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Its Tom Segal's article.
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their not machines
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What's going on hear please?
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HeLlO SaDdo m5
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moRnINg JoHhN m7
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In the current Weekender puts forward
Pardon! |
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good luck with them it will be interesting to see how many win next time out
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Think you can forgive a bad sprint run e.g slow start,poor draw etc but harder to forgive a flop over a mile or further..i.m.h.o
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You can of course find out now whether this theory has worked in the past.
The only question is how long the period of forgiveness should be. |
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How many races are won by the form horse? can't be a high percentage or we would all be winners and the bookies would'nt be driving Bentleys. Horses, like us, are not machines (except Frankel), some days they just can't be arsed, but how do we know? how does the trainer know?
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I've always wondered whether horses get stitches when running long distances, just like us humans?
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@tunnocks How many races are won by the form horse? can't be a high percentage or we would all be winners and the bookies would'nt be driving Bentleys. Horses, like us, are not machines (except Frankel), some days they just can't be arsed, but how do we know? how does the trainer know?
How many races are won by the form horse? About a third of races are won by the favourite. Timeform say more than half are won by one of their top two rated. How can we tell? Paddock-watching; following the market. How can the trainer tell? By their performance on the gallops, perhaps. Some yards rest horses out of form, others run out of form horses in order to get their handicap mark down. But a lot of the time the trainer can't tell. Even after the race, if a horse in the middle of the betting finishes down the field, has it run to form or not? How can you tell if finishing 8th is right and it shouldn't have finished 7th (so has run below form) or 9th (so has run above form)? If a horse who should have won comes second, has it gone backwards or has the winner improved, or neither and the race was decided by the draw or getting blocked in? Some punters think it is all a big conspiracy with trainers as Machiavellian geniuses pulling the horses until the money is down. I take the view that most trainers are doing their best but are incompetent fools (and sometimes drunk most of the day). That's why I'm happy to forgive bad runs. There again, I don't drive a Bentley either. |
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what the unsaid thing seems to be here is 'not today'
so form experts like Segal have to factor this in |
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How many races are won by the form horse?
What is the form horse? |
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its about being unemotional, so 'forgiveness' is entirely the wrong way of looking at it
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Forgiveness in the lower classes, where forgiveness means overlooking what on paper look like bad runs is an essential element in your mindset imo. I tend to feel that going up through the classes this level of forgiveness should be reduced as the competition gets hotter.
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*I know plenty on here think taking part in the lower class racing and aw racing is tantamount to devil worship but plenty of decent folk on here actually concentrate on this to find their angles and 'forgiveness' is a key element here.
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what is Segal's criteria you've used, dave?
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its not a case of forgiveness, its a case of understanding how the game works
if I find a horse that has won off higher and is running at the right trip on suitable conditions, unless the horse is gone at the game which is quite rare in the grand scheme, I can disregard 90% its recent runs, I dont have to forgive them, I can look at them for more information but ultimately they are irrelevant, the relevant form is further back in the book when an unexposed horse is well ahead of its mark, it will often win, lose, win, lose win as it goes up the handicap, sometimes being well beaten in the losses so if you thought one was well ahead you can certainly forgive a bad run in higher classes there is only so much you can forgive |
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The term forgiveness might not be the right one, I take it to mean can i scrap runs where the horse has been comfortably beaten.
As well as just an off day this may incorporate so many different scenarios as to why conditions may not have been optimum, you could have jockey error, pace of the race as well as all the form factors to take into account. A simple measure just won't cut it in trying to investigate this idea of forgiveness (i wouldn't use the term). |
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example
Horse A may have been running well and winning and gone up the hcp to a new high several lbs above the start of it's winning sequence, it may then have had 2 or 3 runs in what look like optimum conditions where it hasn't managed to hit the frame but has only been eased 1b or 2. Horse B may have been coming down the handicap in the current season and suddenly been stepped up to a trip it has never raced off before now several lbs below it's last winning mark. I might not forgive Horse A’s 3 runs out of the frame running again over similar conditions as i feel it's just too high in it's OR but be prepared to forgive Horse B ten runs with no wins and just a place or 2 if i have had a hunch it has needed the trip now at this stage of it's career. There's so many different factors involved here I can't see how you'd possibly measure the results to try and get some rating of 'forgiveness' unless you broke all these runners up into certain subsets, ie all the horse A's and B's with a similar level of runs you are forgiving in each of their circumstances. |
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"Foregiveness" - This method is also know as ...
'Following them over a cliff'. |
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cheers dave...not possible to look at 'fin in last 4' on my database...in general, they are not machines and overlooking a bad run is often a good way to obtaining value, though there is obv judgement involved in deciding which horses are worth persevering with and which ones arent...those that forgave Meccas Angel her too-bad-to-be-true run at Royal Ascot will be glad they followed her over a cliff
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duncan - Mecca's was just ONE run in a string of exceptional outings.
'Following them over a cliff' - refers to backing them, Again, and again, and again - by keep 'Forgiving' them ... as, I am sure, you well know. ![]() |
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To put the OP's OPENING post into a little more perspective,
It refers to Tom Segal's column in this week's Weekender - - the column, and consequent rationale, has been stimulated by, and highlights, the number of MARK JOHNSTON's horses winning, next time out, after being, "tailed off." Perhaps that puts the methodology into a somewhat different light. |
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@Ramruna...How many races are won by the form horse? About a third of races are won by the favourite. Timeform say more than half are won by one of their top two rated.
So betting favourites you lose 66% of the time. So we should be lumping on Timeforms top 2 rated and we are all winners?, sounds to easy, which type of races do they do best in? |
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The opposite is also true, imo. Especially at the top end, pundits and even the official handicapper sometimes get carried away with an impressive performance, and you need to downgrade it a bit.
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@tunnocks -- the point is that form holds up most of the time.
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All for forgiving a horse a bad run if there is a logical reason to do so. A logical reason wouldn't simply be that it is trained by Mark Johnston. His horses just defy any punting rules.
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I have logged 12 failures to reach the first 4 n.t.o for the sample. Further results to follow as the horses come out again.
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Jeeez, no wonder the vast majority of you people lose in the long run, what nonsense this thread actually is, beggars belief.
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Not many can know where trainers are exactly with their horses, some reasons given below.
Training cycles, currently working a mark, horses well thought off that disappoint or improving horses continue to defy the handicapper. How on earth are we to come to terms with that lot? there will be more reasons not listed. |