Vancouver Sun

‘ Drafting’ horses more likely to win, place and show: study

Animals gain valuable rest for final push as they tuck in behind their counterpar­ts

- Agence France- Presse

PARIS — Racehorses that stay in the pack longest before breaking for the final sprint have the best chance of earning prize money, scientists said on Wednesday.

By tucking in cleverly behind the leaders, the horse uses “aerodynami­c drafting” to its advantage, they said. By coasting along behind the front horses, which are battling wind resistance, it saves energy for the final dash.

Jockeys, like long- distance runners and Formula One racing drivers, have always known about drafting, also called “covering up” in the race horse business.

But this is the first time its importance has been pinpointed in data and measured, the paper’s authors say. The work could one day develop into a tool for racing fans, they believe.

“When measured over the entire race, the average speed of a horse goes up the more time it spends tucked in behind other horses,” Andrew Spence of the Structure and Motion Laboratory at Britain’s Royal Veterinary College said.

“If you convert that difference in speed into how the horse finishes, it can amount to a gain of three to four places. You don’t get any money unless you finish within the first five, so basically it’s a big deal.”

Spence and colleagues had access to a statistica­l gold mine: data garnered by a British company, TurfTrax Racing, which places a radio- frequency chip in the horse’s saddle, enabling the animal’s position to be triangulat­ed at any point in a race.

The team had access to more than 4,500 races staged at 10 British racecourse­s from 2005 to 2007.

On average, horse races are decided in the last 500 metres, give or take 200 metres depending on whether the race is longer or shorter, the study said.

At this break point, the speed of competitor­s diverges as the horses muster the strength to the finishing line.

But contrary to popular perception, the final sprint sees a slowdown rather than an accelerati­on, for the horses are tiring. The horses that win, says the study, are those that slow down the least over the last stretch.

Conserving energy through drafting is what counts, according to the study.

When measured over the entire race, the average speed of a horse goes up the more time it spends tucked in behind other horses.

ANDREW SPENCE ROYAL VETERINARY COLLEGE

By reducing aerodynami­c drag by 13 per cent, a horse can notch an additional two percent gain in the average speed for the whole race.

Two per cent may not sound like much, but it amounts to the difference between first place and fifth, according to the analysis.

“For a horse that drafts for 75 per cent of a race, this effect is worth three to four finish places,” it said.

The study defined drafting as being when a horse was roughly one horse length ( 2.5 metres) behind a rival and was within 10 degrees of either side of its line of running.

Spence added a word of caution, saying that what the scientists had found was a statistica­l link. Drafting does indeed offer an advantage, but only if horse and rider use it properly.

“You have to be nicely tucked in, but tucked in a way that still leaves you with a shot at getting clear,” he said. “You have to manage not getting stuck in the pack.”

Top French jockey Olivier Peslier, who has more than 1,000 wins to his credit, said he doubted whether the study would help experience­d riders, who already knew of the benefits of drafting and had to use instincts at high speed in positionin­g the horse.

But Spence believes the work could one day lead to a useful tool for betters who want to analyze performanc­e.

“Maybe you could come up with profiles of jockeys, and say, ‘ this jockey is really good at drafting,” because some jockeys are really good at tucking their way in and threading their way through nicely.”

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