• Rich Val
    7
    For anyone who doesn't know me, I'm a long-time HSH user and go all the way back to the ThoroBrain Days.

    I asked Dave for permission to share the paceline system he taught me back in the early 1990s.

    About the Paceline System
    HSH has a built in Paceline system. It is completely programmable by the user and amazingly simple once you get the hang of it.

    This system is exactly what Dave showed me years ago and it looks for pacelines in order until it has found what it is looking for.
    Step 1: The Tight Finish
    Quit looking if you get once race.
    • A race like today where the horse finished inside of 1 length of the winner.
    • "Like today" means:
    • similar surface ( Dirt or Turf, treat Poly as dirt)
    • similar distance (sprint or route) and within 1/2 fur of today
    Sort by:
    • most recent
    • closest distance
    • fastest final time
    If the winner won by more than 0.99 lengths then this is not a tight finish.

    The theory is that a race like this shows exactly how good a horse really is. If he was any better, then he'd have either won the race or would have won by more.

    Step 2: Same as Step 1 but widen the distance to 1fur. instead of .5fur.

    Step 3: Same as Step 2 but include all distances from 5f to 9f

    Step 4: Same as Step 3 but widen the lengths ahead/behind to 2.00

    It continues outward from there out to step 8, widening with each step.
    Beyond step 3 you always select 2 pacelines.
  • Dustin Korth
    52
    If I may, I'm going to play a little devil's advocate here for the sake of discussion and say when selecting a single representative paceline to predict today's outcome, This may give you the runner's "ability level"...but would seem to ignore the condition and form cycle pattern of the runner when that particular representative paceline was earned...which could have no relationship to the current condition and form cycle pattern...which greatly affects today's "ability level." Thanks guys.
  • RanchWest
    503
    Rich, interesting.
  • RanchWest
    503
    .but would seem to ignore the condition and form cycle pattern of the runnerDustin Korth

    Good point, Dustin. I think this is where the art of handicapping comes into play. I think one thing that helps is to look at recent composite speed ratings and compare those to the pace line speed rating. it's also good to note the points at which the horse was claimed. And, which race off the last layoff. Lots of stuff available to make me look foolish. lol
  • Dave Schwartz
    361
    If I may, I'm going to play a little devil's advocate here for the sake of discussion and say when selecting a single representative paceline to predict today's outcome, This may give you the runner's "ability level"...but would seem to ignore the condition and form cycle pattern of the runner when that particular representative paceline was earned...which could have no relationship to the current condition and form cycle pattern...which greatly affects today's "ability level." Thanks guys.Dustin Korth

    Absolutely right!
    "How good is the horse?" and "Is the horse in form?" are certainly two different questions.

    The other day, I posted this as a reply in the Live & Breath Handicapping Facebook group when someone was looking for ways to figure out a complicated race conditions. I suggested this.

    e6n8awn6fkkgzxm7.jpg

    Here's a screenshot I just took of a concept I built back in 2001.
    The yellow box represents the last 10 races for each horse.
    _________
    G=Won on today's surface, at today's approximate distance, at today's class or higher.
    (Losing by a neck or less counts as a win.)
    _________
    B=Lost today's surface, at today's approximate distance, at today's class or lower.
    _________
    The Dots are races at the wrong surface, wrong distance, too high a class, or off-track.
    IOW, the horse had a valid excuse.
    _________
    As you can see, very few horses actually are entered in a race where they actually fit.
    BTW, the LINE column indicates the horse's odds in the most recent race where they got a G.
    The theory is that if the horse won at what he's trying to do today, then he should be an overlay at that price or higher.

    Of course, this worked out.

    I write handicapping stuff, right? LOL
    _________
  • RanchWest
    503
    (Losing by a neck or less counts as a win.)Dave Schwartz

    I'm trying to follow along. Should that be 2 lengths? And maybe 3 in a route?
  • Dave Schwartz
    361
    I'm trying to follow along. Should that be 2 lengths? And maybe 3 in a route?RanchWest

    No. It is exactly as I said:
    G=Won on today's surface, at today's approximate distance, at today's class or higher.
    (Losing by a neck or less counts as a win.)
    Dave Schwartz

    G=Finish within a neck or a win.
  • RanchWest
    503
    Okay, I'm lost. I don't understand how the two example horses earned a G for the races marked. There's something I don't understand here.
  • Dave Schwartz
    361
    Okay, I'm lost. I don't understand how the two example horses earned a G for the races marked. There's something I don't understand here.RanchWest

    Because they won those races.
    Or, they finished so close that it counts as a win.

    More specifically, #6 won her 5th race back which was:
    • Same surface as today.
    • Similar distance as today.
    • Same or higher class as today.

    What are you not understanding about that?
  • Tom
    89
    (Losing by a neck or less counts as a win.)Dave Schwartz

    If that were true, I would be A rich man.
    Would you contact NYRA and explain that to them?

    TY
  • RanchWest
    503
    #6 I am showing .75 back.
    #5 I am showing 1.75 back.

    Sorry I am being a pest, but what I have learned from you is helping me so much that I don't want to misunderstand this. In a few days I am going to post about my journey.
  • Dave Schwartz
    361
    My mistake.
    I forgot that I changed the rules about 5 years ago.
    Had to go look at the code.

    It appears that I changed it to 1st or 2nd, or less than 1.00 lengths.

    Good catch.
  • RanchWest
    503
    Thanks, Dave! You always follow through.
  • Dave Schwartz
    361
    I asked Rich about this (above), but I should have asked you. I am a confused on the need to Sort by. Can you explain a little or give an example? Thanks for sharing!Biniak

    Easy.
    You have 10 pacelines for a horse.
    There are 3 issues:
    1. Which pacelines are QUALIFIED?
    2. How many do we want to SELECT?
    3. How should we ORDER them to determine which to select?

    1. Is similar surface, similar distance, lengths behind/ahead.
    2. Is a determination that should change depending upon the confidence we have in the selection.

    3. Is what you asked about.
    Imagine you have 10 pacelines.
    Step 1 slims that down to (say) 3 pacelines.
    If it slimmed it down to just one, you would need a sort, right?

    But with 3 pacelines, you need some way to ORDER them.
    Sort by:
    most recent
    closest distance
    fastest final time

    This particular sort will really only require "Most Recent" because there will never be a tie (unless the horse raced twice in one day. - It HAS happened.)

    But some of the other conditions require more sorts.

    THE POINT
    You will sort and take the TOP LINE (or top 2, 3 or whatever).

    Hope this explains it.
  • Tony Kofalt
    397
    I find that usually use 3 pacelines each weighed a little differently based on the way I feel the form cycle is moving. This is a great thread
  • RanchWest
    503
    I find that usually use 3 pacelines each weighed a little differently based on the way I feel the form cycle is moving. This is a great threadTony Kofalt

    Is that something you are doing through HSH? Is there some automation involved in the form cycle weights or is that pretty much subjective?
  • Dave Schwartz
    361
    Is that something you are doing through HSH? Is there some automation involved in the form cycle weights or is that pretty much subjective?RanchWest

    HSH supports that - even via the systems.

    (Tony hasn't used HSH for a long time.)
  • Tony Kofalt
    397

    It can be done through HSH. I did it using ThoroBrain in the past. It's a pretty subjective process for me right now.
  • RanchWest
    503
    It's a pretty subjective process for me right now.Tony Kofalt

    So, I assume your extensive experience guides you in making these calls, correct?
  • Tony Kofalt
    397


    Experience does help. But I'd have to say that my experience with Thorograph played a big part. Especially the concepts around form cycles
  • Dave Schwartz
    361
    Experience does help. But I'd have to say that my experience with Thorograph played a big part. Especially the concepts around form cyclesTony Kofalt

    Tell us as much as you can, please, about that process.
    Or links to TGraph docs.

    BTW, HSH does have built in Rag-style numbers.
    Do you like those?
  • Tom
    89
    So if we have 3 lines to sort/weigh, might using a Fibonocci be useful?
    Good thread!
  • RanchWest
    503
    So if we have 3 lines to sort/weigh, might using a Fibonocci be useful?
    Good thread!
    Tom

    Ted Craven told me how to compute CSR, Composite Speed Rating, which is the speed ratings of the last four races, time decayed through Fibonacci. So, I implemented that for BRIS speed numbers.

    Well, I am always tinkering, so I applied the same concept to BRIS pace figures.

    I tend to not trust individual numbers and computations... I look at things a lot of different ways and see if they all jive or what the outliers are. So, I take these Composite Pace Ratings (CPR? ha!) and compare them to other pace numbers, such as pace line Early Pace and Late Pace. Once I also look at %Median, %Median for the field, Quirin speed points, etc., I start to get an idea of what the pace should look like.

    But, it seems to me, that this still doesn't accomplish what Tony is doing, looking at the actual time line for the form cycle. That concept really interests me.
  • Tony Kofalt
    397
    BTW, HSH does have built in Rag-style numbers.
    Do you like those?
    Dave Schwartz

    I've always felt that the precision in the Thorograph numbers was amazing. I'm comfortable that the adjustments made to the numbers (wide trips, weight on/off, wind) were appropriate and added value. With a little practice, the presentation of the figs in graphs was good for my eye. I felt I could see both obvious and subtle improvements and regressions in a horses form. Key distinction is that I compared a horses recent form with his past form to determine where they may be in their form cycle.
    I don't recall reviewing SLT in HSH so a comparison is difficult. I'm not sure what 'number' is used to build the HSH sheets. Could you please add a little detail for me?
    I'll address the paceline process soon but right now I'm preparing for Belmont
  • Dave Schwartz
    361
    Let's catch up after this weekend.
    I'd really like to run some ideas past you - especially on the note taking.
  • Tom
    89
    I've been trying out this paceline selection for a few weeks and have been happy with the results, albiet a small sample size. The prices are certainly better than focusing on recent lines.
    Recent posts here have been extolling the value of time-decay ratings, so I am looking at testing using this line selection method to identify 3 races to use for a TDR rating of several factors, as Ranchwest talked about yesterday. My goal is update my Ultimate Oddsline method, to hopefully grab a few of the better prices out there.
  • RanchWest
    503
    My odds line is currently using the BRIS pace from 4F and LT from my selected pace line. The decayed pace of the last 4 races might be a good element to the odds line... I certainly use it in my handicapping.
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