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#1
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I like the bozo in that thread who called futures a "sucker bet". First I am still WAY ahead on futures for having Concern back in the BCC back in the day. Second, I have had tremendous value on a few occasions, most recently Eskendereya at a 100-1. If I had been so inclined (I wasn't) I could have easily converted that ticket to very substantial cash a week or two before the Derby. When I see a dumb generalization like his, I know I am dealing with a true idiot. |
#2
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When someone makes a future bet they are betting the horse will make it to the gate. If I had the means to easily "convert" the wager I may take a shot. I'm wondering why you didn't convert that ticket when you had a chance. |
#3
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JFC. Let me guess--you want to chop when a poker tournament gets down to the final table, even when you have the chip lead? |
#4
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The poker analogy is laughable. You could have kept half the chips you were holding and still cashed in on your initial investment while the bad beat was waiting for you. Besides, in a poker game you're dealing with far less variables. |
#5
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![]() Stop already. You are embarrassing yourself. Publicly masturbate elsewhere.
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#6
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Your claim that they are good bets are based on you hitting a bet about 20 years ago as well as the fact that you got 100-1 on a horse who never made the race. The Eskendereya example is a perfect illustration. Did you get good value when you made the bet? Yes. Would I have taken that bet a few weeks out from the Derby? Yes. But, in the end, did you cash the ticket? The simple answer is no. There is no value in a losing ticket. Future bets are sucker bets because you are betting on a horse who may never run. Unlike race day, there are no scratches or refunds. How many examples do we have in the last few years alone where probable favorites scratch from the Derby in the weeks or days leading up to the race. It is not just Eskendereya. Would you have taken 100-1 on I Want Revenge or Uncle Mo in April? People will hit future bets. Sometimes they hit for serious money. But far more often than not, they will lose. Call me a bozo, but I usually like to know something about the race track, the track conditions, the post positions, and whether a horse will actually run before betting. This game is hard enough with that knowledge. I will renew my original offer. Pick any horse from the Wynn list and I will happily book any and all future bets. Paul |
#7
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Your description of what entails value is ridiculous. Are you really saying that any bet that loses offered no value???????? That would also mean that any horse you bet that wins, say even at 1/9 in a 12 horse field, offers value! Obviously the downside with future book bets is the no refund policy, but without that, you'd be getting nowhere near the same odds. There is also the ride you get from having a future bet six months out. The action. Instead of just having action on a horse for 30 minutes prior to post and than the ensuing two minutes, this way, as the horse moves towards the Derby, you get a lot of excitement and thrill from that. When I bet Indian Charlie at 150/1 in August, I felt like I was getting over on Vegas. When he finally made his second start in February, I knew my analysis on him was right and I did enjoy the ride he gave me from there on towards the Derby. Was I disappointed he lost? Yes, absolutely. But I got him at 150/1 instead of around 2/1, and win or lose, I got stupendous value. The only other three horses I've bet in the Derby futures were Snow Chief, Congaree, and stupidly, a horse named Cliquot. I got large odds on all three, and of the three, only the Cliquot bet was stupid, being sort of a whim bet. People who play eight horses in the futures, yeah, I'll agree with you on that, they are throwing away their money. I almost played a future on Fusaichi Pegasus before his debut, but apparently, if I got word on that horse being better than AP Indy (according to the Drysdale camp), everyone else did as well. Oh well. |
#8
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I've dabbled away for the eight years since, and haven't even come close, though I was one of those that held a ticket on I Want Revenge at 60/1. I just have fun with them. I stick to a budget, and get a kick out of it. And if the kick is one to the stomach like I Want Revenge, it just isn't any big deal. Like Indian Charlie said, I had a lot of fun with I Want Revenge's lead-up to the Derby, and even though he didn't make the race, it was worth it. |
#9
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![]() The biggest problem I have with the future bets are when the pools close. If I'm not mistaken, they close AFTER the major prep races are run that weekend. This totally eliminates value on horses who run well in the prep races.
I think if the pools closed on Friday, they might be more worthwhile. Assume you have a priced runner you liked in a Derby prep and you're getting 100-1 on him in the Derby. If he runs to your expectations in the prep, his odds plumet. By the way, I only bet one horse in future pools and it was Tejano Run in the 1995 Derby. I stood to collect 2500 if he won. Of course, he ran 2nd and I collected zip. |
#10
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![]() could i use my irish passport when collecting ?
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#11
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#12
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I don't know how to respond to someone who things a losing bet at high odds on a horse who never ran in the race is a good bet. There are more than 1000 horses listed on the Wynn odds sheet for a race that only 20 will enter in about six months. Sure sounds like value... Paul |
#13
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![]() Yes, it is fairly obvious that you don't. That's the problem.
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