As one might imagine, our last Mane Attraction caused a bit of stir in the harness racing world.
In case you missed it, the idea for larger fields, longer races, higher purses, a 10:30 last race post with the implementation of much larger payoffsāwhether they be pari-mutuel or prop wageringāfeatured the āopinionsā from both sides of the fence.
That Mane Attraction was āfood for thoughtā in saving our industry, now, mostly, on life support from casinos and legislators.
The few horse personnel that have surfaced, thus far, are somewhat against it, some wondering how much horses will be compensated in such large fields.
āHey,ā one trainer said, āright now I am happy with the way things areā¦I make some money with my few horses and itās all good.
āBut Iām in my ā60ās now and I donāt know whatās down the road in 10 or 15 years but, having said that, that really doesnāt concern me. For me, itās all about today and tomorrow!ā
That is the problem. Few cares about the future and this industry is satisfied living on the welfare provided by casinos and legislators and, if we have learned anything from the past performance lines of those two entities, the future is on shaky footing waiting for the earthquake!
And, at many tracks, handle just doesnāt support the purses.
On the other side of the coin, one longtime member of the BDHC (Broken Down Horseplayers Club) was all for it saying, āYour last column proved my point that racing is no longer a spectator sport but, rather, an insider sport.
āThatās the reason we have lost so many fans.
āAll of us guysā (and gals, too) āwould be using both fists to go after a lotto like payday. It could be the start of a re-birth of the sportāthat is āIFāāand thatās a big āIFā the sport can recover from all the damage done thus far,
āYouād have to have a PR (public relations) blitz to get it goingāmaybe a wager seeded with a $5 million jackpot for a Pick-8, or something.ā
Another BDHC fan chimed in with the thought, āSulkies would have to be completely re-designed with back supports to prevent drivers from leaning way back.
āIn an 18-horse field, with the guys leading back a horse near the back would be at least 30 lengths behindāso that leaning back stuff would kill this plan and have to stop.ā
In checking the two large fields at āSPkā from the last Mane Attraction, in the 18-horse field, one horse, racing in 14th place 17 lengths back, finished second just 1 1/4 lengths back of the winner.
In the 16-horse field, the horse in 16thālast–place, 14 lengths back, rallied to be thirdāand Sportsmanās Park was a FIVE-EIGHTHS MILE TRACK back then (with half-mile track turns!)
With a track a ābitā longer–7/8s or 1 mile–it could make for very interesting racing drawing a new ābreedā of fan enjoying a calvary charge to the wire and life changing payoffs all the way down the line.
(Just think, Kentucky Derby payoffs every raceā¦plus an added kicker of lotto-like payoffs.)
R. Phil from the Chicago area asks, āJust how would this work?ā
There are a few scenarios for success here.
Similarly to the different Lotto event drawings through the week, envisioning a Wednesday Pick-6 and a Saturday āPerfect Pick-8.ā
The mid-week Pick-6 with the aforementioned larger fields from 12 to 18 horses per race, would have odds similar to the chances of in the lotto, which have attracted billions of dollars on a āmindlessā drawingāmany of which are āquick picks.ā
The Pick-6 would take astute handicapping and keep our sport in the limelight with that feature alone by the time it takes to handicap the event. (Yes, more eyes on our sport!)
In the Pick-6, the āoddsā of winning would vary with the number of horses in each leg but, as an example, if each leg had 15 horses in it, the odds of winning would be about 11,390,625āthe number of different combinations offered.
The Saturday Pick-8 Bonanza would require the selection of the first eight finishers in order in an event with between 12 and 18 starters.
Yes, the number of different combinations is astronomicalājust like the lotto with its different games requiring one to pick six from as many as 54 numbers!
Difficult? You bet! But harness racingās prize could grow into the hundreds of millions of dollars and would be a welcome āshotā in the arm (for a change) and, like the lottery, attract huge gaming dollarsājust like the lotteryā¦and sports bettingā¦and slot machinesā¦and bingoā¦and blackjack, craps, roulette, poker and dice, to name a few.
One horseman said, āItāll never work! Too complicated!ā
Thatās exactly the reason āitāll never work!ā When we wonāt try it!
Throughout the ages, if all mankind had that same attitude, we wouldnāt have televisionā¦then cable television, rotary phonesā¦then smart phones, cures for diseaseā¦going back further, airplanes, automobiles, computers, the internet and every other thing that has been invented during our lifetime!
Too complicated?
If our own pari-mutuel industry canāt handle it, maybe FanDuel, DraftKIngs, BetMGM, Fanatics, Bet 365, Hard Rock, Borgata, Caesars and ANY of the MANY more sports books would hop on the bandwagon…in a heartbeat!
If our own intelligence isnāt smart enough to handle it, maybe ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE can.
One horseman did have an interesting suggestionāwondering if there would be any way to involve a half mile track, somehow, instead of just the larger 7/8th mile tracks or the mile ovals.
Great idea!
Larger tracks were selected because of field size. Period!
A half mile ovalāNorthfield gets a lot of actionācould host a āSpectacular-Six Sundayā featuring races as short as a quarter mile sprint, a half mile, three-quarters of a mile, one mile, 1 1/4 miles and 1 1/2 milesāthe first four events requiring nine starters and the last two with a minimum of 12 starters. The starting points would be easy with timing beams already in and no problem!!
Canadian harness racing aficionado Trey Colbeck loved the idea but wanted to ātweakā the last race off time suggested at 10:30 saying āMORE late races will attract the young crowd, especially on weekends.ā
Point well taken.
The original 10:30 time was based on āFLORIDAā time, where our BDHC clientele has few members in that āyounger set.ā
There are very few BDHC members under 60 with the vast majority bordering on āantique,ā including myself.
Another astute observer, Sue, asked, āJust out of curiosityāsay you have a field of 18 horses and the purse was $25,000āhow much would all the horses stand to make?ā
Great question.
When everything is negotiated (and we previously mentioned the huge lottery ābite”) some of the wagers on harness racingās lottery events would go to purses so the belief in this corner is that there wouldn’t be any purses at $25,000. They could be MUCH HIGHER, especially when carryovers push the advertised grand prizes up, up, up as they ripen with carryovers!
Finally, there were a couple of comments concerning the safety of horses and drivers.
First, they donāt seem to have much of a problem in Europe with the larger fields and, second, if a ānewly designedā back support sulky, drivers will be sitting up straighter in the bike and see where they are going!
As another BDHC member chimed in, āMaybe my horse wonāt have to come from 15 or 20 lengths back with all them guys leaning back.
It sure will cut the front-to-back distance by as many as 20 lengths.
āIāve thrown some tickets away halfway throughā (a mile) āin disgust thinking my āliveā horse is already ādead.ā
That BDHC member has a pointā¦Race secretaries put events together where horses are in a same āclassā but, as this punter said, āIf Iām sitting back maybe 15 lengths away at the half, if my horse of equal class three or four seconds faster during the last half?
Of course, if some of the races carded would be āunder saddle,ā there would be much less of a distance from front to back.
Well, thatās a sampling of some thoughts on, literally, “both sides of the fenceāā¦the āinside” where our equine athletes complete and the āoutside,ā where the punters put their $2 bucksāor $200āon which one will be the longest nose in the race to the wire!
May The Horse Be With You!
by John Berry, for Harnesslink