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Pace Makes the Race / TPR Discussion, Examples, Lessons from Total Pace Ratings (TPR) aka 'Phase I' from the book 'Pace Makes the Race' |
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04-21-2016, 07:08 AM | #1 |
Grade 1
Join Date: Jun 2005
Posts: 878
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Tpr
Can TPR numbers be used to master the MU?
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04-21-2016, 11:04 AM | #2 |
The egg man
Join Date: Jul 2008
Location: Carlsbad, California
Posts: 10,005
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the sound of one hand clapping
Hi GL45
We can also ask can you do the match up without knowing who the leaders will be at the second call and can those leaders have enough late energy to hold on , So If you know how to interpret the ERP ratings , and the early - late difference graph or "sticks" and The LPR ratings and you take the time to learn how to identify a horses running style, You can matchup Remember TPR is the Total Pace Rating of Phase 1 What TPR is really is 2 readouts Early pace and Late pace which when added together gets a Total Pace Rating So If you master Phase 1, totally you can Match Up It takes lots of practice and intuition, You will have trouble just if you just look at the numbers because the race starts at the gate. we need to know how the horses get to the second call, It is just as important as where they are at the second call . Did they use too much of there total energy ? Will they decelerate relative to their velocity too much. Bill |
07-17-2016, 12:41 PM | #3 |
Abiding Student
Join Date: May 2016
Posts: 711
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Zen Kōan
Bill, what a profound response.
And gl45, thanking you for asking the question. I've wanted to ask it a hundred times. |
07-17-2016, 01:12 PM | #4 |
Grade 1
Join Date: Jun 2005
Posts: 4,151
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It was a good question by GL45, I wish more had been done with it
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07-17-2016, 02:35 PM | #5 |
Grade 1
Join Date: Jan 2013
Posts: 318
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TPR and the Match Up
The vulnerability in literal interpretation of EPR-LPR and TPR is the assumption that should your selected horse run his EPR, that he will run his LPR as suggested by the selected paceline.
Early horses can run much better LPRs and subsequent TPRs if they are on an uncontested lead. So part of your evaluation is determining whether your best EPR horse got to that point slugging it out with other contenders or waltzed to it, reserving considerable energy for the stretch run. As Bill noted, you have to understand the concept of Running Styles. And Running styles are different than ESP. The former is based on visual evidence of a horse's preferred positon at the 1st Call when they run their top efforts, wins or very close finishes. ESP is a ratio of 2nd Call velocity divided by final fraction, IN THE PACELINE RACE YOU HAVE SELECTED. If you look at the Velocity -POH screen it will show you the ESP for each paceline. This tells you how the horse reacted to the POR of that paceline. An E means he was basically all done by the 2nd Call. And each additional designation, EP, P, SP, S and L have greater final fraction components often at the expense of 2nd call velocity. So if you use the best of the last 3 comparable pacelines automatic paceline selection routines and the horses in question have had recent layoffs or have been running at higher classes and finishing poorly, in most cases your EPR best horses will have very poor LPRs and resulting TPRs. Or a S horse that closes into a slow final fraction will have a high LPR and better than normal TPR. This means two things:1) When you identify a horse's Running Style which you do without reference to pace or paceline, then to evaluate his potential you have to find a paceline where he ran well with a win or good finish. That may be his 8th line down or some such thing. You can always throw the horse out later because you feel his form is lousy and there is no way he will run back to that. 2). Also as Bill mentions, you have to know who will likely take the lead and what kind of early contention there will be. Generally, if there are 3 or more Es or EPs in a race, they will beat each other up and maybe one will hang on for 3rd. So you can not rely on the TPR method exclusively, you have to evaluate the 1st fraction and determine what kind of early pace will result. To me this has always been the problem with using TPR as a standalone handicapping method. Once you evaluate the runners, assign Running styles and select pacelines that show how the horses ran against that early pace, then you can throw them into TPR and have something meaningful. |
07-17-2016, 03:29 PM | #6 |
Grade 1
Join Date: Jun 2005
Posts: 4,151
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Mark,
Thanks for the reply |
07-17-2016, 04:36 PM | #7 |
Abiding Student
Join Date: May 2016
Posts: 711
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Thanks, Mark. I printed that and tacked it on the cork board at eye level.
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07-18-2016, 02:27 AM | #8 |
AlwNW1X
Join Date: Feb 2016
Posts: 16
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dear bill thanks for explaning the tpr ,, on another note are you or any one else making money betting maidens? I'm having some success with rdss// turfsup
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07-18-2016, 09:47 AM | #9 |
Grade 1
Join Date: Jun 2013
Posts: 389
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Maidens at this time of year especially are providing some great prices. If you know what to look for and know what has the possibility to create nice mutuals, maidens can make you a good chunk of change at this time of the year.
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07-19-2016, 11:38 PM | #10 |
AlwNW1X
Join Date: Feb 2016
Posts: 16
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DEAR LATEKICK THANKS FOR YOUR RESPONSE REGARDING Maidens , I was wondering are you using rdss or some other program/ also are you using other info besides rdss screens? also anyone that makes money on maidens please comment//// thanks turfsup
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