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#1
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Rule of Thumb for wagering at Keeneland
...especially opening weekend before you can get a feel for how the new configuration and Polytrack will play and what horses have the advantages:
DO NOT TAKE LESS THAN 5-1 ON ANY HORSE ALL WEEKEND, AND MAKE MOST OF YOUR PLAYS OVER 10-1... I would bet that this betting pattern proves to be successful if you can find attributes in middle-priced horses or longshots... EVERY horse is vulnerable on Polytrack....Circular Quay, Happy Ticket, you name the horse....its not worth the short price on these horses just because they may be better on DIRT... Good luck to everyone this weekend and I hope this theory makes you a lot of money - or at least saves you some from betting too many short-priced favorites |
#2
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I'd go so far as to say its unplayable.
The 5 stakes races at Turfway park this past weekend contained qulaity animals with form, yet all 5 were won by longshots with little or next to little rational chance. I didn't bet a quarter on that card, thank God. I simply cannot play this surface. It has no form, and many horses just refuse to run on it. Horses may like or dislike certain dirt surfaces more than others, but they don't jst refuse to try on them. Stick to the grass, and to Belmont Park and Santa Anita would be an even better idea. |
#3
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I still can't see how With a City won the Lane's End earlier this year....he couldn't have won on the dirt if they'd have let him cut through the infield.... This surface WILL change racing and in more negative ways than positive IMO....start taking notes |
#4
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Great advice, Joel. Where do I sign up for your handicapping newsletter?
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#5
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I guess the bottom line for me is I'm all for ANYTHING to make it safer on the horses, that's all I really care about in the end. |
#6
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#7
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My rule of thumb for Kee; avoid any race not run on (real) grass.
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#8
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Jockey - Leparoux
Trainer - Biancone Are the obvious favorites going into this meet. But watch for Amoss, Reinstadler, and Wismer to sneak a few prices in. Especially if the east coast big dogs have a few contenders in the races with them. |
#9
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I sincerely believe that pedigree is much more important but it is tricky to really figure out...... |
#10
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I'm actually hoping the public overbets them and have a good feeling that will be the case. Then comes the fun part of finding who'll beat them with very limited data. |
#11
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I think it's more about if they ran over poly before than anything. Even horses you ran crap dead last on poly might have an advantage over some nice horse who ran good at the Spa on dirt. The more the meet goes the more you will see the prices drop just due to the fact that people will start realizing it's not about the class of the horse but rather has he/she ran the surface much like a dirt to turf horse
Also start looking over there workouts over the poly. Some horses that ran crap are turning in nice training on the poly |
#12
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#13
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They might train over it, but training on a surface and running in a race on it are two different stories.
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