HALF THE RACE IS OUT OF YOUR CONTROL
(part 2)
Nobody would argue that there are many things out of our control when handicapping
a race.
And while there might be more uncontrollable factors at the bottom claiming
levels of horseydom than with Graded runners, doubt or uncertainty is present
in every race.
As promised in Part 1 of this series, we’ll look as some of the more common
things that are out of our control as well as a few I’m sure you’ve never considered.
1----THE STARTING GATE
I don’t know about you, but I wish I had a dollar for every race that I lost
at the starting gate.
Every handicapper alive knows that terrible gut-wrenching feeling that swallows
his entire being the moment he realizes that his horse broke poorly and is 5
lengths behind the pack before the race is 6 lengths old.
It gives me an icy chill and “goose bumps” just to write about it----almost
as if “it” just came into this room and will somehow cling to me this afternoon
causing one of my bets to miss the break.
Why is there so much trouble with the starting gate?
Consider this.
A “perfect break” would be one in which every horse was 100% ready to start
his race.
In order for that to happen, all horse’s hooves would have to be motionless.
Every horse’s assistant starter would have to be holding his horse’s head perfectly
straight and perfectly still. And most importantly of all, the race starter
would have recognize this “perfect moment” in time and simultaneously hit his
starting button that opens the gates.
That’s a very tall order and one that is very rarely accomplished successfully.
Have you ever heard the term “stand time”?
This is the time it takes to actually get a race off. It begins with the loading
of the first horse and ends with the opening of the starting gate. Obviously,
the last horse loaded “stands” for very little time before the break, whereas
the first horse loaded feels as if he’s been in there forever and can’t wait
to get out of there.
Every horse is quite different in his ability to remain calm, cool and collected
when placed in the confines of a starting stall. He has his own “stand time”
beyond which he begins to get very fidgety.
As a rule of thumb, the longer a horse “stands” in a starting gate, the greater
his likelihood of his breaking poorly.
So what’s out of our control at the starting gate?
Everything!
2----THE TRIP
We don’t ride our bets.
We have no guarantees that today’s “trip” will be clean and without trouble.
In fact, when you think about it, very few trips other than front-running efforts
are clean and trouble free. Horses get blocked, steadied, checked, bumped, forced
wide, etc. in every race and often thru no fault of their own.
Races are won and lost by a nose, so any hesitation by any horse in any race
for any reason could cost him a visit to the winner’s circle.
Unquestionably, we have no control over our wager’s “trip”.
3----HANDICAPPERS DON’T TRAIN THEIR WAGERS
Of course we don’t train our wagers. Nor are we around the horse as long as
a trainer to notice little things that aren’t quite right. Perhaps he didn’t
eat this morning. Or maybe he’s been abnormally restless for the past 24 hours
and failed to get his proper sleep. I could go on and on with “maybes”, but
the point is that nobody is closer to the horse than his trainer and his groom.
Unknown factors such as these are beyond the control of most handicappers with
only a single exception.
Any competent “physicality handicapper” perusing the paddock on any given afternoon
or any sharp-eyed satellite player can usually determine if a horse isn’t feeling
up to snuff and ready to run to his best.
Knowing whether or not he emptied his feed bucket this morning or if he had
a sleepless night will be evident from his paddock deportment.
Horses don’t lie---they don’t know how! If they’re feeling only poorly or only
so-so on any afternoon, they won’t hide it from you. They will have zero energy
and no “attitude”. Their heads will be low and bobbing. Nothing about them will
remotely suggest race “readiness”.
Conversely, if they are ready to kick ass, it too will be quite evident. Even
novices of “physicality handicapping” can plainly see when a horse is quite
full of himself and ready to run.
(Continued in Part 3 of HALF THE RACE IS OUT OF YOUR CONTROL)
© Joe Takach 2004 |