EC1
On a break
I'm starting this thread to see if in real time its possible to use sectional times to spot future winners when two races are run on the same day over the trip.
Sorry Slim..this will be long
Basically what i will do is try and spot races where i think one race is better than another and hopefully spot us some horses to follow..it might prove nothing at all..and i'm not going to make any claims it will.
What i do is look at previous day results and try and spot final times that might put me onto a sectional analysis that might tell me more about what happened to create that final time.
I'm going to describe what i am doing so that someone who may be ignorant of time analysis may understand it..so don't think i'm trying to patronise anyone if how i explain it seems like i'm stating the obvious.
The first thing to realise is if two races are run under the same conditions then you may have one race where they have gone slower early than the other which then can cloud actually putting some sense to the sectionals. What you will usually see in two races of similar abilities is a see saw effect...if a race is is slow early..then the later sectionals will be faster than the other race that has been run faster early. Faster early time costs later by affecting latter splits..and vice versa.
What we really want is a race that is better than the other throughout.
I think i've found such a race yesterday.
The first observation
Leicester 12/2/15
Diamond Tammy - overall time 240.60
Henri De Boistron - 244.90
Although Henri De Boistron's race was a novice race..Diamond Tammy's race also had horses that had not run a deal over the big obstacles. Novice handicap races should though be run in similar times to non novice handicap races IF the grade of race is similar. If a novice is rated the same as an older horse they will carry the same weight if meeting each other..so inexperience will be measured automatically by the handicapper..a 91 novice is the same horse as a 91 experienced horse..and should run similar times..the novice may turn out to be a 120 horse when its jumping is quicker but for the purposes here we can use those races as comparison tools.
Diamond Tammy rated 96 carried 10-8
Henri De Boistron rated 91 carried 10-10
So Henri De Boistron should have run slower than Diamond Tammy by about 7lb..approx 1 second. Its 7lb because HDB is 5lb inferior plus he carries
2lb more. At this trip 1 second is approx worth 7lb.
So on overall time DT has run 3.3 seconds faster (4.3 minus the 1 sec that should be the difference) than a horse of his ability should have. This is usually caused by pace differences between races and can be misleading and can only be confirmed by splitting the race up into sections to see if that was the case.
The following sectionals are measured from the first obstacle to avoid dawdle at the start point ...and actually working out where the start point is etc.
The first thing to check is how fast each race is now that we have times measured from a known start point..from first obstacle
DT = 228.5
HDB = 232.3
So not quite the same...but its still nearly 4 seconds
These are the sectionals between each obstacle for each horse
<tbody>
[TD="width: 86"] 15.9 [/TD]
[TD="width: 86"] 13.0 [/TD]
[TD="width: 86"] 11.1 [/TD]
[TD="width: 86"] 11.0 [/TD]
[TD="width: 86"] 43.0 [/TD]
[TD="width: 86"] 11.3 [/TD]
[TD="width: 86"] 10.8 [/TD]
[TD="width: 86"] 18.0 [/TD]
[TD="width: 86"] 19.2 [/TD]
</tbody>
The first thing to notice is that HDB did run slower early on, this can be seen more clearly if we look at the cumulative times. Normally that would be the end of the exercise..it explains why DT has run faster overall by more than he should have done.
But if you check the later splits its clear that DT still ran faster than HDB in most of the those splits too..and when he didn't it was by the odd length.
To try and make more sense of it split the race into larger chunks
Diamond Tammy Fence 1 to Fence 8 = 126.2
Henri De Boistron Fence 1 to Fence 8 = 129.8
Diamond Tammy Fence 8 to finish= 102.3
Henri De Boistron Fence 8 to finish= 102.5
Going back to the see saw effect where if you go faster early you should slow down later..this clearly hasn't happened in line with the ability levels. DT has run 3.6 seconds faster to fence 8..so would be approx 18/20 lengths clear of HDB at that point..but then still runs 0.2 faster than HDB to the finish.
Its this lack of see saw effect that makes this comparison of value to us..hopefully. Without it we would then be having to weigh up how much early has affected late etc..that is still part of this but we have been handed a double beating in both sections of the race...which hopefully tells us for sure that DT is a lot better than most punters will assume.
Diamond Tammy can be confirmed as really being superior to HDB by at least what the overall time [F1 to finish] has suggested..it could be argued he's even better than that as he has exerted more energy early but still had more than HDB late as well.
So being conservative and ignoring that..because we can't really measure it in lbs...we can surely say that DT is at least 3 seconds faster than his OHR at the time. We can also say that any horse finishing near him is also above his OHR.
Convert the 3 seconds to lbs = 21lbs
Diamond Tammy new OHR is 96+21 = 117
Yabadabado was 2nd beaten 8 lengths...or 1.14 sec slower...so he is also approx 1.86 seconds ...or 13lbs better than his OHR..new OHR is 113+13 = 126
Until Winning was a further 12 lengths away so has run near on to his mark..he doesn't get a mark up as he has run exactly where you would expect him to on the clock. We have basically worked from that horse in effect.. the clock says he ran to his level..a normal handicapper would only be guessing here actually which horse to rate the race off. Hopefully we have that answer and the two in front are above their marks by some way.
Hopefully the above two horses can show this to be useful analysis in the coming weeks
The only problem with knowing a horse is above its mark..is that others are above their marks too..so even if knowing it doesn't guarantee anything..but its nice to have a few on your side
I'll keep an eye open for others.
Happy to answer anything on this...some of you might see a lot more than i can here..i'm no more an expert than anyone elase..and am happy to explore any ways in which to break this stuff down in a better way than i have.
so fire away with suggestions or questions.
Summary - for Grass
To Follow horses
Diamond Tammy if OHR if less than 117
Yabadabado if OHR less than 126
Sorry Slim..this will be long
Basically what i will do is try and spot races where i think one race is better than another and hopefully spot us some horses to follow..it might prove nothing at all..and i'm not going to make any claims it will.
What i do is look at previous day results and try and spot final times that might put me onto a sectional analysis that might tell me more about what happened to create that final time.
I'm going to describe what i am doing so that someone who may be ignorant of time analysis may understand it..so don't think i'm trying to patronise anyone if how i explain it seems like i'm stating the obvious.
The first thing to realise is if two races are run under the same conditions then you may have one race where they have gone slower early than the other which then can cloud actually putting some sense to the sectionals. What you will usually see in two races of similar abilities is a see saw effect...if a race is is slow early..then the later sectionals will be faster than the other race that has been run faster early. Faster early time costs later by affecting latter splits..and vice versa.
What we really want is a race that is better than the other throughout.
I think i've found such a race yesterday.
The first observation
Leicester 12/2/15
Diamond Tammy - overall time 240.60
Henri De Boistron - 244.90
Although Henri De Boistron's race was a novice race..Diamond Tammy's race also had horses that had not run a deal over the big obstacles. Novice handicap races should though be run in similar times to non novice handicap races IF the grade of race is similar. If a novice is rated the same as an older horse they will carry the same weight if meeting each other..so inexperience will be measured automatically by the handicapper..a 91 novice is the same horse as a 91 experienced horse..and should run similar times..the novice may turn out to be a 120 horse when its jumping is quicker but for the purposes here we can use those races as comparison tools.
Diamond Tammy rated 96 carried 10-8
Henri De Boistron rated 91 carried 10-10
So Henri De Boistron should have run slower than Diamond Tammy by about 7lb..approx 1 second. Its 7lb because HDB is 5lb inferior plus he carries
2lb more. At this trip 1 second is approx worth 7lb.
So on overall time DT has run 3.3 seconds faster (4.3 minus the 1 sec that should be the difference) than a horse of his ability should have. This is usually caused by pace differences between races and can be misleading and can only be confirmed by splitting the race up into sections to see if that was the case.
The following sectionals are measured from the first obstacle to avoid dawdle at the start point ...and actually working out where the start point is etc.
The first thing to check is how fast each race is now that we have times measured from a known start point..from first obstacle
DT = 228.5
HDB = 232.3
So not quite the same...but its still nearly 4 seconds
These are the sectionals between each obstacle for each horse
DT | 17.7 | 43.0 | 14.5 | |||||||||
HDB | 18.1 | 44.8 | 14.5 | 16.1 | 13.4 | 11.3 | 11.6 | 42.9 | 11.1 | 10.6 | 18.0 | 19.9 |
<tbody>
[TD="width: 86"] 15.9 [/TD]
[TD="width: 86"] 13.0 [/TD]
[TD="width: 86"] 11.1 [/TD]
[TD="width: 86"] 11.0 [/TD]
[TD="width: 86"] 43.0 [/TD]
[TD="width: 86"] 11.3 [/TD]
[TD="width: 86"] 10.8 [/TD]
[TD="width: 86"] 18.0 [/TD]
[TD="width: 86"] 19.2 [/TD]
</tbody>
The first thing to notice is that HDB did run slower early on, this can be seen more clearly if we look at the cumulative times. Normally that would be the end of the exercise..it explains why DT has run faster overall by more than he should have done.
But if you check the later splits its clear that DT still ran faster than HDB in most of the those splits too..and when he didn't it was by the odd length.
To try and make more sense of it split the race into larger chunks
Diamond Tammy Fence 1 to Fence 8 = 126.2
Henri De Boistron Fence 1 to Fence 8 = 129.8
Diamond Tammy Fence 8 to finish= 102.3
Henri De Boistron Fence 8 to finish= 102.5
Going back to the see saw effect where if you go faster early you should slow down later..this clearly hasn't happened in line with the ability levels. DT has run 3.6 seconds faster to fence 8..so would be approx 18/20 lengths clear of HDB at that point..but then still runs 0.2 faster than HDB to the finish.
Its this lack of see saw effect that makes this comparison of value to us..hopefully. Without it we would then be having to weigh up how much early has affected late etc..that is still part of this but we have been handed a double beating in both sections of the race...which hopefully tells us for sure that DT is a lot better than most punters will assume.
Diamond Tammy can be confirmed as really being superior to HDB by at least what the overall time [F1 to finish] has suggested..it could be argued he's even better than that as he has exerted more energy early but still had more than HDB late as well.
So being conservative and ignoring that..because we can't really measure it in lbs...we can surely say that DT is at least 3 seconds faster than his OHR at the time. We can also say that any horse finishing near him is also above his OHR.
Convert the 3 seconds to lbs = 21lbs
Diamond Tammy new OHR is 96+21 = 117
Yabadabado was 2nd beaten 8 lengths...or 1.14 sec slower...so he is also approx 1.86 seconds ...or 13lbs better than his OHR..new OHR is 113+13 = 126
Until Winning was a further 12 lengths away so has run near on to his mark..he doesn't get a mark up as he has run exactly where you would expect him to on the clock. We have basically worked from that horse in effect.. the clock says he ran to his level..a normal handicapper would only be guessing here actually which horse to rate the race off. Hopefully we have that answer and the two in front are above their marks by some way.
Hopefully the above two horses can show this to be useful analysis in the coming weeks
The only problem with knowing a horse is above its mark..is that others are above their marks too..so even if knowing it doesn't guarantee anything..but its nice to have a few on your side
I'll keep an eye open for others.
Happy to answer anything on this...some of you might see a lot more than i can here..i'm no more an expert than anyone elase..and am happy to explore any ways in which to break this stuff down in a better way than i have.
so fire away with suggestions or questions.
Summary - for Grass
To Follow horses
Diamond Tammy if OHR if less than 117
Yabadabado if OHR less than 126
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