Joe Orr Road Rod wrote:
When we first go to the racetrack almost all of us are taught to try to "pick winners". There are guys at any racetrack and OTB that have been out there everyday for thirty or forty years who have no concept of value in wagering. Many don't even know what the takeout at their local track is. There are two old racetrack sayings I've heard time and time again. One is, "It's better to cash a short-priced winner than to throw down a longshot loser" and the other is, "You can beat a race but you can't be the races". And they are both wrong. It's fine to throw down a longshot loser if it was the right bet. And you can never be certain of beating any particular race, but if you manage your money the right way, you can beat the races. And you don't even have to be that great of a handicapper.
The first thing is to learn how to make an accurate line. If you have a reasonably accurate line on a race and you use that line to seek value rather than falling in love with a particular horse, you're going to do well in the long run.
This is a book I would recommend for any aspiring horse race gambler. Its focus is harness racing but the principles work for any type of parimutuel gambling:
https://www.amazon.com/HANDICAPPERS-MON ... B00GS8ANZKJoe bets two horses to win in the same race? Which is against all gamblers logic
Very insightful, thank you. Then how do these guys at the track last for thirty or forty years, if they're always choosing the losing strategy? They would need to have good bankrolls to start with, or get very lucky, to afford such a life-style.
Really, it only takes once or twice to get lucky on the long shot and you're rolling. Respect for how you bet the Kentucky Derby, JORR, because I remember you had a few long shots that you bet heavy. Had you scored, you would have been laughing all the way to the bank and more. You'd have a boat on Lake Michigan, if you don't already.
I am going to be smarter with my betting from now on, where I'll look at the probabilities versus record. Coming into the Jim Dandy, Laoban had no wins, but finished in the money three times out of seven races. That is worth something. Laoban could have run 20 races and won one coming in, and he his winning percentage would still have been better than the implied probability of less than 4%. In this case, he was only on his eighth race and won. His minimal win odds now should be 7 or 8 to 1. You can figure this stuff out just by doing your homework. The question is, what weighting do you give for place and show finishes? It would have to be something less than one.
For the record, I had Gov. Malibu and Destin in my trifecta box yesterday, along with Creator. The jockey for Creator should be fired for the race he ran with that kind of horse. He was asleep until the half-mile pole.