Chris,
That\'s great data, the right way to think about it, and certainly evidence that 1-2 preps is not a problem. Thanks.
I have one question.
Did you include the imports?
If you did, I think the data could be heavily biased in favor of the 1-2 prep horses.
1. We do not know if the quality of speed figures for foreign races is as good as for US races.
2. Foreign horses could be improving their figures a much higher percentage of the time because of differences in drug laws overseas relative to the US.
3. The studies I have heard about indicated that foreign horses (all, not just 3YOs) do in fact improve their figures (or performance) 1st time they run in the US much more often than the average horse (and then tend to bounce) No explanation given.
4. The foreign horses usually have fewer overall starts and would therefore be much more likely to improve.
The other issue is that we don\'t know if the 2 pools are identical. So we can\'t tell if the horses are outperforming or underperforming \"expectations\" even if they are improving more often.
Unfortunately, the only way to determine \"performance relative to expectations\" without getting subjective is profit/loss. However, we have all agreed that the sample size is too small to draw any firm conclusions despite the fact that the evidence so far suggests that they are underperforming very significantly.
Just as an example:
If the pool of high quality horses that had 3 or more preps contained more horses that had already reached a figure of 1 or 2, their chances of improving further would probably be lower than the chances of a pool of high quality horses with two preps whose best figure so far was only a 7 because they were more lightly raced.
There are other possible examples of pool differences that would impact % improvement without indicating whether horses were underperforming or overperforming expectations.
That\'s why even though I think the figures are a really useful tool in this analysis, the key is not just new tops, faster figures etc..
The key is performance vs. expectations or ROI (return on investment).
It doesn\'t do me much good if I find a pool of horses that improves more often than another if that expected improvement is built into the odds and/or my expectations to an even greater degree than is actually achieved on the track.
Thanks again.
Post Edited (03-30-05 20:46)