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#1
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I have wandered in here on page 18 so I probably have missed far more than I will be able to use successfully but if I take this one step further......
Andy if you have an angle on a LS say at better than 10-1 and you really like a horse to win which you play with your typical "X" or unit play. Does not the concept of "saver bet" at times on long odds with horses you have already played to win make sense. Although I want the 33-1 payoff 27/$2 and 14/$2 are not returns that will likely make you a loser for the day. I thought the most important thing at the end of the day,other than making some kind of profit was to be able to look back at all of your wagers and objectively evaluate risk and return favorably. You can certainly on occasion win by playing stupidly, albeit not very often, but making sound wagers should eventually give you a decent chance long term to be a winner over all. An example is a 33-1 shot that paid 68-27-14 allow you to still make quite a profit if the horse finished 2nd or 3rd. I certainly agree that playing short odds will likely make betters go broke but there has to be a time when investing in returns that can be worth the risk at certain potential ROI is a sound play. DrD |
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#2
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It doesn't matter how you do on any given day except psychologically. And, when your " longshot " runs second and you get nothing you need to remember the times you won five times as much as you would have with a place bet when you hit your exacta savers.
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#3
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I disagree fairly strongly. I think the ONLY time a place or show wager can make any sense is when you are betting against a huge minus pool chalk you think is vulnerable to running out of the pool. But that's not what we're talking here. I'm certain if you took a look at every 30-1 shot that ran first or second over a large enough sample, you will find a higher ROI betting those horses just to win as opposed to splitting your wager WP or WPS. If you like a horse at long odds, it's fair to assume you find percieved value because you feel the favorite is underlaid. In other words, a horse you feel is fair at 10-1 that is going off at 20-1 is doing so most likely because a favorite is going off at 4/5 instead of 5/2. In my mind, the only way to play this horse is to win and in vertical exotics with the non-overlaid chalk contenders. Favored horses (deserving chalk and otherwise) are overbet in Place/Show pools and are increasingly overbet in vertical exotics. I think if a horse is 4/5 and is deserving, it's fruitless to try to beat the race betting any horse to win or playing vertically. "Deserving" is, of course, subjective but if 40-50% of the pool is correct, you are just not going to find value elsewhere. In other words, if I see a horse at 15-1 that I thought was fair at 10-1 in a race with a short favorite worthy of its odds level, I'm going to pass because it's very likely that I'm wrong in my opinion of the longshot's fair odds and there's no way to beat the place or exacta pool. I think WP or WPS wagering is a bit of a psychological phenomenon people use to cash tickets and, to an extent, preserve bankroll on a short term basis. So I think the only time to bet a horse at what I percieve is an overlay price is when there is a false favorite simply because there is no other way over the long run that makes my horse an attractive overlay. And given that the bad chalk is increasingly overbet in the vertical pools, I think it's mandatory to use my horse in verticals with the other non-chalk contenders. These are the kind of races and betting opps we live for and you have to get your money in the the right way when you can. Sorry to ramble. Thats my opinion. |
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#4
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While I agree with a lot of what you said I think you are making a mistake in the latter part of your post, or perhaps I am misreading you, as suppose you like that 15-1 shot ( and I understand what you mean when you say maybe you were " wrong " ) but also think the favorite is deserving. Isn't that a situation where at the very least you should have an exacta with your horse under the favorite ( and perhaps a small reverse )?
As an add-on, not relevant to what you posted necessarily, I think people need to pay more attention to how much exactas pay when a strong favorite runs second. To me these are far and away the best value payoffs available. I can't tell you how many 3-1 shots I have seen beat odds on favorites with the exacta paying more than double the win price. If a horse is considered over 50% to win the race just imagine what it's chances are of finishing second....especially when the second or third choice wins the race. It's worth noting. Last edited by blackthroatedwind : 04-19-2007 at 11:38 AM. |
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#5
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#6
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I spent a fair amount of time looking for overlays in the exacta pool, given 2 assumptions: (1) that the win odds are approximately correct, and (2) that the odds of a horse coming in 2nd to another (particular) horse coming in 1st can be approximated by artificially removing the 1st place horse from the odds list and recalculating the odds on the remaining horses. (the Harville formula assumption). There are many races where either or both those assumptions are poor. Still, IMO they are a good starting point for evaluating bets in the other pools. In the exacta pool, the situation that most often showed value was precisely the one that btwind singled out--using a heavy fav as the 2nd part of an exacta. I found that result surprising, because the tendency of many bettors to play an exacta box works against it. --Dunbar
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Curlin and Hard Spun finish 1,2 in the 2007 BC Classic, demonstrating how competing in all three Triple Crown races ruins a horse for the rest of the year...see avatar photo from REUTERS/Lucas Jackson |
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#7
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#8
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Dunbar...
...give it a rest already....will ya? |
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