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-   -   Quinella at Belmont? (http://www.derbytrail.com/forums/showthread.php?t=57601)

joeydb 06-21-2015 02:22 PM

Quinella at Belmont?
 
Going through results charts over the last couple of weeks. I noticed that sometimes there was a quinella offered, and other times not.

I am just curious - does anybody know what the rules or guidelines are for when that wager is offered? I know that I'd rather play exactas anyway, and I am not on site at Belmont so I don't even know if a quinella would be available through simulcast.

herkhorse 06-21-2015 02:31 PM

2nd and 4th race every day

joeydb 06-21-2015 02:41 PM

OK that is simple enough. Thanks.

helicopter11 06-21-2015 02:42 PM

Worst bet IMO

Dunbar 06-24-2015 08:31 PM

joeydb, If you're interested in betting quinellas, you might take a look at an article I wrote in 2002, "Getting More Bang for your Quinella Buck"

http://www.blackjackforumonline.com/...t/Quinella.htm

The idea is that when quinellas and exactas are offered in the same race, you're presented with 2 different ways to bet a quinella: You can either make a quinella bet, or you can make 2 exacta bets in a proportion so that it acts just like a quinella bet.

The article explains how to determine which way will give the bigger payoff.

Linny 06-26-2015 09:11 PM

If the quinella probable is more than half of the exacta, play the quinella by doubling the base value of the bet.

Dunbar 06-27-2015 01:41 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Linny (Post 1033035)
If the quinella probable is more than half of the exacta, play the quinella by doubling the base value of the bet.

You're suggesting betting twice as much, right? You would have twice the money at risk and may or may not be making the better bet. You can't use a quinella in place of a single exacta bet.

What you can do is use two exacta bets in place of a quinella bet. Betting the same total amount on the two exactas as you would have bet on the single quinella, you can sometimes get a better return.

jwkniska 06-27-2015 02:37 AM

any race that has both exactas and quinellas, evaluate what a $2 quinella pays vs a $1 exacta box.

Play whichever one pays more as it's basically the same $2 bet, so play the combination that pays higher. In some cases the quin will pay more, in some, the exacta pays more. Get the most bang for your buck.:)

Dunbar 06-27-2015 12:07 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by jwkniska (Post 1033067)
any race that has both exactas and quinellas, evaluate what a $2 quinella pays vs a $1 exacta box.

Play whichever one pays more as it's basically the same $2 bet, so play the combination that pays higher. In some cases the quin will pay more, in some, the exacta pays more. Get the most bang for your buck.:)

It isn't that simple. The $1 exacta box will have two different payouts. What do you do when one is larger than the $2 quinella and one is smaller?

The answer is not that complicated, and it's in the article I linked to above.

JolyB 06-27-2015 01:47 PM

I have often followed the quinella will-pays in races 2 and 4 on NYRA races, comparing them to the exacta will-pays on the same combinations.

I've found that the quinella will generally pay more than the same amount invested in an exacta box on the same horses when the shorter priced horse of the two wins, and will pay less than the exacta box when the longer priced horse of the two wins. My decision of whether to use the quinella or exacta box often comes down to which of the two horses I think is the best one to have on top. If the shorter priced one, I go quinella; if the longer priced one, I go exacta box.

I know that this oversimplifies a much more complicated equation. This method has worked for me as a way of sometimes using the quinella to obtain a slightly better payoff on combinations I want to use.

The article you referred to was very helpful. One sentence from that article makes this process very difficult:

" There will always be some uncertainty in the final payoffs due to last minute bets and off-track bets that are added to the pari-mutuel pools after the close of betting."

Unfortunately, this statement is even more true today than when the article was written, and sometimes has the effect of defeating the very search for extra value that this process attempts to accomplish.

richard burch 06-27-2015 11:55 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by herkhorse (Post 1032427)
2nd and 4th race every day

you are correct sir! they have it at all NY tracks.

i bet that s..t all the time. i love quinellas!:{>:

Australia is quinella capitol of the world. also prairie meadows....sometimes los al.

Dunbar 06-28-2015 05:54 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by JolyB (Post 1033131)
I have often followed the quinella will-pays in races 2 and 4 on NYRA races, comparing them to the exacta will-pays on the same combinations.

I've found that the quinella will generally pay more than the same amount invested in an exacta box on the same horses when the shorter priced horse of the two wins, and will pay less than the exacta box when the longer priced horse of the two wins. My decision of whether to use the quinella or exacta box often comes down to which of the two horses I think is the best one to have on top. If the shorter priced one, I go quinella; if the longer priced one, I go exacta box.

I know that this oversimplifies a much more complicated equation. This method has worked for me as a way of sometimes using the quinella to obtain a slightly better payoff on combinations I want to use.

The article I linked to assumes you have no reason to think that the exacta has more overlay value than the exacta reverse. We are merely considering using them in place of a quinella. When you bet a quinella, you don't care which of the 2 horses comes in first because you get paid the same either way. If you're going to bet exactas instead, you bet them in amounts that will give you the same net win, regardless of order. (there are examples in the article.)

If, on the other hand, you have an opinion that one of the exacta orders has a bigger edge, then my article doesn't apply.

Quote:

Originally Posted by JolyB (Post 1033131)
The article you referred to was very helpful. One sentence from that article makes this process very difficult:

" There will always be some uncertainty in the final payoffs due to last minute bets and off-track bets that are added to the pari-mutuel pools after the close of betting."

Unfortunately, this statement is even more true today than when the article was written, and sometimes has the effect of defeating the very search for extra value that this process attempts to accomplish.

I'm glad you found it helpful.

Yes, I agree that there's even more late betting today, and the quinella pools are generally pretty small and not that common. (at the time of the article, Santa Anita was offering quinellas on every race.)

Still, if I liked two horses approximately equally in a race where quinellas were offered, I'd do the "Q-test" check to see if the exactas offered a better payout. The additional edge may or may not be there after the final betting, but I'd rather be on the +15% side going into the last minute than the -15% side.

Kitan 07-04-2015 08:43 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by JolyB (Post 1033131)
I have often followed the quinella will-pays in races 2 and 4 on NYRA races, comparing them to the exacta will-pays on the same combinations.

I've found that the quinella will generally pay more than the same amount invested in an exacta box on the same horses when the shorter priced horse of the two wins, and will pay less than the exacta box when the longer priced horse of the two wins. My decision of whether to use the quinella or exacta box often comes down to which of the two horses I think is the best one to have on top. If the shorter priced one, I go quinella; if the longer priced one, I go exacta box.

I know that this oversimplifies a much more complicated equation. This method has worked for me as a way of sometimes using the quinella to obtain a slightly better payoff on combinations I want to use.

The article you referred to was very helpful. One sentence from that article makes this process very difficult:

" There will always be some uncertainty in the final payoffs due to last minute bets and off-track bets that are added to the pari-mutuel pools after the close of betting."

Unfortunately, this statement is even more true today than when the article was written, and sometimes has the effect of defeating the very search for extra value that this process attempts to accomplish.

I think, from what I've seen, that generally the $2 Q will pay better than a $1 Ex. The cases I've seen where it hasn't is where there's been a double digit winner with the 1st or 2nd fav second, which makes sense. If you think the two faves will run 1-2 then it seems the Q is the way to go.

jnunan4759 07-06-2015 12:49 PM

I think most of the people at my OTB don't even know the Quinella exists in NY. I will play it but only when I'm looking at an exacta-type bet and I like to look at the combos and "shop" for a better price. It's usually not a great deal of difference, but it all helps. I also find that the Quinella payouts fluctuate less. Probably because it's a smaller pool and bigger money can alter the EX payouts late.

It's probably more popular at Saratoga than anywhere else. I know a bunch of $2 people who play it.

I'm kind of surprised they've kept it this long, it's an old bet. I would think it's one of, if not the single, smallest pools.

Kitan 07-06-2015 06:35 PM

Pulled up the charts from Saturday because I wanted to see what the pool would be like on a big day.

R2 Ex pool $222k
R2 Q pool $11.5k

R4 Ex pool $276k
R4 Q pool $13k

Definitely not as popular here as it is overseas.

jnunan4759 07-12-2015 03:23 PM

Wow, that's only 5%. I was thinking maybe 10% or 12%.


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