0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.
If you believe the last two posters, which I happen to, then it just verifies what is in the back of all of our minds: We are suckers to bet horses or at least the tracks that are known to have CAW participation. Not that we are gonna stop.
the Cella family, which owns Oaklawn Park, will not allow CAWs into any of their pools...and they didn't before they received historical racing machinesthey know that the average bettor is getting fleeced everyday
Thoroughbred tracks are actually now promoting new wagers where they don't allow CAWs. Says alot about the other 95% of wagers they offer with them in the pools doesn't it?
I think this is a big mistake by Jeff, while I applaud him for trying, I think from a business point of viewthis will make handle go down and possibly significantly.
Gulfstream park added a middle pick 5 tomorrow that prohibits caws. "Retail players only"Makes the 2 other pick 5s seem real fair to the human bettors. I don't see jeff gural taking this route but who knows
Excellent point. More importantly, personally, I hope this is the beginning of massive change re the CAW's. Gural is not a moron. He's very smart. He had a meeting with some major bettors late in the meet last year. He is supposed to have another series of meetings this year. Another poster here was invited to last year's meeting. The message given to Gural, without any misunderstanding possible was that CAW's are not just "reality" and not just annoying, an inconvenience, or even frustrating. They, without question, are a contributor to a lack of integrity in wagering. They are a serious problem!In short, the solution offered to Gural was simple-----all wagering, from all sources and origins-----must cease before the start of the race. One major bettor-----a professional, who is well respected, who has been in this game for 40 years, and his one of the few people who actually make a living betting on horses-----went further and said all wagering should be cut off when the control of the race is given to the starter. One response-----which was given in the context of a larger topic-----was that it cuts both ways as when a horse breaks well before the start of the race, the facts show that horse's odds go up. Great, that's like saying today is Friday. While it's factually correct, it doesn't impact or solve the problem at hand. My position is that while CAW's certainly impact the pools in a major way, but they are not solely or exclusively responsible for all odds swings and changes after the start of a race. Show me a horse that is on the gate, moving forward, on the engine, in the bridle, and that horse leaves, and an overwhelming most of the time, that horse's odds go down after the start. And this was before CAW's. That occurence is older than dirt. It's becoming less noticable and less significant because more handle comes from off-track than on, but that's not the point. I couldn't care less if a 3-1, or 5-2 ML favorite goes down to even money after the start of the race-----and X % comes from CAW's and Y % comes from everywhere else, it doesn't matter. It's unacceptable. Period. It doesn't matter where it comes from and why. When Gural says, "handle will go down"-----my response is, that might be true. At first. But for how long? It might go down in the short-term (and yes, that's a relative term). But, in the end, long-term, I am not sure handle won't go up. No different than throwing out a leading, high percentage trainer, who fills races, and who is highly questionable or scrutinized. People say, you can't throw him/her out because they fill races, they have too many horses, we'll have short fields, and so on. Some true, some not. But if you throw that trainer out.....you might have more difficulty filling races, you might struggle immediately, etc., but, when people start to hear they don't have to race against that trainer, they will start shipping horses there to race! It's true. The first guy through the door always gets bloody, LOL.
CAWS bet after the bell. Kentucky can bet after the bell. Heard this for years but absolutely no proof. Tracks and wagering companies make their money no matter the outcome. What benefits the track and tote owners to allow this??
doesn't this infer that what I have bolded is not happening?