Richie:
Thanks for the reminder I need to focus in on stats instead of anecdotal evidence I\'m piecing together. I need to do some more work.
At the same time, I\'ll give a few examples of where I\'m coming from. I know all about Baffert, Hollendorfer, Mandella, and Callahan (who trains Firing Line and Taris, fine dirt horses). I probably don\'t appreciate the jockey angles in SoCal nearly enough although I feel like I end up on the Bejarano horses he never wins with and then kills me in the next leg of a horizontal.
But what I have trouble with is:
Yesterday, Scott Hansen wins a race with a first time turf horse. Trainer was 3 for 35 on the year and 1 for 22 on Turf the last two years. He had the fastest number in the race (7) and I believe the next fastest was a 9.5, a 9.75 and a few with 10\'s. At 5-1 was this a solid wager on a horse trying turf for the first time? He won so some would say certainly. Do you play the figure even when it is fastest on dirt and he is never tried turf? Even with a first Euro/first lasix for Drysdale, Sheriff\'s horse when he scratched Ziconic from the race, or O\'Neill/Bejarano 2nd off the bench with Blinkers or Kent D (hated the outside post personally) ....but you get the point.
On Thursday, in the third race, Lorenzo Ruiz trained Hawk\'s Eyes to a front running score on turf at 15-1. To be quite frank, I\'m familiar with Jorge Periban, Rafael Becerra, and a host of other trainers some may describe as obscure but I\'ve never even heard of Ruiz before. In this example, I didn\'t look at the Red Board Room so this is on me if he was a solid play on the figures or not. But at that price I feel comfortable guessing he wasn\'t a standout figure play. Anyone out there familiar with Ruiz?
These two cherry picked examples are what I struggle with out there very often it seems. The lesson it seems is to focus more on the horse and less on the trainers although the moment I do that Baffert, Mandella, and O\'Neill sweep the card. Thanks for the feedback both on board and off board privately as well that was passed along. Several helpful points!