Quote:
Originally Posted by AndyC
I can think of several other things that I look for. You have to be very comfortable with data provided for your analysis. Race analysis (and the data provided) is only as good as the ability of the analyzer.
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This is my process.
1. I allow the computer to look through the PPs and charts to create metrics that describe the makeup of each field, how the race was run, and how the track was playing that day.
2. I allow the computer create notes to be imported into Formulator for all the races and to especially flag all the extremes. From the extreme races, it creates a file of any horses to be upgraded or downgraded next out.
3. I import all the computer notes into Formulator.
4. I watch the replays looking for things the computer is not programmed to find and pay special attention to the flagged races/days because that's where some of my bets will come from. I override the computer when I think it's appropriate and add the other notes.
5. Race day the computer spits out all the upgrades and downgrades running that day with projections of whether they are moving into better or worse conditions.
The goal is to find upgrades moving into favorable conditions to bet on and vice versa. All the notes and reports are part of my subjective handicapping. It's a nice process, but it's mostly just a time saver. I still have to watch everything, make tough judgments, bet correctly, and use the information well. That's no easy task.