Las Vegas Review-Journal

Tech problems maddening at Del Mar

- MIKE BRUNKER Mike Brunker’s horse racing column appears Fridays. He can be reached at mbrunker@ reviewjour­nal.com or 702-3834656. Follow @mike_brunker on Twitter.

THERE’S an old and completely erroneous saying in horse racing that time only matters if you’re in prison. Just try telling that to Equibase President and Chief Operating Officer Sal Sinatra, who has been getting an earful from horseplaye­rs infuriated by recent timing problems at Del Mar that forced the adjustment of internal fractions of three Breeders’ Cup races — the Juvenile Turf Sprint, the

Turf Sprint and the Juvenile Fillies Turf. And the critics say the Del Mar issues are just the tip of the iceberg.

NBC Sports broadcaste­r Randy Moss, who’s part of the team that makes Beyer Speed Figures, posted on Twitter over the weekend that Del Mar’s new Gmax system “laid an egg on the sport’s championsh­ip day.” Moss cast the failure as predictabl­e, given that Gmax has been plagued by problems since its U.S. launch in 2018.

“The Gmax technology does not work,” he said Wednesday on Steve Byk’s “At the Races” radio show.

That’s where Sinatra, an industry veteran, comes into the picture. Having taken over in June as president and COO of Equibase, the racing industry-owned statistics database for North America, he’s immediatel­y been thrown into a mess that’s not of his making.

The Gmax system, a joint project between Equibase and the British racing data purveyor Total Performanc­e

Data, is used by 10 tracks in North America, including Belmont Park, Pimlico, Penn National, Santa Anita and Woodbine, Sinatra told me Wednesday.

The company’s website states that the system “tracks all horses in a race and provides real-time data including speed, position, stride length, running order and timing.”

After initially trying to operate a timing system entirely via GPS, the Gmax system now uses a hybrid approach in which the starting and final times are captured using traditiona­l “beam” technology, where a timer starts or stops when a horse passes in front of it. The internal fractions are computed using GPS readings adjusted by an algorithm, Sinatra said.

But Moss and other critics say the fractional times produced by the algorithms can be off by as much as a second from the actual time, which translates to roughly five lengths in a race. That’s a ridiculous variance that no handicappe­r would knowingly accept.

But Sinatra said the internal times are generally accurate and that the problems in two of the Breeders’ Cup races — the turf sprints — occurred because track workers placed a pole used to hold trackside sensors and cameras in the wrong spot, 14½ feet from the proper placing. In the other instance, the older technology failed when something — likely a horse and outrider — tripped the timer by breaking the beam.

So for now he’s focusing on process to try to eliminate such mistakes.

“Right now there are just no checks and balances. I’m trying to clean this up,” he said, adding that he understand­s the anger he’s hearing from data integrity defenders. “They have confidence I’m going to do it, but they’re out of patience, and rightfully so.”

He notes that the ultimate mission of the software is to produce next-generation horse racing data that can be absorbed by someone who has never looked at a Daily Racing Form.

“The whole purpose is for us to get new data to attract new blood to our sport … with the kind of analytics that other sports already have,” he said.

Of the technology’s critics, he said, “They’ll see the value of the data when we get it.”

 ?? ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States