Okay, One More Pop Quiz

Started by TGJB, October 26, 2005, 01:19:59 PM

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TGJB

Very busy with the seminar, but there\'s always time for a little fun.

Last year, Lion Tamer ran second by 3 lengths to Mass Media in the Sport Page. In his next start, he won the GI Cigar Mile despite racing 4 wide. On Ragozin:

a) he ran 3 points faster winning the NYRA Mile,

b) ran the same figure in both races,

c) bounced 3 points from a losing effort in the Sport Page, but won the NYRA Mile.


Hint-- it\'s C. Ragozin gave him 3 points faster losing the Sport Page than winning the NYRA Mile.

For the record, we had him going forward about a point to win the NYRA mile.
TGJB

Michael D.

Jerry,
Do you give horses faster figures because they win?

TGJB

No, Michael. But if there is not some correlation between winning and running fast you are all wasting a lot of money, and I\'m wasting a lot of time.

Do you think he ran better in the Sport Page than the NYRA Mile?

Let\'s put it this way-- I suspect that if you saw all the Ragozin sheets for the Mile, you would see that they gave an awful lot of horses really bad numbers. Like in the Folklore race, and many others.
TGJB

Michael D.

Jerry,

Most Grade 1 winners run fast, and I am sure most Grade 1 winners perform better next out than the average horse, but doesn\'t everybody know that? Where\'s the edge? A hidden SLOW number on a Grade 1 winner must be as valuable as a hidden fast number. No?

No issue with the figs you brough up though. I\'m going with them (yours that is).

TGJB

Michael-- it\'s chaos around here, but briefly--

I\'m not saying that all GIs are faster than all GIIIs, or anything like that. I make part of my living finding the anamolies, like Super Frolic, Santana Strings, etc.-- I look for where performance and accomplishment have not gone hand in hand, and try and turn the former into the latter.

What I am talking about is something else. I am talking about figures not making sense-- for example, the Adirondack. I agree that a graded stake for fillies at Saratoga can go in an 18 in theory-- but not with those horses running in it. That\'s the point about the Jockey Club Gold Cup, and some of the other examples as well-- the only way to give them those figures is to ignore the past histories of the very horses whose performance you are measuring-- AND IT IS ONLY BY USING THOSE FIGURE HISTORIES THAT ANYONE IS ABLE TO MAKE FIGURES AT ALL. That\'s what projection figure making is all about.

The difference is that Ragozin combines a lot of apples with a lot of oranges, and uses averages to do it. He combined the races before they sealed the track at Saratoga with those afterward, and the early (and one turn) races on the Belmont card with the Gold Cup. It is a dogmatic, fundamentalist approach that ignores both the physical realities (sealing the track, etc) and THE SPECIFIC DATA ITSELF-- the histories of the horses in the race itself. It bases figures  on a series of assumptions, relationships, and conclusions that have no basis in science or logic, and lumps all kinds of things together to come up with an average. Averages are fine for large population studies, like coming up with the average winning number for a 25 claimer-- but they don\'t help you come up with the winning number for THIS 25 claimer.

If you saw all the Ragozin sheets for the horses that ran in those late dirt races on 7/27 at Saratoga-- or the Gold Cup, or the two Lion Tamer races-- you would see immediately what I am talking about.

Which is why you won\'t.
TGJB

Michael D.

Thanks Jerry..... I sent you an email - did you get it?

TGJB

Yes, thanks Michael. I\'ll be sitting in the dining room with Super Frolic\'s people, but if I run into someone I think deserves it I\'ll put them in touch with you.
TGJB

elkurzhal

These are fun.  How about a happy T-Graph customer pop quiz?

Superfly ran second in a MSW at the Spa by 3 1/2 (118lbs, 2w) and came back to win a listed stake at Delaware by 1 1/2 (115lbs 1w1w). On T-Graph Superfly ran:

A. 6 points (about 3 1/2 lengths adjusted for lbs & wide) better winning the listed stake by 1 1/2.
B. The same in both races
C. 6 points (about 3 1/2 lengths adjusted for lbs & wide) better in losing the MSW by 3 1/2.

JAKE

There is a small \"g\" next to Lion Tamer\'s 0\" Ragozin number for the Sport Page race. That denotes a heavy gusting wind. LT also had a slow start in that race as denoted by the \"s\" listed after his #. He was wide in both races so we will call that one even. He also carried three more pounds in the Sport Page which equates to a 1/2 point. With those three factors listed above, I do not have a problem with the Sport Page # being faster by 2 and 3/4 points.

flushedstraight

apples and oranges

How about one more little bit of info before we can answer this question;

how much did the Sheikh pay for the winner of that MSW (who made no other starts)?


TGJB

Jake-- the gusting wind was there for all the horses in the race, not just Lion Tamer. And the slow start and wide trip are both taken into account in the number.

Elk-- that maiden LOSS (where he beat the rest of them by 11 lengths-- 9 points),  to a horse that was then sold for $2 million (despite having a sprinter\'s pedigree), combined with the weakness of the Del 5 horse stake field, caused the bettors to send Superfly off at 50 cents to the dollar, as a maiden. Think maybe he laid over the field?

Again-- the point is not just what Superfly and LT ran. It\'s what it means the OTHER horses in those races ran, as well. If you saw all the Ragozin sheets for those races you would see what I am talking about instantly.
TGJB

JAKE

I know the gusting wind was for all horses in the Sport Page, but I was replying to your pop quiz - see quiz below:

Last year, Lion Tamer ran second by 3 lengths to Mass Media in the Sport Page. In his next start, he won the GI Cigar Mile despite racing 4 wide. On Ragozin:

a) he ran 3 points faster winning the NYRA Mile,

b) ran the same figure in both races,

c) bounced 3 points from a losing effort in the Sport Page, but won the NYRA Mile.


Hint-- it\'s C. Ragozin gave him 3 points faster losing the Sport Page than winning the NYRA Mile.

For the record, we had him going forward about a point to win the NYRA mile.

There are instances where a horse can lose a race and run a 0\" and then win one and have a worse number next out (in LT\'s instance a 3+). The wind and slow start made LT\'s Sport Page effort rate better on Rags than the NYRA mile effort.
You can\'t just think he ran faster just because he won the race.

Am I missing something??

TGJB

Yes, you are missing something. And no, I do not think he ran faster just because he won.

The figures of ALL the horses in the Cigar were affected by the gusting wind.
If you see the Ragozin sheets for ALL the horses in the race, you will see that it looks better if you take off a few points. They created those figures by tying the race to the other races on the day-- it\'s the only way you could give them (meaning all of them, not just the winner) figures that slow.

My guess is that something caused that race to (in effect) be run at a different variant. It could have been something with the wind itself, it could have been the wind drying out the track (see \"Changing Track Speeds\" in the archives section of this site), it could have been something else. But there is no basis to give THOSE horses-- the ones that ran in that race-- that slow a figure based on their OWN figure histories. You can only do it if you make a variant for other races, and tie it to that.

Which is particularly crazy on gusty days, where wind picking up or slacking off during the running of a race can make a diference of a couple of points.
TGJB

elkurzhal

TGJB I understand the Spa race was getting a big number and I\'m sure the Delaware stake was weak.  I guess that was my point.  It\'s not always as simple as the pop quizzes make it out to be.  The last one more so then the first couple.  For the record I\'m quite happy with the product and have never used the other guy.  Just playing a little devils advocate.

Having seen what you have since the MSW would you be happy to have paid 2M Discreet Cat?

TGJB

Elk-- I wouldn\'t have paid it for Discreet Cat. I was a whole lot more interested in Superfly, and I had someone talk to them, but they figured out it was a big race, especially when the winner sold for so much with no pedigree. We\'ll see how both do next year.

I\'m not saying winning automatically gets you a better number. If you think I am, you should catch up on about 200 posts of mine on this board explaining what I do. A good start would be the reply I gave Michael last night about this on this string.
TGJB