Showing posts with label handicapping. Show all posts
Showing posts with label handicapping. Show all posts

Sunday, March 5, 2023

Post Race Handicapping Analysis: The Honey Fox G3 at Gulfstream


Welcome Friends to The Turk blog. 

I write handicapping analysis of generally Graded Stake horse races. I started handicapping in 1986 when I spent a summer in Saratoga training to operate nuclear reactors in the sleepy town called Ballston Spa. I lived just blocks from the track. In the mid 1970's, like a lot of kids who grew up in that era, my only access to horse racing was older relatives, ABC Wide World of Sports and Sports Illustrated Magazine.  I had an Aunt, my dear Aunt Rose, who would baby sit me from time to time on Saturdays while my dad worked volunteering at a nearby Boys and Girls Club, and she was my first contact with the sport. I remember sitting at my older cousins house in 1977 watching Seattle Slew win the Preakness at a second cousin's first communion party. I loved reading Sports Illustrated, an era before the instant access internet, and I read and was fascinated by Formula One, Professional Boxing and Horse Racing. It was a simple time in a young boys life. 

In 1986, I was a young man, not quite 20, living in a paradise-like Saratoga (Jumel Place, just blocks from the Oklahoma Training Track.) The highlight that summer was seeing Sylvester Stallone with a bevy of women surrounding him. I worked a lot of mid and night shifts and I would grab the Daily Race Form with my breakfast and handicap. It was like a crossword puzzle to me and the next day I'd see if I was any good. Gambling was never really my thing, but I liked to predict.

Not much has changed in almost 40 years. I hate the term "tout," a label which is what bloggers like me get pigeonholed into. I'm touting no one. My handicaps and my bet constructions are offered free of charge, I have never made any attempt to monetize the blog, and all I'm doing is carefully unpacking a race each week at a level that the track handicapper doesn't have the time to do. Morning Lines and Track Handicappers miss signs, miss over and underlays, because they are busy, because they are surrounded by biases, perceived or not. One race a week I get into the mitochondrial and look for how the field should finish. I offer a bet suggestion on a simple exacta only basis, and the rest is up to you. 

I find my blog to be a relaxing therapy to the hustle and bustle of my job. Operations at a publicly traded company is high stakes, high expectations. Handicapping is an escape for a few hours each week. Horse racing is like a time machine back to Aunt Rosie's couch on 19th Street.

Anyways, I like to build these post race analysis looks at my handicapping, primarily for two reasons:  What did I miss or get right in that race and who should I quietly be watching for in an upcoming race. I will tell you I have had great success watching horses finish 4th or 5th up the track in one race, but showing me something with late turn of foot and stride, and finding them as overlays when most think of them as underlays.  


The Honey Fox G3: Fillies and Mares 4 YO and Up over Firm Turf: 1 Mile. GP.


Honey Fox G3

Race Chart



I identified Princess Theorem and Faith In Humanity (Fr) pre race.  

Faith In Humanity (Fr) Notes:


I really liked her early speed and her post position and thought she'd come out of gate and throttle this race.  Sharp works, with two bullets at 5f in late February.  Of course, being a Brown horse his stats off the layoff are good.  And finally, she was a grade 3 (class neutral) horse.  I still think Speak of the Devil (Fr) is the better horse, but not yesterday, and she herself was coming off a layoff since last June.  






Princess Theorem Notes:

When you are looking for value that that fill the second spot in an exacta, this is exactly what you are looking for.  I didn't think the mare could win, but late speed and a last race win at the distance and over same surface is a recency nod I can't ignore.  -2 Class note is to me she's a 25K OC horse, not a Grade 3.  


Look at :23 second final quarter in last race.




Yes, she finished Show, but could have easily finished Place.  The $1 Trifecta with her paid $373.80.  If you would have taken my top four and boxed them, you win the Tri.  The $2 Exacta, my juice, paid $48.60.  

I'm not touting, I'm analyzing at a level that no track handicapper could possibly because there are not enough hours in the day.  

Aunt Rosie



Have fun friends, Turk out! 

Saturday, December 17, 2022

The Nomination Is In: The Via Borghese $100K at Gulfstream Park

                                                                                                    

Gulfstream Park first turn

Welcome friends to The Turk and the Little Turk horse racing and handicapping blog. I am the Turk, and my almost 23 year old son is the Little Turk.  Little Turk is preoccupied with life these days, as he is studying to be a chiropractor.  I miss the days with him at the track, going down to the paddock, coming up with our bets, and then standing along the rail rooting them home. You always think there will be more time, more outings, but life moves at its own pace.  I miss Little Turk, but he's a young man now, with his own life.  Like many of our young horse players, he's an absolute fantasy football junkie, and the lessons he's learned in horse betting I see him applying well in other things.  It's good to know a little degenerate horse player could impart the lessons of the track on the youth!

Anyways, Gulfstream Park.  The turf track went through significant improvement to make it a premier grass field, and the early reviews are positive. My favorite turf track in the world, Arlington Park, being no more, I hope to see more tracks install lush and thick turf courses to lure the top Europeans over.  I can dream.

I'm just getting my handicapping memory muscles working again, but this time of the year your turf selections are limited.  While that changes in January, beggars can't be choosers and today's nomination, mostly by default, is The Via Borghese, a $100K for Fillies and Mares 3 and Up.  

Let's get after it!



You can find the updated Track Info and Tote at the Gulfstream Park website and this link will take you to it directly. The weather appears to be mostly dry until it gets closer to post time.  I handicapped assuming Fast Turf.  

 As I like to tell people, my best advice for handicappers is to handicap without morning lines or reading any news reports about the race before the handicap.  Leave bias at the door is my philosophy.  I look at the Morning Line after I'm done handicapping to help me identify any over or underlays and gage my view of the race against a track insider.  It's a small sample size, but it gives me a sanity check.  Quite frankly, this race seems to be handicapped by me and the track pretty similarly.  

Pletcher's Beside Herself gets top look at the win spot.  Blinkers off is my only concern.  Training well, 3 Turf Wins in 10 starts, 2 of 3 in the money at GP.  Class, Connections, all good.  

I like Flying Fortress and Viburnum for the best looks at Place.  Flying Fortress has 3 turf wins in 6 starts and drops in class and distance thus time out.  First time back since claim.  Veteran Viburnum goes in 20th start today.  Training well since September, a good late turn of foot, 3 of 4 in the money at GP, 3 wins in 18 Turf starts but 8 Place/Shows.  

I prefer Starship Mallomar more than Lisheen, but it's not a strong opinion either way.  Clearly Lisheen is in the better barn and wins a class battle, but on track little separates these two.

My base handicap will be to a $2 Exacta, betting against Beside Herself for the win:   4-7-5 OVER 4-7-5-1 $2 Bet for $18.  It may be too expensive to carry 4 horses in the place spot so I'll think that through a bit more.

Have fun friends, Turk Out!

 

Monday, September 3, 2018

Lessons of a 30+ Year Handicapper

Welcome friends to The Turk and the Little Turk blog.  I'm not handicapping today, just relaxing.  I put in my work this weekend and ultimately bet on only four races.  As I said in just my last blog post, I'm a high volume handicapper and a low volume race track investor.  I had some tough luck at Kentucky Downs this weekend, some good handicapping and some bad bet construction actually while at Saratoga I intentionally discounted Yoshida (Jpn) in the Woodward Stakes and have to live with that.

I told my readers the following, "...Handicappers just need to keep plugging away and not be emotional.  Nothing I do today can make up for yesterday, today is about today, race 1 is about 1,  race 2 is about race 2, etc.  When you are a high volume handicapper/low volume bettor-investor as I am you have to demand a return that will cover these sort of misstep days.  I'm a lifetime slightly positive ROI player, but its hard to make up the losses. It's hard to be "unemotional".  It's taken a lot of mental training and focus to look back on the handicaps objectively, glean what I can from them and move on."

I mean every word of that.  I'm nearly 52 years old. I've been handicapping since 1986 (32 years this past August) and I've been a horse racing fan since 1978 (40 years this past May).  I'm in the prime of my life and I'm pretty good at picking horses and I just hope, like older handicappers did for me, I can impart some of those painful (read expensive) lessons onto my readers.  I was rewarded with a Del Mar Derby win of $251.20 net making my weekend stat line as follows:
  • $76 Wagered on Four Exactas
  • $291.70 Returned
  • $3.84 Returned for each $1 Wagered


G2 Del Mar Derby; 1 1/8 Miles on Firm Turf



Tourist Mile; 1 Mile on Firm Turf at Kentucky Downs



One Dreamer: 1 Mile 70 Yards on Firm Turf at Kentucky Downs



The Woodward Stakes G1; 1 1/8 Miles on Fast Dirt



I woke up on Sunday Morning a bit dejected.  I felt like I handicapped very well over the past few days but I wasn't rewarded.  It's easy to spout off about how you should conduct your business as a handicapper and its another completely to act professionally on your own advice, but I did it.  I gave myself a few minutes to understand where I went wrong.

  • In the Tourist Mile, I missed the #8 horse in the top spot.  I had it wrote down properly in my book but in my hurry to place my bets before I had to go out (first mistake- I was betting about 2 hours before the race)  I screwed up entering the bet.  That screw-up cost my $55.10.  Every time this happens I tell myself it will never happen again.
  • In The One Dreamer, I overbet because of mistake #1:  I wasn't home to watch the Will Pay's and my bet was too pricy, betting $28 to "win" $21.50.  I was off to a great start this weekend! On Leave, who I didn't think was a slam dunk, was a pretty heavy chalk in hindsight.  
  • In the Woodward, rip up the tickets, I didn't do much right there.  I did favor Leofric to have a big day and I gambled he'd be my "Kazan" in this race, the long odds filling the place spot in the Exacta.  Centimeters away.  Luck goes both ways.  

I put yesterday behind me and I focused on the Del Mar card today with a primary target of the turf race Del Mar Derby.
  • In the Del Mar Derby, it all came together, good handicapping and good luck:  One more hop and River Boyne (Ire) catches Kazan (Ire) and the exacta is paying $20.
    • Prerace I said some smart things:
      • River Boyne (Ire) was tepid and hadn't had a signature moment yet.
      • I liked the late closing speed of Kazan (Ire) for the exacta.
      • I'd like Ride a Comet at worse than 4-1 and he went to post 5-1.
That's the line between positive ROI over time and being a losing horse player.  It's a razor thin margin and the best way to stay positive is to keep working at your handicapping and your bet construction and cash management.  Focus on what you are good at.  For me, I've narrowed my focus to exactas.  I left a Trifecta and Superfecta on the table ($1,600 how I would have bet them) but that's not my focus anymore.  I've hit big takes in the past and its thrilling, but I'm just not interested in the roller coaster of emotions that comes with chasing the big strikes.  I'm Ok with low risk/good reward.

I'm working on growing my blog and developing a few more social interactions through it.  I had a small but tight group of handicapper friends I knew and sometimes collaborated with but they have moved on.  Taking the long view serves me well in life and as a handicapper.  Just keep plugging away is today's message.  As long as you are a skilled handicapper, the betting will follow.




Happy Labor Day!

Turk Out!

Saturday, September 1, 2018

The Nomination Is In: Kentucky Downs Race 7: The One Dreamer $250K

On Leave:  Photo by Christie DeBernardis
Welcome Friends to The Turk and the Little Turk.  I'm back this weekend with another very good betting race, the $250,000 One Dreamer at Kentucky Downs.  I've already posted wide open G1 Woodward Stakes and the race after this, the Tourist Mile $750,000.  Light chalks in all with big fields and I'm on the hunt for big payout exactas in each.

I just love Kentucky Downs.  I love the sort of horse it attracts too: hard knocking, veteran, geldings, fringe stakes runners, gutty and under performers alike.  I could watch video on these races for prep all day, and what a better way for the Turk to unwind this Labor day weekend.  I work hard, I travel constantly and quite frankly, I'm often tired and on the edge of mental exhaustion.  What keeps me plugging along at a high level is taking time before bed and on the weekends to dedicate time to my passion of horse racing.  You have to have an outlet.  I tell my staff constantly, what we do is a marathon, not a sprint.  It's mostly true, very often like any race, there are sprints within the marathon.  The Turk was raised by Momma and Papa Turk to work hard, work the pants off of everyone and advance through your merits.  I'm in the final furlongs of a career and its this horse racing blog that gives me my outlet and pleasure.  I hope my crazy and wild readers enjoy it as well.  It's now September 2018.  I started doing this in September 2008.  Time flies....

You'll find information here from what's available for the Equibase Kentucky Downs profile for Scratches/Changes etc.  The weather?  Looks drier than I expected.  I'm waiting to see what the condition of the turf is but I can't imagine its worse than Good.

Let's go!

Ellis Park:  1 1/16 Miles:  Last Race Effort on July 8th for Dubara (GB)/2, I Remember Mama/4 Youngest Daughter/5Burma Road/6 and Also Eligible Red Dane (Ity)





Arlington Park Race 6: Modesty G3; 1 3/16th on Firm Turf on July 7th with Celestial Insight/1 (#4), Con Te Partiro/7 (#11) and Prado's Sweet Ride/9 (#8)



Finish G3 Modesty: Twin Spires TV


I'm not sure what to takeaway from this:  Prado's Sweet Ride at 11.9-1 has one big run, Con Te Partiro at 9.3-1 comes late but well beaten and Celestial Insight at 3.3-1 buckles when the pace quickened.  One race back of this in the Grade 3 Mint Julep the 5 YO mare out of Scat Daddy (rest in peace) took the lead at the 1/16th pole only to lose by a neck, while the #8 horse in that race, Youngest Daughter cracks under pressure.





Mint Julep G3 1/16th to Go: Twin Spires TV

Youngest Daughter with no excuses, last few running lines;  "...faltered late, weakened, Bobbled Start, weakened, faltered, belated".  That's not good.  She was a vet scratch August 5th.   Her adjusted 1/4 time in Thorograph race shape is third fastest at :24.92 but if she can't finish better it won't help.  Celestrial Insight gets pilot Rocco back up and I think has a chance to finish top 4.

English Affair is intriguing to me.  The 4 YO English Channel filly is 6 of 8 in the money on turf, with 6 Win-Place finishes in 9 starts.  In the next video, the Kentucky Downs Ladies Turf Preview held at Ellis Park on August 5th breaking with odds of 8.3-1 she closed fast.  Same for second race back with a running line of "gaining".  Post 10 and an opening 1/4 from Thorograph race shape of :25.62 means she may get hung up wide into first turn.



On Leave, Conditioned by McGaughey with Geroux up for Stuart Janney (White/Cherry Belt/Cherry Sleeves) a 5 YO War Front Mare, has $918K in earnings in 18 starts with 7 wins.  4 of 5 in the money at the distance, 14 of 18 in the money over grass and a race third best adjusted quarter time of :24.97 that should allow him to move over out of the gate from post 11.  Blinkers On.

Two back for On Leave is a game Distaff Mile on Kentucky Derby day at Churchill Downs.  At 4.1-1 the mare lost in last few hops to the classy Proctor's Ledge.



Last Promise Kept breaks from post 12 and has little tactical speed but a big closing run with a late turn of foot Timeform late race pace fig of 103.  This is two races back in June in Delaware an OC 25K N2x.



UPDATE 2:46 PM:  Scratch 1 Celestial Insight and 7 Con Te Parito




Another very good betting race this weekend.  I'll be assembling some sort of Exacta that will look something along these lines:

$1 exacta 11-1-9 OVER 11-1-9-4-7-12-10-8 for $21.  I'll be watching the Will Pays prior to the start of this race to exclude anything that doesn't seem value driven,

Have fun!

Turk out

Thursday, August 30, 2018

The Nomination Is In: The Woodward Stakes G1 at Saratoga

Seeking the Soul: Coady Photography
Welcome friends to The Turk and the Little Turk.  I'd like to thank the good people of The Thorofan and the Thorofan Handicappers Corner for allowing me the opportunity to share my thoughts with you today reading the $750 Woodward Stakes at Saratoga.

This has been a race I've gravitated to over the years as some of my favorites: Lawyer Ron, Curlin, Rachel Alexandra, Quality Road, Harve de Grace and Gun Runner have all won this since 2007.  Perhaps none of these runners are of that quality, but we at least certainly have quantity today with 14 in the starting gate.  This is going to be an excellent betting race.  There are no heavy chalks, no locks for Win-Place, I see this as a pretty wide open race and to me that's opportunity. I've got a tepid chalk on my board as Seeking the Soul, with my fair line odds 5-1 with his morning line 4.5-1.

You'll find Scratches and Changes hereYou'll find the weather here, and by the looks of it we should have a dry, fast dirt track.

Let's get after it!




It's been some time since I had a more tepid chalk than I have today.  I've put Seeking the Soul on top:4 Straight 100+ Beyers, 5 of 6in the money at the distance, 13 of 17 in the money on Fast Dirt, sharp work over the dirt and a Saratoga win.  Castellano up a week after Catholic Boy victory ride in the Travers for Dallas Stewart.

Pegasus World Cup G1: 1 1/8 Miles  Fast Dirt; GP; January 2018



Sunny Ridge comes in after setting career best Beyer of 102 in the State Dinner 98K at Belmont over fast dirt at 1 1/16 miles.



Trainer Servis and I. Ortiz are 29% at Saratoga in 55 starts and 33% over past year at all tracks in 181 starts.  One win in six starts at the distance but 6 wins in 13 starts over fast dirt.

Gunnevera is the Morning Line favorite and I would expect will enter the gate as post time favorite.  In his last ten races he's one three times:  an OC 62K 3 weeks ago (an 85 Beyer), a 107K Stakes one year ago and The Fountain of Youth G2 in March of 2017.  The link between all these wins are they were all at Gulfstream Park.  Woof!  He's got a huge late Timeform Pace of 131.  Here he was in good form at the Travers in 2017 taking a big, wide, dirty run at West Coast, but he doesn't reach him until 1 1/4 miles and this is 1/8 less.



Watching that Travers Stakes, I'll pause to remember Irap as well.  An absolutely beautiful colt who left us too soon.

Irap: WSVX FM

The nearly $3.0 Million dollar earning Gunnevera will be coming late, but will he have enough tactical speed early on to be well positioned.  That's something the handicapper must consider.  I'm betting against him to win and I'm not even sure I'll cover him to Place (and yes, that should all but assure he does win!)

I like two higher prices to contend for Place: Leofric and Zanotti.    I hate the draw for both of them and possibly it dooms them, but I'm thinking that this race might be won by a horse that's 5-1 or worse and the Place horse could be 15-1 or worse, so yes, its a bit of gut and gamble (we are gambling after all).

Leofric, a smallish grey/roan gelded son of Candy ride (Arg) is trained by Brad Cox.


West Virginia Governor G3; 1 1 1/16 Miles Fast Dirt MNR.



If it gets sloppy he has a 447 Tomlinson for Wet Dirt.

Razorback Handicap G3:  1 1/16 Miles Muddy/sealed




Again, he's not as talented as many of the horses her, but he ships well, wins on different tracks and he's gutty.  Place in an Exacta at 20-1 or worse is worth a wager to me.

Zanotti as an 8/5 favorite finished Place in the Monmouth Cup G3 last time out.  While a gutty stretch run he couldn't seal the effort and didn't look good at the distance.  1 win in 5 starts at the distance but 4 Places so 5 for 5 in the money at 1 1/8 Miles.  5 Place finishes in 6 starts in 2018.




While I have six runners listed as no higher than Exotic, I'll most likely play a few in the Place spot of the Exacta.

In that mix is both Tapwrit and Discreet Lover, running recently in the sloppy and sealed Whitney G1  at 1 1/8 miles. Discreet Lover has  big closing run speed while Tapwrit hasn't won since his Belmont win last year.  I'm more inclined to think that Discreet Lover has a better chance of hitting the board than Tapwrit.



Two Calumet Farms breds are in my next grouping, Patch and Hence.  Patch and Kurilov (Chi) squared off at 1 1/8 miles over fast dirt at Saratoga three weeks ago in the Alydar 97K. 





Hence enters 4 weeks after winning as a heavy chalk in a 200K Stakes at Albuquerque Downs.  Best known for his impressive Sunland Derby win in his 3 YO campaign that made him a trendy Kentucky Derby pick (and unimpressive 18 lengths behind Always Dreaming).



I like Yosida (Jpn) quite a bit but on Turf and not at 5-1 Morning Line.  Yes, I trust and respect Bill Mott so I will be watching the tote and if his price gets a but larger I'll consider him but I like others much more.

 I tossed Rally Cry (Mike Smith up) as I think he'll have to work too hard just to overcome his post draw.  I tossed Imperative as I  think the gelding deserves a retirement home, even though he's still shows flashes.  I tossed Term of Art, although more talented than some of these runners, winless at the distance in 3 starts, 1 win in last ten starts.  I respect Cox as a conditioner but its a 14 horse field and you can't cover everyone.

So what to do with all this?

I'll be looking at Exacta and Win Bets.  I'm thinking of no more than $16 Wagered and I view this as low risk high reward.  My early thoughts are:

$1 Exacta:  10-8-12 OVER 10-8-12...11-13-7  $15

That's Seeking the Soul/Discreet Lover/Sunny Ridge Over Seeking the Soul/Discreet Lover/Sunny Ridge and Leofric/Zanotti/Kurilov (Chi)

That might not be the exact bet but you get the idea.  This is the sort of race you can Tote Board Handicap.  Pair a few favored horses with some longer prices and have some fun with it.


Thanks for reading, Turk Out!

Saturday, July 22, 2017

The Turk at 600 Posts: 21 September 2008- Present; A Study in Persistence



Dear friends, family and readers, Welcome to the Turk and the Little Turk, where today I am celebrating the 600th blog posting, dating back to 21 September 2008.

It was a different time when this blog began.Twitter and Facebook were still just starting to take hold, and whole communities of bloggers banded together by subject material, and the one I gravitated to was horse racing.

I thought I could provide free, No BS Past Performance analysis and bet structures to my readers, as well as develop some horse racing fan friendships.  I've accomplished those relatively modest goals and my only regret is declining readership and a lack of feedback in the form of comments.  There are times when I feel like I'm talking in space, inside my helmet, with no one listening.  I made a decision to blog for myself, first and foremost, and if I can grow my incredibly rapid group of core readers, so be it.  There was a moment a few years ago when I thought about hanging it up. I kept asking myself if I still enjoyed reaching 100 people per post.  After time to think about it, the answer is always yes, The Turk will endure until I no longer have anything to offer.

I've included some images that appeared in this blog over the years.  I'm proud that this blog consistently produces top shelf handicapping and not too shabby bet construction.  I'm as dedicated and excited about the next 600 posts as I was the past 600.  I'll never compete with the bigger blogs, I'll never get thousands of views per post, advertisers will never be craving space on my margins, and I'm good with all that:  I'm a hack handicapper who doesn't bedazzle anyone with fancy terminology or systems and I'm content with this blog being what it is.   The Turk blog would never have happened if it wasn't for the internet kindness of Equispace blogger and now Buffalo News Turf Writer Gene Kershner.  Blame him!



                                                  A Little Turk Halloween circa 2007


Little Turk and I:  Arlington Millions Preview Day 2007



The Turk in the IRS Cashing Lane at the Spa 2006


                     What I thought would be the last Derby Winner and the Next Derby Winner: Mine that Bird and Eskendereya


The Turk's Office:  Street Sense, Curlin, Rachael, Ruffian, Mine That Bird, Rags to Riches


A cold Breeders' Cup Day at Churchill


Lost by a Nose to John Henry


Horse Racing Friend Tim "Tiznow" Reynolds-Rest in Peace



Three Generations of Turk at the Spa 2007


A Corbin Clan gathering at Arlington 


The Turk Clan 

On a cold and rainy Preakness Saturday 2013

Pioneerof the Nile winning the Santa Anita Derby 2009


Little Turk at Arlington Million 2016


A mature Grandma Turk and Sister Turk at Fort Erie


Thanks for reading.  Expect about the same.

Turk Out!


Saturday, May 14, 2011

Post Race Analysis for Race Day 14 May 2011: BEL Race 9: The Peter Pan Grade 2

Ramon Dominguez! You know Ramon helped make my wallet over $800 thicker this afternoon with his win on Alternation in the Grade 2 Peter Pan, the key single in my Superfecta win.

I betcha Ramon carries a wallet; it's the one that says bad mother f**ker on it! I reckon I digressed, anyway....

As a handicapper I get a sense of when the seas are parting. Don't get me wrong though, that is no sure sign of dollar bills being handed my way, but that feeling underlies what I call pattern recognition. On paper, The Peter Pan unfolded for me in terms of class and pace. While I didn't pick the order 1-10 perfectly, I did clearly see the line between the top four and everyone else, and thats as close to clarity as you get in this game.

The Arkansas Derby to me has become one of the key dirt races of every season and Oaklawn Park seems to be a great place to launch your campaign. Alternation took defeat in Arkansas, added some sharp work and gave a nice final kick to win today.

BEL Race 9: The Peter Pan Grade 2



The gambling part of the day involved singling Alternation. Sometimes you just have to take a stand and thats how strongly I felt about the quality of the Arkansas Derby field and how ready I thought this colt was today for conditioner Von Hemel. The rest of the bet just involved making the cut off just below my sixth favorite, leaving five horses in the red, four horses when Isn't He Perfect scratched.

The Turk is a pretty happy cigar smokin', bourbon drinking bald fella right now. The Little Turk's U-11 Soccer team won both games today and made the Championship game in the tournament which is tomorrow, yet I still found time to handicap, bet and take down a superfecta. Life is good.

Have fun, Turk Out!

Thursday, February 3, 2011

The Nomination Is In: February 5, 2011: The Donn Handicap Grade I


Gulfstream Park is a place that the Ol' Turk likes to day dream about when the snow is flying and the temperature is frigid. The Turk was honored to handicap one of my favorite races of the year, The Donn Handicap for the Thorofan website and their Handicappers Corner. Take a swing by and see if their fancentric organization is right for you.

I'm a fan of horse racing in general, but when forced to articulate my feelings I'd tell you my true passion is older horses on dirt and turf. I'm a numbers handicapper; I soak up the data on the past performances and the race charts and older horses offer more information to scour over a longer period of time, and well, the past is usually prologue.

The Donn Handicap is named after the Donn family that owned and managed the track for sixty years, starting with James Donn, and then James Jr and finally Douglas. The 2011 edition of the race mirrors the state of the older horse division nationally as well: A dearth of established stars but a deep bench of horses where at least a few of them can become real fan favorites. Nine horses will enter the gate and at least seven of them have what it takes to become force in the older division and just haven't been able to be consistent or healthy enough to create a buzz.

Let's get after it!

Race 10 Gulfstream Park: The Donn Handicap Grade I; 1 1/8 Miles on dirt for 4 YOs and Up.



As always, get your information and your past performances before you sit down to handicap. Weather.com gives you hour by hour information and is invaluable when trying to sort out what track conditions will be like. Weather does not appear to be a factor here. Get the scratches and changes as well. For me, I like Daily Racing Form Formulator PP's with works mixed in with race lines, fractional running times and full jockey/trainer stats. One thing I skip is morning lines. Build your own opinions and ignore the morning lines until after you are set in your outlook. If you don't always play the particular track where the race is, take some time to familiarize yourself with the track website to see what information you may gather. And while this isn't something you can get and start using right away, an Equibase Track Bias Report, available from Equibase for $3, packs an incredible amount of information onto several pieces of paper: You'll find the past four days worth of races condensed down to which post positions were winning, what running style was winning, and where the winners were at first call. The past twelve month statistics by race surface and general distance gives you the information as was predicted pre and post race. The report is dense but once you get use to it, and it took me several weekends, it does unlock a window into how the track plays.

At first glance, it appears that Morning Line and Rule will provide the pace. Stalking this group will be I Want Revenge, Square Eddie and Eldaffer, and closing speed will be provided by Giant Oak and Fly Down. Everyone else, I don't know what they will do and I'll assume they are mixed in 3-6 lengths back.

No particular strong chalk jumps off the page either which is fine from my perspective as several horses will receive betting action and keeps the odds from being too depressed on someone very good. What I do think I see is two separate layers, a current ability line if you will, which I denote with color in chart breakdown. The horses in blue I expect will W-P-S, in what order, well that's still debatable. The horses in yellow I don't think can win but have the ability to get up for place possibly, but most likely show or fourth, and the horses in red are the dreaded tosses that will inevitably sneak up and ruin your day on occasion. Handicappers have to be like cornerbacks after getting burned for a touchdown: Let it go and move along!

When I see these ability levels appear strong to me I start thinking superfecta. Superfecta to me is a matrix, like boxing except I'm selectively picking and choosing who is in and who is out in spots 1-4. These types of bets can become pretty expensive and are not to be trifled with unless you feel pretty good about your experience and skill level. My rule of thumb is if you can't string exactas and trifectas together then don't bother with the Super. The same logic goes with Pick Sixes, save em' for the whales and work the Pick Three and Pick Four and keep your financial exposure reasonable. Don't be scared off by heavy chalk when you are looking to build an exotic bet: There's nothing wrong with having one spot singled as long as you think there will be some volatility in spots 2-4 but again, be careful of your bet size and don't try to cover everyone, this is gambling after all. Worse than losing a bet from a prestige perspective is winning a bet that only returned half of what it cost.

For my chalk, I'm banking on Rule. Rule returns after a tune up in the one turn, 1 mile Hal's Hope. The son of Roman Ruler returns with Castellano up for Trainer Todd Pletcher (pictured above). This is Rule's second effort after a being shut down after failing to close out the Florida Derby last year as the chalk. Pletcher wins 26% of his second efforts off >180 day layoffs and he and Castellano win 32% of the time at Gulfstream.

Take some time to watch Rule and Morning Line dig in on the stretch run. The effort was four weeks ago and I think it will really make him sharp here. I like where Rule is with his form compared to some of his rivals who are just getting going after long layoffs. Expect him near the front or on the lead from early on and it will come down to if he can hold off the closers in the last 1/16 of a mile.

The Hal's Hope Grade III


Fly Down is a horse I have overlooked to my own detriment several times. Trainer Nick Zito is off to a fast start at Gulfstream, winning 24% of the time this meet, a bright spot when contrasted against his graded stakes win percentage of 8% over past 48 chances. A fine string of consistent efforts now going back six races to last year's Grade II Dwyer. He'll be closing fast at the end and with any closer you just wonder if he will have a clean trip to the wire and if the speed on the front end will carry.

Morning Line is an impressive son of Tiznow; 7 of 8 in the money lifetime, three straight 100+ BSF and training very sharply since the Hal's Hope. A loss by a head bob cost him the Breeders' Cup Dirt Mile. He'll be trading strides with Rule from the get go and I'm betting against him to win but I expect he will be in the top four. I type this and it's a bit of dilemma for how to place Morning Line, as on paper he's very similar to Rule and they both exit the same race with the same sort of effort and finish. Both are starting their ninth races and both have almost $900,000 in earnings and both have identical lifetime best 104 BSF. From a class perspective I think Morning Line has the edge and his Tomlinson's support that with a race best 410 at the distance and a race best 439 on the slop. Reminding again, this is gambling and you can't be too wishy-washy in your selections as this isn't T-Ball, no ties and someone will win. I'm shading him down here and covering him in the superfecta matrix up and down the finish order. Take a stand and live with it.

Those three horses are the top talents in this race but the next group back of them are dangerous and capable. Giant Oak doesn't win very often, only one win on fast dirt in 11 tries,12 of 23 in the money and 1 of 6 at the distance, but the 5 YO son of Giant's Causeway seems to have turned the corner since returning to dirt at Hawthorne and then at Churchill Downs. Trainer Chris Block wins 28% of his won last start efforts and both he and jock Bridgmohan are looking for their first win of the meet.

Eldaafer is the six year old gelded son of A.P. Indy. One win at this distance and 4 wins on fast dirt , 14 of 24 lifetime in the money . Two straight Grade III wins, perhaps a bit slow but game enough over distance to crack the top four. A Breeders' Cup Champion at the marathon distance. Trainer Diane Alvarado and her jock, Edgar Prado have little race history together. The horse has never placed in 24 tries.

Square Eddie and I Want Revenge both offer uncertainty: Square Eddie flies in from California after winning a comeback 6.5 furlong N2X. Only his second start on dirt. I Want Revenge has been training nicely since mid December and takes to the starting gate for the first time since August, when he was rambunctious in the starting gate and lunged skyward. The race world is still waiting to see the explosive form he displayed at Aqueduct while becoming the favorite to win the Kentucky Derby two years ago.

As my chart shows, I've built two $1 dollar superfectas, one valued at $64 dollars and the other valued at $20. You get what you pay for and the $64 variety offers more choices in the third and fourth spots, where I see the uncertainty coming. The $20 variety puts skin in the game but things have to break exactly like I see it pre race and I'm not Nostradamus. Play with your own matrix and perhaps the answer is somewhere in the middle, like adding back in Morning Line to win and paying around $42.

Good luck and have fun with it. Check out the Thoroughbred Bloggers Alliance home page for more analysis from some of the top racing bloggers in the business.

Monday, January 17, 2011

The Nominations Are In: January 17, 2011: The Jimmy Winkfield and The Smarty Jones for 3 YOs

From our friends at Wikipedia, James "Jimmy" Winkfield (April 12, 1882 - March 23, 1974) was a Thoroughbred jockey and horse trainer from Kentucky, best remembered as the last African American to ride a winner in the Kentucky Derby.

Winkfield was born in Chilesburg, Kentucky and began his career as a jockey in 1898 at age sixteen. He was suspended for four years after just one race for his involvement in a four-horse accident at the starting gate. However, he returned in 1900 to ride a horse named Thrive in the Kentucky Derby, finishing third. He rode the race again in 1901 and 1902, winning on His Eminence and Alan-a-Dale respectively - in 1901 alone, he won 220 races. He competed in his final Derby in 1903, finishing second on Early.

Later that year, Winkfield emigrated to Russia where he was greeted as a celebrity and in the name of the Czar Nicholas II competed at racetracks all over Europe. He won the Russian Oaks five times, the Russian Derby four times, the Czar's Prize on three occasions, and the Warsaw Derby twice. The Russian Revolution caused him to leave the country in 1917 and he moved to France where he resumed racing, scoring numerous wins including the Prix du Président de la République, Grand Prix de Deauville, and the Prix Eugène Adam. He retired as a jockey at age fifty having won more than 2,500 races then began a second successful career as a horse trainer.

Winkfield lived on a farm near the Hippodrome de Maisons-Laffitte (racetrack) in Maisons-Laffitte on the outskirts of Paris. He remained there until fleeing the German occupation of France during World War II. After the war, he eventually returned to the farm at Maisons-Laffitte where he lived until his death 1974.



In 1960, Jimmy Winkfield made an appearance at the Kentucky Derby to celebrate 60 years since his historic victories. In 2004 he was inducted posthumously into the National Museum of Racing and Hall of Fame. The Jimmy Winkfield Stakes at Aqueduct Racetrack is run in his honor.

In 2005, the United States House of Representatives passed a resolution honoring Jimmy Winkfield. The full details can be read here at the National Museum of Racing and Hall of Fame.

As for Smarty Jones, well Smarty was a darn fine horse that won a couple of races you might have heard of in 2004, the Kentucky Derby and the Preakness.

OK, what do we have here today? A couple of three year old non graded stakes, just to get a feel for the talent pool belong Uncle Mo, which, with just a few exceptions, hasn't lit the house on fire yet, but The Turk's a patient man and it isn't just about the Triple Crown, its a long season and you have to do your homework. Let's get it on!

Aqueduct Race 8: The Jimmy Winkfield and Oaklawn Park Race 8: The Smarty Jones.



I don't know what do do with these short fields and the talent gaps that exist inside of them. I don't want to lament too many racing days and not enough quality horseflesh, but that's what brothers gotta do. That said, I'm keeping my betting action light and I truly believe you have to handicap and analyze constantly to learn who's out there running, so here we are.

At Aqueduct, a six horse field competes in the Jimmy Winkfield. A Rick Dutrow trained horse for Jay Em Ess Stables, Rift, seems to be the class of the group. A son of Not for Love, C. Velasquez is up today. In his previous three starts he's been in the money each time and has one win on the inner dirt.

Royal Currier is a son of Red Bullet, winner of the Preakness and the Gotham. Training nicely and comes in with two straight wins and 6 of 6 lifetime in the money. I like him for a value win bet.

Fort Hughes is a son of Henny Hughes, winner of the King's Bishop, the Vosburgh, The Champagne and Hopeful and a place in the Breeders' Cup Juvenile and career earnings totalling $1.124 MM. The Darley Stables Colt, trained by K. Mclaughlin with E. Castro up, starts for the third time and has two solid previous efforts.

Trainer Levine and jock D. Coen have 23% of their races at the Big A. Bambi Bound, coming off a good 6f inner track effort in early December has a chance at minor prize, but pay attention for future restricted NYS bred action.

And at Oaklawn, a Harlan's Holiday son, Grant Jack, comes in off a win for Trainer Bret Calhoun, something he wins with 31% of the time after 212 tries. Harlan's Holiday won over $3.6 MM in his career with big wins in the Donn, Florida Derby and the Blue Grass Stakes and I like this horse as he stretches out further.

Archarcharch is a son of Arch, sire of Blame and a Grade I winner. Comes in off two solid and improving efforts for trainer Fires and jock Court. Fires stats are pedestrian at sprints/routes (7%), won last starts (0%) and just 10% of routes. He also saddles Bluegrass Bull who I don't think much of right now.

Again, I'm watching and learning more that betting. This type of legwork during the season helps you go for the bigger scores as the season rolls on.

And always, study the race charts and deconstruct your handicaps in a post race analysis. The following was two stakes from Santa Anita over the weekend, The Sham and San Fernando.



In the Sham, Tapizar struck the lead at the 1/4 pole and never gave it up. he never had to deal with any sustained pressure from Uncle Sam, the bettors second choice that I wisely discounted. Clubhouse Ride was clearly second best and the rest were an afterthought.

In the San Fernando, pre race I wondered in Mike Smith could make a difference with a horse content to win minor awards and it seemed that he did. Indian Firewater paid $13.00 for the winning effort. I discounted the chalk down, Thisskyhasnolimit and he weakened when he shouldn't have. Tweebster gave a good accounting and I'll look for his run back but I won't not so much with Haimish Hy.

Enjoy the holiday and enjoy the Eclipse Awards as well. I think these types of award shows are a joke, but I want to see if common sense prevails on Horse of the Year or not from curiosity standpoint. Turk out!

Saturday, December 18, 2010

The Nomination Is In: December 18, 2010; The WL McKnight Handicap


The Turk has enjoyed a handicappers holiday since shutting down is red gel pen after the Clark Handicap nearly a month ago. I think it's important to put the Daily Race Form Past Performances down several times a year and clear your mind, but just like the horses I handicap, if my break is too long I can get dull.

That said, this is a tough time of the year to open the conditions book and find a race that sparks my creative juice. The snow is falling rapidly here near Buffalo, and not being able to see the grass has me thinking longingly for those idyllic days watching the turk course at Arlington and Saratoga. With that, I have the 1 1/2 mile W.L. McKnight Handicap at Calder Race Course to get me thinking about those days that will come again. I thank the talented Sarah K. Andrew for the picture that provides a bit of holiday cheer. Remember, horse pictures make a great Christmas gift, and please go and look at what Sarah has to offer. Lets get after it!

The track condition was firm yesterday but the weather forecast may soften it up just slightly by post time. Typical of a 1 1/2 mile turf race, you find an odd assortment of horses in the field, from proven distance competitors to horses who haven't really fit in anywhere else and the connections are seeing if they like the extra real estate. It's a niche race and its usually run by niche horses. Even the best in the niche don't dominate, so look for value instead of chalk.

Race 11 Calder Race Course Post Time 4:45 ET: The W.L. McKnight Handicap Grade 2; 1 1/2 miles on Turf



The big names are out for this race: Telling, Presious Passion, Prince Will I Am, and Musketier all represent good win opportunity, but I'm looking at Rescue Squad at the right price. After I handicapped (and never before!) I checked the morning line and Rescue Squad is installed at 6-1. Hmmm. A nice last race go around against Grassy in a grade II for the 4 YO son of Dynaformer. The colt has never won at the distance, never raced at Calder, but is training well, had a nice 4f handride in :47 3/5 ths and I'm hoping to find him more like 8-1.

I can't remember the last time I didn't approach my bet strategy from a multi race perspective, but I am today, and I'm taking for me the unusual step of building my handicap and bet strategy at the same time. With that in mind I'm slotting Telling followed by Price Will I Am as Place and Show. Telling, the Little Turk's chalk, is a consistent 6 YO who has won at this distance twice, is 9 of 18 in the money on turf, and strings together good performances. Unfortunately for Telling, since getting freshened after a Grade I win in August he has not been nearly as dangerous. Words like No Kick and Lacked Response aren't great to see, but he's quality horse flesh and I think he'll be somewhere from Place to fourth.

Prince Will I Am is a baby at 3 YO in a niche that is usually filled by older horses. 3 of 3 in the money on turf, he comes in off a wild DQ in the Breeders' Cup Marathon and a win in the Grade I Jamaica.

Presious Passion is always dangerous if left on the lead to long, but I'm expecting he will be reeled back in today.

I'm leaning towards a Superfecta fun built around a matrix of my base handicap. I'll keep the risk low and remember this is more about engaging my brain than anything else.

I'll be back this weekend for some last minute gift ideas for the gentleman horseplayer in your lives. Turk Out!

Saturday, November 13, 2010

The Nomination Is In: The Churchill Downs Pick 4 including the Grade III Commonwealth Turf

This is the image I've had in my mind for one week now: Zenyatta, passing the crowd, already 15 lengths off the leaders. The next trip past the crowd was one of the most exhilarating stretch runs I've witnessed, maybe ever. It'll be some time until I get that mare out of my head. I had such a wonderful time at Churchill Downs I find myself handicapping the card today with some special motivation: A former USS Louisville shipmate of mine, Tom McFadden, and his family, will be in attendance today and I'm hoping they have a great time. Best of the Breed shipmate! Let's get after it.

Churchill Downs Pick 4 Race 7-8-9-10 First Post 3:36 ET



The Pick 4 sequence is a bit tricky so you'll have to decide what the risk/reward is for you. The first race, a five furlong turf sprint has a handful of horses that should be strong, so I'm going to cover four here and take chances later. Delano, a Mott/Leparoux joint, looks strong in this 2nd off a long layoff. Galientos will attract betting action: A More Than Ready trained by Steve Asmussen with Bridgmohan up, slick on slop, trying turf for the first time. Don't ignore another More Than Ready, Ready to Strike.

Not any easier, Race 8 is a $52,000 N2X on Dirt. I like both the coupled entries, Gold Collection and Film Charm, trained by Bill Mott. I plan on singling with these two and rolling the dice. If you wish to risk a bit more betting capital you have at least three good options with Zermatt, Absinthe Minded, and a minor bid by Tizahit. Zermatt, a son of Tiznow has Desormeaux up for Trainer Pletcher.

Race 9 is the featured Grade III Commonwealth Turf. Trainer McLaughlin has Yankee Fourtune who will attract much attention following his sizzling Hawthorne Derby win in early October that came after a 7+ furlong romp at Saratoga in September. for value, I like Dark Cove quite a bit:back to back 89 BSF on firm turf, Theriot is up for McPeek today and the son of Medaglia d'Oro out of Crystal Cove by Kris S. is intriguing. It should be a pretty darn good race.

Race 10 is a 15K claimer that I'll cover three in and if I'm still alive I'll be pleasantly surprised.

It looks like rain is coming to Louisville, but maybe too late to make much of a difference to the surfaces. Pay attention to scratches and changes and most of all, have fun.

Turk out!

Saturday, September 25, 2010

The Nomination Is In: September 25, 2010 Belmont Park Late Pick 4 including the Grade II Gallant Bloom

That's Rapport, the Grade III winning runner for Trainer Baffert with M. Garcia up and the Turk's chalk in the Grade II Gallant Bloom at Belmont Park today. The Turk went to the tape and had to watch the Grade III Azalea before I could get comfortable picking Rapport. With R. Albarado up, Rapport shot out of the gate for a quarter mile in :21 1/5 and a half mile in :44 3/5 before shortening her stride in the stretch and getting gutty to hold on for fourth. Garcia goes back up, winning his last three rides with her, and she takes on the regal and much classier Sara Louise, last seen on a race track in November 2009.

These late September races are setting the stage for horses thinking Breeders' Cup and you get a mixture of horses coming off breaks or horses in a second of three race cycle looking to be peaked in early November. This Late Pick Four ain't no walk through the garden either. No real singles jump off the page and if I went purely off my base handicap I'd spend a whole lot and most likely lose or return less than my investment. That's not a good place to be so we will have to take some chances, gamble, and see if we can't make the investment and possible reward come back into the proper perspective. Let's get after it!

Belmont Park Late Pick 4; Post Time for Race 6 is 3:39 ET



In Race 6, I'm backing Stevil, a 30 start 5 YO gelding who's been in the money 19 times. He's most likely the bettor's chalk here although Lemon Spice, a Chad Brown runner with Borel up, will get play. Lemon Spice is 6 of 10 in the money on turf with a 92 BSF on fast Gulfstream Turf and is 4 of 5 in the money at the distance. For value, Glacier Bay is a nice 4 YO son of Distorted Humor and carries a race high 123 pounds. 4 of 6 in the money in 2010.

Race 7 is a claimer with a $25K purse again run a 1 1/16 miles on what should be firm turf. Shimmering Forest returns to this class after Placing at Saratoga on Woodward day. 4 of 5 in the money on turf. Hasten to be King is a stretch but comes in off a first race maiden breaker who was bred by Bobby Frankel and is now trained by Contessa. A nice turn of foot at 6f for Gomez, M. Luzzi is up today for the first time turf try. Don Balcazio is the best of the rest and I respect Trainer Clement with Maragh up, winners of 23% together at BEL.

Race 8 is an Allowance N1X with a $54,000 purse. Pretty Boy Freud is my tepid chalk; 10 of 13 in the money lifetime, a win would double Trainer O'Brien's 2010 total in 57 tries. I'm warming up on Devon Rock, starting sixth race, 3 of 4 in the money on Turf and a winner on Belmont turf in June. Will press the pace but his last few run lines paint a picture, "...faded...weakened...lugged in..." Optimism is a string suit of mine. Missinglisalewis is more polished with 6 of 8 in the money at the distance, 11 of 17 in the money on turf and 6 of 10 in the money on the turf at Belmont for Trainer Domino. Harmonizer, with Leparoux up, tries turf for the first time, something Trainer Maker does Ok with at 16% of his tries and a dirt to turf switcher at 18%. He's got dirt speed but he'll need to stay further today as well.

And in the Gallant Bloom Rapport gets my nod after a 103 BSF and win at Saratoga on Travers Day in the Grade III Victory Ride. Sara Louise won the Victory Ride last year only to run Place to Indian Blessing in the Gallant Bloom. The Godolphin Team bounces back from +180 layoffs 31% of the time and the horse has plenty of class and quality to not be phased by the inactivity. I'm not buying if 2-1 or 3-2 but I'm covering in Pick 4. Qualia is a nice horse for one of The Turk's favorites, Trainer Ribaudo, and the bettors might be comforted by My Jen and Pretty Prolific, capable teases.

As bettor's, this is a card that we ask for: Nine horse fields, quality competition, few heavy chalks, good stuff indeed. If you want easy, well, go somewhere else. I love Big Sandy in the fall, and with dirt being the surface of choice at the Breeders' Cup again this year I believe we'll see the best fall racing here instead of Oak Tree Hollywood.

Build your own handicap and have fun with it. Watch the weather which should be great, the scratches and changes, and keep that tote board in your mind. Value, value, value, but most importantly, fun, fun, fun. Never bet more then you can afford to lose from your household's budget.

Turk Out!