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#1
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![]() Yesterday's Pick Six featured a $133.80 winner, an $18 winner, a $6 winner, a $31.60 winner, an $11 winner and a $5.80 winner. A win parlay with those six winners would have paid $910,411, yet the Pick Six pool was just $198,417, AND IT WAS STILL HIT by one ticket.
Not impossible, but according to Brad Free, that lone winning ticket had the first four winners ($133.80, $18, $6, $31.60) all SINGLED. Weird. |
#2
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#3
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![]() WOW! That is insane. Does anyone know how the rest of the ticket was structured?
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#4
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![]() Not sure.
I know the Breeders Cup Fix 6 winning ticket consisted of four straight singles, followed by two ALL-ALL's. I think it's pretty amusing that someone singled a 65/1 shot in leg one of pick six!...if this is true. |
#5
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#6
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![]() Ateam - certainly does raise some eyebrows. Maybe the person(s) who singled the horse in Leg A had a connection to the horse so they had to single him. It was just a $16 ticket. Either good handicapping or luck or both.
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#7
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![]() I've played this game for the better half of my life and I've never heard of someone singling a 60-1 shot and having it win, much less, having it be one of four straight singles and then hitting the pick 6.
I would like to know the percentages of that happening. Virtually impossible for me to believe. |
#8
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But yeah, just the concept of singling a 65/1 shot in leg 1 of a P6 is virtually unheard of. |
#9
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#10
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![]() Just two cents to think about (at least from my optimistic perspective) is that we're using the 65-1 number as the standard.
If this were a player who placed their pick-6 wager before the pools opened, say a bet from a bettor who wasn't actively wagering on each race and just handicapped it first and placed it -- the morning line odds and the final odds were: 20-1 -- off at 65-1 5-1 -- off at 8-1 3-1 -- off at 2-1 8-1 -- off at 14-1 While the early singling still looks fishy, it doesn't look quite as crazy when you look at the ML odds of the horses. This player didn't necessarily single a 65-1 shot, he or she may have singled what they thought was a 20-1 shot. If that matters.... |
#11
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#12
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![]() If the winner did legimately place this bet, he or she is probably kicking him or herself for not playing the parlay bet rather than the Pick 6, seeing as how it paid over eight times as much!
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#13
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![]() Here's the link to the Brad Free article:
http://www.drf.com/news/article/86864.html |
#14
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#15
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![]() If this were like the original scam, it means they knew the winners of the first four legs when the tickets were punched. The mistake the idiots the first time made was in the structure. If they had included some losers in the first few legs, nobody would have noticed.
I can't believe someone would try the same thing and make the same stupid mistake. |
#16
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#17
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#18
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Byers said he wagered $44 into the pick six Thursday. Byers cashed the ticket Thursday evening at Viejas, and admitted he was lucky. He originally wanted to single race-3 favorite Hit It Skip (No. 8) in the first leg, but when that one scratched, he said he was flustered and went instead with No. 7 - the $133.80 winner. "I was in a hurry," Byers said. "I go by jockeys and trainers." |
#19
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![]() dumb luck, good handicapping.. whatever you want to phrase it.. he hit 6 winners with small investment. I say both lucky and good, There were 3 other singles
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#20
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![]() Thanks to Volponi. This should be investigated.
__________________
Good jockeys don't need instructions and bad ones don't follow them |