In no way was I defending the rule. (I was merely pointing out what the rule is in New York.)
I recall what the track signals looked like on TV back in the 1980's and 1990's.
Before they started displaying the 1 and 1A separately it was definitely misleading. Not so much these days.
Personally, I'm against any rule that calls for scratching a horse for betting purposes and letting it run for purse money only --
As a horseplayer, I see such rules as a slap in the face.
I also think such rules are financially harmful to the track's bottom line. As well as harmful to the horsemen's purse account.
When a horse is scratched for betting purposes and allowed to run for purse money only:
The track gets one less runner for that race. (Smaller field size.)
That equates to less money bet on that race. Which in turn equates to a reduction in gross profit for the track's bottom line.
The reduction in handle also equates to a reduction in money going to the horsemens's purse account for that race.
I contend that if you scratch the horse instead of allowing it to run for purse money only:
There's a good chance the trainer runs that horse right back.
In theory the track gets one extra horse in a future race. (Much sooner than if you allow that horse to run for purse money only and it needs another 6 weeks to recover.)
If the trainer runs the horse right back the track gets higher handle and the horsemen get an increase in money going to the purse account.
I contend that if you scratch the horse instead of allowing it to run for purse money only:
Both the track's bottom line and the horsemen's purse account are better off in the long run.
-jp
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Last edited by Jeff P; 08-19-2018 at 10:31 PM.
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