By Kevin O’Neill
There are certain aspects of the structure of sports betting
and horse racing that can give the player an advantage. Some
of them don’t happen all that often. Some opportunities
occur only once a year, such as the house quinella in the Kentucky
Derby.
When a track doesn’t offer a separate quinella pool
(1st and 2nd in any order, while exactas require you to pick
1st and 2nd in exact order), some books, both in Vegas and
offshore book a “house quinella”. The House Q
is calculated by multiplying the win price of the first place
horse by the place price of the runner up and dividing it
by two. When betting exactas involving two horses that are
15-1 and less in the Kentucky Derby the house quinella is
a better bet than an exacta box. Let’s look at a couple
of examples.
Last year Smarty Jones was the favorite at 4-1 and Lion Heart
was the second choice at better than 5-1. The exacta paid
$65.20. The house quinella paid $41.82. If you had a $10 exacta
box ($20 total bet) of those two you got back $326. If you
risked the same $20 on a house quinella your return was $418.20,
28% more than the exacta box.
In 2003 Funny Cide won at 12-1 with favored Empire Maker
running second at odds of 5-2. The exacta paid $97 while the
house Q paid $80.04. A $20 risk in a $10 exacta box with the
two returned $465 while a $20 house quinella paid a stout
$800.40, a 72% premium over the exacta box return.
The public nature of Derby betting provides the opportunity
here. Smart horseplayers know that longhots are a bad bet
to place over the long run (no time to detail why. You’ll
have to trust me on this). On an average day at the races
the place pool is an efficient market. At the Derby a lot
of once a year horse bettors are playing longshots to win/place
or across the board, creating bloated place pools that fatten
the place prices on well bet horses.
Not all books post house quinellas, in fact most don’t.
You’ll have to ask and when you do ask check on their
limits. Two worth checking out are the Stardust in Vegas and
Millennium (see http://www.consumerbet.com/rsb.html)
online.
On another Derby issue. Why do trifectas and superfectas
pay enormous amounts in the Derby even when the horses seem
logical or there is only one bomber in the mix? It is all
about the size of the field. In a typical 8-horse field there
are 336 possible trifecta combinations and 1680 superfecta
combinations. In the Derby a full 20-horse field has 6840
possible trifecta combination and 116,280 superfecta combinations.
That explains why the superfecta paid over $41,000 last year
with the favorite winning and the second choice nabbing the
place spot. Of course most books cap their payoffs on exotics
and big paying exotics are usually better played at the track
or with a simulcasting outfit that puts your action right
into the tote.
Last week we promised information coming soon on our Business
of Sports Handicapping seminar and coaching program. We’ve
been enhancing the program for this year and with the details
close to being worked out it’ll be sent to our email
list next week. Opt in by visiting http://www.consumerbet.com/email.html.
Our baseball totals-only service is now 17-12 for 58.6% winners.
Record updates at 770-618-8700, a 24-hour recorded message.
Interesting media tidbit from last week. People often ask
me what the law is about offshore wagering. Forbes Magazine
summed it up in one sentence recently. “Federal law
effectively bans online gambling sites from operating in the
U.S., but it doesn’t prevent American gamblers from
using them.”
That’s essentially it. Barring some sort of invasive
local ordinance, you can bet but you can’t book.
Good luck in the Derby and in all your endeavors. Be careful.
We’ll be in touch with those on our email list next
week with the information promised above and some stuff not
promised as well.
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