Bit-- you don\'t have to be so respectful. It makes me feel old, like when a kid calls me \"mister\". I tell them mister is my father.
The basic idea is that even though we accept the inherent limitations of accuracy, we are trying to make things as accurate as possible. If you start letting half points slide, it will eventually loosen up your data base, and you will have trouble putting things together. The same thing goes for not using all the elements (wind, ground, and weight, for example)-- other skills aside, the best you can do is to get a race generally accurate.
And the same goes for using an average as a variant when conditions are not the same-- you end up with a sort-of generally correct variant, within a few points. That\'s the degree of accuracy those who use pars get-- and it was plenty good enough back in the days when 99% of the bettors weren\'t using speed figures with any basis in reality. In other words, until the advent of the Racing Times.
Damn you, George White.