No one likes to go to Aqueduct these days. Getting there is a nightmare traveling on the Van Wyck Expressway (Distressway) from Flushing after picking up Johnny M. who is without a car these days. Another story. Construction, construction, construction, in both directions and an accident. Just made the first race with little time to spare.
We four eventually all met at the agreed upon spot on the 2nd floor, just to the right of the boxes, where no one sits these days. Bobby G. had trouble finding a parking spot. The parking lot is a hodge-podge of places dominated by the casino parking. Bob usually relies on VIP or valet parking, but there is no such thing at Aqueduct these days. There is little there that enhances the fan experience. This is not patron friendly Disneyland.
Bob finally parked near an entrance next to an ambulance, which was probably a restricted spot. He was frustrated, and thought he might be towed.
But Bob is a retired surgeon who keeps his medical license active and drives a vehicle with MD plates. We told him they probably don't even have anyone on staff who could tow him, and the MD plates would likely save him if it came to that. And parking next to an ambulance as such would give the illusion that he was connected with the track's health care.
Bob still went down a few times to check that his car hadn't been moved. The fate of Bob's car became a running theme throughout the day. Jose was on FIRE, and eventually hit a $120 exacta. We told Bob that Jose would pay the towing charges if there were any.
It was a colder day than we anticipated, and windy, which was good as the marijuana smoke didn't hang in the air. As soon as you get off the escalator you smell it, despite not being allowed to smoke inside. Yeah. CVS has better security.
Unfortunately, Aqueduct is the only Downstate track until 2026 when the new Belmont will open. The Belmont Stakes will be run at Saratoga at the usual interval of three weeks after the Preakness, but at 1¼ miles rather than the usual 1½ miles in 2024 and 2025. Belmont should be back in business for 2026.
2026 is two years from now, and The Assembled, while all breathing and with no signs of terminal illnesses, are not getting any younger. We consist of two octogenarians, one septuagenarian, and a youngster at 66, a sexagenarian. Each one has health issues, and like anything in life, attendance in 2026 at a new facility is not guaranteed. We're holding our breath.
We skipped Aqueduct all together last year, and considering the infrastructure shortcomings, will likely not be in attendance in 2025. Yesterday, sitting outside, the announcer's call of the races could not be heard. Nada. Nothing at all. It was Keeneland in the 70s, when they purposely didn't use a track announcer.
At one point, Johnny D. had the binoculars on the backstretch starting gate, only to see it start to move up the backstretch. The horses had already left the gate, unannounced, and were two furlongs into the race before he picked them up with his binoculars.
NYRA's VP of communication Patrick McKenna (PCMckenna), had a Tweet Saturday about how the backstretch facilities were going to be even better in the new Belmont. I'm always one to tell NYRA their shortcomings, and I Tweeted a reply that I'm hoping they include an audible outside PA system in their Belmont plans. I expect no reply. [I got none.]
Despite the infrastructure inconveniences that also included bird poop on the seats, we're there for the handicapping and the betting. And it was good day for all, despite the discomforts and privations that NYRA manages to inflict at every outing.
Jose B. as usual lead the quartet in money won. But everyone else was either slightly ahead for the day, or even. An even day is a winning day because you have to have winners to offset the losing bets. So you're in the game.
There is no on-track attendance to speak of. Sure, there are other people there, but hardly anywhere near the numbers of the 1970s. This is not news. Betting drives the game, and the dish antennas and simulcasting have kept the game going now for decades.
I was always good at math, although I met my match with college calculus. How did Isaac Newton actually devise calculus in his Principia Mathematica? I wonder if he could have grasped Racing Form hieroglyphics as easily.
The enjoyment of horse racing exists on several levels. You have the owners, trainers, jockeys, breeders and agents whose livelihoods depend on winning at the game, and not necessarily from betting. There is a documentary on FX that ironically is hosted by two NYT journalists, Joe Drape and Melissa Hoppert who used to write about horse racing for the paper.
The NYT has outsourced their sports department to an outfit called The Athletic, which I think is a subsidiary of the NYT. The paper sees no obligation to assign beat reporters to the local teams. It's Sports Illustrated of the old days with regional reporting done by The Athletic's non-Guild writers. The NYT is as haughty as NYRA is. The good news from their approach to sports is that I'm enjoying the New York Post to no end.
The Joe Drape and Melissa Hoppert documentary is about the use of drugs to keep horses running and the subsequent injuries and deaths that occur. Last year, Derby week at Churchill Downs saw an outlier number of breakdowns and deaths.
The theme of the documentary is how there are aspects of horse racing that resemble giant corporations. Bob Baffert, a controversial trainer, is mentioned in connection with winning $350 million in purse money. Churchill Downs has banned him from entering horses there because of a positive drug test on a Derby winner Medina Spirit a few years ago. Medina Spirit died on the West Coast soon after of a heart attack.
But like anything else in life, there is the lifestyles of the rich and famous and the rest. For every Super Trainer and owner there is a huge multiple of owners for whom even one horse is a large stable.
I'm actually amazed when I watch a starting gate being loaded how much has gone into the life of even a bad horse who is going to be asked to run usually ¾ of mile (6 furlongs) and whose effort will take about one minute and twelve seconds before they are either feted in the winner's circle or quickly led back to the barn. Either way, win or lose, a lot goes into even having an unaccomplished horse ready for the races that is pretty much over in blink of an eye.
The enjoyment of horse racing for The Assembled is found in picking winners, converting the information gleaned from the Racing Form into a bet that is hoped will return money. Be right enough times, with good money management, you might even come out ahead or even at the end of the day. Even even is a good day.
Getting the Racing Form is another matter. There is no serious handicapper who will approach a day at the races without consulting, studying the encyclopedia of data that is truly time sensitive. Saturday's past performance are no good on Sunday. They are only then of historical value.
Newsstands have dried up in the Metropolitan area. The few that once existed would only get a few copies of the Form and would quickly sell out. Thankfully, the people at the Daily Racing Form are a savvy computer bunch and make the past performances downloadable if you have a printer. Thus, what might cost $8 to $11 for a past performance booklet at he track for several race tracks for that day, can be obtained now for $4.25 in downloadable form for one track.
Johnny M. could not get a copy of the Form a day ahead of time (newsstand went out of business) so Johnny D. printed another copy. The nice part of the downloadable Form is that you can print as many copies as you want of the race card you're paying $4.25 for.
Bobby G. usually arrives with a copy of the Form, but I don't think he studies it the night before. So Saturday, he showed up without even a copy of the booklet because he was so flustered from his parking odyssey. He bet the first looking at my printed PPs, then went downstairs to get an $8 copy of the booklet.
Jose as usual comes loaded with the efforts from a night of preparation. Color-coded selections dot his paperwork.
Johnny D. spent a good part of Friday, and Saturday morning going over the Form and attaching his "numbers" to each entrant. And there aren't many entrants to work with. On Saturday, there were only 82 horses entered for 9 races. Usually a Saturday used to carry a 10 race card, but there just aren't a lot of horses running these days. There are only 4 days of racing scheduled these days. There used to be six days years ago. Even Saratoga can only manage a 5 race day week. The sport is withering on the vine.
The information in the Form is astounding these days. They keep adding information. Now you even get the date on which a horse was gelded, a procedure that is done to quell their temperament. A recently gelded horse can be a betting angle that mitigates what might have been bad past performances. Any angle in a storm is useful.
Saturday's results were more than predictable. Favorites won 7 of the 9 races, a trend that even continued into Sunday.
But, with a flexible betting strategy, even favorites winning an inordinate amount of time there are betting options. Johnny D. and M. prefer win and exacta wagering. Multi-leg betting is for deeper pockets and robs you of a winner in the sequence when another one in the sequence bombs. The ticket become worthless unless there is a consolation payout, like in the Pick-6. For the Johnnies they had 4 split exactas; betting selections that ran 1-3. Very frustrating.
Johnny D. even put together a 10¢ Superfecta, boxing 4 horses based on the "numbers." A 10¢ boxed Super with 4 horses is in effect 24 bets at 10¢ a bet, resulting in a modest $2.40 outlay. The payoff can be decent, even with a favorite winning.
Johnny D's 6th race Super hit! Well, it hit unit until the stewards took a look at Dylan Davis's ride on the favorite Carson's Run who bolted on the turn on the turf into the stretch and carried the horse next to them wide. Very wide.
The INQUIRY light went on, and after a somewhat lengthy delay Carson's Run, who finished 4th was placed 5th removing it from the Superfecta results, and removing Johnny D's hope for a payout. C'est la vie. You hate to see your number blinking on the board. Stop blinking, will ya?
Not all INQUIRIES result in a change in the order of finish. Jose survived one, and got a decent trifecta payout, which helped him be the leading money winner of the day. Again.
The blustery weather drove Bob to leave after the 7th race, having secured a go-ahead day. His car was still there.
The remaining three of us retreated inside to sit and watch the rest of the races on the large TV screens, where you could actually hear the announcer. What a concept! Sitting inside at Aqueduct is like sitting in a dingy waiting hospital room or a DMV office. But, all you need is there, including a seat with no poop on it and large screen TVs bringing anyone who is interested all the simulcasting action they desire.
The Johnnies hit the 8th race exacta (finally) and had the winner separately. The combined payout insured a break even day.
My own attraction to racing is not solely centered on any money I might make. I never bet more than I can afford to lose, and even an o-fer day is not a financial disaster. Reading the Racing Form is like getting a Valentine.
Already mentioned is the ton of information available these days. There are so many nuggets of what is esoteric information revealed.
Take weight assignments. I never saw 127 pounds assigned before. It was usually 126 the top weight on the allowance scale. The Jockey Club scale must have changed.
How many races would you guess a horse has won who has a lifetime earnings total of $151,318? My guess is you would never say zero.
And yet, in the 9th race, a Maiden Special Weight New York State-Bred race at a mile on the turf there was 6-year- old gelded Scherzando who was sporting an o-fer 24 past performance! Every race in the maximum of 12 lines displayed in their past performance showed being entered in a similar State-Bred Maiden Special Weight race. It's as if the repeat button was hit.
This horse never won a race and yet amassed over $151,000 in earnings for the Dee Tee Stables. This is a career maiden, and yet had a 10-1 morning line. An owner's pet.
Not all trainers are Super Trainers who could be listed on the stock exchange. This horse was being trained by Gary Siacca, an extremely low percentage trainer who so far this year has started horses 13 time, 3 at this meet, and won a total of no races. They are o-fer 13 on the year.
Scherzando wasn't always such a zero. They are the product of a $40,00 stud fee and a $50,00 auction price. They have finished in the money 9 times from the 24 starts, which is how the earnings were accumulated.
I have never seen a horse who wasn't bet on, and I have never seen a race where there wasn't a winner—sometimes 2 winners if there is a dead heat.
So, how did Scherzando do? The new tote board that NYRA is providing doesn't give you any information as to how much is bet on the three places for any given horse. This information can be useful if you're looking for lopsided show betting. The new board is annoying in that it can display two rows of odds if there are more than 6 entrants. It looks cluttered.
Years and years ago I was once at Greenwood racetrack in Toronto (long closed) and saw that there were horses who had absolutely nothing bet on them to show. I remember taking a picture of the tote board. At the bell, it's possible some money flowed into the place and show pools for the longest shots on the board.
Scherzando? Well he went off at an optimistic 12-1 and finished 4th, getting a piece of the $70,000 purse and advancing their lifetime earnings even further. He wasn't even the longest shot on the board. That honor was reserved for Sweet Tone at 87-1, making their 4th start and having the look of eventually amassing a record matching Scherzando's if they stay on the track.
The Johnnies finished their day with their 4th busted 1-3 exacta in the 9th. but finished the day even, even with hardened pigeon poop on the seats. We didn't sit on those seats. It was a good day.
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