After receiving a communique from Hughie, a long-time player, he related why his participation in harness racing has become limited over the years and confined to, mostly, tracks larger than a half mile.
āI consider myself a decent playerā$50 to, maybe, $100 a raceā he said, āand John Campbell hit the nail right on the head when he said that legislators and casinos watch (pari-mutuel) handle closely to monitor their investment in racing every year.
āThere are āliveā tracks and there are ādeadā tracks and I classify them on how a $50 to $100 win wager will alter the odds.
āOf course, (in the U.S.) The Meadowlands is the king because a $50 win bet may (or may not) cost a bettor anything on the board or, maybe, 20 cents if they are on the cusp of change and there are some other decent ones here like (Harrahās) Hoosier (Park) and Scioto (Downs) and, on occasion, The Red Mile.
āThe guy down there (Gabe Prewitt) is doing a lot of things to build the place up and build handle.
āBut, when you get down to the nitty-gritty of half-milers, Northfield Park is, really, the only one that I can even think of playing these days, although Monticello gets a little action, too, lately, especially in the exoticsā (exacta, trifecta, superfecta).
āNorthfield has full fields and a pretty good clientele and the pools are pretty darn goodā¦but I tend to stay with the larger tracks because the stretches are longer and there are still horses that can close a bit more than on half milers.
āGuys leaning back donāt do the bettors any good because they put the closers too far back to much damage.ā
Hughie is āright on the moneyā here with his thoughts and the ever threat of shorter fields is slowly putting the sport in future danger.
āBreeders run the business,ā he said, āand all they care about is speed but speed kills longer racing careers and has played a big role in these shorter fieldsā¦and I think itās only going to get worse.ā
Examining Hughieās thoughts, a ābit further, in a 10-horse field with a 20% takeout, if all horses had the same amount bet on each one, the odds board would show ā8ā (to 1) and the pay would be about $18.00.
In a eight horse field, the board would show ā5ā (to 1) with the win mutuel about $12.80.
When you get down to a six-horse fieldāwith all things being equalāthe board would show 7 to 2 with a mutuel of $9.60.
Hughie is correct in thinking that, with shorter fields, the wagering value decreases and players can become disenchanted and disengaged from wagering as value decreases.
āThis is a spectator sport with an aging clientele that loses more older players at a faster rate without the newer, younger crowd replacing them,ā he rightfully says.
If you think the lottery is to blameā¦or casinosā¦or sports bettingā¦or propsā¦youāre right because they are always finding new gimmicks to entice new bloodāsomething harness racing is not doing to any great degree.
Guaranteed pools help a bit but they are only used when there are carryoversā¦and thatās not every night!
Again, there are some tracks doing something about this dilemmaā¦and others trying to do somethingā¦but, as Hughie says, there are ādeadā tracks for the bettor, no matter what purses are offered.
In examining win pools from a recent Saturday nightāremember, itās still winter timeāThe Meadowlands average win pool for all their races was a tad over $40,000āsome a little lower and some appreciably higher.
Hughieās $50 win bet would have a negligible effect on the odds board.
Looking at another trackāwonāt mention the nameāeven a $50 bet would destroy that horseās value to the bettor BIG TIME.
Hereās a breakdown from one trackā¦
In the particular race in question, on a Sunday night with little competition, the official chart had number one at odds of 4.1 to 1 ($8.20). Had Hughie placed a $50 wager on this horse, the winning payoff would have been reduced to $6.40 and, with a $100 bet, the odds would have been 3 to 2 ($5.00).
Number two was off at 12 to 1 (probable $2 pay of $26.00). A $50 bet would reduce the odds to 9 to 2 ($11.80) with a $100 bet further lowering the odds to 5 to 2 ($7.80).
Yet another example involving the even money tote-board favoriteāactually 1.10 to 1 ($4.20) āwould reflect a $2 payoff of $3.40 with an additional $50 bet, further reduced to tote-board odds of 1 to 2, resulting in a $3.00 win mutuel.
Of course, one might argue that the difference between $4.20 and $3.00 is only a measly dollar and twenty centsā¦but, if itās that $100 wager weāre talking about, that means a $60 difference in the win payout, which is quite significant, even for the ābiggerā player.
The most extreme change with a āHughieā bet involves the longest shot on the boardā15 to 1. A $33.40 win payoff would shrink to $14.00 with a $50 bet and, with that $100 bet would make that pick in a āDHā as second choice in the betting at 3 to 1 ($8.80).
By the way, the purse in this race was $10,000 and, based on total handle for this particular race the purse would have been about $180.00! (Yes, one-hundred eighty and 00/100 dollars).
Hughie classifies this track as a ādeadā track for the bettor.
He continued, āTo be a successful bettorāand Iāve been gambling for way over 50 yearsāyou have to find value for your betsā¦bets that make it worthwhile win, lose or draw.
āWhen betting what I call āa dead track,ā you wind up being against yourselfā¦and thatās what harness racing is doing to itself with short fields and tracks with low handle.
āPurses donāt matter to me all that much because many tracks are on crutches with casino help and legislative transfusion making purses decent for horse peopleā¦but for how long?ā
Hughie also believes that, with the drain on the bottom line, infusing purse money into bloodstream of racing may get to be a ābothersome thing for shareholders, if these are publicly held companies on the NYSE or NASDAQ,ā he says.
āCasinos watch their bottom line like a hawk, and they are going to get tired of supporting racing down the road and thereās no telling what a buck or two in a legislatorās pocket can do to turn the tide favoring decoupling.
āJust look at Florida, for example!
āThat guy (the Governor) turned his back on the very voters that allowed casinos in the first place.
āMIchigan is a bad way now. So is Chicago and all of Illinois. The midwest was one of the biggest players and, now, they are hardly visibleāencased in fog!ā
So, Hughie, what do you consider to be the āliveā tracks besides the ones mentioned above?
āAs they say, different strokes for different folksā¦I like win wagering and win pools are pretty weak these daysā¦but that because of all the different types of waters offered, so itās hard to find a track with decent win pools.
āSaratoga is pretty good, especially with exotic handleā¦Cal Expo is very decent, but short fields tend to put a damper on value in some racesā¦Dover (Downs) has fairly full fields, good driver colony and value in some exoticsā¦
Hughie has no opinionāyetāon many of the tracks that havenāt opened for the 2024 season as yetālike Oak Grove, Shenandoah, Harrahās Philly, Running Acesāsaying, āIāll look at them and, if I find value in anything, Iāll be in the action.
āI love the sport,ā he says, ābut Iām not sure how long Iāll be in the betting arena if things donāt change a ābit.āā
Hughie says, āonly TIME will tell!ā
And thatās too bad.
May The Horse Be With You.
by John Berry, for Harnesslink