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#1
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![]() BTW, please take a look at the last race of sweet ferver and Any Limit. THEY RAN EQUAL TIMES! With very similar fractions and track variance. Sweet Ferver was given a 90 BSF and Any Limit was given a 105. How can this be explained? Sweet Ferver proved the beyers wrong yesterday IMO. Too bad I got wrapped up in Stormy Kiss. LOL. Thanks for your insight.
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#2
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Well, Sweet Fervor ran on January 28th and Any Limit ran on February 17th so I can't compare the actual final times at all. As far as what happened yesterday, I guess Sweet Fervor improved off her first race, and probably appreciated the extra half a furlong, and Any Limit probably regressed a tad and didn't appreciate the added ground. Specifically on the Any Limit fig, it always seemed high to me, and specifically I had a problem with the third finisher running a career high especially with the reasonable amount of trouble she encountered on the turn. There are often problems with figs where the fields are significantly gapped out, as they were in the Hurricane Bertie, with the top two finishers finishing over eight lengths ahead of the third placed horse. I don't make figs, and don't believe it's too fair to criticize those that do, but I talked about this number with Beyer before the race, and also about the problems making numbers in fields that gap. It feels like intellectually the numbers in these races need to be compressed but the problem with that is it does not offer a true indication of every horse's final time. Thus, I don't have an answer. To be honest, and I don't mean this to point a finger at you, but I think it is every horseplayer's responsibility to make their own determination about any number they use. If you use them blindly, without taking other factors into account, in my opinion you are asking for trouble. I use them as a very vague guide, and always look at outlying high or low figures carefully, like Any Limit's surprising 105, and attempt to make my own determination about whether or not they seem aberrational and why. Considering Any Limit dueled hard for the lead that day, and had never run that kind of number, I did not particularly believe in its predictive powers. I hardly think that was a surprising conclusion. The bottom line? Do ALL the required work. |
#3
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![]() I don't know waht the BSF came back from yesterday, but they were 15 points apart after running the same 7f on the same track in the same time. SW was 8-1 and ANY Limit was 9-5. The public bets the figs.
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#4
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![]() I know that only a few people pay any attention to Mountaineer but it seems like the beyers there are always inflated. I have seen a lot of mediocre, mid 60 Beyer horses ship there and suddenly run 80's or 90's. When they ship out of there they usually go back to the 60's. I knoew that this is not scientific and I have not bothered to do any real research but I always cast a bit of doubt on the numbers from there.
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#5
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![]() DaHoss, You have to look @the pp's to really see what I am saying. I know I stated an opinion but I was really asking Andy for his.
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#6
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#7
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I atrribute that to a probably loose medication policy at Mountaineer....but I agree with you that numbers there don't seem to be reproduced at other tracks. Delaware is the same thing.....as is Laurel when they ship to NY. |
#8
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#9
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I suppose that's possible, and I will certainly try and get you an answer, but you know me, I always think it's medication related. I'll check tomorrow. |