Tag Archive for: Racing Insights

Racing Insights, Monday 27/02/23

We make one of the racecards tools free to all each day and on Mondays the freebie is PACE, an often over-looked facet of UK betting, but if you know how horses are likely to approach a race, you've a better chance of working whether they're going to be in with a shout of winning. We log the pace of every horse in every race and we show their last four outings under the pace tab on our racecards. We think pace is so important that we open the pace tab up to all readers for all races not once, but twice a week.

That's right, the pace tab is freely available on Sundays and Mondays, including our daily 'races of the day', which for Monday are...

  • 3.50 Ayr
  • 4.25 Ayr
  • 5.30 Wolverhampton

And I'm going to look at the last of those three, because the pace-map looks like this...

...and I'm going to try and see if attempting to make all is the right approach to winning the 5.30 Wolverhampton, a 10-runner, Class 4, 4yo+ A/W handicap (amateur jockeys) over a left=handed 1m1½f on standard tapeta...

Super Den is clearly the 'form' horse here, having won his last two and with three wins/two places from his last five. We've no other LTO winners here, but top weight The Menstone Gem and Dream Harder are both two from five, whilst May Night is the only other runner in the field with a 'recent' win.

We've lots of class movers here, as only four of these (The Menstone Gem, Society Red, Visibilty and Sir Plato) ran at Class 4 LTO. Four (Precision Storm, Dream Harder, May Night and They Don't Know) drop in from Class 3, but Super Den is up a class and bottom-weight Taqwaa is up two from Class 6.

Sir Plato is making a yard debut today, as he runs for the first time since mid-November, but aside from The Memstone Gem's near three month break and the 33 days since Society red's last outing, the other seven have all raced in the last seventeen days with Visibility out as recently as Friday here at Wolverhampton.

He was only 4th of 7 here on Friday, but Visibility is a former course and distance winner, as are Precision Storm, Dream Harder and Society Red. The only other course winner, May Night, scored here over both 7f and 1m½f, whilst elsewhere The Memstone Gem has won over 1,1f at Newmarket and over 1m2f at Newcastle.

Today's free feature is, of course, pace and I'll add some meat shortly to the bones of the pace map I posted at the start, but I wanted to add that Precision Storm, May Night and Super Den have all been denoted as fast finishers. We know how our course, distance and C&D winners, but Instant Expert also gives us the lowdown on going, class and weights v last win...

...where fast-finishing May Night would be a definite eye-catcher on a slightly slower surface, although he has also won on the rarely seen Standard to Fast here at Wolverhampton! Society Red's numbers are pretty consistent and Dream Harder would make even more appeal at Class 5, where he's 3 from 6. I'm concerned about Precision Storm's 1/13 at C4, he's also better a grade lower. Visibility likes it here and gets the trip, but would also suit being a class lower, whilst They Don't Know and Taqwaa are 0/15 and 0/10 respectively on the All-Weather!

Sir Plato is a whopping 12lbs higher than his sole A/W win from six attempts, way back in March 2017 and is still 8lbs higher than his most recent turf win seven starts ago and Society red is now 6lbs lower than his C&D win her a year ago, but has won off today's mark on turf since then. The others are 4-6lbs higher than their own last A/W wins.

And now back to the pace map that we started with, but with runner's names and individual pace scores from their last four outings...

...where it's top weight The Memstone Gem who'll probably attempt to make all from stall 3. To work out whether this is a good or bad tactic, let's consider which pace tactics have worked best here previously, which draw(s) are the best (if any) and how the pace and draw have worked together, starting with past race pace profiles...

...which suggest that those who lead do well, which is good news for The Memstone Gem on the face of it, but the truth is that there's not that much in it, as long as you're not on a hold-up type. The chances of winning or placing do diminish the further back you race, but the differences between leading and running in mid-division are negligible here, so let's see if there's a draw bias to be had from those 160+ races above...

Based on these numbers, the place to be drawn is anywhere from stalls 3 to 7, which would be good news (on paper, at least) for the likes of The Memstone Gem, Precision Storm, Sir Plato, Visibility and Taqwaa, so you'd now be expecting The Memstone Gem fondness of leading allied to his draw to give him a great chance here and the pace/draw heat map says that he is in a really good place to be...

...but a fair distance shy of the success achieved by high-drawn mid-divisional runners and by overlaying this field's draw and recent pace averages, we can see if anyone fits that bill...

...and this suggests a trio of May Night, Super Den and They Don't Know has having the best of it.

Summary

May Night, Super Den and They Don't Know come out best on pace/draw with The Memstone Gem handily placed too. The latter is the likely pace-setter here and his chances of success will rest upon how much daylight he can put between himself and the pack early doors, but he's currently 9/1 with Hills and wouldn't be a terrible E/W option, especially as his form on Tapeta reads 12213.

As for the high-drawn mid-dvisional trio, They Don't Know is least likely to be involved because although he has a 40% place strike rate on the A/W, he's still winless in 15 in this sphere and hasn't made the frame in three tapeta outings. May Night also looks a reasonable E/W bet at 8/1 a fortnight after finishing less than a length and a half further back than Precision Storm over this course and distance at a higher grade. Precision Storm is the 3/1 favourite here, but May Night runs off the same mark as LTO whilst the fav is up 2lbs and there's a good chance of the placings being reversed.

Which leaves us with Super Den, who has been in cracking form on the A/W this winter finishing 13211 and although he's up in trip, class and weight, he certainly looked like having plenty ion hand when scoring by two and a quarter lengths last time out, suggesting a 5lb rise might not yet be enough to anchor him. He's by no means a cert here, but a 4/1 pricetag looks fair if nothing else.

Racing Insights, Saturday 25/02/23

Saturday's free feature is the Trainer/Jockey Combo (TJC) report, which works by bringing together the form of trainers and jockeys into a single composite report that has produced excellent results for users. Basically, some trainers turn to specific riders when they have one ‘ready to win’ and this report quickly identifies the most profitable of those combinations. Clicking on any row will reveal the entries for that trainer/jockey pairing whilst clicking on the entry will open the race in a new tab.

HINT: Look for a good sample size – ideally five or more – combined with a decent win percentage (30%+), and a positive figure in the profit column and as ever, please refer to our User Guide for further information.

My own settings for the TJC Report look like this...

...and they have generated qualifiers solely on the 5-year course form filter as follows...

...for me to consider in addition to our selection of daily 'free' races...

  • 1.35 Fairyhouse
  • 1.57 Chepstow
  • 2.05 Lingfield
  • 3.07 Chepstow
  • 5.10 Chelmsford
  • 5.20 Kempton

Jockey Stan Sheppard has a good record on Tom Lacey's horses at Chepstow and they team up in just one handicap on Saturday, a race that also happens to be on the free list. Now, it's a bigger field than I'm generally comfortable with (12 is my usual limit), but let's see how Operation Manna might get on in the 3.07 Chepstow and whether there's also an E/W bet or two to be had from this 15-runner, Class 2, 5yo+ handicap hurdle. The trip should be just over 2m7½f, but a 200 yard rail movement has extended it to 3m½f on good to soft ground that is quicker in places and is being watered to stop it turning "good"...

FORM : Ballybegg, Kings Keeper, Top of the Bill and The Kniphand all won last time out. Operation Manna is three from five and Kings Keeper/Top of the Bill/Take Your Time/The Kniphand are all two from five with the latter on a hat-trick. Surrey Quest/Bells of Peterboro/My Bobby Dazzler/Thanksforthehelp are all winless in five. LTO winner Ballybegg has failed to complete three of five and Southfield Harvest/Take Your Time have two incomplete runs.

CLASS : Bells of Peterboro is down one and Bear Ghylls, Ballybegg, Southfield Harvest, Kings Keeper, Surrey Quest, Take Your Time, My Bobby Dazzler and Thanksforthehelp are all up one class. Top of the Bill, The Kniphand and Operation Manna are all up two classes with just three (Jon Snow, Galileo Silver & Dubrovnik Harry) running at this Class 2 last time.

WHAT'S NEW : Top weight Jon Snow makes a handicap debut on his first start for George Baker, Bear Ghylls is in first-time cheekpieces as are Surrey Quest & Thanksforthehelp (who runs for the first time since wind surgery) whilst Southfield Harvest is blinkered for the first time

COURSE/DISTANCE FORM : Southfield Harvest (2m bumper) and Operation Manna (2m4f hurdle) are former course winners and Jon Snow, Galileo Silver, Southfield Harvest & The Kniphand have all won over a similar trip to this one whilst Bells of Peterboro, Toip of the Bill and Take Your Time are all former course and distance winners.

LAST RUN : Take Your Time has had a 12-week rest, Top weight Jon Snow has been off nearly five months and it has been eight months since Galileo Silver was last seen. He was in fine form, though when signing off with a run reading 11P2212. The rest of this field have all raced at least once in the last two months, but all have had a fortnight or more to get over their latest effort.

Suitability for expected conditions is quickly and easily shown via Instant Expert...

There's not actually masses of experience of these conditions when all is said and done with Bells of Peterboro's eleven attempts at similar trips the most we've got in any section. Some have, of course, fared better than others and Top of the Bill is probably the eye-catcher on wins to runs. I suspect that many of these will look better if we just considered place form...

...which might help to form an E/W bet later. Weight might be an issue for many of these with seven of them carrying 6-9lbs more than their last win with one at +4lbs and another at +5lbs. Take Your Time, however is now 3lbs lower and represents a yard that won this race in 2021 (& 2016), whilst last year's race was won by the trainer of Top of the Bill and The Kniphand.

Past large field races over this going/course/distance have favoured those brave enough to attempt to set the pace and those keeping handy to the pace have also done well here...

...which based on the more recent efforts from this field...

...suggests we might well have a proper battle on our hands with so many of these preferring to race prominently with only Top of the Bill and out and out hold-up horse.

Summary

The Kniphand looks like the 'form' horse here and he's two from two at the trip, he's going to be up with the pace and despite being raised another 7lbs here for his most recent win, that might not be enough to arrest his progress. He's still unexposed after five starts and there's probably more to come from him. He'd be the one to beat in my book, but 5/1 in a 15-runner race hardly sets the pulse racing.

Of the rest, there are a few that I like the look of ie Dubrovnik Harry, Bells of Peterboro, Galileo Silver, feature horse Operation Manna, Kings Keeper and Top of The Bill. In a race where the bookies are paying four places, I'd not be surprised if the four placers are in those seven I've listed, but I wouldn't back The Kniphand or Operation Manna at just 5/1 and I'd be concerned about Top of the Bill trying to come from the back of the pack, if there was plenty of early pace.

This leaves me with possible E/W bets. I'm not sure which Dubrovnik Harry turns up here, though. If he races prominently, he would be a decent pick at 11's, but he has been held up in two of his last three and I wouldn't want that here.  Kings Keeper has never been beyond 2m4.5f and although he stayed on well last time out, he's up in class, trip and 6lbs, so I' want more than 17/2 about him.

And so, almost by default, we're at the 12/1 Bells of Peterboro and the 9/1 Galileo Silver. Both will be up with the pace and both are attractively enough priced for an E/W bet. Bells wasn't disgraced last time out and this former course and distance winner now drops in class. He had a full line of green on the place side of Instant Expert and could well be worth a 12/1 play. The fly in the ointment with Galileo Silver is a 224-day absence, but he was in great form last winter and travels/jumps well. He has finished fourth and second after breaks of 187 & 190 days respectively, so the lay-off might not be an issue and a 9/1 bet might just see a small profit from the race.

Racing Insights, Friday 24/02/23

Friday is Horses For Courses (H4C) report day at Geegeez and this feature does exactly what you'd expect, as it shows the full course history since 2009 of any horse running that has previously had a run at that track, sorted by number of wins, but this can be changed to any column at your discretion.

As well as today’s race time, course, horse name, jockey and trainer name, there is a breakdown of runs, wins and places, and profit and loss calculations for both win and each way betting. And as with all Geegeez reports, there is a ‘Today’ and a ‘Tomorrow’ (for the next day’s racing) view.

HINT: Layers might like to look towards the lower end of the report, for those with negative performance at the track, but please refer to our User Guide for further information.

My chosen settings for the H4C report...

...have yielded the following...

...and this free report is, of course, backed up by our daily list of 'free' races...

  • 1.20 Lingfield
  • 3.15 Exeter
  • 4.30 Dundalk
  • 5.15 Warwick
  • 5.45 Wolverhampton

...and as and as Raddon Top's handicap record at Exeter reads 1112 over hurdles followed by 31 over fences, I think we should see if he has any chance of making the frame in Friday's Devon National. That's the 3.15 Exeter on your cards and it's a 10-runner, Class 3, 5yo+ handicap chase over a right handed trek of just over 3m6½f on good ground...

Django is our only LTO winner, but featured horse Raddon Top and favori de Sivola both won their penultimate races, whilst Coup de Pinceau and Premier D'Troice won 3 and 5 races back respectively. Copperhead, on the other hand, has failed to make the frame in ten starts over the last three years and only completed five of those runs since a 72-day hat-trick in the winter of 19/20.

Six of these ran at Class 3 on their most recent outing, we have no class droppers, but Samuel Jackson (3rd LTO), Gwencily Berbas/Premier D'Troice/The Macon Lugnatic (all 5th LTO) step up from Class 4. Six of the field have already won at this track, but Gazette Bourgeoise and Django are a combined 0 from 3 here with Premier D'Troice and The Macon Lugnatic making their Exeter debuts.

The only three to have won at this trip have all won over course and distance; Favori de Sivola, Samuel Jackson and Gwencily Berbas, as featured runner Raddon Top has only won here at 2m6f, 2m7½f and 3m½f (over hurdles) and once over fences at 3m and has never raced beyond 3m2f.

Favori de Sivola has had a short six and a half breather since his last run and top weight Coup de Pinceau runs for the first time in almost four months, but the other eight have all been seen in the last four weeks.

We know about course/distance form, but the rest of this field's chasing stats are covered by Instant Expert...

...where Favori de Sivola looks particularly strong. Samuel Jackson's numbers are very good too and Raddon Top only tackled a fence for the first time on New Year's Day. The negatives here are Gwencily Berbas' record at class & going and Premier D'Troice at this level. I mentioned the desperate 3-year form of Copperhead, which explains his 18lbs drop from his last winning mark and it's an even worse tale for Gwencily Berbas who is 1 from 24 since winning at Roscommon in June 2017, whilst The Macon Lugnatic has yet to make the frame in eight starts over fences, so I'll just be looking at these from now...

The ground here at Exeter is quicker than the usual soft/heavy conditions for this race (2013 was the last good ground contest), but that doesn't mean that stamina and race tactics are less important than usual and our pace analyser suggests that those willing to do the hard work upfront do tend to get rewarded...

...BUT if they don't hang on for the win, they end up out of the frame, swallowed up by the prominent pursuers and based on this field's recent outings...

...I'd expect Samuel Jackson and Favori De Sivola to provide the early running with the likes of Gazette Bourgeoise, Coup de Pinceau and Raddon Top ready to pounce. Raddon Top's runs here at Exeter have tended to be more prominent than at other venues and this has proved successful, as he's 4 from 6 with 2 places in handicaps here from a career record of 4 wins from 13. Also worth noting that he's 4 from 8 under today's jockey.

Five of the six left 'in' after Instant expert were the first five on that pace graphic and Django, the odd one out, does tend to run from the back of the field which makes him vulnerable here.

Summary

I think I'll omit Django from the post-Instant Expert half dozen to leave me with half of the field and of the quintet Gazette Bourgeoise and Coup de Pinceau looked the weakest on IE. The latter is more of a placer than a winner and the former is entitled to need a run after another layoff which, almost by default leaves me with featured H4C report horse Raddon Top and the two pacesetters Favori de Sivola and Samuel Jackson.

Raddon Top is the course specialist, of course, but this is almost 6f further than he's ever raced before, but has been in decent form. Samuel Jackson hasn't won any of eight starts since his last win two years ago, but that win was in this race in 2021 and he's 4lbs lighter here and has made the frame in two of his last three, whilst Favori de Sivola is two from three here and won over course and distance two starts ago and I think we might have an interesting contest on our hands.

I completed the above just before 3pm when Samuel Jackson was 8/1 with Bet365, but sadly he's now as short as 9/2 with Stoke's benefactors and my top three are now the three market principals which is more than a tad annoying as the value in advising an E/W bet on Samuel Jackson has now gone. I'm not sure he's quite there to beat Favori de Sivola and with Raddon Top untested/not proven at the trip, my pick of the trio would have to be Favori, who currently (4.15pm) trades at 5/1 with Hills.

Those wanting an E/W play might struggle with six of the ten priced shorter than 8/1!

Racing Insights, Thursday 23/02/23

Thursday's free feature, the Instant Expert racecard tab is one of Geegeez readers' most popular tools because it has the unique ability to condense the entire form profile of every runner in the race into a single, easily digestible, view covering the form in terms of wins (or places), runs, and win (or place) percentage for each of going, class, course, distance, and field size.

It also compares today’s official rating with the horse’s last winning official rating. The display is colour coded: green for a higher percentage rate, amber for a middling percentage, and red for a low percentage. Horses with no form under a certain condition have grey figures.

IMPORTANT NOTE: Where a horse has no UK/Irish form – i.e. it is having its first run in Britain or Ireland under Rules – it will not show up on Instant Expert at all.

We make this feature freely available to ALL readers EVERY Thursday for ALL races, including, naturally, our selection of 'free' races as follows...

  • 2.05 Sedgefield
  • 2.15 Huntingdon
  • 3.40 Thurles
  • 4.25 Sedgefield

..from which I'm going to look at the 4.25 Sedgefield, an 8-runner, Class 4, 4yo+ handicap hurdle over a left-handed 2m½f on good ground...

None of these managed a win last time out, but both Legendary Day and Start In Front were runners-up and now make a handicap debut over hurdles, as does Bertie's Wish. These three are also the only ones with a recent win to their name and they along with Lord Caprio bring the best form to the table. Plenty of these are running at a different class to LTO with only Bertie's Wish, Start In Front and They Call Me Pete having raced at Class 4 last time and the latter makes just a second handicap start. He'll wear first-time cheekpieces here, whilst it's also Bertie's Wish's first time in a hood.

Of the class movers, top weight and 12 yr old veteran Glimpse of Gold is the only class dropper after failing to complete his at two starts. The rest of the field (Legendary Day, Lord Caprio, North Parade & Golden Town) all step up from Class 5. They Call Me Pete is the only one yet to win at a similar trip to this one, whilst five of the pack (Legendary Day, Bertie's Wish, Lord Caprio, North Parade & Golden Town) have done it here at Sedgefield.

It's a little over three months since Lord Caprio was seen on a racecourse and Glimpse of Gold hasn't run since New Year's Day, but the others have all been out in the last two to four weeks. So far, my instincts are suggesting I spilt the pack and side with the three handicap debutants plus Lord Caprio, but time will tell. Feature of the Day is, of course, Instant Expert, so let's what that tells us about this field...

And it's a mixed bag, isn't it? The four I was interested in have good numbers off small sample sizes, Glimpse of Gold has a wealth of experience and has won his fair share of races and They Call Me Pete has yet to make the frame in five (1 x NHF, 4 x hrds) starts. North Parade has won here over course and distance almost a year ago, but that was the exception to his normal results and a 1 from 12 record at the trip isn't good at all, nor is the fact that he has failed to complete four of seven runs since the start of 2022.

As for bottom weight and another 12 yo veteran, Golden Town, it doesn't look great at all. Yes, he has made the frame in just a third of his 53 career outings, but he's only won 4 of 47 NH contests and hasn't made the frame in any of his last eleven starts going back to 2nd June 2021, when second at the yard's favoured track, Cartmel. At this point, Golden Town looks the weakest contender despite receiving weight all round.

The pace stats from these runners' most recent outings suggest that my preferred quartet will be spread through the pack...

...as Start In Front likes to do exactly that, but will probably have company early on from Glimpse of Gold and North Parade. Legendary Day is likely to race in midfield with Bertie's Wish and Lord Caprio our back markers and the analysis from past contests says that it's not easy to win or even make the frame from the back...

...so that's not ideal for the likes of Bertie's Wish and Lord Caprio.

Summary

Quite early on, I felt that the three handicap debutants (Legendary Day, Start In Front and Bertie's Wish) plus Lord Caprio made up the half of the field I'd want to be with. Bertie's Wish and Lord Caprio were the weaker pair on Instant Expert and also look troubled by the pace perspective, so I'm going to say their chances are much diminished and if they're battling it out for third place, that would be great.

As for the Legendary Day vs Start In Front conundrum, I don't think there's that much between them, but as Start In Front has a better pace profile for this race, gets nearly a stone from the other and is attractively priced, then an 11/2 bet on Start In Front could be the way forward.

Racing Insights, Wednesday 22/02/23

Wednesday's free GOLD feature, the Trainer Statistics (TS) report is, in fact, four reports in one. It contains information on a trainer’s recent form, and their longer term course form. For each of 14 day, 30 day, course one year, and course five year, users can filter by runs, wins, places, win profit/loss and each way profit/loss.

Clicking on any row in the report will reveal the runners that trainer has entered on the day in question, and clicking on the runner row will open that race in a new tab.

HINT: It can help to cross refer the profit figures of the trainer with their win/place percentage. A few big priced winners can mean a trainer has a high profit number but a low strike rate. You may need to be very patient, and a bit lucky, to come out in front this way! And as ever, we ask you to please refer to our User Guide for further information.

In addition to the TS report, we also have the following fully functional free racecards...

  • 3.00 Doncaster
  • 4.20 Ludlow
  • 4.35 Punchestown
  • 6.30 Kempton

My own personal settings for the TS report ...

...have actually generated the following...

...but as Sod's Law often prevails, none of my TS qualifiers are in a 'free' race so I'm going to see how trainers Henry Daly and Venetia Williams get on again each other in the first of their two duels, as a small but competitive field is assembled for the 3.45 Ludlow, a 6-runner, Class 3, 5yo+ handicap chase (amateur jockeys) over a right handed three miles on good ground...

HEAD TO THE STARS has only won 3 of 22 over fences to date, but that includes 3 from 10 here at Ludlow and more specifically 3 from 8 over course and distance, but hasn't performed well since a runner-up finish here almost a year. He was beaten here by 27 lengths in late March and beaten by 34 lengths at Aintree in mid-May. After a break, he hit the 2nd fence at Aintree and unseated at the third in mid-November and made a bad mistake here almost seven weeks ago and finished th of 6. Conditions will suit him, but he needs to pick his jumping back up.

ONE TRUE KING won a bumper here on debut just over three years ago, won over 2m7f at Market Rasen (hurdles) and over 2m6½f in a Class 3 chase at the same venue last September, but has struggled since, going down by 49, 46, 21 and 21 lengths. His last run was just four days ago in a Class 1 race at Ascot, so he's down two classes here, but possibly still too high in the weights.

THE BIG LENSE ran his best race for some time when a runner-up over 2m4f at Leicester last time out, but since winning over 3m1f at Kilbeggan in July 2021, his record at this kind of trip reads FPP and he has failed to complete five of his last ten outings.

COO STAR SIVOLA certainly isn't the same horse that won the Ultima at the Cheltenham Festival in 2018 but did run well back at HQ in April 2021, when only a length and a half behind the winner of a Class 2, 3m2f chase. He was then off track for 20 months, during which time he moved yards, but has shown very little in two starts for Venetia Williams, going down by 64 lengths in November and by 35 lengths last month, but down in class and weight here, could he have one more decent run in him?

VOLCANO was a runner-up here over course and distance two starts/nine weeks ago when held off by just a neck well clear of the rest of the field and ran better than the bare result suggests last time out. He was, indeed, only 5th of 13 and beaten by some 16 lengths but was running from 10lbs out of the weightin a Class 1 handicap. He's that 10lbs better off here and down two classes, so could be the one to beat.

SEIGNEUR DES AS has yet to win in the UK after 2 efforts over hurdles and 3 over fences and he was 0 from 8 in France, but ran his best race to date last time out. He was rununing for the first time since a wind op and managed to finish 2nd of 4, denied on the line by a nose when 6lb out of the weights. He's 3lbs out here, but that should hap him be more competitive and another decent effort is expected.

Composite relevant chase form is highlighted by Instant Expert...

...where doubts are raised about Head To The Stars on good ground, as he'd definitely prefer it softer, but is excellent here at Ludlow. The Big Lense hasn't won at the trip yet, but he is 1 from 4 at 3m1f, but is much better at 2m4f and Volcano's record at Class 3 isn't great, but he's too good for Class 4, he's in decent form and will have no issues with the trip.

Small fields can be a bit cagey when it comes to pace, but if they all run as they have been doing of late...

...I'd suggest that Volcano will be the one leading them along with possibly/probably Coo Star Sivola next in line. The rest of the field generally seem content to sit things out until later, but I think such tactics might well play into Volcano's hands...

Summary

I've liked Volcano all the way through the process and there's only his poor record at this grade that could possibly be an issue. That said, he's in great form and is too good for Class 4. Only Hills have priced this up, but he's available at 10/3 and that's fair enough, I think. 11/4 or 3/1 is where I'd have been, so he's the one I'd prefer to be with at the expense of  Seigneur D'As who is ready to win, but always seems to find one (or more) just too good on the day.

Mind you, any of these could win here, but the lack of pace amongst the pack might be their undoing, unless one of them is brave is enough to put it to Volcano.

Racing Insights, Tuesday 21/02/23

Tuesday's free offering from the GOLD service is the The Shortlist feature, a simple – and usually brief – report highlighting those horses with a largely ‘green’ profile in the Instant Expert Report each day. It covers win or place stats, and can be viewed for both today’s and tomorrow’s racing.

GREENis good (33% or better win rate) – worth 3 points
AMBERis quite good (16-32% win rate) – worth 1 point
REDis not so good (0-15% win rate) – worth -1 points
GREY means there is no available data for that factor - worth 0 points

The final column, ‘Score’, is the sum of the previous five ‘colour’ columns, with 15 being an all green profile, and 9 being the lowest score appearing on this report.

HINT: The best bets are not necessarily the highest scores. Rather, they are often the biggest difference between a Shortlist horse and the ‘best of the rest’ in that race.

N.B. Shortlist selections are unlikely to make a profit, at SP at least, to blind backing. Our recommendation is – and has always been – that The Shortlist should be a starting point rather than an end in itself. That said, it continues to highlight horses whose chance is better than recent form - and its odds - imply. As ever, please refer to our User Guide for further information!

And this how TS looks this  for this Tuesday...

We do still also have our daily list of 'free' racecards, which are as follows...

  • 2.15 Market Rasen
  • 4.15 Market Rasen
  • 6.00 Southwell

The first four races on TS are of obvious interest and from those and the trio of 'free' races, I've decided to focus on the 2.15 Market Rasen, which on paper is the highest rated of the seven, despite only being an 8-runner, Class 4, handicap hurdle for 4yo+ mares over a right-handed 2m4½f on good ground, that is softer in places...

My initial thoughts were that this would be pretty competitive with any of five in with a decent shout, but that I wasn't over keen on the top two in the weights (Bon Retour & Could Be trouble) or bottom weight Ravenscar, but I'm not ruling anything out so soon!

Notnowlinda and Windtothelightningboth won last time out, but all bar Could Be Trouble have won at least one of their last three (CBT won seven starts ago). Top weight Bon Retour is the only class mover dropping down a level after a 17 length defeat earlier in the month.

Four of the field (Presenting A Queen, Notnowlinda, Let's Go To Vegas & Windtothelightning) make a handicap debut here in a contest where only Presenting A Queen, Notnowlinda and Ravenscar have yet to win over a similar trip. Our sole course winner, Let's Go To Vegas scored over 2m5½f on debut in November prior to a runner-up finish next/last time out and all of this field have been seen in the last eight weeks.

Instant Expert shows us the field's performances under similar conditions and it loos promising, albeit off fairly small sample sizes in some cases (two of these have only five races under their belts and two are making just their third starts)...

And those two graphics would lend more confidence to my initial feeling about this being a five-horse race. Of these five, past efforts suggest that Presenting A Queen is the likely pace-maker with Phillapa Sue the hold-up type...

...although Notnowlinda might want to get involved early too. The Pace Analysis of past similar contests suggests that Phillapa Sue is likely to struggle from the back of the field...

...and if we eliminate her from our calculations, we're left with just four of our original eight runners.

Summary

Having halved the field, let's take a quick look at each of the remaining quartet, who are all on handicap debut...

PRESENTING A QUEEN was a winner in each of her first three starts (2 x NHF and a 2m4f hurdle), but has been beaten by 16 and 10 lengths in two efforts since, albeit at 2m7½f and 2m5f. She's down in trip here, which might help, but she carries most weight of the four.

NOTNOWLINDA actually won a three mile Irish PTP before tackling a pair of bumpers, where she was third twice last winter. Since then she has won two of three over hurdles, but both wins were over 2m and her attempt at 2m4f saw her beaten by 24 lengths, but that was at Class 2.

LETS GO TO VEGAS raced in two Irish PTP races last March, falling on debut but finishing second three weeks later prior to an eight month break and a win on her hurdling debut here over course and distance. She ran to a similar standard next/last time out, but was a runner-up at Huntingdon behind an impressive 8/15 favourite from the Skelton yard.

WINDTOTHELIGHTNING also comers here after a PTP runner-up finish and two hurdles runs where she has finished 3rd of 7, beaten by little more than 2 lengths on debut and then an impressive 12 length success at Sedgefield over 2m4f three weeks ago where she stayed on well to go clear late on despite a couple of mistakes. A similar effort and a clear round here puts her in the driving seat.

That's my four in racecard order and I think I've got keener about each one the further down the list I've gone and I've got Windtothelightning edging out Let's Go To Vegas with Notnowlinda battling with Presenting A Queen for the bronze medal. In racecard order, this quartet are best-priced at 6/1, 7/1, 7/2 & 5/2 and I'm not really surprised that Windtothelightning is favourite here. If she stays out of trouble and jumps cleanly she should win. Elsewhere, if either of the two 'outsiders' get much bigger than 7's then they might make for a nice E/W option.

Racing Insights, Monday 20/02/23

The pace tab on our racecards helps to make a reasoned assumption based upon a field's most recent runs as to how their next race might unfold. This information is vastly under-used by UK bettors, but we feel it's that important that we make this info totally free for all races every Sunday & Monday.

This, of course, includes our daily free races, which for Monday are...

  • 3.15 Carlisle
  • 4.45 Lingfield
  • 5.00 Newcastle

...from which I'm heading North East for a quick look at the 5.00 Newcastle, a six-runner, Class 5, 4yo+ A/W handicap over a left-handed 1m4½f on standard tapeta...

VICTORY MARCH has failed to make the frame in three starts this year after winning each of his last three in 2022 and finishing 1212111 in his last seven of that year. That run of form took his mark from 53 to 80 and he now looks too high in the weights to win. He is, however, down in class and has won two of three previous efforts over course and distance.

BUXTED TOO looks the form horse here, finishing 3111 in four starts this year, winning three times at 1m4f/1m4½f after a third over 1m2f. The mniddle of those three wins was here over course and distance and although he's up 3lbs for hi last win, he is down in class and will probably be the one to beat.

GREEN PLANET is a 13-race maiden across five spheres (1 x NHF, 1 x chs, 6 x hrds, 2 x flat and 3 x A/W) and hasn't raced on the Flat for 21 months nor on the A/W for 23 months, but his A/W form does read 223. That said, he really looks up against it here on his yard debut for Jedd O'Keeffe.

CASA LUNA is also a maiden, but after just three unplaced (4th of 9, 3rd of 7 & 3rd of 6) runs on polytrack. She's also making her yard (and handicap) debut here for Philip Kirby off an opening mark of 71, which seems neither generous or onerous if truth be told. She was well beaten over a mile and also over 1m4f, but was only beaten by just over half a length at Chelmsford over 1m2f on her second outing and that might be her trip. Others make a better case here.

TYPEWRITTEN is the third of the trio making starts for new handlers today and she comes here after a pair of placed (2 x 3rd of 10) finishes in Class 5 A/W handicaps over 1m6f and then 2m½f on tapeta at Southwell and Wolverhampton. This grey mare now drops back in trip, but she has raced ten times (3 wins and 3 places) over 1m4f, so that drop shouldn't be an issue and I'd expect her to go well.

JUBILEE GIRL has just six races under her belt and having finished 544 in three runs on turf last summer to acquire a handicap mark of 65, she took six months off prior to an A/W campaign this winter starting with a pipe opener over 1m2f here at Newcastle on Jan 13th. She then won over 1m3f at Southwell eight days later, before going down to the re-opposing Buxted Too here over C&D 13 days later (17 days ago) She was a runner-up that day, beaten by just a length. Jubilee Girl is now 5lbs better than Buxted Too, so there's every chance she could overturn the deficit, especially if she's handily placed late on as she's marked on the card as a fast finisher.

At this point Buxted Too and Jubilee girl seem the pair to focus on and this is backed by Instant Expert, albeit off small amounts of data...

Now these two couldn't be drawn any further apart here, but regular readers of my 'stuff' know that I don't always place huge importance on the draw when you've got a small field over a trip longer than a mile, but there are exceptions to every rule and the stats suggest that a mid-to-high draw here is better than being drawn low...

...which is advantage Buxted Too over Jubilee Girl and if we run those same races above through our Pace Analyser...

...we find that those who have been waited with are the ones to be on and that unsurprisingly the next graphic, the pace/draw heat map, shows a strong bias to mid-t0-high drawn hold up types...

If we the revert back to our draw and our two initially favoured runners, Jubilee Girl's best chance from Stall 1 would appear to come from a prominent running style, whilst wider out, Buxted Too would be advised to tuck in towards the back.

But how do we know how they'll run? Well, sadly, we don't! But because we log every runner's racing style, we can often build up a fairly clear picture of how they might run. We allocate a score of 1 to a hold-up run, 2 denotes mid-division positioning with 3 for a prominent run. Leaders get 4 (surprise, surprise) and here's how the field have raced in their last four (last three for Casa Luna, of course) outings...

...and this suggests that both Buxted Too and Jubilee Girl like to race in a prominent position and that it's Victory March and/or Typewritten who will be the back marker(s). The latter, typewritten was interesting from my write-ups above, when I said I'd expect her to go well and from an ideal Pace/Draw setup, she should be the main challenge to Buxted Too and Jubilee Girl.

Summary

I've just said that Typewritten should be the main challenge to Buxted Too and Jubilee Girl and that's exactly how I see it, but to get involved she'll need one of that pair to run poorly. She's currently a 6/1 shot, which isn't quite long enough for my liking as an E/W play when there are only two places paid, because I can't see her beating both of the favoured pair. However, if a 25% profit from the race is enough for you, than a 6/1 E/W bet on Typewritten might suit you.

As for the winner, Buxted Too and Jubilee Girl are best priced at 15/8 and 7/2, but I don't think those odds reflect their respective chances and I'd have expected something closer to 9/4 vs 11/4 when you consider than Jubilee Girl is 5lbs better off than a one length defeat and I think that she would be the value play here at 7/2 with Bet365. (forecasts and reverse forecasts, too?)

Racing Insights, Saturday 18/02/23

Another blustery day expected on Saturday where the free feature is the Trainer/Jockey Combo (TJC) report, which works by bringing together the form of trainers and jockeys into a single composite report that has produced excellent results for users. Basically, some trainers turn to specific riders when they have one ‘ready to win’ and this report quickly identifies the most profitable of those combinations. Clicking on any row will reveal the entries for that trainer/jockey pairing whilst clicking on the entry will open the race in a new tab.

HINT: Look for a good sample size – ideally five or more – combined with a decent win percentage (30%+), and a positive figure in the profit column and as ever, please refer to our User Guide for further information.

My own settings for the TJC Report look like this...

...and they have generated the following runners for me to consider...

...in addition to our daily list of 'free' racecards, which are set to be...

  • 1.20 Ascot
  • 2.40 Haydock
  • 3.27 Gowran Park
  • 3.50 Haydock
  • 5.30 Newcastle

Neither of my TJC Report runners appear to be in particularly good form, so I'm going to stay relatively close (approx 30 mile SW) from (my) home for a crack at the 3.50 Haydock, a 12-runner, Class 3, 5yo+ handicap chase over a left handed 2m4f on good to soft ground...

This looks (on paper, at least) a really open/competitive affair, a thought backed up be the fact that Hills (only book open at 3pm) had the first eleven in the betting split by just 5pts from 5/1 to 10/1! with Courtland the 18/1 outsider and the bottom weight 8 yr old does look the weakest to me too in a field where only Evander and If Not For Dylan won last time out, but the former hasn't raced for 689 days since scoring at Ludlow and the latter is up a class here, as is Garincha, whilst our two other class movers, Golden Whisky & Quid Pro Quo drop one and two classes respectively with the latter making a handicap debut 99 days after his last run where he was last of seven in a Cheltenham Grade 2.

Regarding form, only High Moon (placed in his last two) is without a win in five, although he did win six back almost a year ago. We know that Quid Pro Quo is on handicap debut already, but the card also says that Maypole Class has had wind surgery sometime in the last seven weeks and we're also told that the returning Evander has changed yards, but that's not quite true, it's more of a licencee name change with Josh Guerriero joining Oliver Greenall as joint-trainer during Evander's hiatus.

Garincha is the youngest here at 7yo, some 4 yrs younger than Magic Dancer and they are both among the ten in this race to have already won at a similar trip (Super Six & Courtland being the odd ones out), but only The Paddy Pie is a former Haydock winner, having won and placed in two efforts over course and distance. We know that Quid Pro Quo (99 days) and Evander (689d) have both been off for over three months, but the rest of the field have all raced inside two months, but seem spilt into two date ranges...

17-20 days off : Enzo D'Airy, Super Six, The Paddy Pie, High Moon, If Not For Dylan
48-59 days off : Golden Whisky, Magic Dancer, Maypole Class, Garincha, Courtland

We know that most of these should get the trip but only one has won here (only four have raced here), but Instant Expert can tell us more...

Golden Whisky has struggled in this grade at 1 from 11, but does have a win and a place from four at Class 2. Magic Dancer's 1/13 on good to soft is mainly hurdling form, he has one placed finish from three over fences. Enzo D'Airy is one from three over fences at this trip, but Maypole Class is probably a Class 4 runner. I'm a little surprised at The Paddy Pie's 1 from 9 on good to soft when his record is better on both Good and on Soft, so there's no reason why the ground should be an issue for him.

If we then consider the pace profiles of these runners, based on their last three or four outings, we see at least two definite groups forming, those that want to get on with it early doors and those that don't...

I'm not sure how Courtland will approach this to be honest, he tends to race prominently, but might inadvertently find himself back in mid-division if the six ranked above him all decide to make a go of it. What do I expect is that the ones towards the rear of the field will be the bottom four on that list.

Unfortunately there aren't many similar races to this in the Haydock programme and even with an expanded filter, we don't get much data from a search, but this is what we do see...

...where the out and out leaders (Evander/High Moon, perhaps?) end up getting beaten by those just in behind, which could bode well for The Paddy Pie, Enzo D'Airy, Super Six and Golden Whisky. Hold-up horses have struggled, which suggests a tough day for Quid Pro Quo, Maypole Class and Garincha, but If Not For Dylan won last time out after a change in tactics from hold-up to prominence. That was his first win in seven, since winning from an advanced position at Perth, so I suspect he might have more of a go at it today.

Summary

It could well turn out to be cracking race and it looks super competitive, so the smart advice is to walk away, put the kettle on or grab a beer and just sit and watch it. That said, I know some of you can't/won't do that, so to take the piece to a conclusion, I think I'd want to be with the likes of Enzo D'Airy on form/Instant Expert/pace, Super Six for his consistency and pace profile and also If Not For Dylan on form and possible pace.

These three are currently trading at 5/1, 15/2 and 9/1 with Hills who are paying four places here, so If Not For Dylan might not be a bad E/W bet at 9's.

Racing Insights, Friday 17/02/23

Friday's free feature, the Horses for Courses (H4C) report does exactly what it says on the tin ie it shows the full course history since 2009 of any horse running that has previously had a run at the track and is sorted by number of wins, but this can be changed to any column at your discretion.

As well as today’s race time, course, horse name, jockey and trainer name, there is a breakdown of runs, wins and places, and profit and loss calculations for both win and each way betting and as with all Geegeez reports, there is a ‘Today’ and a ‘Tomorrow’ (for the next day’s racing) view.

HINT: Layers might like to look towards the lower end of the report, for those with negative performance at the track, but as ever please refer to our User Guide for further information!

My own settings (you get to choose your own parameters) for the H4C report...

...are quite restrictive but have still produced four qualifiers...

Our daily feature is always supplemented by a number of 'free' racecards...

  • 1.50 Lingfield
  • 3.20 Lingfield
  • 3.55 Dundalk
  • 4.40 Fakenham
  • 6.00 Dundalk

The second of those 'free' races has a runner from the H4C report, so why do we have a see how Starshiba might get on in the 3.20 Lingfield, an 8-runner, Class 3, 4yo+ A/W handicap over a left handed mile on standard polytrack...

We'll start with Starshiba's record at this venue which reads 3113137 including 1137 over course and distance. As for the field as a whole, only Unforgotten won last time out and comes here seeking a hat-trick on just his second start in a handicap. He's only had four runs so far, finishing 2211 including 211 at this track/trip, making him the 'form' horse, but only Farasi Lane is winless in five.

Larado is the only one to have raced at this Class 3 least time around, as sole class-dropper Darwell Lion ran at Class 2, whilst Unforgotten, Lord Rapscallion, Farasi Lane, Starshiba and Enough Already all step up from Class 4, but bottom weight Brunel Charm was well beaten in a Kempton Class 5. That was just over four months ago and aside from Darwell Lion's 52-day rest and Lord Rapscallion's run four weeks ago, the rest of the field have all seen action this month already.

Larado has won over 1m½f and Brunel Charm over 7f, but they are a combined 0 from 20 at today's trip, whilst the others have all won at the trip. Brunel Charm has at least won on this track over 7f and Brunel Charm scored over 1m2f, whilst Darwell Lion, Unforgotten and Starshiba, are all course and distance winners as shown here...

...where my early concerns centre around Larado (Going/Distance), Farasi Lane (Weight), Enough Already (Going/Distance) and Brunel Charm (Going/Distance) and their numbers on the place stats do little to inspire confidence either...

And if I was to omit those four from my thoughts for now, I'd be left with runners in stalls 3, 6, 7 & 8, so i'm hoping that if there's a draw bias here, it's in the favour of those drawn highest! There isn't a huge advantage to be gained, but given a choice based on the following stats...

...I'd prefer not to be where Darwell Lion is drawn, although closer inspection shows that stall 3 is actually the best of the low draws and has figures not too dissimilar to those drawn highest...

...so I wouldn't rule him out just yet. And whilst there's little to separate them on the draw off over 450 races, there's certainly a pace bias at play with front-runners doing best of all...

...where the basic/general premise is that the further forward you race, the better the chance you have of making the frame and ultimately going on to win, which based on this field's last four runs will suit Unforgotten more than the others...

Of the four we were looking at, Darwell Lion and Starshiba really look up against it from a hold-up position, but all Starshiba's wins/good form here at Lingfield have come from the back, so it's not impossible, but ideally you're a high drawn front runner...

Summary

After shedding half of the field at the Instant Expert phase, I was left with Darwell Lion, Unforgotten, Lord Rapscallion and Starshiba, from which Darwell Lion looks the weakest carrying top weight in poor form and running from the back of the field, so he'll not make my final three.

Of the three, Unforgotten has the best pace/draw profile, he scored well on Instant Expert and brings the best form (2211) to the table and I'd be very surprised if he didn't win this relatively comfortably off a mark just 4lbs higher than his course and distance win a fortnight ago. That was his first run for almost 23 months and it took a while for him to get going, but was quite cosy in the end and should come on for the run. Starshiba was 3.25 lengths further back that day and is now 5lbs better off with the winner, so you'd hope/expect him to get a bit nearer this time.

As for Lord Rapscallion, he steps up in class and up to a mile for the first time, but looks the type who seems to find a bit more when needed as typified by back to back wins by a shorthead at Chelmsford in December, doing all his best work late on. He would seem to be the weaker of this trio, but I wouldn't rule out his chances of making the frame.

Sadly, the bookies are also very keen on Unforgotten and he's just the wrong side of even money with both firms currently open for this race (Hills & Bet365) and both go 15/2 about the other pair. I'd expect more money to come for the fav and that might make bothStarshiba and Lord Rapscallion more attractive as E/W propositions.

 

 

Racing Insights, Thursday 16/02/23

Did you know that the Instant Expert tab is by far the most popular tab on the geegeez racecards?

That's because it has the ability to condense the entire form profile of every runner in the race into a single, easily digestible, view. The report covers the form in terms of wins (or places), runs, and win (or place) percentage for each of going, class, course, distance, and field size. It also compares today’s official rating with the horse’s last winning official rating. The display is colour coded: green for a higher percentage rate, amber for a middling percentage, and red for a low percentage. Horses with no form under a certain condition have grey figures.

IMPORTANT NOTE: Where a horse has no UK/Irish form – i.e. it is having its first run in Britain or Ireland under Rules – it will not show up on Instant Expert at all.

This GOLD feature is so important that we make freely available to ALL readers EVERY Thursday alongside our usual selection of FREE races which, for this Thursday are...

  • 2.15 Clonmel
  • 2.45 Newcastle
  • 4.45 Sandown
  • 6.00 Chelmsford

And of the three UK races, the last seems to have more for us in terms of Instant Expert, if not quality. It's the 6.00 Chelmsford, a 10-runner, Class 5, 4yo+ A/W handicap over a left-handed 6f on standard polytrack...

Old-timer Muscika was a winner last time out, as was Thismydream, whilst Magical Max, Bezzas Lad and Jupiter Express were all in the frame. El Hombre won three starts back, ad did Jupiter Express and Bezza's Lad is 212 in his last three, but half of the field (Magical Max, Bang On the Bell, Desert Boots, Mustaffiz and Autumn Flight) are winless on their visible form line.

Both Bang On The Bell and LTO winner Muscika drop in class today, but the bottom four on the card (Jupiter Express, Desert Boots, Mustaffiz and Autumn Flight) are up one grade. All bar Bang On The Bell (2 months off) have raced in the last six weeks with both Desert Boots and Autumn Flight turned back out fairly quickly after just six and three days rest respectively.

Both Muscika and El Hombre are former course and distance winners (the former is 2 from 3 over C&D), whilst Autumn Flight has won here over his preferred 5f, but did win over today's trip at Bath. Magical Max, Bang On The Bell, Bezza's Lad and Desert Boots have also scored elsewhere over today's trip.

So, we've three course winners (2 at C&D) and all bar three with a 6f win, but it's time to check in with feature of the day Instant Expert for the going/class/weight stats...

Autumn Flight is two from six at this track, but it's all over 5f and his going, class and distance stats are very poor. The top half of the field looks the stronger with Muscika probably standing out, but there's a lot of red going on in that graphic, so maybe the IE place stats will yield more for us...

Well, it doesn't really solve the "who to back?" conundrum, but it does highlight Mustaffiz's deficiencies and the depth of Muscika's experience and he has to be a contender dropping in class after an LTO win without a change in his "mark". He made virtually all to win as he does normally other than two starts ago when he was inexplicably tardy in getting going, resulting in his worst run for some time.

One suspects, however, based on the field's recent outings that he won't have it all his own way up front, if the following is anything to go by...

There may well be a battle for the lead early doors, but I'm fairly sure that Desert Boots will sit that out and I'm even more sure that that isn't generally a great tactic here at Chelmsford over 6f, but let's look at facts rather than opinions, courtesy of the Geegeez Pace Analyser...

And this shows that leaders win 1.41 times more often than prominent runners, who in turn win 1.51 times more often than in mid-division who win a staggering 2.56 times more often hold-up horses. Hold-ups are almost 5.5 times less likely to win than leaders and whilst that gap isn't as wide on the place results, leaders still make the frame more often than the others and this inferred pace bias is far more important than the draw here, as shown by the Draw Analyser...

...which is pretty inconclusive, but the pace/draw heat map is centred around  leaders with any running style and high drawn prominence...

Summary

Working backwards from that pace/draw heat map and the pace stats, I want to be working with the four most likely to contest the lead ie Jupiter Express, Thismydream, Muscika and Bezza's Lad, but adding Magical Max to the mix. He's drawn high and likes to race prominently.

If I'm working with this half of the field, I think Magical Max and Thismydream would be the weaker picks, Thismydream did indeed win LTO, but it was a Novice event and his first ever win coming at the 23rd attempt and he's now 4lb higher than his last handicap run where he was only fourth of seven. Magical Max is on a 10-race losing run, since scoring on his First two career outings and although second on his A/W debut over this course and distance six weeks ago, he's inexperienced in this sphere and the loss of his claimer jockey effectively makes him 3lbs worse off than a defeat to El Hombre.

Which leaves us with the 3/1 fav Jupiter Express, 6/1 shot and Bezza's Lad and my preference the 4/1 Muscika. All have a great chance of winning this and all look suited by the pace profile required here, but Muscika caught the eye in Instant Expert, comes here in form and escapes a penalty for an LTO win, thus possibly offering the best value for money of the trio.

Racing Insights, Wednesday 15/02/23

Wednesday's free Geegeez GOLD feature, the Trainer Statistics (TS) report is, in fact, four reports in one. It contains information on a trainer’s recent form, and their longer term course form. For each of 14 day, 30 day, course one year, and course five year, users can filter by runs, wins, places, win profit/loss and each way profit/loss. Clicking on any row in the report will reveal the runners that trainer has entered on the day in question, and clicking on the runner row will open that race in a new tab.

HINT: It can help to cross refer the profit figures of the trainer with their win/place percentage. A few big priced winners can mean a trainer has a high profit number but a low strike rate. You may need to be very patient, and a bit lucky, to come out in front this way!

[ Please refer to our User Guide for further information ]

In addition to the free daily feature, we always open up a number of racecards to non-Gold subscribers and for Wednesday, they are...

  • 2.50 Dundalk
  • 3.00 Hereford
  • 4.35 Dundalk
  • 7.00 Kempton

My own personal settings for the TS report...

...have generated the following runners for me to consider...

And I think I'll see how course 5-year specialist Paul Nicholls gets on with his 5yo Pleasant Man in our 'free' jumps race, the 3.00 Hereford, an 11-runner, Class 4, 4yo+ handicap hurdle over a right handed 2m4f on good ground...

My initial thoughts are that this would be a three-horse race between our featured runner Pleasant Man, Bashers Reflection and Cabrakan and in a race with no LTO winners, their runner-up finishes are the best result on offer, whilst Bucks Dream was third LTO. Bashers Reflection and Cabrakan both won two starts ago and of the rest, only Toronto has win in their card-visible form line.

Pleasant Man is up one class here, as are the bottom two on the card, Bucks Dream and Beannaigh Do with the latter making just a second handicap appearance, whilst Highland Frolic and Cabrakan are on handicap debuts. Top weight Forecast is the only previous course winner, having landed a 2m3½f contest here, whilst Bashers Reflection won over 2m3f at Warwick. Elsewhere not much to write home about with regards to course/distance form. All eleven have raced in the past seven weeks or so, with Pleasant Man seen most recently when going down by half a length at Taunton last Tuesday.

Instant Expert backs up this lack of relevant course/distance form and actually paints a pretty dismal picture of how this field has performed under these conditions...

Not good at all, bar Toronto's going/class form, but thankfully the place stats do at least give me something to work with...

At this point, I need to be pretty ruthless and get rid of some of these runners, so I'm going rule out Forecast (class), Astrophysicist (going/class) and Beannaigh Do (generally!), giving me eight to choose from and their recent pace profiles are as follows...

...suggesting Cabrakan as the likely pace-maker with Malaita and probably Highland Frolic tucked in behind. Bashers Reflection does have a 4, but he also has a 1 and he does generally run in mid-division or further back. Vengeance and Toronto look like being our held-up back markers in a race where unusually for an NH contest, there's no great pace bias...

Yes, mid-div runners have fared worse than the others, but had one more of the 41 runners won, they'd also have a win % of  9.76% so I'm not entirely convinced that any running style is that much better than the others here.

Summary

Not all races can be worked out to a degree of clarity using the toolbox and when that happens, like here, you've two choices. One is to just walk away and look at the next race, the other is to go off recent form and your 'gut feeling'.

Walking away is probably the best option/advice here, but if I was to see the process out to a conclusion and abet, I'd have little choice but to go back to my original trio of  featured runner Pleasant Man, Bashers Reflection and Cabrakan, whilst having a second look at Toronto, due to his Instant Expert numbers.

Pleasant Man has finished 322 in three starts this year and is up 2lbs after recent runner-up defeats by a shirt head and half a length, but he is up in class here. Bashers Reflection won by half a length on New Year's Eve and was hit by a 9lb rise. He has since been a 5.5 length runner-up and is up another 2lbs, whilst Cabrakan has finished 212 in his three starts over hurdles with a LCass 2win and a pair of Class 4 runner-up finishes, but he was beaten by 15 lengths last time, racing 3f further than he's gone before and certainly hasn't been treated leniently by the handicapper off an opening mark of 106, just 1lb lower than Pleasant Man and a pound heavier than Basher's Reflection.

Based on that, I'd have to agree with the bookies by saying that I think the 11/4 Pleasant Man should win here ahead of Cabrakan (generally 3/1) and Basher's Reflection who is as big as 6/1 with PP. If he drifts any, he could be a live E/W play.

As for Toronto, he's available at 25's with bet365 (3 places0 and 22's with Skybet for four places but on recent form, that would be a bit of a stretch. He won over 1m7f and over 2m½f on his first and third efforts over hurdles, but since that second win in May he has struggled going down by 19L, 30L, 34L and 28L off decreasing marks of 123, 117, 113 and 109 LTO. He's down another 4lbs here and if regaining last summer's form, could get involved, but he's also another yet to travel beyond 2m1f.

If you want an E/W punt on Toronto, please don't throw too much money at him!

Racing Insights, Tuesday 14/02/22

It's Valentine's Day on Tuesday and I'm just back off a long/heavy weekend, so I'm not exactly feeling the love. Hopefully the racing will provide a spark for me and The Shortlist is Tuesday's free Geegeez GOLD feature and it's a simple (usually brief) report highlighting those horses with a largely ‘green’ profile in the Instant Expert Report each day and it covers win or place stats for both the current and the next day's racing.

GREEN is good (33% or better win rate) – worth 3 points
AMBER is quite good (16-32% win rate) – worth 1 point
RED is not so good (0-15% win rate) – worth -1 points
GREY means there is no available data for that factor - worth 0 points

The final column, ‘Score’, is the sum of the previous five ‘colour’ columns, with 15 being an all green profile, and 9 being the lowest score appearing on this report.

HINT: The best bets are not necessarily the highest scores. Rather, they are often the biggest difference between a Shortlist horse and the ‘best of the rest’ in that race.

N.B. Shortlist selections are unlikely to make a profit, at SP at least, to blind backing. Our recommendation has always been that The Shortlist should be a starting point rather than an end in itself. That said, it continues to highlight horses whose chance is better than recent form and its odds might imply.

[Please refer to our User Guide for further information] and here is Tuesday's Shortlist...

...where Hoganville & Statu of Liberty are of obvious interest. As ever, the daily feature is complemented by a selection of fully functional racecards opened up to all readers and for Tuesday they cover...

  • 3.00 Lingfield
  • 3.55 Ayr
  • 7.30 Newcastle

Both of the interesting Shortlist horses run in 'free' races, so let's quickly see if either are worth backing, starting with Hoganville in the 3.55 Ayr, an 11-runner, Class 4, 4yo+ handicap hurdle over a left handed 3m on good to soft ground...

HOGANVILLE arrived from Ireland last summer with a 0 from 9 record for Paul Nolan in Ireland, but he has since finished 1113 in his four starts for George Bewley with his second win coming over course and distance in late October. This run of form took his mark from 96 to 112 and he was beaten by 13 lengths in to third last time out under today's weight; a mark that might ask a little too much of him. He'd had a month's rest, though, so who knows?

Instant Expert suggests that he's one of the few who should relish the conditions...

...and those four at the top may well be where the winner comes from in a race that in the past has rewarded those getting on with it more than those who want to be waited with...

This field's recent races have looked like this...

...and of the four from Instant Expert, I'd have to omit hold-up horse Nicandeasy, leaving me with Apple Away, Hoganville & Leostar to consider in my summary later.

*

Race 2 sees top-weight Statu of Liberty make just a second handicap run in the 7.30 Newcastle, an 8-runner, Class 5, 3yo A/W handicap over a straight 5f on standard to slow polytrack...

STATU OF LIBERTY was a winner here in a 6f maiden three starts ago for Brian Meehan, but finally made her handicap debut at Southwell last time out almost four weeks ago. That was her seventh career run and first for new handler Michael Dods, but could only finish 6th of 7, beaten by almost 4.5 lengths.

She's down in trip and has been eased 3lbs by the assessor, but she'd still have room to improve if she wants to win here. That said, she's the main eye-catcher in another sea of red on Instant Expert...

...where Colors of Freedom also has some good numbers, especially over this trip. Based on recent outings...

I'd imagine the field will have chase to Statu of Liberty down to win, as she appears to be one most likely to set the tempo of the contest in a race that has favoured front runners in the past...

.

So far so good for Statu, then and the draw has her in stall 2 with only Tantalus inside her, but sadly the higher drawn runners have done much better here...

...but pace is more important than draw here over a straight 5f, as shown by the pace/draw heat map...

Summary

In race 1, we got it down to Apple Away, Hoganville & Leostar and they're priced at 5/2, 6/1 and 8/1 , from which only Leostar is worth backing E/W (keep an eye out for firms paying 4 places). All three are capable of making the frame, but if pushed for the winner, I'd fancy Apple Away to 'pip' (sorry!) the other two.

As for the evening contest at Newcastle, Statu of Liberty has plenty going for her, but I do fancy the top two in the market Sugar Hill Babe (5/2) and the 11/4 Colors of Freedom to beat her, but Statu currently trades at 9/1, so is of E/W interest.

Racing Insights, Saturday 11/02/23

Saturday's free feature is the Trainer/Jockey Combo (TJC) report, which works by bringing together the form of trainers and jockeys into a single composite report that has produced excellent results for users. Basically, some trainers turn to specific riders when they have one ‘ready to win’ and this report quickly identifies the most profitable of those combinations. Clicking on any row will reveal the entries for that trainer/jockey pairing whilst clicking on the entry will open the race in a new tab.

HINT: Look for a good sample size – ideally five or more – combined with a decent win percentage (30%+), and a positive figure in the profit column and as ever, please refer to our User Guide for further information.

My own settings for the TJC Report look like this...

...and they have generated just one runner under the 1-year form filter...

...for me to consider in addition to our selection of daily 'free' races...

  • 2.25 Newbury
  • 2.33 Lingfield
  • 3.13 Warwick
  • 4.00 Naas
  • 7.00 Wolverhampton

It's a decent looking contest that Sayadam is entered into, but we don't often have top quality Grade 2 contests on the 'free list' and as it's named after one of my all-time favourite jumpers, I feel I should look at the Denman Chase. The card says it's the 2.25 Newbury, a 7-runner, 5yo+ handicap chase over 18 fences on good ground, The race is worth almost £40k to the winner and the trip is just shy of 2m7½f, these are the runners...

There's a school of thought that this is two races in one, where Eldorado Allen, Fanion D'Estruval and Hitman will battle it out for the big money and the rest scrap it out for the remnants of the pot and to be perfectly honest with you, I'd be inclined to agree.

Does He Know won LTO and four races ago, Hitman won two starts back, as did Zanza whilst Sam Brown won three back. Eldorado Allen, Sam Brown & Fanion D'Estruval all sport cheekpieces for the first time whilst Kalashnikow tries blinkers. Five of the field were last seen on Boxing Day, but Sam brown has been off for ten weeks and Does He Know's LTO win was three months ago. He's the only one yet to win here at Newbury, but he has won over a similar trip in a 3m chase at Ascot, whereas Sam Brown's distance win was over fences at Lingfield. Top and bottom on the card, Eldorado Allen and Zanza are former course and distance winners.

The Geegeez-sponsored yard of Anthony Honeyball train Sam Brown and he's the oldest in the field at 11, whilst the youngest is the likely fav, the 7yo Hitman who attempts to go beyond 2m5½f for only the second time (pulled up at Kempton LTO on first try). Hitman is however, best off at the weights based on weight carried to official ratings and he's 2lbs better off than Fanion D'Estruval and a whole 17lbs clear of Zanza, who looks worst off by a good way.

Those course and distance wins mentioned above are documented below in Instant Expert, along with the stats for Class and Going...

...and they interestingly show Does He Know in a very good light and he's already won a Grade 2 and a Class 1 handicap this year. Ten of Fanion D'Estruval's fourteen starts have been at Class 1, but he has yet to win any and has only made the frame twice. Hitman (0/9) and Kalashnikov (1/11) have also struggled at this level, but the former has at least made the frame in five of those nine defeats and will be seeking to do better here in a race where last year's winner Eldorado Allen and the veteran Sam Brown are the likeliest front-runners...

Three of the field were held up LTO, but I suspect they'll all race ahead of Fanion D'Estruval and Kalashnikov, because if they don't, there's going to be nothing going on behind the front pair who might set themselves up for a free tilt at the prize money. That's actually a decent tactic and the further back the hold-up types drop, the less chance they'll have of winning, if past races are anything to go by...

In fact the story of last year's win for Eldorado Allen goes like this...Led, but hit 12th fence and was narrowly headed at the 13th. He then chased and caught the leader for himself to lead again 4 out, ending up 3 lengths clear at the last, staying on strongly on the run-in... A similar approach here might well yield a similar result.

Summary

I'm not that keen on the favourite, Hitman, here to be honest. He bled last time out and that's a concern, he's never actually gone this far in a race and has a poor win record at Class 1, making Eldorado Allen a more attractive option to me at 11/4.

Fanion D'Estruval completes the 'favoured' trio, but he might have to come from a long way back to get involved and I've got a feeling that Does He Know might run a better race than his 7/1 odds might suggest. Bookies are generally paying three places here, so he might be an option for a cheeky E/W punt.

Whatever you decide to do, I hope you all have a great weekend. I'm away with the family for my mother-in-law's 75th Birthday, so my next instalment will be on Monday evening for Tuesday's racing.

Racing Insights, Friday 10/02/23

Friday is Horses For Courses (H4C) report day at Geegeez and this feature does exactly what you'd expect, as it shows the full course history since 2009 of any horse running that has previously had a run at that track, sorted by number of wins, but this can be changed to any column at your discretion.

As well as today’s race time, course, horse name, jockey and trainer name, there is a breakdown of runs, wins and places, and profit and loss calculations for both win and each way betting. And as with all Geegeez reports, there is a ‘Today’ and a ‘Tomorrow’ (for the next day’s racing) view.

HINT: Layers might like to look towards the lower end of the report, for those with negative performance at the track, but please refer to our User Guide for further information.

Sadly, my chosen settings for the report...

...have yielded no UK qualifiers for Friday...

...but I can still fall back upon our daily list of 'free' races...

  • 1.40 Southwell
  • 3.15 Southwell
  • 3.55 Dundalk
  • 4.45 Kempton
  • 6.15 Chelmsford

And the best of those (on paper, at least) for me to cover looks like being the 6.15 Chelmsford. Just six are set to go to post for this Class 5, 4yo+ A/W handicap over a left handed 1m2f on standard polytrack...

ABSOLUTE RULER drops down a class here and wears cheekpieces for the second time, but they had little effect last time out as he was last home of seven, beaten by 19 lengths over this trip at Newcastle 16 days ago. Hard to see him getting involved here and his yard are on a 20+ losing run (as of 3pm Thursday).

FAST STYLE has made the frame in five of seven A/W starts, winning twice, both over a mile at Kempton and Newcastle. Last won three starts ago and was subsequently only beaten by a neck over 1m½f at Wolverhampton at today's class/mark. Wasn't as good at Kempton LTO, but he was up in class that day and now drops back down. This is, however, 1½f further than any of his other A/W efforts.

TARAVARA won at Southwell by a neck over a mile two months ago, but could only manage to finish 10th of 14 back at the same course and distance next/last time out a month ago. That's his only win in twenty career starts and probably won't win this either, even if his yard have a good 1-year (4 from 10) and 5-year (10 from 37) record on this track.

JENSON BENSON is one of just two previous course winners, having landed a Class 6, 7f handicap here nine months ago. He was beaten by a length and a half after being forced wide at Wolverhampton 18 days ago, but he's better than that as typified by three narrow defeats from his previous four outings and is now a pound lower than when sent off as an even money favourite here over a mile last May is a 0.75 length defeat when sent for home a little too late.

GIORGIO VASARI doesn't win many, as shown by a 1 in 16 record on the A/W, but since that win two months ago, which came off the back of a 230-day absence, he has been running consistently well. He won off a mark of 52, but then finished 2232 off marks of 57, 58, 58 and 61 before a below par effort at Wolverhampton last time out in a falsely run race. The step back up in trip might help but others hold more appeal. Wears first-time cheekpieces.

ENGRAVE steps up in class after a win over this trip at Newcastle 16 days ago ended a run of 15 straight defeats since the last of her five course and distance wins. She has tackled this track and trip 22 times so far and has made the frame in 12 (54.5%) of them, leading to those five wins. She's up 2lbs for that win, but jockey Rose Daws claims 7, more than making up for the rise. Carrying 10 to 25lbs less than her rivals, she's probably the one to beat here and her course/distance form is easily detected on our Instant Expert feature...

Engrave is clearly far more experienced/exposed than the others, but you do sort of know what you're going to get from her. She's the one closest to her last winning mark and is the course/distance specialist albeit historical form. I'm a little concerned at Jenson Benson and Giorgio Vasari having largely failed at this grade and the latter's 'best' A/W form has been on Tapeta.

With such a small field and a 1m2f trip, I suspect the pace of the race might well prove more important than the draw, but let's quickly check if any of the six might have an advantage at the start...

There's not a great deal in it, if truth be told, but given the choice you'd probably want to be in stall 2 (Fast Style) or on the rail (Engrave), but stall 6 hasn't done badly either, so it's really a case of what you do with the draw, because if you dwell from those preferred stalls, you could be in trouble...

...because it's pretty common knowledge (here on Geegeez anyway!) that pace wins the race at Chelmsford as shown by the stats from those races above, so if Fast Style and/or Engrave are fast starters, they might be tough to catch/beat. Sadly for the former, he isn't, but the sole mare in the race is expected to take it on...

...which creates a little dilemma for me!

Summary

I didn't like Absolute Ruler from the off and neither Taravara nor Giorgio Vasari win often enough for my liking, so that's the field halved. I do like the other trio and I suspect there won't be much to choose between the three.

The mare Engrave won last time out, receives bundles of weight all round and is the course and distance specialist. She's got the best pace/draw profile but wasn't in good form prior to that win last time out and now steps up in class. Fast Style has been in better recent form and has a win and two places from four on polytrack. He seems to have the plum draw and has made the frame in all three runs at this grade. The hope here is that he sets off a bit quicker with Engrave inside of him and he did race more prominently at Wolverhampton three weeks ago. As for Jenson Button, he loves the track here but is unproven at this class and also beyond a mile. His recent form hasn't been as good as Fast Style and he may well be too high in the weights.

It might well be that you can throw a blanket over them at the finish, but if I had to side with one, it would be Fast Style. I'm only really concerned about him getting off quickly enough, but with Engrave on his inside, he should get towed along nicely. Engrave has plenty going for her, but the step up in class and an inexperienced rider might be her undoing.

Fast Style was a best priced 7/2 with Hills at 4pm, whilst Engrave was the same price with Bet365. Jenson Button was a surprising (to me, anyway) early favourite at 3/1 with Hills and only 9/4 with Stoke's finest.

 

Racing Insights, Thursday 09/02/22

Thursday's free feature, the Instant Expert racecard tab is one of Geegeez readers' most popular tools because it has the unique ability to condense the entire form profile of every runner in the race into a single, easily digestible, view covering the form in terms of wins (or places), runs, and win (or place) percentage for each of going, class, course, distance, and field size.

It also compares today’s official rating with the horse’s last winning official rating. The display is colour coded: green for a higher percentage rate, amber for a middling percentage, and red for a low percentage. Horses with no form under a certain condition have grey figures.

IMPORTANT NOTE: Where a horse has no UK/Irish form – i.e. it is having its first run in Britain or Ireland under Rules – it will not show up on Instant Expert at all.

We make this feature freely available to ALL readers EVERY Thursday for ALL races, including, naturally, our selection of 'free' races as follows...

  • 1.40 Doncaster
  • 4.10 Huntingdon
  • 5.40 Newcastle
  • 6.40 Newcastle

...from which I'm going to look at the 4.10 Huntingdon, an open-looking 9-runner, Class 2, 4yo+ handicap hurdle over a right handed 2m3½f on good ground...

GALORE DESASSENCES won at this trip on his last hurdles run (2 starts ago) and his record in cheekpieces over hurdles reads 113P1 with the '3' coming in a Kempton Grade 2 almost a year ago. He's 12lbs higher than last win, where he was comfortably clear of the pack by 12 lengths, but he could have won by more and might not be weighted out of this just yet.

WEST CORK won back to back hurdles races here in the 2019/20 season and was a Grade 3 hurdle winner at Cheltenham in November 2021 and had three subsequent decent efforts at that level before a fall 3 out at Haydock last May. he took six months off and has raced over fences since his return in November, but was last home of three three starts ago prior to being pulled up in his last two. Now back over hurdles 5lbs higher than his last Grade 3 win.

HUNTERS CALL won on his 2021 seasonal reappearance at Bangor over today's trip, but that was the highlight of his winter, until finishing a runner-up at Uttoxeter in April. He was then off for over six months, before starting this campaign back at Bangor in November when third of nine off 3lbs higher than today.

SONIGINO had a wind op during his summer break last year and won both starts back in a pair of Class 3, 2m½f contests at Chepstow in October, but found a 2-class & 10lb rise too much next/last time out, when almost 30 lengths adrift as 8th of 13 at Cheltenham two months ago. Some respite here as he's down a class and 2lbs.

GIPSY DE CHOISEL ran and won once in France (soft ground, 2m3f, May 2020), but took five races to get off the mark here in the UK, scoring over 2m (class 3, good) at Warick to end his season in mid-May. He returned in November up in class and weight to finish 5th of 9, beaten by 12 lengths and now makes a 3½f step up in trip.

BOURBALI was excellent last season, starting off over today's trip at Class 5 off a mark of 101 and finished 1432111, culminating in a Class 3 win off 124. More recently he was 3rd of 10 over 2m5f at Cheltenham in November off 126 and then 2nd of 15 at the same trip/weight at Kempton on Boxing Day. Up 2lbs and one class here but down in trip.

TOO FRIENDLY won his first two over hurdles in October/November 2021 as a 3yo, both over 2m½f on good to soft ground, but one at Class 4 and one at Class 2. More recently has been the runner-up in each of his last two, but is up in class, trip and weight here.

HYDROPLANE is 4 from 14 over hurdles, but hasn't 'jumped' since mid-March, when a 16-lengths 10th of 22 in a Sandown Grade 3 hurdle. Has raced three times over 2m on the Flat/AW since finishing 163 and now reverts to hurdles at the same class/mark as his last NH success 13 months ago.

MOVEIT LIKE MINNIE had an eight month break last year returning in late November and has finished 121 in three starts since, all under today's 5lb claimer and although he's clearly in good nick, he's 10lbs and two classes higher here. He won at this track last time out and won over this trip at Taunton in November, but the big jump in weight/class could be an issue.

Instant Expert gives us a clear overview of a field's past record under expected conditions as follows...

...and underfoot conditions shouldn't be too much of an issue here. Galore des Assences is only 1 from 5 on good, but has made the frame in 2 of 4 defeats and has won on both quicker and slower ground than this, whilst Too friendly has a pair of runner-up finishes in his last two on good ground, but wouldn't mind a bit of rain! Most of the field are largely unproven/untested at this level, although several of them have Class 1 experience (West Cork has made the frame in 4 of 6 inc 1 win) and that lack of experience also extends to this course, but those who have run here previously seem to have handled it OK with three of them sharing 3 wins and a place from 5 visits.

As for the trip, again those with experience have handled it well, although you could say that Hunters Call looks like more of a placer than a winner, but at just 1lb above his last winning mark, he's very well treated here, especially in comparison to Galore Des Assences at +12 and Sonigino at +8 etc, but at this point, I wouldn't rule any of these out from making the frame, including top-weight Galore!

We should remember that he's up 12lbs for a facile 12 length win that could have been 20 or 30 lengths had they wanted to. Now, he generally runs in mid-division or a little further back without actually been held up at the back, which is probably where six-time Class 1 runner West Cork is likely to be in a race that will probably be headed by the likes of Sonigino, although Gipsy de Choisel and Bourbali have both led in recent outings...

...and if I was to split the field into the four Geegeez running styles, I'd probably say...

Leader(s) : Sonigino (possibly Bourbali)

Prominent : Bourbali, Gipsy de Choisel, Move It Like Minnie

Mid-Division : Galore Des Assences, Hunters Call, Too Friendly, Hydroplane

Hold-Up : West Cork

We can then look at how this type of race has unfolded here at Huntingdon in the past (I now cross my fingers for some clarity!) via the Geegeez Pace Analyser...

...where leaders/prominent runners are nearly 2.75 times more likely to win and 1.66 times more likely to place than those racing further back, which is better news for the likes of Sonigino, Bourbali, Gipsy de Choisel and Move It Like Minnie.

Summary

The race itself looks fiendishly difficult to call but Move It Like Minnie interests me, because he's in great form and will race prominently enough to stay in touch, but he's massively up in weight and class and whilst he might pull out a career-best here, I don't want to back him as low as 7/2. If I then remain with the pace runners, Sonigino is the likely pace-maker and he's down in class and weight here, but might need more assistance before winning again, I'd normally be interested in him as an E/W bet, but again 6/1 doesn't excite me for that type of punt.

Gipsy de Choisel is priced at 7's, which again is a little short for me as an E/W bet, but he looks a decent type, who'll need to bounce back from a disappointing return to action at Ascot in November, which I suppose leaves us with Bourbali, who we know will be towards the head of the pack. I'm not convinced he wins here up in class and weight, but was in great form this last year and comes here off the back of two good runs making the frame at big prices. He has 3 wins and 2 places from 8 on good ground and 4 wins/2 places from 7 at this trip, so he's be my idea of an E/W option at 9/1, especially if you can get on with a firm paying four places.

There's every possibility that I've overlooked the winner in that quartet or even amongst the other five, but I didn't have a strong view on the contest as a whole and when that's the case, I tend not to pick a winner, but look for an option to make the frame at an acceptable price.