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![]() I know this has been knocked around enough recently, but Steve just made a statement on ATRAB that I would like clarified. He said a horse coming off a big "effort" would be LESS likely to "bounce" coming back quickly, in this case 2 weeks. I would think that the opposite would be true, the more time since the effort, the less likely the bounce.
Steve, or any other sheet's using, kool-aid drinking, bounce theorists, feel free to respond ![]() |
#2
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#3
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The evidence is there, too...at least most recently in the Derby-Preakness window...Funny Cide, Smarty Jones, Afleet Alex, all came back to top their Derby performaces with their Preakness wins. The window of time between the two races is so short, that you are more likely to use the Derby as a training tool for the Preakness to stay sharp or even improve. Then, maybe you can more likely see the regression later on (say the Belmont, which is five weeks from the Derby).
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"Boston fans hate the Yankees, we hate the Canadiens and we hate the Lakers. It's in our DNA. It just is." - Bill Simmons |
#4
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![]() And recognize that regressions come most often off off big, new high water mark performances. Neither Hard Spun or Street Sense are operating under that scenario. Curlin either for that matter... Hard Spun reached a slight new top and Street Sense got back to his BC Juvy top, though he had to leap to get bck to it... Curlin paired up on his string of fast performances...
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All ambitions are lawful except those which climb upward on the miseries or credulities of mankind. ~ Joseph Conrad A long habit of not thinking a thing wrong, gives it a superficial appearance of being right. ~ Thomas Paine Don't let anyone tell you that your dreams can't come true. They are only afraid that theirs won't and yours will. ~ Robert Evans |
#5
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![]() In order for Street Sense to get back to his 2yo top on the Thoro-Graph sheets---Any Given Saturday had to run a new top for finishing 8th, and Sam P. had to run a significant new top for running 9th....both beaten double digits.
I'm personally skeptical of the number--though I'm not sure they'd effect the patterns much either way. |
#6
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![]() 0-2-x
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#7
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![]() OK, now I am more confused than ever, which, in my opinion, is quite an accomplishment. Jerry Brown has a study on TG website listing all 3 year olds since 2000 who have run negative numbers, and what happened in the subsequent race, also broken down to when that race was 30 days or less later. 48 horses have run negative at age three, NONE of them went forward in their next race, only 9 paired up, the rest regressed. 31 horses ran back in less than 30 days after their negative number, NONE went forward, only 5 paired up, the rest regressed. That's 16% pairing, and 84% regressing.
So I will ask again (and I'm not trying to be argumentative), why is it that you believe that running back quickly negates the bounce? If this is the case, I've been looking at this incorrectly for the last two years, and better to fix this now, then 2 years from now (when I'm living in Steve's basement, because he feels "sorry" for me). By the way, I encourage everyone to check out the study, the full sheets for all these horses are available for perusing, very interesting. |
#8
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![]() Golfer,
Where are these studies...directions for the TG novice. By the way, whether it helps or adds to the confusion, Steve's comments on ATRAB broke it down to 2 weeks versus 3-4 weeks. May have only been his opinion, not sure. Thanks, Spyder
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Don't sweat the petty things and don't pet the sweaty things. |
#9
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#10
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![]() G,
JB did that study last year looking to see what effect Barbaro's big Derby effort (figure) might have going forward. The information is indeed contrary to basic tenents about big figure efforts, but it is confined in application to 3yo's running negative numbers in the first half of their sophomore campaigns. Interesting to note that besides Smarty Jones, alone pairing up efforts off a negative number on short rest, the other was poor, doomed Egg Head who got sick and died after his incredible Riva Ridge battle with Lost in the Fog. Remember that with the figs, JB & Co. are trying to anticipate the possible scenario that could result in a wagering opportunity. The decision they are trying to make is whether Street Sense's effort will indeed knock him back enough to be vulnerable. Given that there are already questions about his running style (rail, etc.) to try and find alternatives, the study suggests it is well worth trying to beat the Derby winner Saturday. As I've maintained since last Monday, the concern I have is the previous model involving Nafzger and this odyssey: Unbridled... a mildly-threatening second in the Preakness and then a never-involved 4th in the Belmont... The focus was on the Derby with him, and the focus was on the Derby with Street Sense. As Nafzger has said, "It's up to the horse." If we believe that he is special and are happy with the way he appears to be coming into the Preakness, then there is enough to feel confident about in supporting him at the windows as a key, believing that the wheels won't come off yet... Remember that most recent Derby winners, or big effort Derby runners, were able to sustain their form for the second effort before problems arose physically (Smarty Jones-WON; Afleet Alex-WON; FuPeg-2nd; Funny Cide-WON, then effectively knocked out for the rest of the year by the TC..).
__________________
All ambitions are lawful except those which climb upward on the miseries or credulities of mankind. ~ Joseph Conrad A long habit of not thinking a thing wrong, gives it a superficial appearance of being right. ~ Thomas Paine Don't let anyone tell you that your dreams can't come true. They are only afraid that theirs won't and yours will. ~ Robert Evans |
#11
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![]() golfer/byk,
The interesting part of that study is that I wonder how many of those 3 year olds that went negative, went negative as a two year old also, not many. I can't remember many negative 2 year old numbers, especially one as low as neg 2. What I think happens is he moves backward, by 2 points, setting up the 0-2=x theory, and that my friend really puts JB in a bad spot, because the all of the racing world will be talking about it, and if he 'X's like he is suppose to in that given spot, JB becomes even richer, if he doesn't 'X' and wins the TC, that theory loses crediability. I am guessing SS runs about a neg1/2 to zero range, which wins this race |
#12
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__________________
Alcohol, the cause and solution to all of life's problems. -Homer Simpson |
#13
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#16
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Younger the horse the more likely that he will bounce. I think you really have to look at the situation and who is doing the entering. If a horse has been running between the 3-5 range and then alll of a sudden jumps to a 0, and then comes back in 14-20 days into a stakes race where others were pointing, and progressing well and you predict them to run a 2, I would bet the horse that I am predicting to run the two, and not the horse that just ran a zero. The only two rules that I really live by when it comes to TG is the 3year old year to 4 year old year. If you think the horse has some talent, and is coming off the layoff, they improve immensely when they get that 60-90 day layoff in the winter from 3-4 years old. ESPECIALLY horses that looked rushed to the races or ones that have a stretch out pedigree's. Unbridled's horses were unbelievable when going from 3-4 and 4-5, they just got better with age. If a newly turned 4 year old matchs his top first out, he is an AUTOMATIC play for me next out unless it is a long layoff. AUTOMATIC. If they don't I then look at it more, but the 3 year old to 4 year old angle is EXTREMELY strong, and for good reason. |
#17
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![]() the chicken bones say 2o-xneg = at 2 a chicken nugget..at 3 a crispy chicken...of you add in the blood of rooster is all makes sence...
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#18
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Any good trainer will tell you that if a horse runs a big race, the horse will be more likely to repeat that effort if he is given plenty of time(at least 4 weeks). All the best trainers will tell you that. They've all learned it through experience. I learned it very quickly through handicapping. It was one of the first things that I noticed back in the mid-1980s when I first started going to the track. I noticed that really good horses would often times regress badly if they came back too soon. |
#19
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I think this is common sense. I can't believe that anyone could think otherwise. |
#20
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