Thursday, March 12, 2026

Hippos Handicapping - LLM Virtual Panel - Pertemps Network Final Handicap Hurdle Preview

WCMI Hippos Handicapping - LLM Virtual Panel
Pertemps Network Final Handicap Hurdle Preview

The Hippos Handicapping Panel — where memory and mechanisms collide, but only the horses decide.

Our ongoing exploration of the role of Large Language Models (LLM) in sports trading.


Welcome to the Hippos Handicapping Panel — a virtual round‑table of racing minds brought to life with the help of an LLM. Each Hippo has a distinct voice:

  1. Mick – Aussie handicapper and professional punter
  2. Pearl – Canadian academic and causal analyst
  3. Philip – British host who keeps them honest and sneaks in his own Weekend Warrior longshots

Together they blend events and explanations into a lively debate that is equal parts analysis and paralysis.

Art vs Science of Picking Winners

๐Ÿด Hippos Handicapping Panel — Pertemps Network Final Handicap Hurdle

Cheltenham | Thursday 12 March 2026 | 4:40pm | 2m 7f 213y | Good | 24 runners | £61,897


Race Context and Likely Shape

The Pertemps Network Final is one of the great cavalry charges of the Cheltenham Festival, a twenty-four-runner staying handicap hurdle run over two miles, seven furlongs and two hundred and thirteen yards on the New Course. That New Course configuration is crucial: Thursday's layout features a longer, more protracted run-in than the Old Course used on Tuesday and Wednesday, with the final two hurdles positioned in the last six furlongs, creating a gruelling stamina examination that punishes early movers and rewards horses who can grind up the Cheltenham hill on a longer approach. On Good ground — and that's genuine Good, drier than anything most of these have encountered since October — the complexion of this race shifts meaningfully away from the mud-loving Irish raiders and toward horses with proven form on a quicker surface.

The market installs Supremely West at 7/2 as a clear favourite, which on the face of recent form looks remarkably generous to the layers. His form figures read 3-3546, including a 24-length and 32-length thumping by Kikijo on consecutive starts at Cheltenham and Sandown. The second favourite, C'Est Different at 7/1, boasts four consecutive victories but has never been tested remotely near this grade. Bold Endeavour at 10/1 is the third favourite, ahead of Electric Mason at 11/1 and Ace Of Spades at 12/1 from the Skelton operation that also saddles the favourite. With a full field of twenty-four, this is a test of homework, not hope.

The stable signals are worth noting early. Gordon Elliott sends Staffordshire Knot carrying top weight of twelve stone off an official rating of 152, with Jack Kennedy in the plate — a serious booking. Dan Skelton runs two, the favourite Supremely West and Ace Of Spades. Paul Nicholls sends the remarkable Absolutely Doyen on a five-timer. Philip Hobbs and Johnson White's yard is firing at a 68% run-to-form percentage and saddle Kikijo with a handy three-pound claim. Emmet Mullins — 64% RTF — runs two from his smaller operation, Melbourne Shamrock and Minella Emperor.


๐ŸŽ™️ Philip Opens

Philip: Right, good afternoon and welcome to the Hippos Handicapping Panel for the Pertemps Network Final, which might just be the most intellectually humbling puzzle of the entire Festival. Twenty-four runners, a wide-open handicap, and a market leader whose recent form suggests he'd struggle to win a raffle. Mick, you've been studying this one since dawn. I saw the empty coffee cups. What's the betting landscape telling you, and more importantly, where is it lying?


๐Ÿ—‚️ Mick — Memory Lane

Mick: Mate, the biggest thing this market is telling me is that the crowd has anchored on a name, and that name is Supremely West at 7/2. Now look — I've been around long enough to know that when a horse gets walloped by twenty-four lengths as a five-to-four favourite at Cheltenham itself, then goes to Sandown and gets clobbered by thirty-two lengths by the same horse, that's not a blip. That's a pattern. The interesting bit? The horse that gave him both beatings is sitting there in this very race at 16/1. That's Kikijo, and he's my headline act.

Let me walk you through the collateral form, because it's screaming. Kikijo beat Supremely West by twenty-four lengths at Cheltenham on the fifteenth of November. Soft ground, sure, but the margin was enormous. He then went to Sandown on the sixth of December and beat him by thirty-two lengths. Now Supremely West subsequently ran sixth at Aintree over Christmas, beaten twelve lengths. The trajectory is awful. Meanwhile, Kikijo's form reads 12-411 — he's won his last two, he's a progressive six-year-old from a yard hitting 68% run-to-form, and he gets a three-pound claim from Callum Pritchard. His RPR of 155 is jointly the highest in the field, yet he's off a mark of only 135. There's roughly a stone of wiggle room between what the handicapper thinks he is and what the performance figures say he might be. That's your edge, right there.

My safety each-way play is Ace Of Spades at 12/1. He's from the same Skelton yard as the favourite, but unlike Supremely West, his form is actually progressing. Won at Huntingdon in January, was second to Ma Shantou at Cheltenham on New Year's Day, and ran a creditable fourth in the Haydock Grade 3 handicap hurdle behind Electric Mason in November. He handles Good to Soft ground, he stays this trip, and Kielan Woods takes the ride. In a race where the favourite could easily flop, this is the Skelton runner I'd rather be on.

And for the value swing, I want Champagne Chic at 20/1. Two wins on the bounce, a six-year-old who won at Haydock last time out by five and a half lengths with a bit in hand. Jeremy Scott's yard is ticking along at 46% run-to-form, the horse is progressing rapidly — he's gone from an official rating of 114 to 131 in three runs — and he carries only ten stone seven. In a twenty-four-runner handicap on Good ground with a long run-in, there's a lot to like about a progressive lightweight on the upgrade.

Here's how I'd roughly frame it: Kikijo's beaten the favourite by a combined fifty-six lengths in two runs. The market says he's a quarter of the favourite's price. That's not inefficiency, that's insanity. Approximately right is always better than precisely wrong, and this market is precisely wrong about Supremely West.


๐ŸŽ™️ Philip to Pearl

Philip: Pearl, Mick's built a compelling collateral form case, particularly around the Kikijo-Supremely West dynamic. But I wonder whether he's committing a classic case of fighting the last war. Those two Kikijo victories came on Soft ground at Cheltenham and Soft ground at Sandown. Tomorrow's going is Good. Does the surface change the causal picture, or is this a case where the margin was so large that conditions are almost irrelevant?


๐Ÿ”— Pearl — Meaningful Musings

Pearl: It's a fair challenge, and the answer requires us to think carefully about mediators. Ground conditions don't operate in isolation — they mediate the relationship between a horse's physical profile and the performance outcome. The question isn't simply "does Kikijo act on Good ground?" It's "does the Good ground change the causal pathway by which Kikijo generated those performances?"

Looking at Kikijo's form in detail, his fourth-place finish at Aintree on Good ground in October — beaten only three lengths — suggests he handles a drier surface adequately. He wasn't beaten by the ground that day; he was beaten by inexperience at the trip and a three-pound higher mark than he carries tomorrow. So while Mick's margins might compress on Good ground — and I would expect them to — I don't think the underlying causal mechanism reverses entirely. That said, I want to broaden the lens.

My main selection is Electric Mason at 11/1, and the reasoning is structural. He has the highest Distance Suitability Rating in the entire field at 110, which tells us the algorithms regard this trip as his optimal distance. He won a Grade 3 handicap hurdle at Haydock in November on Good to Soft ground by a neck from Hartington, carrying a mark of 132. He's now 139, so the handicapper has raised him seven pounds, but his Racing Post Rating of 153 and Topspeed of 144 both suggest he has the engine to absorb that rise. Critically, he ran second at Cheltenham itself in October on Good ground — beaten two and three-quarter lengths by Ma Shantou — which gives us direct evidence of his course-and-ground profile. His trainer Chris Gordon is running at a 38% RTF, and jockey Freddie Gordon knows the horse intimately. The one concern — and I'll flag it openly — is that he's been off since the twenty-second of November. That's nearly four months between runs.

Now, here's where my causal framework helps. The layoff is a potential confounder, but we need to ask: is it a cause of poor performance, or merely correlated with it? Electric Mason's previous layoff — from April to October 2025 — produced an immediate second-place finish at Cheltenham. The Gordons clearly manage this horse's preparation around targets, and the Pertemps Final looks like it's been in the diary since Haydock. The layoff is a planned absence, not a symptom of problems.

For my each-way structural play, I'll actually converge with Mick on Kikijo at 16/1. The causal pathway is clear: he has direct evidence of superiority over the market leader at the actual course, he has a weight advantage through the claim, and the Hobbs yard's 68% RTF suggests peak readiness. I view him as a genuine win contender, not merely a place prospect.

For my progressive risk selection, I want to talk about Absolutely Doyen at 14/1. Five consecutive victories looks extraordinary on paper, and Paul Nicholls at a 54% RTF with Harry Cobden aboard is a powerful combination. But let's examine the base rate. Those five wins came at Stratford, Sedgefield, Ascot, Wincanton, and Musselburgh — none of them remotely comparable to the Cheltenham Festival. His best RPR of 136 was achieved at Musselburgh. The confounding variable is opposition quality: are the five wins evidence of exceptional ability, or are they an artefact of facing weak fields? I lean toward the latter, but I'll acknowledge that for a six-year-old with an OR of 135 from the Nicholls yard, the ceiling is genuinely unknown. Absence of evidence is not evidence of absence. He's a risk play, not a confidence play, and the 14/1 price is roughly fair for that uncertainty.

The key takeaway is that prediction is not explanation, and the market's current explanation — that Supremely West is the best horse in this race — doesn't survive contact with the evidence. The actual best horse, on ratings and recent form, is Staffordshire Knot at the top of the weights, but the handicap structure makes him vulnerable. The best value horse, on causal grounds, is Electric Mason at 11/1.


๐ŸŽ™️ Philip Challenges Mick

Philip: Mick, I need to press you on something. You've built an emphatic case for Kikijo at 16/1 based on his superiority over Supremely West, and the logic is seductive. But aren't you essentially making a one-dimensional case? You've proved he's better than a horse that can't run a yard — beaten a combined fifty-six lengths in two starts. That doesn't necessarily prove he can beat the other twenty-two runners in the field. Electric Mason won a Grade 3 and never met Kikijo. Staffordshire Knot won a Grade 2 at Navan. Ace Of Spades, your own each-way selection, was only six and a quarter lengths behind Electric Mason at Haydock when Kikijo wasn't even in the race. How do you calibrate Kikijo against the rest of the field, not just the false favourite?


๐Ÿ—‚️ Mick — Rebuttal

Mick: Fair cop, Philip, and it's a sharp question. But here's the thing — when I calibrate against the wider field, Kikijo still stacks up. His RPR of 155 is the joint highest in the race, level with Supremely West. His Topspeed of 135 is competitive. He's off a mark of only 135, which gives him a seventeen-pound advantage over Staffordshire Knot at the top of the weights. That means the handicapper believes he's a stone and three pounds inferior to Staffordshire Knot, but the ratings suggest he's every bit as good. That's your structural edge in a handicap — it's not just about beating one horse, it's about the handicapper underestimating your horse relative to the entire field.

Now, on the specific cross-references: Electric Mason at 11/1 is a fine horse, and Pearl's made a good case. But he's been off since November and he's up seven pounds for his Haydock win. Kikijo won more recently — December sixth — and he's only up eight pounds from her pre-Cheltenham mark. The freshness gap between November and December might sound trivial, but it matters when you're talking about fitness for a two-mile-seven staying test up the Cheltenham hill.

And look at the yard form. Philip Hobbs and Johnson White at 68% run-to-form is among the best on the card — second only to Jamie Snowden's 71%. When a yard is operating at that level, you don't mess about trying to outsmart the form. You back the horse. I've seen it a hundred times, mate. The form is the form.


๐ŸŽ™️ Philip Challenges Pearl

Philip: Pearl, I appreciate the elegance of your Electric Mason at 11/1 case, but I want to probe the elephant in the room that you yourself flagged: the four-month absence. You argued it's a planned layoff rather than a symptom, drawing on his previous comeback second at Cheltenham. But that was after a five-month break and he finished second, not first. Isn't there a significant base-rate problem with horses returning from lengthy absences to win twenty-four-runner Festival handicaps? The Pertemps Final tends to favour horses who've been campaign-hardened through the winter qualifying route, not those arriving cold off the back of one Grade 3 win in November. Doesn't that structural concern undermine your entire causal pathway?


๐Ÿ”— Pearl — Rebuttal

Pearl: You're right to push on this, and I want to be honest about the uncertainty. The base rate for horses winning Festival handicaps after four-month absences is undeniably lower than for those with recent runs. That's a genuine prior, and I don't dismiss it. However, I'd argue the base rate is misleading if you don't condition on the right variables. When I narrow the sample to horses who were deliberately freshened for a Festival target by a competent yard with a specific plan — rather than horses absent through injury or loss of form — the base rate improves considerably.

Electric Mason's DSR of 110 is the highest in the field by a wide margin. Kikijo is 96, Supremely West is 76. That tells us no horse in this race is as well suited to this distance as Electric Mason. His October second at Cheltenham on Good ground is a direct data point for course-and-ground. The layoff is a risk factor, I concede that fully, but it's a risk factor on a horse whose structural fit to the race is tighter than any other runner's. Risk management is about pricing risk correctly, not eliminating it, and at 11/1 I believe the market is pricing the layoff risk appropriately while underpricing the structural upside.

But I want to add one caveat: if I had to pick only one horse for the win, I might actually side with Mick's Kikijo at 16/1 over my own Electric Mason at 11/1, simply because the value differential is significant. Electric Mason at 11/1 is fair. Kikijo at 16/1 is generous. When two horses both have strong cases and one is nearly fifty percent longer in the market, the Bayesian in me leans toward the bigger price.


๐ŸŽ™️ Philip's Summary

Philip: Well, well. We have something approaching consensus through divergent reasoning, which is either a sign of genuine insight or a spectacular case of groupthink. Let me synthesise.

Both Mick and Pearl identify Supremely West at 7/2 as a false favourite, and on this the evidence is overwhelming. A horse beaten a combined fifty-six lengths in two runs by a rival in the same race, with form figures of 3-3546, has no business being favourite for a Cheltenham Festival handicap. The market appears to be anchoring on last season's rating and the Skelton name. That's a trap.

On positive selections, Mick's primary pick of Kikijo at 16/1 has drawn a concession from Pearl, who admits the value case is stronger than for her own Electric Mason at 11/1. The collateral form over the favourite, the RPR of 155, the three-pound claim, and the Hobbs yard's exceptional 68% run-to-form rate all converge on the same conclusion. I'm persuaded. Mick's each-way case for Ace Of Spades at 12/1 stands on solid ground — consistent form, handles the surface, stays the trip. And Pearl's structural argument for Electric Mason at 11/1, despite the layoff concern, has merit given his unmatched Distance Suitability Rating.

The area of most interesting disagreement is Mick's Champagne Chic at 20/1 versus Pearl's Absolutely Doyen at 14/1, both progressive types at different prices. Mick likes the lighter weight and the Jeremy Scott yard form. Pearl respects the Nicholls machine but questions whether five wins over moderate opposition truly evidence Festival class. I lean toward Mick here — the lighter weight in a twenty-four-runner cavalry charge is a meaningful structural advantage.

So my consolidated selections: Kikijo at 16/1 as the main win play — the panel convergence is strong and the price is genuinely generous. Electric Mason at 11/1 as the each-way backup — if the layoff isn't an issue, his distance profile is the best in the race. And Ace Of Spades at 12/1 as the risk add — the consistent form profile of a Skelton runner who hasn't been let down by recent results.

As the philosopher might say: the market is a voting machine in the short run and a weighing machine in the long run. Tomorrow, I suspect the weighing machine catches up with Supremely West in a rather painful fashion.


๐Ÿงข Weekend Warrior — Live Longshot

Philip: And now to the part of the show where I abandon all pretence of analytical rigour and follow my nose into the outer reaches of the betting ring. My Weekend Warrior for the Pertemps Final is Staffordshire Knot at 20/1.

Here's the narrative. He carries twelve stone, the top weight in the race, off an official rating of 152 — the highest in the field by four pounds. His form figures read dash-31121. He won a Grade 2 hurdle at Navan in February, beating Better Days Ahead by two and a half lengths. He was a half-length second in another Grade 2 at Gowran before that. He won his handicap qualifier at Punchestown in November. Jack Kennedy — who could ride anything at the Festival — chooses to ride this horse for Gordon Elliott. When Kennedy picks you out of the entire Elliott string for a Thursday handicap, that's not casual. That's a statement.

The case against him is simple: twelve stone in a twenty-four-runner Festival handicap. The case for him is equally simple: he's far and away the best horse in the race on form. His RPR of 153, earned at Navan, ranks among the best in the field, and his Grade 2 form is a class above anything else here. History shows us that top weights can and do win the Pertemps — the handicap is compressed enough, with only twenty-five pounds between top and bottom, that class can prevail if the horse is good enough. And this horse, on current form, is comfortably the best horse in the race.

Is he in the model? Not really — the weight concern is legitimate. Is he in the memory banks? Mick didn't fancy the burden. Is he in the market consciousness? At 20/1, clearly not. But he's the class act in the field with the best jockey booking, and if Kennedy sits quiet for two miles before unleashing him on that long New Course run-in, well... I'll be insufferable until the Gold Cup. At least.


๐Ÿ“‹ Quick Racecard Crib

  • Race: Pertemps Network Final Handicap Hurdle (Grade 3)
  • Course: Cheltenham (New Course — Thursday)
  • Distance: 2m 7f 213y
  • Going: Good
  • Runners: 24 (maximum field)
  • Prize money: £61,897 to the winner
  • Top weight: Staffordshire Knot (12st 0lb, OR 152)
  • Bottom weight: Ike Sport (10st 3lb, OR 127)
  • Key trainers: Elliott (2), Skelton (2), Mullins E. (2), Nicholls (1), Henderson (1), Hobbs/White (1)
  • Key course form: Electric Mason (2nd at Cheltenham Oct), Kikijo (won at Cheltenham Nov), Supremely West (3rd and 5th at Cheltenham)
  • Ground note: Good ground favours proven quicker-ground performers; several Irish raiders step up in surface from winter Heavy/Soft

๐Ÿ“Š Guide Odds — Panel Selections

Horse Price Panelist Role Key Angle
Kikijo 16/1 Mick (Win), Pearl (E/W), Philip (Win) PANEL CONSENSUS WIN Beaten favourite twice by huge margins; 3lb claim; joint-highest RPR 155; Hobbs 68% RTF
Electric Mason 11/1 Pearl (Win), Philip (E/W) STRUCTURAL FIT Highest DSR (110); Grade 3 winner; Cheltenham course form on Good; layoff concern
Ace Of Spades 12/1 Mick (E/W), Philip (Risk Add) CONSISTENT FORM Progressive; won at Huntingdon; Skelton's better runner on form
Champagne Chic 20/1 Mick (Value Swing) PROGRESSIVE LIGHTWEIGHT Won last two; 10st 7lb; Scott yard 46% RTF
Absolutely Doyen 14/1 Pearl (Progressive Risk) FIVE-TIMER ATTEMPT Nicholls/Cobden; five wins; untested at Festival level
Staffordshire Knot 20/1 Philip (Weekend Warrior) LIVE LONGSHOT Best form in field; Kennedy; Grade 2 winner; top weight risk
Supremely West 7/2 ALL — OPPOSE FALSE FAVOURITE Form 3-3546; beaten 56L combined by Kikijo in two runs

๐ŸŒ Web Sites (Alphabetical)

  • At The Races — attheraces.com
  • Betfair Exchange — betfair.com/exchange
  • Cheltenham Racing — cheltenham.co.uk
  • Geegeez — geegeez.co.uk
  • Oddschecker — oddschecker.com
  • Racing Post — racingpost.com
  • Sporting Life — sportinglife.com
  • Timeform — timeform.com

Generated by Hippos Handicapping Preview - LLM Virtual Panel [ https://vendire-ludorum.blogspot.com/ ]

Wednesday, March 11, 2026

Hippos Handicapping - LLM Virtual Panel - Grand Annual Challenge Cup Handicap Chase Preview

WCMI Hippos Handicapping - LLM Virtual Panel
Grand Annual Challenge Cup Handicap Chase Preview

  • Grand Annual Challenge Cup Handicap Chase
  • Cheltenham, 4:40, March 11, 2026
  • Distance: 1m 7f 199y (approximately 2 miles)
  • Going: Good To Soft
  • 20 runners (MAX field)
  • Winner: £84,405

The Hippos Handicapping Panel — where memory and mechanisms collide, but only the horses decide.

Our ongoing exploration of the role of Large Language Models (LLM) in sports trading.


Welcome to the Hippos Handicapping Panel — a virtual round‑table of racing minds brought to life with the help of an LLM. Each Hippo has a distinct voice:

  1. Mick – Aussie handicapper and professional punter
  2. Pearl – Canadian academic and causal analyst
  3. Philip – British host who keeps them honest and sneaks in his own Weekend Warrior longshots

Together they blend events and explanations into a lively debate that is equal parts analysis and paralysis.

Art vs Science of Picking Winners

๐Ÿด Hippos Handicapping Panel — Grand Annual Challenge Cup Handicap Chase


Race Context & Likely Shape

The Grand Annual Challenge Cup is one of the great Festival cavalry charges — twenty runners tearing around the Old Course over a shade under two miles, navigating tight bends and the famous uphill finish with prize money north of £84,000 for the winner. This is the Old Course configuration, which favours tactical speed, a sharp turn of foot, and accurate jumping under extreme pressure. The shorter, tighter run-in rewards horses who can sustain momentum on the climb rather than those who need a longer gallop to wind up, and in a field of twenty, the first mile will be run at a tempo that stretches the elastic to breaking point.

The field is a puzzle box of competing narratives. Be Aware heads the market at 5/1 as a high-class novice stepping up from a Class 3 handicap into Graded handicap company off a mark of 147, though the nagging question is whether a horse whose form reads 1-2-2-2 in his last four chase starts has the will to win when it really matters. Jazzy Matty at 13/2 is the defending champion, having won last year's renewal under Danny Gilligan, but his intervening form of 6-P-0-5-6 over hurdles and fences reads like a horse who has lost his way entirely — unless, of course, Cheltenham in March is the key that unlocks the door again. Then there is the progressive Vanderpoel at 8/1, who has won his last two starts with a Racing Post Rating of 159 sitting some 18lb above his official mark of 141, a differential that screams "ahead of the handicapper" if you believe the speed figures. Beneath these principals lurks Jour d'Evasion at 16/1 on a hat-trick for a Henry Daly yard operating at a remarkable 69% Run-To-Form, and the mercurial Relieved Of Duties at 11/1, whose raw figures — RPR 161 (joint-highest in the field alongside Personal Ambition) and a topspeed of 156 — are among the best in the entire field despite recent efforts that suggest a horse in freefall. It is, in short, exactly the kind of race that separates form students from fortune tellers.


๐ŸŽ™️ Philip Opens

PHILIP: Right then, the last day of the Grand Annual as a Wednesday feature, twenty runners locked and loaded, and the market doing its usual job of pretending certainty where none exists. Mick, you've been stewing over this since Sunday — talk to me about the shape of the race and where your memory banks are leading you.


๐Ÿ—‚️ Mick — Case-Based Reasoning

MICK: Look, twenty runners over two miles on the Old Course — I've seen this picture plenty of times. It's controlled chaos for the first mile, absolute carnage at some of those fences, and then a test of who's got the legs and the lungs for the hill. What I keep coming back to, and I've been picking at this like a scab all week, is the collateral form web.

Start with Jazzy Matty at 13/2, the defending champion. Won this race last year off a mark of 142 — he lines up off 143, basically the same mark. Danny Gilligan rides again. Now, I hear the objection before anyone makes it: his form since reads like a horror novel. Pulled up at Punchestown, nowhere in Galway, tailed off over hurdles. But I've seen this movie before, mate. Horses who come alive at the Festival and flatline everywhere else. The key lesson we've learned time and again is that past performances at Cheltenham are the single strongest indicator of future performances at this track. The market agrees — there's no way a horse with form figures of 6-P-0-5-6 is 13/2 second favourite unless the money says the Festival angle is real. Cian Collins's RTF at 38% isn't setting the world alight, but that number is dragged down by his bread-and-butter runners. This horse has been aimed at this race. You can feel it.

But he's my each-way cover, not my main play. The horse I've zeroed in on is Vanderpoel at 8/1. Two wins on the spin, the RPR of 159 is operating about 18lb above his official mark of 141, and Ben Pauling's yard is humming along at 52% RTF. Won at Ascot in December, then stepped up again at Sandown in January, beating Kotmask by four and a quarter lengths. He's a seven-year-old who's still learning his trade over fences, and the trajectory is pointing sharply upward. His DSR of 67 is among the highest in the field, which tells me the course-and-distance profile fits. The market's got him at 8/1, which feels about right for a progressive horse in a big field, but I think there's still juice in that price because the form he's beaten looks modest on paper — Class 3 novice handicaps — and the market tends to discount that until it gets burned.

Now, here's where it gets interesting. Run me the collateral chain. At Leopardstown in early February, Addragoole was third, Western Diego fourth, Inthepocket fifth, Ballysax Hank sixth, and Jasko Des Dames twelfth, all beaten by Jacob's Ladder. At Fairyhouse in January, Western Diego won a Grade 3 by three and three-quarter lengths from More Coko, with Touch Me Not third and Inthepocket fifth. At Leopardstown over Christmas, Addragoole beat Release The Beast by two and a quarter lengths. And here's the kicker — at Cheltenham in October, Calico won a handicap chase by seven lengths from Jasko Des Dames, with Addragoole fourth. That Cheltenham form line gives Calico and Jasko Des Dames proven course form in the type of race they're running tomorrow. And Jazzy Matty, from last year's Grand Annual, had Jasko seven lengths behind him.

So my staking plan looks like this. Vanderpoel at 8/1 is my main play — the progressive profile in a compressed handicap is the classic punter's edge. Jazzy Matty at 13/2 is my each-way safety net because you don't ignore the defending champion at a track where festival form is gospel. And for the value swing, Jour d'Evasion at 16/1 — three wins on the bounce, light weight of 10st 10lb, and Henry Daly's yard running at 69% RTF. The objection is that he's coming from Class 4 and Class 3 company, but approximately right is better than precisely wrong, and his trajectory is the steepest in the field. At 16/1 you're being paid for the step up in class, and sometimes the market overcharges for that.


๐ŸŽ™️ Philip to Pearl

PHILIP: Pearl, Mick's woven together an elaborate tapestry of collateral form and gut instinct. But I notice he's gone for Vanderpoel, a horse whose two wins came in Class 3 chases — a novice handicap at Ascot and a handicap at Sandown — as his main selection in the biggest two-mile handicap chase of the year. Walk me through your causal framework — what does the structural picture tell you?


๐Ÿ”— Pearl — Causal Analysis

PEARL: Thank you, Philip. Let me set up the directed acyclic graph for this race, because there are several causal pathways competing for our attention, and I think one of them is being significantly underweighted by the market.

The primary causal pathway in any compressed handicap is this: latent class, mediated by weight carried, moderated by current form trajectory, and confounded by course suitability. That's the skeleton. Let me flesh it out.

Start with Be Aware at 5/1. The class argument is the most straightforward causal driver in this race. His RPR of 160 and topspeed of 153 are earned in Graded novice chase company — second to Lulamba in the Grade 1 Henry VIII at Sandown, a length and a half behind July Flower in the Grade 2 at the Cheltenham November meeting, and just a length behind No Questions Asked at Windsor. These are not flukes; they represent a consistent output level against elite company. When you drop a horse of that calibre into a handicap off 147, the structural advantage is enormous. He's effectively rated to beat these horses by significant margins on raw ability.

But here's where I want to introduce a potential confounder. His form reads 1-2-2-2 in recent chase starts. That second-place habit could be dispositional — a temperamental ceiling — or it could be contextual, meaning the horses who beat him were simply better on the day. I lean toward contextual, because Lulamba is a potential Champion Chase horse, July Flower is top-class, and No Questions Asked is a serious operator. In a handicap against twenty runners rated between 136 and 155, the question is whether the horses who beat him exist in this field. They don't. That's the counterfactual: if you removed Lulamba, July Flower, and No Questions Asked from his form, he's unbeaten.

However, I want to separate my win pick from my structural analysis. The horse whose causal profile excites me most is actually Vanderpoel at 8/1. The RPR-to-OR differential is the critical hidden variable. He has an RPR of 159 off an official mark of 141. That 18-pound gap is extraordinary, and it represents what I'd call a latent ability confounder — the handicapper hasn't caught up with the horse's true level. His DSR of 67 is the fourth-highest in the field, suggesting genuine course-and-distance aptitude. Ben Pauling has placed him in two progressively stronger races and he's won both. The form trajectory here isn't just positive, it's accelerating.

Let me address the objection head-on: the level of competition he's beaten. At Sandown in January, he beat Kotmask by four and a quarter lengths. At Ascot in December, he beat Stencil by seven lengths. These are not household names. But here's the causal point — we need to separate the quality of opposition from the manner of victory. Vanderpoel hasn't just won, he's won with increasing authority. That upward trajectory is a leading indicator, and in a field where the favourite has a habit of finishing second and the defending champion hasn't shown a pulse in six months, a horse moving in the right direction carries significant probabilistic weight.

So my staking structure: Vanderpoel at 8/1 as my win selection — the RPR-OR gap and trajectory form the strongest causal pathway to victory. Be Aware at 5/1 as my each-way structural play, because the class advantage is real even if the price is short for a twenty-runner handicap. And for the progressive risk, Release The Beast at 10/1. His DSR of 75 is the highest among the plausible contenders, meaning the course-and-distance fit is optimal. He's only had two runs this season, finishing second on both occasions — beaten two and a quarter lengths by Addragoole at Leopardstown over Christmas, and a length and three-quarters by Nouvotic at Wexford in October. The freshness since December 26 could be a mediator rather than a negative — if Paul Nolan has been pointing him at this race, the break represents preparation, not regression. Sean Flanagan in the saddle adds weight to the idea that this is a targeted effort.

Let me close with this: prediction is not explanation, and form is not destiny. The market prices Jazzy Matty at 13/2 because of what he did twelve months ago, and it prices Relieved Of Duties at 11/1 because of what his speed figures say he can do. But the causal question is different — it asks what is happening now, and what mechanisms connect the present to a future outcome. On that basis, Vanderpoel's ascending trajectory is the most reliable causal signal in this field.


๐ŸŽ™️ Philip Challenges Mick

PHILIP: Mick, I want to press you on Jazzy Matty at 13/2. You say the Festival brings horses alive and I'll grant you the historical pattern. But this is a horse trained by Cian Collins, whose yard is running at just 38% Run-To-Form. He hasn't shown a flicker since last March. He's been pulled up, tailed off, beaten distances. At what point does "aimed at this race" become "wished upon a star"? How do you separate a genuine festival specialist from a declining horse whose one good day is already behind him?


๐Ÿ—‚️ Mick's Rebuttal

MICK: Fair cop, and I'll tell you honestly, it's not my most confident call. But here's the thing, Philip — I'm not asking you to back him as a win single. He's my each-way cover, and at 13/2 in a twenty-runner handicap, you only need him to hit the frame. The form since last March is terrible, no question, but drill into it. He ran over hurdles at Thurles and over hurdles at Cheltenham in October — different discipline, different animal. The last time he actually chased at a festival-type venue, he won this race. His OR has barely moved — 142 then, 143 now. Same jockey, same trainer, same race. I'm not saying he's a certainty, but when I scan my memory banks for horses who've turned up at Cheltenham looking like they couldn't beat a carpet and then run a blinder, the file is thick.

And look at the each-way terms here. In a twenty-runner race, you're getting paid for first four at least. Jazzy Matty needs to hit the first four or five places to earn his keep, and his proven ability to handle the Old Course circuit, the fences, and the uphill finish gives him a structural advantage over half this field who've never set foot on the track. I'm not making him my main bet — Vanderpoel's my main bet. But writing off the defending champion at 13/2 in his own race? That's the kind of certainty I can't afford, mate.


๐ŸŽ™️ Philip Challenges Pearl

PEARL: Pearl, you've made Vanderpoel your win pick and I can see the logic in the RPR-OR differential. But I keep coming back to the same concern: his two wins have come in Class 3 chases against thin fields — a novice handicap with four runners at Ascot and a handicap with five at Sandown. He's essentially been beating B-team opposition. The Grand Annual is the Champions League of two-mile handicap chasing. How confident are you that the gap between his RPR and his OR reflects genuine latent ability rather than inflated figures earned against weak opposition?


๐Ÿ”— Pearl's Rebuttal

PEARL: It's a legitimate challenge, and I want to address it directly rather than hand-wave it away. The quality-of-opposition objection is what I'd call a collider bias concern — are we conditioning on the wrong variable? Let me explain. When we look at Vanderpoel's RPR of 159, that figure is generated by Racing Post's model, which already adjusts for the quality of opposition. The RPR doesn't simply say "he won by seven lengths" — it says "he won by seven lengths against this level of horse, which translates to this performance level." So the objection that the opposition was weak is already partially accounted for in the figure itself.

Now, is there residual inflation? Possibly. Small fields can produce flattering margins because there's less interference, less pressure on the pace, fewer variables. I'd apply a conservative discount — call it two to three pounds — which still leaves him operating at approximately 156 to 157, a full fifteen or sixteen pounds above his mark. That remains a very significant edge in a race where the spread from top weight to bottom is only nineteen pounds. The risk is real, Philip, I won't pretend otherwise. But the expected value calculation, even with a generous discount for competition quality, favours the selection. The trajectory is the signal, and the trajectory is unambiguous. Two wins with increasing margins, improving jumping, and a trainer who's demonstrably in form. I'd rather back a horse moving in the right direction off a lenient mark than one standing still off the right one.


๐ŸŽ™️ Philip's Summary

PHILIP: So here's where we stand. Mick and Pearl converge on Vanderpoel at 8/1 — Mick from his pattern-matching of progressive improvers in big handicaps, Pearl from her RPR-OR gap analysis and trajectory modelling. That convergence is meaningful, though we should be aware that agreement between two independently reasoned positions isn't the same as truth — it could be convergent error if the Class 3 form simply doesn't translate.

They diverge on the supporting cast. Mick gives us Jazzy Matty at 13/2 as his each-way safety net on the defending champion angle — festival form as destiny. Pearl opts for Be Aware at 5/1 as her structural each-way, the class argument in concentrated form, and Release The Beast at 10/1 as a progressive risk with the best DSR profile in the field. And Mick throws in Jour d'Evasion at 16/1 as his value swing — the hat-trick horse at a featherweight for a yard in rampant form.

I'm going to plant my flag on the convergence point. Vanderpoel at 8/1 is my main selection — I find the RPR-OR gap compelling, and the Ben Pauling placement pattern feels deliberate. For my each-way backup, I'll take Be Aware at 5/1, because Pearl's counterfactual argument cuts deep: the horses who've beaten him simply aren't in this race, and class is still the most reliable currency in compressed handicaps. And for the risk add, I'll take Jazzy Matty at 13/2, because Mick's right about one thing — I've seen too many Festival veterans prove the form book irrelevant on the day to dismiss a defending champion outright.

As the philosopher might say: in racing, as in life, we are condemned to choose under uncertainty. The trick is to choose where the edge is sharpest and the price is longest.


๐Ÿงข Weekend Warrior — Philip's Live Longshot

PHILIP: And now for my weekly exercise in wishful thinking. The Weekend Warrior pick needs to be 20/1 or bigger, and this week I'm reaching into the fire.

Give me Personal Ambition at 20/1. Here's the narrative. This is a horse with an RPR of 161, joint-highest in the entire field alongside Relieved Of Duties. That number tells you there's an engine in there that most of this field can't match. Yes, the form line includes two pullups, including one at last year's Cheltenham Festival — but as we've learned, pullups can be contextual rather than dispositional, and the one thing you cannot fake is raw ability. He won at Newbury on February 17th by seventeen lengths, absolutely demolishing a small field. Ben Pauling trains him alongside Vanderpoel, so the yard is in form and knows how to target the Festival. Kielan Woods takes the ride, he carries just 10st 11lb, and his OR of 138 gives him a significant weight advantage over the market principals.

He's not in the model, he's barely in the memory banks, and the market has him firmly in the "others" column. But the RPR says he belongs, the last-time-out demolition says he's in form, and the weight says the handicapper is giving him a chance. If he lands a top-four finish, I'll be insufferable for the rest of the Festival. You know the drill.


๐Ÿ“‹ Quick Racecard Crib

  • Race: Grand Annual Challenge Cup Handicap Chase (Grade 3)
  • Course: Cheltenham — Old Course (Wednesday)
  • Distance: 1m 7f 199y (approximately 2 miles)
  • Going: Good To Soft
  • Runners: 20 (maximum field)
  • Prize: £84,405 to the winner
  • Key trends: Festival course form is the single strongest predictor; Old Course favours tactical speed and accurate jumping; compressed handicaps reward class drops and progressive profiles
  • Top weight: Touch Me Not (12st 0lb, OR 155)
  • Bottom weight: Four horses on 10st 9lb (OR 136): Break My Soul, Relieved Of Duties, Jasko Des Dames, Release The Beast
  • Defending champion: Jazzy Matty (won 2025 Grand Annual off OR 142)

๐Ÿ“Š Guide Odds — Panel Selections

Horse Odds Panelist(s) Role
Vanderpoel 8/1 Mick ✅ Pearl ✅ Philip ✅ Win (convergence pick)
Be Aware 5/1 Pearl ✅ Philip ✅ Each-way / structural class
Jazzy Matty 13/2 Mick ✅ Philip ✅ Each-way / defending champion
Release The Beast 10/1 Pearl ✅ Progressive risk (DSR)
Jour d'Evasion 16/1 Mick ✅ Value swing (hat-trick, light weight)
Relieved Of Duties 11/1 — (discussed) Latent ability, raw figures best in field
Personal Ambition 20/1 Philip ๐Ÿงข Weekend Warrior longshot

๐ŸŒ Useful Web Sites (Alphabetical)

  • At The Races — attheraces.com
  • Betfair Exchange — betfair.com/exchange
  • Cheltenham Festival Guide — cheltenham.co.uk
  • Oddschecker — oddschecker.com
  • Racing Post — racingpost.com
  • Racing TV — racingtv.com
  • Sporting Life — sportinglife.com
  • Timeform — timeform.com

Generated by Hippos Handicapping Preview - LLM Virtual Panel [ https://vendire-ludorum.blogspot.com/ ]

Hippos Handicapping - LLM Virtual Panel - BetMGM Cup Handicap Hurdle Preview

WCMI Hippos Handicapping - LLM Virtual Panel
BetMGM Cup Handicap Hurdle Preview

The Hippos Handicapping Panel — where memory and mechanisms collide, but only the horses decide.

Our ongoing exploration of the role of Large Language Models (LLM) in sports trading.


Welcome to the Hippos Handicapping Panel — a virtual round‑table of racing minds brought to life with the help of an LLM. Each Hippo has a distinct voice:

  1. Mick – Aussie handicapper and professional punter
  2. Pearl – Canadian academic and causal analyst
  3. Philip – British host who keeps them honest and sneaks in his own Weekend Warrior longshots

Together they blend events and explanations into a lively debate that is equal parts analysis and paralysis.

Art vs Science of Picking Winners

๐Ÿด Hippos Handicapping Panel — BetMGM Cup Handicap Hurdle


Race Context and Likely Shape

This is the big-field handicap puzzle of Day Two — twenty-four runners going to war over two and a half miles on the Old Course, where the tighter turns and shorter run-in put a premium on tactical speed and the ability to quicken off the final bend rather than grind up the hill from distance. Good to Soft ground should be an equaliser for much of the field, but it's significantly quicker than the Heavy and Soft surfaces several Irish raiders have been performing on through the winter, and that ground switch is a genuine unknown for some of the principals.

Willie Mullins has loaded the gun with five runners — Storm Heart, Kopeck De Mee, Chart Topper, Sony Bill, and Bunting — a battalion assault from a yard firing at 60% RTF that ensures pace options and tactical flexibility. Nicky Henderson counters with a three-pronged attack through Lucky Place, Jingko Blue, and Iberico Lord at a yard running at 65% RTF. Gordon Elliott sends two, headed by top weight The Yellow Clay with a canny 5lb claimer booked, while Henry De Bromhead's trio of Ballyadam, Beckett Rock, and Forty Coats adds further depth to the Irish contingent. Joseph O'Brien's Puturhandstogether and Emma Lavelle's progressive Guard Duty complete the shortlist of live contenders.

The market, headed by Storm Heart at 6/1 with Kopeck De Mee at 13/2, tells an intriguing story — no horse is shorter than 6/1 in a twenty-four runner field, which is the crowd wisdom screaming that this is anyone's race. The Yellow Clay and Kateira share 8/1, Iberico Lord is at 9/1, and then the field opens up quickly. When a festival handicap is this competitive, it's the structural angles and hidden form that tend to decide the argument.


๐ŸŽ™️ Philip Opens

"Right then. Twenty-four line up for the BetMGM Cup and the market can't separate them — six-to-one the field. Mick, this is your bread and butter. Big-field handicap, plenty of Irish form to unpick, five Mullins runners to navigate. Where does your memory bank take you?"


๐Ÿ—‚️ Mick — Case-Based Analysis

"Mate, twenty-four-runner handicap hurdles at the Festival are basically solved puzzles if you know where to look. I go straight to the filing cabinet marked 'Cheltenham Festival form' because the evidence is overwhelming — horses that have run well at the Festival come back and run well at the Festival. It's the single most repeatable signal in jump racing.

"So let me start with The Yellow Clay at 8/1, because this horse was three-quarters of a length off The New Lion in the Supreme last March. That's a run rated 157 by the Racing Post, with a topspeed of 144, at this course and distance on Good to Soft. Virtually identical conditions to tomorrow. Yes, he's top weight at twelve-stone, but here's the trick — Elliott's booked Michael Kenneally, who claims five pounds, bringing the effective burden down to eleven-nine. That's lighter than Storm Heart and Lucky Place. A five-pound claim on a horse proven at the top level at this track is a masterstroke, and I've seen it work before. The last two runs — beaten by Colonel Mustard at Navan, then fifth at Leopardstown in a Grade One — look mediocre on paper, but you don't judge Cheltenham horses on their away form. Leopardstown behind Teahupoo? That's like judging a county cricketer because he got bowled by Bumrah. Completely irrelevant to the handicap question.

"For my each-way play, I'm going to Guard Duty at 22/1. This is a horse on a steep upward curve — won at Newbury last March off 124, placed at Newbury and Windsor through the autumn and winter, then won again at Doncaster in January. His Racing Post Rating of 158 is among the highest in the field, and his topspeed of 145 is up there with the best. He's rated 142, carrying eleven-one. If the RPR is even roughly right, he's a stone well-in. The concern is no Cheltenham form, and the Old Course demands sharpness, but Emma Lavelle has him in the form of his life and Ben Jones is a tidy pilot in these big fields.

"Then for the value swing, I want Forty Coats at 14/1. Here's a horse with a career-best RPR of 161 — the second-highest in this entire field behind only The Yellow Clay's 162 — and a topspeed figure earned in that Supreme fourth. Where did that come from? Fourth in the Supreme at this meeting last year at 150-to-1. He was in the same race as The Yellow Clay, fifteen lengths off The New Lion. Now, he's been running in maidens since and can't seem to win one, which looks terrible. But De Bromhead's brought him straight to the Festival handicap off a mark of 138 on bottom weight. If he reproduces anything close to that Festival run, he's a handicap blot. I've seen this pattern before — horses who can't win maidens in Ireland but come alive under the unique Cheltenham pressure. Approximately right beats precisely wrong, and the approximate here says he's thirty pounds well-in on his best form."


๐ŸŽ™️ Philip to Pearl

"Pearl, Mick's essentially made this a Festival form argument — if you ran well here before, you'll run well here again. But Storm Heart heads the market at 6/1 for Mullins and he's never run beyond twenty furlongs. Is the crowd seeing something Mick's memory bank is ignoring?"


๐Ÿ”— Pearl — Causal Analysis

"Let me build the causal structure before jumping to conclusions. In a twenty-four runner handicap, the outcome is mediated by several pathways, and the critical question is which pathways are genuine and which are confounded.

"Start with Storm Heart at 6/1. The market is pricing in two powerful variables: the Mullins stable effect and the recent winning form trajectory. He's won his last two, both convincingly. But here's where I part company with the crowd. Both wins came on Heavy ground — at Gowran and Limerick — and both were over shorter trips. He's stepping up from twenty furlongs to twenty-one for the first time in his career, and he's simultaneously switching from Heavy to Good to Soft. That's two untested mediators in the causal chain. More importantly, his only Cheltenham run was a fifth in the Triumph Hurdle as a well-fancied 7/2 favourite, beaten fifteen lengths on Heavy. If we take seriously the lesson that past Cheltenham performance predicts future Cheltenham performance, then Storm Heart's base rate here is actually negative. The 6/1 price is anchoring on trainer reputation and current trajectory while ignoring the direct course evidence. I respect the horse, but I don't think the causal pathway supports the price.

"My main selection is Jingko Blue at 10/1. The causal logic is clean. He was second in a Grade Two at this course in January, five and a half lengths behind Kabral Du Mathan over two-and-a-half miles. That gives us direct course-and-distance form on similar going. He's trained by Henderson at 65% RTF, and the structural narrative makes sense — he went chasing, it didn't work out after a fall at Ascot, came back to hurdles and immediately ran a big race at Cheltenham. The switch from fences to hurdles actually removes a risk variable rather than adding one. James Bowen keeps the ride. At 10/1 in a race where the favourite is 6/1, I think the market is underpricing the course form mediator.

"For my structural each-way, I'll take The Yellow Clay at 8/1, because I agree with Mick that the Festival form is the strongest causal signal in this field. His RPR of 157 and topspeed of 144, both earned at this course over this distance, create a clear causal pathway to a big run. The 5lb claim is a structural bonus that the market may not be fully pricing.

"My progressive risk is Bunting at 14/1. He's a six-year-old from the Mullins yard stepping up significantly in trip. His fourth in a Listed handicap hurdle at Leopardstown over Christmas, four-and-a-quarter lengths off Champagne Kid, represents solid form, and the dual-purpose profile — he ran well on the flat at Newmarket — suggests an athletic, adaptable horse. At six, there's a modest weight-for-age edge, and Mullins wouldn't waste a Festival entry on a horse he doesn't think stays. The absence of evidence at this trip is not evidence of absence for a horse with fewer lifetime hurdle starts than most of his rivals."


๐ŸŽ™️ Philip Challenges Mick

"Mick, I hear the Cheltenham argument, but let me press you on The Yellow Clay. He was beaten as 8/15 favourite at Navan by Colonel Mustard — a horse who's 33/1 tomorrow. Then thirty-three lengths behind Teahupoo at Leopardstown. That's two runs suggesting a horse in decline. Isn't the Festival form from last March already in the price at 8/1?"


๐Ÿ—‚️ Mick — Rebuttal

"Look, the Navan defeat is a fair point, but context matters. That was on Soft to Heavy ground — completely different surface. And Colonel Mustard is a course-and-distance specialist at Navan who always runs his best race there before going backwards everywhere else, which is exactly what happened when he was eighth at Ascot at Christmas. The Leopardstown run? Grade One against Teahupoo, a horse who's basically the champion hurdler in waiting. You can't extrapolate Grade One graded form onto a handicap mark.

"Here's what the market's actually telling us. The Yellow Clay is 8/1 in a race where nothing's shorter than sixes. That's not 'already in the price' — that's a horse the market respects but isn't sure about. I think the claiming rider is the angle the market hasn't fully processed. Effectively eleven-nine on a horse with a proven 157 RPR at this track? That's the kind of edge I've built a career on spotting."


๐ŸŽ™️ Philip Challenges Pearl

"Pearl, your case for Jingko Blue rests heavily on the January run at Cheltenham. But he was sixteen lengths off Electric Mason at Haydock the time before that. Isn't there a danger you're cherry-picking the one data point that supports your thesis while ignoring the poor ones?"


๐Ÿ”— Pearl — Rebuttal

"Not at all, and this is precisely where the causal framework earns its keep. The Haydock run was over three miles and half a furlong in a staying handicap — a fundamentally different race shape that tests different physiological systems. It would be a confounded comparison to weight that run equally against the Cheltenham performance. The relevant variable is course-and-distance form on comparable ground. When we control for those factors, Jingko Blue has one data point and it's an excellent one: second in a Grade Two here. The previous run over an inappropriate trip tells us nothing about his likely performance over two-and-a-half miles tomorrow. It's the difference between correlation and causation — running poorly over three miles doesn't cause poor performance over two-and-a-half. They're mediated by different stamina demands. Let's not confuse a bad trip selection with a bad horse."


๐ŸŽ™️ Philip's Summary

"So we have genuine convergence and genuine divergence, which is exactly what you want from a handicapping panel. Both Mick and Pearl land on The Yellow Clay at 8/1 — the Festival form, the claiming jockey angle, the course-and-distance pedigree. That's a strong signal when two very different reasoning styles arrive at the same place.

"Where they diverge is instructive. Mick's looking at Guard Duty at 22/1 as the progressive improver who might be ahead of the handicapper, and Forty Coats at 14/1 as the Festival specialist hiding in plain sight behind a misleading maiden form profile. Pearl prefers the cleaner structural path through Jingko Blue at 10/1 with direct course form, and flags Bunting at 14/1 as the Mullins wildcard at a trip that might unlock something new.

"Both make persuasive cases against Storm Heart at 6/1 as favourite — the untested trip, the ground switch, the poor Cheltenham reference. That's notable. When neither analyst can build a case for the market leader, it's worth listening.

"My consolidated card runs as follows: The Yellow Clay at 8/1 as the win selection — the convergence pick with a concrete angle in the claiming rider. Jingko Blue at 10/1 for the each-way, because Pearl's course-form argument is hard to dismantle. And Forty Coats at 14/1 as the risk add, because Mick's right that an RPR of 161 off a mark of 138 on bottom weight in a Festival handicap is the kind of discrepancy careers are built on. As they say in philosophy, the only true wisdom is knowing how little you know — and in a twenty-four runner handicap, that's basically all of us."


๐Ÿงข Weekend Warrior — Live Longshot

"And so to the sacred ritual. One outsider at twenties or bigger, selected on narrative rather than numbers, for purposes of insufferable bragging rights should the impossible become merely improbable.

"I'm taking Guard Duty at 22/1. He's not a typical Cheltenham horse — no prior course form, trained by Emma Lavelle rather than one of the superpowers, ridden by Ben Jones rather than one of the championship jockeys. But his RPR of 158 would be good enough to win most runnings of this race, his topspeed of 145 says he can finish, and he's won two of his last four with progressive margins. He's the horse who's been winning his races at provincial tracks while nobody was watching, and now he turns up at the Festival with a rating that might still underestimate him. He's not in the model, he's barely in the market, but the form book says he's very much in the conversation.

"And if he lands a place at 22/1, I shall be absolutely unbearable through the remainder of the week. You have been warned."


๐Ÿ“‹ Quick Racecard Crib

  • Race: BetMGM Cup Handicap Hurdle (Grade 3)
  • Course: Cheltenham — Old Course
  • Distance: 2m 5f
  • Going: Good to Soft
  • Runners: 24 (maximum field)
  • Prize: £61,897 to the winner
  • Top weight: The Yellow Clay (12st 0lb, OR 155)
  • Bottom weight: Forty Coats / HMS Seahorse (10st 11lb, OR 138)
  • Favourite: Storm Heart (6/1, W P Mullins)
  • Key trainers: Mullins ×5, Henderson ×3, De Bromhead ×3, Elliott ×2

๐Ÿ“Š Guide Odds — Panel Selections

Horse Trainer OR Weight Odds Selected By
Storm Heart W P Mullins 151 11-10 6/1 Pearl (noted, not backed)
Kopeck De Mee W P Mullins 145 11-04 13/2
The Yellow Clay Gordon Elliott 155 12-00 8/1 Mick (Win), Pearl (E/W), Philip (Win)
Jingko Blue Nicky Henderson 144 11-03 10/1 Pearl (Win), Philip (E/W)
Bunting W P Mullins 139 10-12 14/1 Pearl (Progressive)
Forty Coats Henry De Bromhead 138 10-11 14/1 Mick (Value), Philip (Risk Add)
Guard Duty Emma Lavelle 142 11-01 22/1 Mick (E/W), Philip (Weekend Warrior ๐Ÿงข)

๐ŸŒ Useful Web Sites (Alphabetical)


Generated by Hippos Handicapping Preview - LLM Virtual Panel [ https://vendire-ludorum.blogspot.com/ ]