Michael Pizzollaʼs 2010 Preakness Handicapping Magic Rant
Transcription
Michael Pizzollaʼs 2010 Preakness Handicapping Magic Rant
Michael Pizzollaʼs 2010 Preakness Handicapping Magic Rant Copyright ©2010 By Michael Pizzolla. All Rights Reserved www.posttimedaily.com From The Desk Of Michael Pizzolla May 14, 2010 5:47 AM Las Vegas Dear Handicapper and Friend, Time for the second jewel of the Triple Crown. This year’s tempest in a teapot is the uproar over the catch phrase ‘Get Your Preak On’ for promoting the Preakness. Who really cares about this stuff? I would have guess next to no one, until I saw the number of articles written on this. Astounding. Like clockwork, I got asked if I had the Derby. Well, yes and no. Black Magic: The Ultimate Handicapper Software™ had Super Saver right on top. Great. Here’s what the screen shot looked like right out of the proverbial box: Copyright ©2010 By Michael Pizzolla. All Rights Reserved www.posttimedaily.com Copyright ©2010 By Michael Pizzolla. All Rights Reserved www.posttimedaily.com The good news is that Super Saver was indeed right on top. Pretty impressive that Black Magic: The Ultimate Handicapper Software™ can take a race of 20 3 year olds going a mile and a quarter and make that call. Here’s the ‘no’ part of the yes and no. The Black Magic line started at 11-1. That means that if the race were run 12 times, Super Saver would win once. At 8-1, it was an underlay. End of story. Yes, I know of the school of thought that every winner is an overlay, spoken typically by those who have never made their living at the track, or bet seriously. Hobbyists. Nothing wrong with that: in a way I long for those halcyon days when I thought the game was as easy as picking enough winners, outsmarting the ‘ignorant public’ by my brilliant technique, betting horses regardless of odds, of true value. You’ll notice from the Black Magic: The Ultimate Handicapper Software™ screenshot that the second place horse, Ice Box, was considerably far down on the line. There goes the exotic bets I made. Yes, I allowed myself some recreational bets on the Derby, and the tickets are now bookmarks. Copyright ©2010 By Michael Pizzolla. All Rights Reserved www.posttimedaily.com In truth, it’s the kind of race that I’d pass in a couple of nanoseconds on any other day. One email I got wanted to know why I didn’t do a more extensive analysis of the Derby. Try as I might, I just couldn’t see the point of doing a raft of analysis on a race that was a clear pass from a professional betting viewpoint. Making value the central theme of your work will beting to change the way you look at a race. I’ve been talking a lot this year about a process of looking at potential race investments that I call ValueCapping™. It starts with the premise that value is the FIRST, not the last, thing that must be considered in a race. As those of you who have followed my work, I have advocated for years the concept of using TWO lines for evaluating investments. The first is the line from the numbers, patterns, pace scenarios, and all of that from Black Magic: The Ultimate Handicapper Software™. But whether you use that software or another, or whether you make the line yourself by hand, your line is the starting point. As important is the second line, the Contention Line. This is a line that makes an estimation of what the public SHOULD do in a race. The nuances of the two line approach would fill a book, but here’s the basic insight: Knowing what your opponent, the betting public, should do with a horse from conventional handicapping procedures is a key to understanding the betting in a race. Copyright ©2010 By Michael Pizzolla. All Rights Reserved www.posttimedaily.com I used to think that racing nirvana was finding a horse that I made 3-1 on my line that was going off at 10-1. How naive. See, if that horse looks really good by conventional handicapping technique, if that horse is also 3-1 on the Contention Line, and is going off at 10-1, something’s not right. On the other hand, if Black Magic: The Ultimate Handicapper Software™ makes the horse 3-1 and the public should not like the horse, reflected by a 12-1 Contention Line, say, and the horse goes off at 10-1, then the overlay is an ‘expected’ overlay, and a potential good investment. Now, there’s a lot more to it, but those are the basics. So in ValueCapping™, the analysis of the value question comes FIRST, followed by an analysis of WHY there should be a price on the horse or horses, and only then using non-conventional analysis, or ValueCap™ factors, to see if there’s an outstanding investment lurking. What I advocate strongly to the Wizards on the Wizards’ Forum is to make the mainstay of their betting portfolio the simple, clear, and obvious races. There are plenty of them, too many to waste time fooling around with puzzles like most Kentucky Derby and Breeders’ Cup races. Sure, there are exceptions, but they are rare. Copyright ©2010 By Michael Pizzolla. All Rights Reserved www.posttimedaily.com Here’s a couple of examples of simple value investments that happened just yesterday, May 13, 2010, that several Wizards had and posted about on the Forum. The 2nd at Arlington had a horse right on top of Black Magic that was 7/2 on the odds line and 11-1 on the Contention Line. Not only that, it was the only horse in the race with a pattern, a Type 2 (the T2 designation), and was a Reverser to boot. On top of that, it was a Speed of Speed Horse in an unpressured race. Copyright ©2010 By Michael Pizzolla. All Rights Reserved www.posttimedaily.com How simple was it to spot this value investment by starting with the value issues in the race? See any overlays in the horses above random (the top 4 in this case)? Only one. Copyright ©2010 By Michael Pizzolla. All Rights Reserved www.posttimedaily.com $34.20 and a $160.40 exacta there for the taking. And several Wizards did just that. Apparently, judging by the show prices, more than one MOTO jumped off the proverbial bridge on a 3-5 shot that was off since March and dropping to $10,000 claiming after finishing within a length at $30,000, and winning the race before that at $25,000. Same day, May 13, 2010, Pimlico 6th race. 3 horses above the random line, the favorite the 6 taking a similar negative drop in class as the 4 in the Arlington race. Copyright ©2010 By Michael Pizzolla. All Rights Reserved www.posttimedaily.com Again, the potential value sticks out like a sore thumb in this race, and resulted in another value investment for several Wizards who spotted this. The negative dropper, the 6, finished 5th. These happened just yesterday, in modest claiming races, and they were just waiting to be had. Copyright ©2010 By Michael Pizzolla. All Rights Reserved www.posttimedaily.com Not all of these win, of course, but at these prices your win percentage does not need to be high for a wonderful profit to be made. Of course, there’s a little more to the process of ValueCapping™, but these are examples of the simple, clear and obvious races that I urge the Wizards to look for. Do you see why it’s hard to get excited about a puzzle like the Derby when modest races like these produce such spectacular results? One more example, and we’ll get on to the Preakness. Last Saturday, May 8th, I posted about a race on the Wizards’ Forum. Every Saturday morning, we have a ‘Wizards’ Roundtable’ where there are postings about races that look interesting that day. Unlike the rancor that usually appears in internet discussions of races, these Roundtables are unfailingly supportive and instructive. One of the reasons I wake up in the morning looking forward to my day is to see the support and encouragement users of Black Magic: The Ultimate Handicapper Software™ give each other on that Forum. Here’s what I posted about the 5th race at Golden Gate that day: Copyright ©2010 By Michael Pizzolla. All Rights Reserved www.posttimedaily.com Copyright ©2010 By Michael Pizzolla. All Rights Reserved www.posttimedaily.com Here’s the screenshot with my notes: Copyright ©2010 By Michael Pizzolla. All Rights Reserved www.posttimedaily.com And here were the final odds. Copyright ©2010 By Michael Pizzolla. All Rights Reserved www.posttimedaily.com As I said in the post, this was not the simplest race, but I had several ValueCapping™ factors including the fact that the 5 was the lone closer in AccuPressure V2 and the lone Sustained horse in the race. A scratch of one horse changed the odds slightly, but I was still going to bet the 5, and wanted to use the 6 as an unknown with a big Late Fraction. And my ‘home run’ trifecta box worked out as well in the superfecta. The results? A $49.80 horse, an exacta that paid $289.60 for $2, a $1 tri that paid $1,225.50, and a $1 superfecta for $7,031.70. A weekend maker, all from the ValueCapping™ process and recognizing horses that were not as good as the public thought they were. Some of my tickets follow:` Copyright ©2010 By Michael Pizzolla. All Rights Reserved www.posttimedaily.com Copyright ©2010 By Michael Pizzolla. All Rights Reserved www.posttimedaily.com Copyright ©2010 By Michael Pizzolla. All Rights Reserved www.posttimedaily.com Copyright ©2010 By Michael Pizzolla. All Rights Reserved www.posttimedaily.com Copyright ©2010 By Michael Pizzolla. All Rights Reserved www.posttimedaily.com $6,316.25 out of the race with not a lot invested. The key tools of Black Magic: The Ultimate Handicapper Software™ and ValueCapping™ led me to a very simple insight into the race. This was a $4,000 claimer, non winners of two lifetime. Again, can you see why I don’t get that excited about the so-called ‘big’ races? Having said that, I suppose it’s time to look at the Preakness. Here’s the Black Magic: The Ultimate Handicapper Software™ summary: Copyright ©2010 By Michael Pizzolla. All Rights Reserved www.posttimedaily.com The two morning line favorites, Lookin At Lucky and Super Saver are the first and third on the Black Magic line. Three of the race’s top 4 morning line horses are in the top 4 of Black Magic. The top Contention Line horses are at the top of the line. That means in effect that Black Magic agrees with what the public will probably do in the race. Another bit of caution is that the race comes up as an Unpressured race, slightly favoring the early horses, yet the Track Profile for Pimlico routes has been trending on the late side. In other words, the pace scenario is as clear as mud. At this point, I don’t see a good reason to get seriously involved in this race. I may take small shots with the 6, Jackson Bend, one of the earlier horses from a running style perspective, yet expends its energy on the late side. With the obvious horses, 7, Lookin At Lucky, 12, Dublin, 8, Super Saver, at a big price I’d throw in the 6, and for bombs structure some small exotics with the 1, 5th on the line, and the 5, the Fulcrum. But this is strictly an action play. Give me a good $4,000 claimer any day of the week. Copyright ©2010 By Michael Pizzolla. All Rights Reserved www.posttimedaily.com I wanted you to see my analysis of those ‘cheap’ races with not so cheap payouts so you could see first hand the opportunities that are out there, far removed from the ‘glamour’ races. I’m supposed to have an opinion about the Triple Crown races, and sometimes I do. Sometimes, that opinion is that it’s not a good value investment, and that’s not a popular sentiment. As usual, I will focus on the undercards, and the ‘lesser’ tracks. I don’t have all of the final cards as I write this, so I haven’t done all of that work, but do try to find value in the other couple of hundred races running on Saturday. Drop me a line at [email protected] if you have any questions or to let me know how it’s going. As this is Preakness weekend, it may take a little bit to get back to you. You can see the latest goings-on at Post Time by visiting www.posttimedaily.com Good luck on Derby Day and always! Remember to make the bet make you, All the best, Michael Copyright ©2010 By Michael Pizzolla. All Rights Reserved www.posttimedaily.com P.S. One last thing. In answer to the many inquiries I’ve gotten about when Black Magic will be open to join again, the good news is that it is open now, and will be open through the Triple Crown series. I am personally involved on a daily basis supporting the Wizards on the Forum, so I have to keep the numbers limited. They get personal coaching from me on the Forum and a full length DVD every month from yours truly, and it’s a tremendous amount of work, but I am so pleased with the progress I see with the Wizards, and the scores they post, I can’t even begin to say. As an added sweetener, those of you who get Black Magic: The Ultimate Handicapper during the 2010 Triple Crown Season will receive a copy of the latest DVD set, ‘Mastering The Art Of Handicapping And Value Investment’, 15 DVDs, Manual, special StackTech™ upgrade for Black Magic), valued at around $1,500, normally sells for $497, as a free bonus with your getting Black Magic. (You can read more about Black Magic: The Ultimate Handicapper Software™ and see an introductory video here: http://www.posttimedaily.com/blam01/index.html You can read more about the ‘Mastering the Art’ DVDs here: http://www.posttimedaily.com/MAHVI/mahvi.html ) Those who get Black Magic between now and Belmont Stakes day will automatically get a copy of this course included with Black Magic. I’ve never gotten so much positive feedback about any other Seminar course, many have found it an utter game changer. Copyright ©2010 By Michael Pizzolla. All Rights Reserved www.posttimedaily.com If you’re interested, go to www.posttimedaily.com, and you’ll see banners about Black Magic and ‘Mastering the Art’ right on top. Michael Pizzolla Post Time Solutions, Inc. 2900 South Rancho Drive Las Vegas, NV 89102 Copyright ©2010 By Michael Pizzolla. All Rights Reserved www.posttimedaily.com
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