Speed Figures and
Variants - Part 1
by Charles Carroll
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Track variants
are values that are assigned to a particular race or set of races on the
same track and the same day to indicate how much should be added or subtracted
from the actual final time (for speed) or incremental times (for pace)
for comparison with times achieved by other horses in other races.To
calculate the variant, the actual time of a race is compared to an expected
normal (par) time for a similar class of horses on the same track.
I
hate to talk about track variants.Variants
have achieved the status of religious mysteries in handicapping.Everybody
believes in them—hardly anyone understands them.I
hate to talk about them, because if you understand them, they’re tedious.But
if you don’t, they’re holy.To
get to variants, I’ll also need to talk about where the art of speed handicapping
is today, now that the Beyers are spoon-fed to the mob.
I
could probably do a week at Club Med if I had $10 for every time someone
has buttonholed me at a seminar or Expo, or called on the phone and opened
the conversation with, “So—how do you handle variants?”
They
seem to hate the answer I’ve developed to avoid long, unresolved debates:I
just shrug and say, “I don’t.”Usually
this does the trick and they shake their heads and walk off, although once
in a while it starts a one-sided harangue on why I should.If
I can get a word in, I’ll ask, “How do you make yours?”
When
the smoke and mirrors clear, the answer usually is they don’t—they
use the Beyer Figures, which they have some idea contains a built-in variant
or, if they are making their own speed figures, they use the Daily Racing
Form variant, or some other variant based upon someone else’s work.All
they know is they must use it.
Track
variants can be extremely valuable—if they are local and immediate.This
almost has to mean:if you make
them yourself as part of an alternative approach to speed or pace handicapping,
which you understand and master.
Since
public odds are overwhelmingly based upon the published Beyer Speed Figures,
one way to find an “edge” is to have a strong set of alternative speed
figures of your own.So that you
know I’m not hyping my own figures here, let me add that a good approach
to building strong, local, and immediate speed figures can be to simply
make
your own Beyers.
If
you work on a few tracks of your choice, you can make better Beyers than
“The Beyers”—if for no other reason than the simple fact that you must
do research and you must understand them.The
published Beyers are not bad speed figures, but the great value of Beyer’s
approach, when he first introduced it, was that it was do-it-yourself.
Andy
Beyer’s first book, “Picking Winners,” probably ranks among the best How-To
books of all time, regardless of topic.It
set a whole generation of handicappers to work with pencils and calculators,
before PCs existed, to make their own “Figs.”
Then,
like now, there was great incentive to make alternative figures—in this
case using the new “Beyer method.”Beyer
offered an alternative to the DRF speed figures and variants, which were
not held in much esteem.
You
don’t have to run exhaustive statistical tests to conclude that the published
Beyers appear to be far better than their predecessors—just observe
that the odds on speed have noticeably dropped.Unfortunately,
improved information is not the value bettor’s friend, and when you make
your own figures, the last thing you want are better published figures.
One
of the most naive quotes I’ve seen on this subject from an executive in
the racing industry was recounted in Thoroughbred Times, about a
year ago.Essentially, he wanted
to provide simpler and more widely understandable information to the public
so
that there would be more winners.
Hello?Aside
from whether replacing data columns with baby talk would actually accomplish
that goal or not—this is a pari-mutuel, zero-sum sport.To
have “more winners” everyone has to either win less (smaller amounts)—or
somebody has to lose more.(I seriously
doubt he was suggesting that the tracks add to the mutual pools.)However,
from the slightly cynical angle below, the evolving flood of superficial
information is starting to look a lot better.
Handicapping
the information available to the crowd can occasionally be almost as important
to finding an edge as handicapping the horses themselves.Have
you ever handicapped a race and exposed “Trixie’s Notion” as the false
favorite—and understood exactly who the true contenders were—and then picked
up the Form and found a banner headline, “Trixie’s Notion Takes
On The Pretenders At Belmont”?Don’t
you wish you could get a headline like that every time you nail a race?
As
mentioned in one of the earlier columns about odds, the crowd “piling on”
a false favorite is one of the surest ways to a legitimate overlay.A
few days ago (September 16th) TVG’s commentator spoke prophetic words before
a Grade II event:“You’ve got
to go with the only Grade I winner in the race.”I’ve
been meaning to send her a Thank You note.The
underlying prophecy was that the false favorite Grade I winner would be
pounded by the public, and the real winner would pay $45+.
Unfortunately,
you don’t get headlines or televised commentary on your money race every
day, but what you do get at some tracks, at least, are those wonderful
little “At A Glance,” or “Closer Look” comments, and other additions to
information to help “simplify” the crowd’s selections.
Usually,
these comments simply recount what is already there, in the more cryptic
speed lines—which presumably they feel the public can’t read.For
example:“Wasn’t seen after a layoff
in May, then returned to do poorly.”
No
kidding?Now, there’s some hot
information.The guys writing these
comments have to say something about a hundred or more horses a
day, with some relevance to the race at hand, so you can’t blame them for
being a little jaded.But when
one of these overworked fellows slips up and states an actual opinion—which
differs from yours—the last thing to do is be worried by it, or “fold.”Instead,
try looking for value.
As
a handicapper, you may be skimming thirty or forty races a day looking
for opportunities.Bad public information
can sometimes be a clue that interests me enough to work a race I might
not otherwise, and hang with it until the final moments to see how the
odds are going to be affected.
When
the bad public information involves speed or times, then the advantage
of making your own alternative speed (or pace) figures really steps out.Over
the next several weeks, we’ll cover several of these topics as we sneak
up on variants.
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