, that is as clueless a post on making Beyers as I have seen. Where has pace been mentioned? You are saying the figures were a little high for two races and a little low for one, but that is doing exactly what Beyer did. "A little" is certainly not 21 points.

I think the problem is with the clock in this case. It is doubtful track maintenance sped the track up and then it immediately reverted back to its previous speed for the next race.
Did you go back and hand time the races?
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  #14  
Old 07-11-2010, 02:08 PM
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cmorioles cmorioles is offline
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Did you go back and hand time the races?
No, I have not, and to be honest it really won't matter. I may later today if I have some time. If the time came back right I would assume the track was manipulated.
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  #15  
Old 07-11-2010, 02:11 PM
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philcski philcski is offline
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No, I have not, and to be honest it really won't matter. I may later today if I have some time. If the time came back right I would assume the track was manipulated.
I did. They are fine. And it matters a lot.

The track was certainly weather challenged yesterday- but as you said before, it would be hard to believe they changed it THAT much in a 90 minute span and visually it didn't look much different.
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  #16  
Old 07-11-2010, 02:16 PM
blackthroatedwind blackthroatedwind is offline
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Originally Posted by philcski View Post
Dude, I don't know what's gotten into you, but this is way too typical these days. I get that you're an opinionated person. But YOUR opinion isn't necessarily the beliefs of everyone else. Enlighten me on why or what I'm "wrong" on.



Once again, and CJ gets it right with " disingenuous", it's not at all what has gotten into me....it's what has obviously gotten into you. I don't care, as I've learned to ascribe the opposite to everything you post to get to the truth. I give you credit for continuing the charade.
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  #17  
Old 07-11-2010, 02:18 PM
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Once again, and CJ gets it right with " disingenuous", it's not at all what has gotten into me....it's what has obviously gotten into you. I don't care, as I've learned to ascribe the opposite to everything you post to get to the truth. I give you credit for continuing the charade.
Thanks for nothing.
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