Mr Brown:
I\'m a member of the Derby List and subscribers to this forum, who have an interest in the rampant drug problem (so called) in today\'s racing world, have been directed over to this site by Ben Bloomberg so that we could become better informed by you. The issues of \"cheating\" and the use \"illegal drugs\" (even more specifically) have been very hot topics for an awfully long time on the DL, with the most vociferous adherents being sheeters. Yet, when these adamant \"crusaders for truth, justice and reform\" were asked on the DL to provide current and specific examples or demonstrations of instances wherein they believed illegal drugs performed a major role in the outcome of some race, we members of the DL became very hard-pressed to find one public response. In fact, oddly enough only one sheeter volunteered to offer anything that he thought resembled evidence (but was cold, hard \"proof\" to his mind) -- yet, he would only do so in the dark, secret underground, as it were, of private emails. He refused to discuss publicly any specifics, names, etc. It appears that if DL members wanted that kind of unambiguous information stated openly that we had to come to either this site or Mr. Ragozin\'s. (Of course this sheeter\'s refusal to deliver the goods publicly contributed nothing to my conversion from Skepticism to Believism . Quite the contrary!). Anyhow sir, this is the reason I am here.
As I\'m sure you have surmised by now, I\'m not a sheeter. But my handicapping years probably outnumber the hairs on my head, sadly. What I would request of you, Mr. Brown, is that you provide me with three to four of what you personally think are the best current examples of illegal drug-induced race outcomes. These two vocal sheeters on the DL believe with all their mind, heart and soul that the racing industry is steeped in wholesale illegal drug usage, If this is the case, I would think that you\'d be able to provide such examples with barely any effort. This way I would be able to download current data files for each card of races and process those files through my software to study the entire field, the suspects and the outcomes through the prism of my own methodology.
If you\'d be willing to do this, I\'d ask that you simply post the race details (when, where, race number, horse(s)) on this thread with brief commentary as to why you personally believed that the race\'s outcome was marred -- why it wasn\'t as you thought it should have been. Of course, if you so desire, I\'d be willing to post my own brief commentary on this thread subsequent to my own personal race analysis.
Of course, sir, chances are pretty good that this little exercise will not \"convert\" me -- or you to my way of thinking, for that matter. In which case, we\'d have to agree to disagree, hopefully as civil, polite gentlemen. It\'s likely that you will think that I have a huge blind spot or two in my methodology, and I might think you\'re seeing witches behind every tree, rock and corner. But be that as it may, I think it would provide both of us and interested lurkers alike with viable, alternative explanations through our interpratation of the output of our respective handicapping approaches.
Regards,
Boxcar
Boxie
As a member of both the DL and TG board since 96. It is fact there are several big move up trainers, started about 2000-2001, do a search in these here archives or maybe some member can direct you to these specific comments. You may not get specific races, however, there are specific patterns. For example, the 8yr off a claim that runs for the \"new\" trainer that gets his \"new\" charge to improve by 7-10 lengths over any previous run in the past 6 yrs.
Rich
RICH Wrote:
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> Boxie
>
> As a member of both the DL and TG board since 96.
> It is fact there are several big move up trainers,
> started about 2000-2001, do a search in these here
> archives or maybe some member can direct you to
> these specific comments. You may not get specific
> races, however, there are specific patterns. For
> example, the 8yr off a claim that runs for the
> \"new\" trainer that gets his \"new\" charge to
> improve by 7-10 lengths over any previous run in
> the past 6 yrs.
>
> Rich
Thanks, Rick, for your reply. A couple of things. First as you know, the the most vocal Raggie on the DL has claimed that this has been going on for at least 20 years. Now, you opine that it\'s been going a lot less than this.
Secondly, I really would like to see current examples because as stated to Mr. Brown, I would like the opportunity to study the race fields, suspected druggies and race outcomes through the data output of my program.
As you know, Rich, this same Raggie recently opined openly on the DL that Asmussen\'s recent 6 winners at FGX was \"shameful\". I didn\'t see it that way after I analyzed those 7 races through my software\'s output (one race his horse got beat by a nose, you might recall). Six of those low priced winners figured very well on paper.
This same fellow yesterday sent an example in email to me of what he thought was a druggie who ran recently at LRL. Again, after I examined that race, the horse\'s chart, my program\'s report, etc. I didn\'t see anything out of the ordinary. This, too, was another horse who was sent off as the favorite, sported very competitive figs, etc. and he won. In other words, on paper he figured to be there at the end.
Rich, just how prevalent is this illegal drug problem, in your opinion? Ben Bloomberg on the DL has essentially said he could write several books on trainers he doesn\'t like to handicap. In another post of his, he listed several So Cal trainers that he also didn\'t like to handicap, but then in the next breath denied that any of them were on his \"suspicious activities\" list, after I pressed him some on the issue. He just didn\'t like to handicap more than a few trainers for some reason on which he chose to not elaborate. So evidently, some sheeters see this problem as being very widespread.
Boxcar
Box
There is a redboard room, you can see for free the next day. If you pull up some races with horses trained by trainers in question, you may see some for yourself. Maybe some lakes, romans, pletchers, dutrows. assmuusens, etc. I don\'t pretend to know how prevalent the drug issue is, howvever, I pass right over races many times when I see a bunch of some of these trainers in the same race. the numbers appear far to erratic for me.
Good Luck
Boxcar-- When you put the word \"illegal\" into your question, it is no surprise that people won\'t give you examples, since they don\'t want to be sued. Unless someone has factual knowledge of exactly what was done to move the horse up, all we can say is that the horse was in fact moved up.
So let\'s put this another way. I suggest you go to the Red Board Room for a few days, and pull down the sheets for all Scott Lake starters at Philly and Maryland. Look at the figures they were running BEFORE he got them, and those they have run since.
You are making the mistake of handicapping these horses in the context of one race they run in. That\'s not the question-- it\'s about whether they improve overall after going to a \"move-up\" barn. When we see the same trainers getting sudden, extreme, and long lasting improvement with LOTS of horses, we draw conclusions. The way to measure that improvement is with figures comparing them before and after, not by handicapping.
I\'m so glad that some of you love dealing with numbers and stats! I just want the information, the actual mathematics of it all makes me dizzy- but it\'s interesting and good to know.It\'s like appreciating the GE scientists who invented the television while having only a dim awareness of how it actually works. Sometimes that\'s how I feel reading the Forum. The Guru has spoken wise words. Circumstantial evidence rarely washes in a court of law.
>You are making the mistake of handicapping these horses in the context of one race they run in. That\'s not the question-- it\'s about whether they improve overall after going to a \"move-up\" barn. When we see the same trainers getting sudden, extreme, and long lasting improvement with LOTS of horses, we draw conclusions. The way to measure that improvement is with figures comparing them before and after, not by handicapping.<
While I agree with you totally in principle, handicappers that use speed figures exclusively and handicappers that are more comprehensive often disagree wildly about how well horses ran on any given day or even over a series of races.
Heck, even handicappers that just use figures often disagree wildly depending on whose figures they are using. That goes double when the horse in question changed circuits off a claim/private purchase etc... Figure issues occur more frequently when comparing circuits. Plus \"legal\" medication rules vary from circuit to circuit.
IMHO, you need a very substantial amount of evidence to conclude anything if you use just figures and you need to be an expert comprehensive handicapper to conclude just about anything off a limited sample.
By the way, your McCain idea is looking a lot better. You can actually lock in a profit by booking a bet on him now if you took him at 12-1.
TGJB Wrote:
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> Boxcar-- When you put the word \"illegal\" into your
> question, it is no surprise that people won\'t give
> you examples, since they don\'t want to be sued.
> Unless someone has factual knowledge of exactly
> what was done to move the horse up, all we can say
> is that the horse was in fact moved up.
>
> So let\'s put this another way. I suggest you go to
> the Red Board Room for a few days, and pull down
> the sheets for all Scott Lake starters at Philly
> and Maryland. Look at the figures they were
> running BEFORE he got them, and those they have
> run since.
>
> You are making the mistake of handicapping these
> horses in the context of one race they run in.
> That\'s not the question-- it\'s about whether they
> improve overall after going to a \"move-up\" barn.
> When we see the same trainers getting sudden,
> extreme, and long lasting improvement with LOTS of
> horses, we draw conclusions. The way to measure
> that improvement is with figures comparing them
> before and after, not by handicapping.
Hah! I was told as much by someone in email. So, then...the bottom line is that this suspicious \"move up\" pattern is essentially a phenomenon that would be detected only by sheeters, right? Someone like myself, who uses a more comprehensive handicapping approach and one that isn\'t speed figures-centric, would not be nearly as likely to see such patterns, correct?
Boxcar
Boxcar-- Someone who doesn\'t use speed figures would not be as likely to see those or any other patterns.
However-- someone with a strong statistical background could figure out a way to do something pretty good. Rick Arthur et al did in the TCO2 study posted here a few weeks ago, linking levels of TCO2 (the test used for \"milkshakes\") with the results for races. The key in either case is not to use a small statistical base (your own analysis of a small number of races),but the results of a large sampling. It\'s much easier with speed figures, and Arthur (the California state vet) has spoken to me about using our figures for tracking cheaters.
TGJB Wrote:
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> Boxcar-- When you put the word \"illegal\" into your
> question, it is no surprise that people won\'t give
> you examples, since they don\'t want to be sued.
> Unless someone has factual knowledge of exactly
> what was done to move the horse up, all we can say
> is that the horse was in fact moved up.
True enough. By the same token, the same sheeters who want to hide from possible lawsuits aren\'t at all shy about about pontificating about how crooked the game is, how overrun with cheaters it has become, and how badly, generally, the racing industry\'s state affairs has deteriorated over the last two decades or so. Moreover, what value would there be be in making inquiries about the use of legal drugs!? Legal is legal. If a racing jurisdiction has seen fit to legalize this drug, that drug or some other drug, then so be it. As a bettor I may not like it, but why concern myself over something over which I have no control? Or if it is of large concern to me, I could always opt out of the game. No one is holding a gun to my head to play.
>
> So let\'s put this another way. I suggest you go to
> the Red Board Room for a few days, and pull down
> the sheets for all Scott Lake starters at Philly
> and Maryland. Look at the figures they were
> running BEFORE he got them, and those they have
> run since.
First off, you\'re assuming I know how to read the sheets. I do not. This is precisely why I came here to get the expert opinion of the Jerry Browns of this world.
And secondly, I don\'t have the time to make a project out of this -- primarily because I\'m still working on my own software project. I figured, I might be able to get a few good recent examples, relatively brief interpretations of the numbers and go from there.
>
> You are making the mistake of handicapping these
> horses in the context of one race they run in.
> That\'s not the question-- it\'s about whether they
> improve overall after going to a \"move-up\" barn.
> When we see the same trainers getting sudden,
> extreme, and long lasting improvement with LOTS of
> horses, we draw conclusions. The way to measure
> that improvement is with figures comparing them
> before and after, not by handicapping.
You are the second one who has told me this. And this means that I can\'t use my qualitative-oriented methodology to make any meaningful judgements of any sheeter\'s interpretations. In fact, this \"move-up\" phenomenon (I probably would be told) is exactly why so many of these \"over-achieving\" equine athletes figure so well in my program\'s reports. And this brings me to my final point.
As stated recently on the Derby List, I have long been a skeptic as to the extent of illegal drug usage mainly because the long term statistics, such as percentage of winning faves, second choice horses, and winners in other odds ranges have remained amazingly consistent for the last 40 years or so. Moreover, my core \"high percentage\" plays perform just as consistently. My conclusion, therefore is this: Regardless of the degree of illegal drug usage in the industry, race outcomes are remarkably formful, generally speaking. Even if horses are routinely administered their \"cocktails\", \"milkshakes\", etc. -- even if illegal drugging is occurring on a grand scale -- then I have to think that the drug effects are largely negated because \"they\'re all\" running on them! One of the better horses (i.e. legitimate contenders) on paper will likely win, anyway. And I state this as a player who has never gone beyond the 7th race back when evaluating current form -- and most of the time never has to go back beyond the 4th back. Me approach focuses intently on current form and everything a trainer has been doing recently with his horse in bringing him up to today\'s race.
In closing, I want to thank all you sheeters for your indulgence -- for allowing me to invade your space . And a special note of thanks to all of you who have responded to my questions. You made my trip over here worthwhile. I have learned something. I\'m only sorry I didn\'t get to meet the Big Kahuna. But maybe in the next life...
Regards,
Boxcar
boxcar,
One of the reasons that \"contenders\" and \"favorites\" continue to do well despite whatever illegal drugging is occurring is that comprehensive handicappers build these things into their thinking.
They know which trainers are likely to move a horse up off a claim.
They know which trainers get their horses to repeat their top efforts and hold their good form a much higher percentage of the time than for the average horse.
They can make an educated guess as to what a sharp dropdown in class might mean.
They study the details of a trainer\'s past successes and failures. This all gets built into the odds to some extent.
Plus, once a horse switches barns, whatever form he\'s going to establish for the new trainer (assuming he is illegally drugged) will be established fairly quickly and be apparent in the PPs. A handicapper that\'s not even thinking about drugs can see the superior race and doesn\'t really need to know how it was accomplished, just whether it is good enough to beat today\'s field.
The real problem with proving these things from PPs or speed figures alone is that some trainers are legitimately superior to others. So are some vets, assistents, facilities etc.... So it gets tricky to seperate legitimate skill from illegal activities.
On top of that, there are usually several legitimately reasonable interpretations of race results/past performances. Even handicappers looking at the same information will come to different conclusions about how well a horse has been running over a SERIES of races. For example, one person might be screaming that the horse had to have been drugged because he ran so much faster than in the past for his new trainer and another will point to an aspect of his recent trips that made the performance logical.
Sometimes you see enough suspicious things to be fairly certain that a trainer is probably cheating. But as far as I am concerned, many people scream \"cheating\" way too soon because they have less complete information/understanding or are pissed off that they lost a bet.
fkach
\"The real problem with proving these things from PPs or speed figures alone is that some trainers are legitimately superior to others. So are some vets, assistents, facilities etc.... So it gets tricky to seperate legitimate skill from illegal activities.\"
....thats mainly lore.There is only so much one can legally do with a horse and the idea than one competent guy/gal is FAR superior to another competent guy/gal is nonsense.Occasionally, we see a trainer take a horse from another trainer and improve him, sans illegal stuff, but the idea that Shug, or Mott is really FAR better than say a Pat Kelly is all in the mind. Drugs aside, the guys with many of the fastest, soundest horses are going to win races regardless of their name.It happens that success makes the new rich owners gravitate to say a Pletcher who is probably no better a horseman than 50 guys/gals training now.
Mike
>There is only so much one can legally do with a horse and the idea than one competent guy/gal is FAR superior to another competent guy/gal is nonsense.Occasionally, we see a trainer take a horse from another trainer and improve him, sans illegal stuff, but the idea that Shug, or Mott is really FAR better than say a Pat Kelly is all in the mind.<
If you look at most of the move up trainers closely, they do better in terms of moving horses up when they take a horse from a low percentage trainer than from another high percentage trainer.
Of course, win percentage is not a complete measurement of trainer skill. Determining that would require a more subjective comprehensive analysis. But you get the gist. Even though there may be many competent trainers out there, there are a lot of bad ones also. If you ignore that, you\'ll have to blame everything on drugs.
Fkach,
You are overlooking the main point, i.e. there are lots of slow rats racing out there making lots of trainers look bad.As I said, illegal stuff aside, there just isn\'t that much difference between the best and worst trainer with equal stock.
Mike
Miff,
>You are overlooking the main point, i.e. there are lots of slow rats racing out there making lots of trainers look bad<
I realize some trainers are stuck with slow horses, but even slow horses can win if you spot them correctly (class, distance, surface etc..), recognize their problems quickly, run them when they are fit, and help them keep their form.
If you are always running overmatched horses at the wrong distance and on the wrong surface you aren\'t going to win many races no matter how good they are.
It can be demonstrated quite clearly that some trainers get their horses to hold their good form (no matter what that level is) for longer, which in turn gives them a chance to win more often. If they also spot their horses appropriately, that only adds to their success. The best trainers do both and that\'s why they often turn these horses around when they take them from very low percentage guys (but DON\'T do as well when they take them from other top notch trainers).
IMO, it\'s just a matter of recognizing the trainer\'s skill and seperating it from the impact of his stock.
fkach,
Was discussing pure horsemanship not managing horses, two very different/separate issues.Smaller outfits always seem to race over their head to avoid losing the horse, big outfits drop with impunity.
mike
Any one can train horses but not all trainers are horsemen. Good trainers take horses off bad trainers because they can fix what a bad trainer can not. They do not have to use illegal drugs to get a horse to run to his ability.
Everybody talks about trainers cheating using drugs or what ever they can get to make a horse run faster. How about trainers & jockeys that stiff horses in races. They still do that.
Cheating has been going on in all horse racing for ever. I would hope that someday we could get clean racing but i would not hold my breath. We bet on the races anyway because we still have a fighting chance to pick winners using the sheets. If all races were run clean we would all be rich because all the numbers on the horse would be true to that horse natural ability.
To: TGJB (a/k/a Jerry Brown)
I was just informed on the DL that I had in fact met the \"big kahuna\". How embarrassing! Please forgive my dullness, sir. If my punishment is going to be forty lashes, I beg that you make them with wet noodles; for I bruise all too easily. .
Regards,
Boxcar