Handicapping-Class
Handicapping Class
The word class, used by handicapper is no abstraction. The
entire structure of thoroughbred racing is based on the
differences in class between animals.
In stakes races, for instance, apart from the penalties for
prior wins, all entrants carry the same weight.
In handicaps' anyone who's willing to pay the required fees and
enters a horse can have the tracks handicapper assigns the
weights for the race so as to ensure a real contest.
In allowance races the weights are assigned directly by the
conditions of the race itself, not by the tracks
handicapper.
The animal with the best prior record in the recent races will
carry the most weight with graduation's down to the lightest
weight to be carried by the horses of less impressive
records.
Just as differences in class are part of the structure of
racing, so is the ability to recognize differences between
individual horses in point of basic class.
This is an absolutely essential part of the equipment of every
handicapper who attempts to pick winners.
Better Horses Better Results
It is a very simple matter of avoiding extremely cheap
horses, the $5,000 claimers that clutter up racecourses to the
boredom of handicappers everywhere should usually be
avoided.
Many of
these cheap horses are unsound, some are old and almost as
unreliable as the cripples, others are simply no good,
never could race well and never will race well.
And yet strangely enough these aged horses seemed to have a
fatal attraction for players.
Even handicappers with the most basic knowledge of racing
cannot fail to recognize that them for what they are in to
avoid them like a plague.
Horses of class run truer to form. With the on line and off
track wagering facilities available these days there's no
reason not to concentrate on the quality racing.
My handicapping is much more consistent when I play the major
race tracks.
Belmont and Aqueduct are consistent favorites of mine. Santa
Anita and Hollywood Park are also profitable to handicap.
If you concentrate on the better horses there consistency, in
easily determined class will give you a definite advantage.
Horse racing is a game of slight variances.
Ever Lose A Sure Thing?
Even a mortal lock can have the jockey fall off, or stumble
leaving the gate and get beaten by a lesser animal.
In the last analysis, all practitioners of the gentle art of
handicapping fall within one or the other of two groups.
The first group is made up of those who attempted analysis in
terms of the comparative class and consistency of the
individual entrants in each field.
The second group is made up of those who rely primarily upon a
process of speed analysis in attempting to get their
winners.
Between these two schools of handicapping there has been much
spirited debate.
Class is a valuable instrument to any handicapper. How it is
best evaluated and measured in any single horse is the dilemma
that confronts the serious horse player.
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