Okay, Friedman has given a couple more non-answers about the adjustment-within-a-slow-paced-race-nonsense. So let me make a point here.
The relationships between horses in a race, in figure terms, are fixed, as anyone who makes figures knows. For Beyer they are fixed by beaten lengths, for those of use who make performance figures, also by weight and ground loss. This is the one unbreakable rule.
And that\'s even MORE true with \"Slow Pace\" races. By definition, in those cases you are not using the final time, because the pace of the race made it impossible for horses to run as fast as they ordinarily would. So what do you use? THE HORSES. It\'s all you have. You use the relationships between the horses to try and figure out what happened-- the winner runs a lot of 5\'s, and if we give him that let\'s see if the second horse gets the 7 he usually runs, etc. But that, of course, depends on those relationships being solid-- the winner ran 2 points better than the second horse, on down the line.
So what Friedman is saying is this-- we are going to figure out what the horses would (should) have run, base the relationships on that, THEN do a figure for the race. OR, we will do the race based on the actual relationships, which we think are wrong, then change the figures for individual horses to make them come out better.
This is from a guy who on several occasions has falsely accused me of \"giving them whatever figure I wanted to\". Which you can\'t do unless you do exactly what those guys are now doing, and what I have never done-- break the mathematically fixed relationships within a race.
Len, prove me wrong. Give us an example of a race you adjusted, go through the method you used to come up with the figures, which people PAY for. If there really is a formula, instead of Ragozin\'s ego making the decision that he can figure out what every horse is GOING to run, show us how it works, WHAT IT\'S BASED ON, and what it came up with in one race. You guys went to great lengths to explain your methodology in Ragozin\'s book, you should want to do this.
And show us some races that are not stakes, or at NY, Cal or the other big circuits, where you did this-- it\'s even worse if you do it for some races but not others.