To Disclose or Not to Disclose
I'm repeating myself, reposting this Bill Finley ESPN column, but I wanted to say a little more about the issue of disclosure. What Finley writes, in the wake of the Sweet Catomine affair and owner Marty Wygod's CHRB hearing, is that when it comes to the public getting information on a horse's condition,
This seems like a very reasonable position to me. If a horse has a myectomy or is treated for a bleeding episode between starts, that should be made known. Really, how different is disclosing this information from the disclosure bettors get now that a horse is on Lasix for the first time? Or that it's wearing different shoes than previously reported? Or carrying x number of excess pounds?
Hank Wesch take a contrary stance in the Union-Tribune:
I don't buy this argument -- it ignores the fact that bettors already feel cheated by nondisclosure, and it's patronizing. If anything, I'd expect bettors to feel less cheated if they were given such information and could incorporate it (or not, depending on their preference) into their handicapping, so long as clear guidelines for what should be disclosed were established and the information was reported consistently.
Posted by JC, Apr 27, 2005 10:30 PM

