As people mention the Chelt Festival as a reason to NOT back horses, hear is an article from the NTF website by Ben Aitken. VERY INTERESTING.
Horses that ran at the Cheltenham Festival struggle to run their race when they come on to Aintree… That is something you will probably hear quite a bit over the three days. Personally I don’t buy it.
Of the 126 winners at the past six Aintree Grand National Festivals 70 had their last start at the Cheltenham Festival. Yes there were a huge 691 of the Aintree runners that had their last run at Cheltenham but don’t be sucked into believing a run at the Cheltenham Festival is a negative. For sure, Cheltenham can leave its mark on some runners but they do convert at the expected rate at Aintree (in fact it is a smidge above expected) and it is best to ignore the ‘Cheltenham myth’ to a certain extent.
If we look a bit closer we can see that 41 of that 70 finished in the top three at the festival. If you had backed all 183 of these types over the past 6 seasons you would have returned a +£123.81 BFLSP.
Aintree is a well-established spring festival with an array of valuable and prestigious prizes on offer; it makes sense that trainers target the top races here. The season isn’t just simply about Cheltenham (despite what the media may have you believe) and **shock horror** there will have been some horses running at Prestbury Park with one (or both) eyes firmly on other targets. Some will in fact have been targeted at both meetings. Cheltenham can, and will, take a lot out of some horses and ‘leave its mark’ but to me that isn’t the real reason that some horses ‘flop’ when they come on to Aintree. The main reason for me is the difference in track configurations. The two tracks are very different in lay-out and some horses will simply act better around the hefty Cheltenham contours than the lighter Aintree ones, and vice-versa. To me it has a lot more to do with ability to handle the track than suffering from post-traumatic-Cheltenham-stress-fatigue (a known symptom for many punters, who let’s be honest are less robust than a thoroughbred machine…and I include myself in that!).
It's good to have the stats to hand on this one and as always is a question of having the above in the back of your mind, using your own judgement on how hard a race you think a horse had at Cheltenham (O'Faiolains Boy and Ballynagour at extermes of the spectrum in this respect) and looking at an individual horses record: does it go well with a recent run, does it have a high rating (speed , RPR, whatever you choose) with a recent run or a poor one etc.
It's good to have the stats to hand on this one and as always is a question of having the above in the back of your mind, using your own judgement on how hard a race you think a horse had at Cheltenham (O'Faiolains Boy and Ballynagour at extermes of
OFB a tough one to call if he shows, lost one shoe, twisted another one, said by BJG not to be at his best and still won!
He could conceivably put up an even better show at Aintree - AFC did for the same trainer last year.
Would like to see how those stats pan out depending on whether there are 2 weeks (rare, I know), 3 weeks or 4 weeks between the two festivals.
All food for thought anyway - always pays not to be too dogmatic about such matters in this game I think.
yes - thank you, an interesting read.OFB a tough one to call if he shows, lost one shoe, twisted another one, said by BJG not to be at his best and still won!He could conceivably put up an even better show at Aintree - AFC did for the same trainer la
I used OFB as an example, purely because I thought he had one of the toughest races of the Festival in a race where mnany decent animals can get bottomed out. I don't know if he can bounce back and I wasn't aware of the other issues you mentioned.
Yeah that was my point (re not being dogmatic).I used OFB as an example, purely because I thought he had one of the toughest races of the Festival in a race where mnany decent animals can get bottomed out. I don't know if he can bounce back and I was
Raceform Interactive is a piece of subscription-only software.
Basically, a huge form database going back 10-plus years, but you've got to lay out upwards of £40 a month to get access.
Raceform Interactive is a piece of subscription-only software.Basically, a huge form database going back 10-plus years, but you've got to lay out upwards of £40 a month to get access.
I actually paid £99 for rest of NH season from beginning of Jan so substantially less than £40 per month though a regular subscription costs around that.
Without going into too much detail, the database is user friendly, it allows me to use a framework/structure to analyze a race from multiple dimensions - that sounds a bit pretentious, what I really mean is that (imo) it makes it easier to identify when a horse has it's optimum conditions and is therefore likely to perform at is best.
It also helps me find information that is n't necessarily widely known like OFB's shoes!
I've never subscribed to Racing Post Members club but I prefer the RI format to what's available in the paper (though in fairness, there's some good free stuff available on the RP site).
I'm interested in all sources of information (like the article at the start of the thread), so if anybody has any recommendations would be gratefully received.
OFB's shoes could be a red herring of course, might mean he had an even harder race than we originally thought but I like horses who have an excuse when they win! We'll find out tomorrow, I like Many Clouds at the prices tomorrow but OFB better as a long term prospect.
Anyway, four winners who ran at Cheltenham today, of which three finished in the first three there so a boost for the original article.
As I paid for it, I'll answer as best I can.I actually paid £99 for rest of NH season from beginning of Jan so substantially less than £40 per month though a regular subscription costs around that.Without going into too much detail, the database is
yep, three of which finished in top 3 at Cheltenham (the other finished 4th).
Also, three Cheltenham Festival handicap winners stepped up in class to win Grade 1 novice events at Aintree.
yep, three of which finished in top 3 at Cheltenham (the other finished 4th).Also, three Cheltenham Festival handicap winners stepped up in class to win Grade 1 novice events at Aintree.
The first thing to do is comcentrate on horses that finished in the first 6 in respective races at the Cheltenham Festival. That narrows runners down a fair bit. The next thing is to check the Topspeed ratings at the festival. This should narrow your selections down to two or 3 max per race, even the grand national.
The first thing to do is comcentrate on horses that finished in the first 6 in respective races at the Cheltenham Festival. That narrows runners down a fair bit. The next thing is to check the Topspeed ratings at the festival. This should narrow your
I think there's something very important that hasn't been mentioned yet. This year, there are 4 weeks between Cheltenham and Aintree - for most of the past 30 years it has been 2 or 3. That's going to greatly improve horses chances of reproducing their best form.
The tracks are chalk and cheese though, especially the chase tracks. The hurdles track at Aintree is on the outside of the chase track and much more galloping than many people give it credit for. The Mildmay chase course it like a left handed Kempton, only with much tougher fences.
I think there's something very important that hasn't been mentioned yet. This year, there are 4 weeks between Cheltenham and Aintree - for most of the past 30 years it has been 2 or 3. That's going to greatly improve horses chances of reproducing the
Ben (NTF) is a good friend of mine and knows his onions. However, I personally think you have to be selective with your Cheltenham runners at Aintree. I would say that over the past 22 years being against a high percentage of them has served me much better than backing them.
Ben (NTF) is a good friend of mine and knows his onions. However, I personally think you have to be selective with your Cheltenham runners at Aintree. I would say that over the past 22 years being against a high percentage of them has served me much
Absolutely Mully, just pointing out that it is unwise to dismiss Cheltenham runners just because they ran for their lives at the Festival. Some will surely disappoint though.
Absolutely Mully, just pointing out that it is unwise to dismiss Cheltenham runners just because they ran for their lives at the Festival. Some will surely disappoint though.