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Pedigree Handicapping | 
enlarge | Author: Lauren Stich Publisher: DRF Press Category: Book
List Price: $14.95 Buy New: $9.10 You Save: $5.85 (39%)
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Avg. Customer Rating: 8 reviews Sales Rank: 466558
Media: Paperback Number Of Items: 1 Pages: 144 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.6 Dimensions (in): 8.9 x 6 x 0.7
ISBN: 0972640134 Dewey Decimal Number: 798.401 EAN: 9780972640138 ASIN: 0972640134
Publication Date: December 25, 2004 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days Shipping: International shipping available Condition: Brand New, Perfect Condition, Please allow 4-14 business days for delivery. 100% Money Back Guarantee, Over 1,000,000 customers served.
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Product Description Pedigree Handicapping reveals how evaluating a horse's bloodline is most commonly used in maiden special weight races. It also points out the many other areas where pedigree handicapping has proven to be a powerful tool.
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| Customer Reviews: Read 3 more reviews...
A surprising disappointment from one of my favorite handicappers. November 1, 2007 Lauren Stich, Pedigree Handicapping (DRF Press, 2004)
I hate to say this. I really do. I have found Lauren Stich's posts on @derby and her column in the Daily Racing Form very, very valuable over the years, and I admire her handicapping prowess to no end. But this book just doesn't work on so many levels.
The main problem with the book is it lacks explanation. It's packed with examples, which is always a good thing, but the reasoning behind those examples is rarely, if ever, made clear. Instead, the book has two very long lists, one of sires whose offspring do well on certain surfaces, and another of freshman sires for 2004-05. While Stich contends that the freshman sires list is timeless, and it's certainly the case that offspring of a horse who was a freshman sire in 2004 should perform the same way as those offspring in later years, what's missing is an explanation of how she comes to the conclusion that sire X's offspring will perform better at distance Y or on surface Z. It's easy to figure out if you've followed discussions on pedigree handicapping over the last twelve years, as I have, but I can't imagine most of this book's prospective readers would fall into this category.
Also, Stich's examples fall into the "selective examples" trap-- every example fits perfectly. Which is okay for illustrative purposes, but tends to bias the reader's perceptions a great deal. (This is why most modern handicapping authors will go through a full day or two-- or in the memorable case if William Scott, a full week-- to show the places where their handicapping failed as well, or races that simply couldn't be handicapped with the methods presented. (One may argue that Stich's handicapping, which lends itself to maiden and two-year-old races, would get very boring as you watched race after race pass. I'd answer that people advancing this argument have never seen a weekday card at a bush-class track in autumn, where bottom-level maiden claimers are the rule, not the exception, and pedigree handicapping is often the only handicapping one can do.)
I hope there is a second edition of this book eventually, one with a great deal more explanation, more writing on the concepts behind pedigree handicapping and how they can be applied by the average player, etc. Until then, this will have to do, but it is only one small piece in the pedigree handicapping puzzle. **
A little disappointing April 12, 2006 0 out of 1 found this review helpful
OK, the author clearly knows her matreial, but I was really looking forward to reading this book as I am interested in horse pedigrees and their usefulness as a handicapping tool. Stich shares some good ideas, but nothing I hadn't read in other volumes on comprehensive handicapping. The ideas are solid, but the material will need constant updating to be effective. I really wish she had spent more time discussing why certain traits are passed from maternal and paternial ancestors instead of just offering a blanket statement that "speed and surface characteristics come from the sire, while racing class comes from the dam." I've heard it before, but nobody has been able to satisfactorily tell me why this may be the case or back it up with any evidence.
As a practical tool for handicapping, I really don't think it's that useful.
potential is there, execution is meh July 23, 2005 5 out of 5 found this review helpful
Stich is a fantastic mind on pedigrees and analysis. However, this book doesn't quite live up to the potential that it should for a few reasons:
(1) Spending a chapter or two on a primer as to why certain lines (Bold Ruler, Northern Dancer) do better than others (Man O'War, etc.) would give the reader a real foundation for the information contained inside. The book becomes a list of "here's who's good for x, y, and z", without any history or exposition to back it up.
(2) There's a fair amount of material in the book (including an entire chapter) that's pure regurgitated material from her Racing Form columns. They're useful material, but nothing really new if you've followed racing at all.
(3) The chapter on pedigree in the Derby doesn't really work because she boldly declares which horses did or did not have the pedigree to win the Derby, with no explanation attached. Yes, this would've made for a longer book, but it would've been more informative than by simply putting together a laundry list of horses that did and did not make the grade. (She also admits herself that Derby pedigree analysis may be useless at this point, which makes one wonder what the entire point was.)
So yes, there's a lot of good info in the book, but it could've been much, much better. Color me disappointed.
Another useless pedigree yawner with no practicality April 20, 2005 6 out of 9 found this review helpful
You have to be a devout pedigree analyst or become one for this book to be effective in the daily war handicapping horse races. In that event the book is 5 stars but outside that it is almost useless.
An ESSENTIAL and POWERFUL Tool for Horseplayers January 2, 2005 1 out of 7 found this review helpful
This interesting book has great merit as a handicapping tool. Written in clear concise language, the author shares her extensive knowledge of horse pedigrees with the reader. She explains the influence of the pedigree (especially the sire, the dam, and the dam's sire) on racing performance, including stamina, speed, and the secret of the "hidden turf" factor.
Whether you bet frequently, or only occasionally on popular races such as the Kentucky Derby and Breeders Cup, this book is a valuable resource and MUST READ for every horseplayer and aspiring horseplayer. Bravo to Ms. Stich for creating such a detailed reference guide! Her passion for racing is quite apparent and admirable.
Arlene Millman author of "Boomerang - A Miracle Trilogy"
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