![]() ![]() And if you see a good worker going off long, then you may be the only one that didn't get the message that the horse can't run. Then they became a good predictor of who would take a lot of action. They were great until everyone had access to them. So the bottom line is that workout reports have gone the way of speed figures, trainer/jockey combos, pedigree information and other once little known data. Especially when the guys on the racing channels have the same reports and are telling their audience of thousands, all of whom have betting accounts, how great the horse looked in the mornings. Doesn't do much to help that score you have been planning for months. The last thing they want to see in a workout report available for those with a credit card with a $10 limit is how great their unraced 2 or 3 year old worked. Many trainers, and their owners, are degenerate horseplayers. It certainly wasn't fear of losing a good parking spot by the rail at 5:00AM. ![]() Either a respected guy like Harrington suddenly lost his vision, or something else was happening.Īlso for years, horseman at the NYRA tracks, or perhaps NYRA itself, fought like crazy to keep private clockers off the grounds. Poor workers were blowing the doors off of good workers. Then, about a year or so ago, it all ended. I've bought the reports once or twice since then on big days, but generally stayed away from betting SoCal entirely because of it.įrom what I heard from a once loyal Harrington follower was that he was lights out for years. Said the Del Mar poly was an entirely different beast after training closed and the sun blazed on it for several hours before post time. Long story short: He gave me a very honest reply stating that since the switch to synthetics (particularly at Del Mar) it was total chaos and randomness as to how those works would stand up to predicting race results. When the SoCal tracks switched to synthetics, I emailed the private clocker whose reports I thought were the most valuable asking him what was up with the bizarre dropoff in the reliability of morning works being replicated in the afternoon. ![]() Had good luck with several of these in the early 2000s (particularly helpful with layoffs, FTS, and getting to know the patterns of "betting" trainers). At least one clocker also ranks the works on a subjective A+ down to F grade. We’ll go to a deep Race 9 for our Two Minute Pick, presented by NYRA Bets.For those who aren't familiar-Several of the SoCal private clocker reports give you a whole paragraph of HOW the horse looked and who (if anyone) the horse worked in company with. I thought he ran HUGE that day after a slow start and is a deserving favorite in the finale. Race 10: Go watch the replay of that June 18th race that some of these come out of, including #7 Ramblin’ Wreck. Race 6: Will be watching the board but #4 Lamorna has some interesting turf pedigree. Race 3: Lot of speed on paper in here and toyed with #1 King James as my pick today. Feels like a move he likes these days and #6 Little Prankster is making that move. Race 1: Over last year (per DRF Formulator), trainer Phil Bauer 7-2-2-1 going route to sprint on the dirt. Didn’t help yesterday as the Danny Gargan filly took little money, crushed and paid $15 in Race 6. If you can’t get the Clocker Report, the board can tell some of the story in these baby races. DRF Clocker Report: Florida workers running on 2022 Blue Grass Stakes card at Keeneland. Mike Welsch, Mike Vesce and the crew have put a lot of money in my pockets over the years. Pass for me on that sequence.įor these two-year-old races, I consult the DRF Clocker Report. There are three MSW races in the early Pick 5, two of those for two-year-olds. I liked yesterday’s card better from a betting standpoint. Our pre-scratch Two Minute Pick is below. I’m traveling mid-morning today for a work-related opportunity, so the thoughts on the card will be brief. We’ll have our first MutStack Podcast of the summer late Friday with our friend Jessica Paquette from Parx Racing, talking the late Pick 3 at Saratoga for Saturday, the Haskell, and the closure of another important race track in America. Just click the image above or visit NYRABETS.COM/MUT200 to learn more and sign up. If you’re getting ready to play Saratoga (or any track) this week and you’re not signed up yet, take advantage of the MUT200 promo and get up to a $200 deposit bonus when you sign up at . The final preparations are just about over for this years Kentucky Oaks and Kentucky Derby candidates, although many turned in spirited gallops in cool conditions over a pretty quick racetrack on. And with a win under our belts, there is no better time to get signed up ay NYRA Bets.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
Details
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |