wilderness
12-13-2011, 04:41 PM
The following from the Sept 30, 1942 Harness Horse and Rochester, NH.:
Briar Hanover, another longshot placed in the third heat of the 2:14 trot so unexpectedly that there was not a single place ticket sold on him, so the fortunate person that thought he might show and bought a ticket to that effect reaped a harvest, as Briar paid even $90, not a bad day's work.
end of quote
That is certainly not the way the pari-mutuel pay-off regulations work today.
Anybody have any idea when these rules changed, or if this may have been a N.H.-rule-only?
Briar Hanover, another longshot placed in the third heat of the 2:14 trot so unexpectedly that there was not a single place ticket sold on him, so the fortunate person that thought he might show and bought a ticket to that effect reaped a harvest, as Briar paid even $90, not a bad day's work.
end of quote
That is certainly not the way the pari-mutuel pay-off regulations work today.
Anybody have any idea when these rules changed, or if this may have been a N.H.-rule-only?