Chief Stipe Posted 7 hours ago Posted 7 hours ago New graphics part of TAB’s long-term plans to educate punters www.newstalkzb.co.nz The way Kiwis watch horse racing is changing and Trackside bosses hope that ultimately provides punters with a new way of analysing the sport.https://bitofayarn.com New Zealand Cup week saw a successful roll out of the new real time tracking graphics which show punters where their horse is during the running of the race. The system powered by company tripleSdata is already common in some overseas jurisdictions and something similar was already being used by major New Zealand racetracks like Ellerslie and Addington. But the new package will be expanded to most tracks around the country to provide uniform coverage of racing. It shows where each horse is in every race in a graphic across the bottom of the screen on Trackside and Trackside.co.nz, along with race speed and sectionals. The graphic clears during the closing stages of a race as less horses are in play and to provide a clean screen to cover the whole track as horses often spread across it.https://bitofayarn.com The system works through transponders placed in saddleclothes for both thoroughbred and harness racing, which are transported around the country in the Outside Broadcasting Vans used by Trackside, so every time a meeting is covered, the saddleclothes will be there. While some punters who watch a lot of racing may not need the system to keep up with where their horse is in the running, TAB Head Of Live Racing for Entain, Kyle Bettler, says it is a great resource for those new to racing punting or who may not be as used to reading races. But Bettler says the ultimate benefit of the new system will be as a punting tool and helping New Zealand racing fans catch up with data analysis around the world.https://bitofayarn.com “First and foremost it is a great new tool so racing viewers can see where their horse is,” says Bettler. “Some punters may not need that but plenty of people will enjoy being able to track their horse for the whole race. “But all the data from each horse is also recorded and will become available to punters.https://bitofayarn.com “Within a few months we hope to have all that data collated and available on the trackside.co.nz website so punters can get in-depth information on any horses not only after races but more importantly when assessing their chances in upcoming races.” Data analysis on things like sectionals, top speeds and even total ground covered is common in overseas betting jurisdictions but the New Zealand punting marketplace is still maturing, not only in terms of analysis, but understanding how markets work. “We want to educate punters on how to use this data so they can be better informed,” says Bettler, who has a background at the elite levels of Australian-based professional punting. “Next year we will be launching a new show on Trackside to help educate punters on how the data works, what to look for, how ratings systems work and how they can use all of it as a punting tool.” The new graphics and data collection system will be rolled out on 30 tracks this summer but some of the less frequently-used venues won’t have it installed yet because they may not have the infrastructure to support it. “But any track that races 4-5 times a year or more will have it for certain. “In some cases we will have a test run at the next meeting for a venue and once that is successful punters will see it at that track’s next meeting after that. Michael Guerin wrote his first nationally published racing articles while still in school and started writing about horse racing and the gambling industry for the Herald as a 20-year-old in 1990. He became the Herald’s Racing Editor in 1995 and covers the world’s biggest horse racing carnivals. Quote
Chief Stipe Posted 7 hours ago Author Posted 7 hours ago I noticed it while watching 1000 Guineas day at Riccarton. The sectionals assuming they were accurate were brilliant. 1 Quote
hesi Posted 7 hours ago Posted 7 hours ago With GPS tracking technology readily available, and used in sports like tennis and cricket, I would love to have seen it used in horse racing. Would love to know how far each horse actually runs in each race, plus birds eye track paths Quote
Chief Stipe Posted 7 hours ago Author Posted 7 hours ago 4 minutes ago, hesi said: With GPS tracking technology readily available, and used in sports like tennis and cricket, I would love to have seen it used in horse racing. Would love to know how far each horse actually runs in each race, plus birds eye track paths That's what they've been doing during Cup week. Quite accurate too. LOL shame the Jockeys dont have the real time info. Might help them judge pace better. Quote
Shab Posted 3 hours ago Posted 3 hours ago Totally useless gimmick to keep punters betting. No edge if it’s available to everyone. Maybe if you bet against what horses it leads you into it’d be OK. Hopefully they get some expert analyst to spruik some runners from it and we can lay them for a profit. Oh no I forgot we can’t do that anymore. Quote
Chief Stipe Posted 3 hours ago Author Posted 3 hours ago 37 minutes ago, Shab said: Totally useless gimmick to keep punters betting. No edge if it’s available to everyone. Maybe if you bet against what horses it leads you into it’d be OK. Hopefully they get some expert analyst to spruik some runners from it and we can lay them for a profit. Oh no I forgot we can’t do that anymore. Is that why Hong Kong has been doing it for years? Quote
The Centaur Posted 3 hours ago Posted 3 hours ago 30 minutes ago, Shab said: Totally useless gimmick to keep punters betting. No edge if it’s available to everyone. Maybe if you bet against what horses it leads you into it’d be OK. Hopefully they get some expert analyst to spruik some runners from it and we can lay them for a profit. Oh no I forgot we can’t do that anymore. The more complicated racing gets the more punters will disappear because they figure there is no edge or more importantly don't have the time to do research. Neither will they take someone's word for it. They will also figure the bookie has mulled over this info so definitely no edge for the punter and unlike the bookie the punter doesn't have the time. Now if TAB wants to drive turnover pay the trackwork watchers to report and pass on quotes from the trainers. 1 Quote
Shab Posted 2 hours ago Posted 2 hours ago 24 minutes ago, Chief Stipe said: Is that why Hong Kong has been doing it for years? Good for them. Still a useless time wasting gimmick you won’t make any profit from. Quote
The Centaur Posted 1 hour ago Posted 1 hour ago 43 minutes ago, Shab said: Good for them. Still a useless time wasting gimmick you won’t make any profit from. Some Hong Kong replays and the Ellerslie ones are clean videos i.e. no numbers on them. And indeed when Hong Kong replays do have the numbers the viewer still has to figure out the name of the horses. THe best and most efficient info is the in the running 4 still images of Hong Kong races after the event. Quote
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