Money Management Fundementals
We are keenly aware that what one player considers a good winning percentage may
not appear very good to another player. Likewise, what one bettor considers good odds may
be regarded by another bettor as something less than satisfactory.
In proposing the use of two or more spot play methods for making selections, we have
made an effort to strike a middle ground between winning percentages and prices.
Some players prefer a high winning percentage; others strongly favor high prices. Of
one thing we may be sure: it is next to impossible to maintain a high percentage of
winners at what are generally considered high prices.
Personally, we prefer a compromise. That is, we favor a reasonably good winning
percentage with profits that range from moderate to substantial.
Perhaps we should define more clearly what we mean by "moderate" and
"substantial" as these terms apply to mutuel prices. In our opinion, a price of
3-1 is an acceptable or moderate price.
We know that some handicappers consider anything lower than 10-1 as less than
satisfactory. However, in this business we can't have our cake and eat it too. Therefore,
the most logical procedure is to try for a reasonably good winning percentage and good
average prices.
Professional horseplayers usually have a set profit goal for the day, and when they
attain that goal, they call it a day and leave the track. The recreational player is
advised to adopt the same method of play. A logical procedure is to set a daily profit
goal of an amount commensurate with the amount of operating capital available to the
individual and then to stop play when the first cashing wager attains the desired daily
margin of profit.
It is foolish for a person with, say, $100 to shoot for a daily profit of $50. If $100
is all that is available for wagering, then his daily profit objective should be no more
than $15 a day. That is because he or she simply does not have sufficient operating
capital at their disposal to safely enable them to shoot for a higher daily profit. In
fact, they might be wise to select an even more moderate daily profit objective if $100 is
all they have available for wagering purposes.
If in this day of inflated costs, $15 dollars profit a day seems too low, then the
individual should wait until more operating capital is available which will enable him to
safely attempt a greater amount of daily profit.
How should he manage his playing capital in order to sustain the greatest possible
margin of safety and at the same time attain his profit objective? In our opinion, close
attention should be paid to the relationship between bankroll size, a contender's odds and
the size of the target profit objective.
For example, suppose your first selection for the day is going off at 3-1. If your
daily profit objective is $30 a day, you can arrive at the correct amount to wager at odds
of 3-1 in order to attain a net profit of $30 by dividing 30 by three. The answer is 10
and $10 is the logical amount to wager.
Or suppose your selection is held at 5-1. Since your profit goal is $30, you arrive at
the correct amount to wager by dividing 30 by five. The answer is six and the wager is,
therefore, $6.
What does one do if the first selection loses? The amount wagered on the loser becomes
part of the original profit goal. So if the daily profit objective was $30 and the lost
wager was $6, the profit goal becomes $36, the original $30 profit goal plus the six
dollars lost on the previous selection. The amount of the next wager hinges upon the odds
at which your selection is held.
If the second selection was held at 3-1, you arrive at the correct amount to wager by
dividing 36 by three and the wager is $12. On the other hand if this second selection was
held at, say, 6-1 then the wager would be only $6.
Many professionals back their selections on the 1-3 scale win and place. For every
dollar wagered to win they bet three dollars to place. Remember, however, that if a player
chooses to use the win and place method of wagering, he must have available four times
the amount of capital he needs for win bets only.
If you employ the money management plan explained above, remember that the one sure way
to keep the wagers within reasonable limits is to avoid excessively short-priced
selections. In our own play, we seldom back a horse at less than 3-1. This is because in
over 50 years of experience, we have learned that a short-priced horse can lose just as
easily as a good-priced selection. There is no such thing as a sure thing in this
business, so why take the worst of the odds?
In making use of the following method, the fan who is well grounded in sound
handicapping principles will produce better results than the player who knows little or
nothing about sound handicapping. Nevertheless, this method is designed so that it can be
played mechanically.
The basic principle on which this method is based is a race within the last two starts
which offers good evidence that the horse is now ready to turn in a good effort.
Any horse that gained three or more running positions from the pre-stretch call to the
finish, or which turned in a front-running effort, is a horse worth following today. This
is especially true of horses that made such a gain or front running effort in their
next-to-last race, if it was run within the past 35 days.
Therefore, the first step in making a selection is to find a claiming race (other than
a maiden claiming race) where a horse gained three or more running positions between the
pre-stretch call and the finish in its next-to-last race and lost by no more than 3-1/2
lengths or in which the horse turned in a front-running effort being
defeated by no more than 3-1/2 lengths. Any horse meeting this basic qualification becomes
a selection if it meets all of the following requirements:
1. The most recent race must have been run within the past 21 days and the
next-to-last race must have been run within the past 35 days.
2. The horse must not be moving up in claiming price today.
3. It must not have finished in-the-money in its top race.
4. If the horse is not dropping in claiming price today, the odds of its
second race back must be higher than the odds of its top race.
5. If the horse is dropping $10,000 or more in claiming price today, Rule Four
is disregarded, and the horse can qualify if it meets all other requirements.
ELIMINATIONS:
A. Eliminate any qualified horse whose odds were more than 15-1 in both
of its top two races.
B. Eliminate any qualified horse that has not finished in-the-money or within
3-1/2 lengths of the winner in at least one of its top three races.
If two or more horses qualify in the same race, play the selection at the highest odds
today.
Now take a moment to study the past performances of Maria's Reward in the sixth race at
Sportsman's Park on March 3, 1998. The mare had raced 17 days ago and her previous race
had been run within 35 days (Rule One) . She was not moving up in claiming price today
(Rule Two) and she had run out of the money in her most recent race (Rule Three).
Rule Four did not apply since she was dropping in claiming price today (see Rule Five)
but could have qualified anyway since the odds in her next-to-last race were higher than
those in her most recent race. She also qualified easily on both of the elimination rules.
As a perfect single qualifier she paid $39.80 to win.
Ten And Two also qualified on all the rules except Rule One because her next-to-last
race had not been run within 35 days. Even so, Maria's Reward at 18-1 was an obvious pick
over Ten And Two at 2-1. The only other horse who had raced within 21 days was moving up
in claiming price today and was eliminated by Rule Two.
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