Quote:
Originally Posted by thaskalos
Given the current competition for the gambling dollar, an industry has to be brain-dead to charge $11 for a pamphlet containing some basic handicapping information. Especially since the "Big Gorilla" of legalized betting has all its handicapping information available online for free.
Charging $11 for a DRF is akin to a restaurant charging $11 for a look at its menu...IMO.
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I believe the equibase daily pass is $5.25. I don’t think that’s an unreasonable price for a company to maintain that data
Either way, anybody complaining about an $11 DRF is the same person betting dime supers, $2 show bets, and $1 exactas. They’re not even customers. They’re the equivalent at a restaurant where somebody sits in a diner with a coffee for 3 hours every day, it costs more money to keep the lights on and they’re hoping that one day they’ll order a sandwich with the coffee