Tuesday, September 23, 2014
The Horses
All through my college years, I worked several nights a week and often during weekends at a McDonalds in Andover, Massachusetts. It was there that I was introduced to gambling. Joe Picarelli1 was the day shift manager, and he claimed that he made big money betting the horses at nearby Rockingham Park, affectionately known as “The Rock”. The Rock had a unique form of horse racing called “the trotters.” The horses pulled little 2-wheeled carts called sulkies where the driver sat. And the horses had to run the race in a trot, not a gallop, a “two beat diagonal gait” in which they always seemed to have two feet on the ground.
I was intrigued by Joe’s stories, and so at his insistence I decided to try it out. Being a bit of a geek, I naturally kept track of my winnings, or loosings as it turned out, in a small spiral notebook.
When it comes to horse racing, there were various levels of participation. The first level was the general public. The general public got their information from the racing form printed daily in one of the Boston newspapers. The racing form listed all the horses in the upcoming day’s races, their recent performances, and the odds of them winning this time. Students of the sport would spend lots of time (often in the bathroom) studying the racing form, looking for mismatches such as a horse that has performed well but is given long odds, or a poor chance of winning. But of course since this same information was pretty much what the odds makers used to determine the odds, so the chances of anyone getting ahead were pretty slim. Nevertheless, thousands of people would place bets at the Rock every day based on studious examination of the racing form.
The second level of participation was called “in the know.” These were folks who perhaps know a trainer or a driver, or who spent long days listening to small talk in the stall area or watching horses exercise. Those “in the know” thought they had access to information beyond the racing form, like how a horse was feeling that day, what their recent workouts were like, or most importantly, which horses had been holding back on previous races to try to get the odds up for a big score.
Which brings up the third level of participation. This was the shadowy level of those who were “connected.” The mob was a real presence in the Northeast when I was young, and it was widely believed that the mob controlled horse racing. Those who were connected had access to knowledge of “the fix,” and knew when to bet on an unlikely winner when the “the fix was in.” It was universally accepted by the general public that “the fix was in” quite often, and the only way to really make any money betting on horses was to be connected. Yet in spite of this knowledge the same general public religiously studied the racing form and bet piles of money at The Rock every day of the racing season.
So Joe and I would study the racing form, and several evenings a week would go up to the Rock to make try our luck. I didn’t bet too heavily, but even so by the end of the season my ledger showed that I was eighty dollars in the hole. I knew Joe was down a lot more than that, and he complained bitterly that this was “the first year in a long time” that he had had a loosing season.
I remember the last night that I went to Rockingham park. As usual I had carefully studied the racing form, and I had a good feeling about my pick for the “daily double.” This was a bet on the winner of both the first and second races, and the odds, or return if you won, were pretty high. In this case, the odds were eighty to one, and a win of my two dollar bet would pretty much even out my entire summer’s effort.
My pick won the first race, and I was feeling confident. My confidence grew during the second race as my horse had the lead at the inside rail on the back stretch. Rounding the last turn, he was ahead by a buggy length. But as they entered the straight, my horse seemed slower, and bit by bit the second horse gained. It was a close enough finish that they put up the photo. My horse had lost by a neck, and in the photo you could see my jockey leaning way back, pulling back on the reins for all he was worth. The fix was in, and once again we the general public were left out in the cold.
Notes:
1. As always, names are fictitious, and any resemblance to a real person is purely accidental.
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