Friday, March 13, 2026

Hippos Handicapping - LLM Virtual Panel - County Handicap Hurdle Preview

WCMI Hippos Handicapping - LLM Virtual Panel
County 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 — County Handicap Hurdle Preview

Cheltenham (New Course) | Friday 13 March 2026 | 2:00pm 2m 179y | Good | 24 runners (max field) | Winner: £61,897


Race Context and Likely Shape

The County Hurdle is the great democratic cavalry charge of the Cheltenham Festival — twenty-four horses, a tight handicap band, and the kind of twenty-horse pile-up at the last flight that makes strong men reach for the sofa cushion. This year's renewal is run on the New Course, which adds a protracted, grinding run-in after the final flight. That longer approach to the hill means tactical speed alone won't get the job done: the winner needs reserves, the ability to sustain effort when the hill bites and rivals start treading water. Good ground — genuinely good ground — is a further variable, stripping away the stamina-sapping mud that can drag the pace back to a crawl and rewarding clean-jumping speed horses who can gallop.

The OR range runs from 132 (Ooh Betty) to 156 (Ndaawi), a 24lb spread that's fairly standard for a County. Weight at the bottom end should confer an advantage in this mob-handed contest, particularly when reinforced by a jockey's claim. The market is topped by Karbau at 9/2 for Willie Mullins and Paul Townend, with the progressive Sinnatra at 6/1 for the Skelton yard. Mullins raids with three — Karbau, Murcia at 9/1, and the enigmatic dual-purpose Absurde at 20/1 under Patrick Mullins — while Dan Skelton sends two, Sinnatra and the long-absent Tellherthename at 12/1. Gordon Elliott's pair of Ndaawi at 33/1 and Bowensonfire at 18/1 add further intrigue from across the water. The crowd wisdom tilts toward Karbau and Sinnatra, but big-field Cheltenham handicaps have a way of humbling consensus.


๐ŸŽ™️ Philip Opens

"Welcome to the final day of the Festival, and if you've survived the week with any of your bank intact, you deserve a medal — or at the very least a strong coffee. The County Hurdle is upon us: twenty-four runners, good ground, and the kind of open handicap that either makes you look like a genius or sends you trudging to the car park muttering about pace bias. Mick, you've been scribbling on the back of a napkin all morning. What patterns are you pulling out of this?"


๐Ÿ—‚️ Mick — Case-Based Reasoning

"Right, Philip, let me walk you through it because I reckon this is a race where you can actually see the plot if you squint hard enough.

First thing I look at in any County Hurdle is whether someone's brought a ringer — a lightly-raced improver whose official rating is a lagging indicator, not a ceiling. And mate, Sinnatra at 6/1 screams that profile. He's a six-year-old by Walk In The Park, he's had five hurdle runs, and his form figures read two-two-one-three-one. That last win at Warwick was a procession, but it's the Sandown maiden he won by fifty-five lengths that sticks in my mind. Now, fifty-five lengths in a four-runner maiden doesn't mean he's Istabraq, but it tells you the horse has a massive engine that the handicapper hasn't fully caught up with. He's rated 133 and his published RPR is 161 — that's a twenty-eight-pound chasm between what the official handicapper thinks and what the Racing Post rater says. Dan Skelton doesn't send a novice to the County Hurdle for a day out. He does it because he thinks the mark is wrong. Harry Skelton rides, they're at 10st 5lb near the foot of the weights, and I reckon roughly two-thirds of this field can't match his raw ability on his best day. Market's not drifting either — if anything the 6/1 might be gone by post time.

For my safety each-way I want Wilful at 14/1. This horse has actually done it at the level. Won the Ascot Grade 3 handicap hurdle in December off 135, beating Hot Fuss by nearly three lengths. Ran a cracker next time at Windsor when second to the same horse. He's rated 144 now which means he carries 11st 2lb, but his top-speed figure of 146 is one of the highest in the race and that matters on good ground. Jonjo Jr rides with conviction and this horse has a proven turn of foot. At 14/1 in a race like this, I think you're getting a solid each-way proposition.

My value swing is Bowensonfire at 18/1. Gordon Elliott sends two and this fella's won his last two starts, including a Listed hurdle at Leopardstown on February 1st when he beat I Started A Joke by nearly two lengths. He's up to 153 now and carries 11st 11lb, which is near the top of the weights, but Jack Kennedy knows this horse inside out and Elliott's 40% RTF suggests the yard is ticking over. Two wins on the bounce gives you momentum, and in a race where half the field hasn't won since autumn, that's worth something. I'd roughly estimate that a horse who's won its last two starts has about a 15% to 18% chance in a field this size, which makes 18/1 look very generous.

As the old saying goes: the market tells you what people think, form tells you what horses can do, and the weights tell you what the handicapper hopes. I'm banking on the handicapper being behind the curve with Sinnatra."


๐ŸŽ™️ Philip to Pearl

"Pearl, Mick's built his entire case on a horse who won a four-runner maiden by fifty-five lengths and a couple of novice hurdles. Is he confusing a big engine with a proven record, or is there a genuine causal basis for that confidence?"


๐Ÿ”— Pearl — Causal Analysis

"It's a fair question, and the answer lies in separating signal from noise in Sinnatra's profile. Let me build the causal diagram here.

The path from ability to County Hurdle success runs through several mediators: raw talent, weight carried, ground suitability, course experience, and race fitness. Sinnatra scores well on talent and weight — I agree with Mick there — but there's a critical confounder that inflates his numbers. That RPR of 161 and that fifty-five-length maiden win both come against negligible opposition. When you win by fifty-five lengths at 1/8, you haven't beaten anything — you've just galloped in isolation. The RPR model assumes the runner-up performed to a baseline standard, but in a four-runner maiden at Sandown where the second horse was rated nowhere, the figure is likely an artefact rather than a reliable ability marker. Think of it this way: if I measure your sprint time against a toddler, the margin tells me very little about how you'd fare against Usain Bolt.

The more troubling confounder for Sinnatra is that he's never run in a handicap, never negotiated a field of more than fifteen runners, and never tackled Cheltenham. We have no data on how he handles the chaos of a twenty-four-runner cavalry charge on the New Course. That's not a reason to dismiss him, but it should compress our confidence interval.

My main selection is Wilful at 14/1, and the causal chain here is far more transparent. This is a seven-year-old who won a Grade 3 handicap hurdle at Ascot in December on good-to-soft ground, beating a subsequent winner by nearly three lengths. The mediating variable — his top-speed figure of 146 — ranks among the best in this field, and that figure was earned in competitive company, not in a vacuum. His form trajectory shows a clear upward curve: won at Ayr off 121, won at Ascot off 135, ran a close second off 142. Each step was against better opposition and he kept delivering. On good ground over two miles on the New Course, his sustained finishing effort is exactly what this race rewards. At 14/1 in a field where the favourite has question marks, I think the market is underpricing the most battle-hardened horse in the race.

For my each-way structural play, I'm going with Karbau at 9/2. The Bayesian prior here is substantial: Willie Mullins at the Cheltenham Festival with his primary jockey aboard. The yard's 63% RTF isn't just a number — it reflects a stable operating at peak preparation for its biggest targets. Karbau's second to Glen Kiln in a Grade 3 at Naas last time reads well: beaten only a length by a smart horse on heavy ground that wouldn't have suited his profile. Good ground here is a genuine intervention that changes the picture, not just a cosmetic adjustment. His OR of 150 gives him 11st 8lb, which is workable, and Paul Townend's race craft in big-field handicaps is a mediating advantage that's hard to quantify but very real. Yes, he flopped at last year's Festival in the Supreme, but that was his first ever run at Cheltenham and the 40/1 starting price tells you the market didn't fancy him then either. One poor run is a single data point, not a pattern.

For a progressive risk, I like Joyeuse at 10/1. Nicky Henderson and Nico de Boinville at the Festival is a combination the base rates support, and while Joyeuse's recent form reads poorly on paper — ninth, fourth — there's a collider at work in her results. She went chasing mid-season and ran two mediocre races in a discipline that didn't suit her, which made her hurdle form look stale by association. But her published RPR of 161 matches Sinnatra's, and unlike Sinnatra, that figure was earned against proper opposition. She's back over hurdles, drops to 10st 7lb off an OR of 135, and the return to good ground removes the confound of soft conditions that blunted her at Ascot in January. The causal pathway is: ability plus weight relief plus ground shift equals reactivation of latent form.

As I'm fond of reminding people — prediction is lovely, but understanding the mechanism is what gives you an edge when the model breaks. I'd rather back a horse whose form I can explain than one whose form I have to assume."


๐ŸŽ™️ Philip Challenges Mick

"Mick, Pearl's making a rather devastating point about your headline act. Sinnatra's signature performance was beating nothing by fifty-five lengths. How do you know he's a racehorse and not just a fast worker who's been kept away from proper opposition?"


๐Ÿ—‚️ Mick — Rebuttal

"Because the Skeltons aren't mugs, Philip, and the market isn't a charity. If Sinnatra was just a nice maiden winner, he wouldn't be 6/1 second favourite in a County Hurdle. There's serious, informed money behind this horse, and that money isn't being placed by people who watched a four-runner maiden in isolation and got excited.

Now, Pearl's right that the fifty-five-length margin is inflated — course I'm not taking that literally. But here's what I am taking literally: this horse ran third in a Listed novice at Huntingdon behind Act Of Innocence, who is a proper performer, and he was only beaten eight and three-quarter lengths after being outpaced. That tells me his ceiling is significantly higher than his current mark. Then he went to Newbury and ran second in a maiden behind Captain Hugo, who subsequently won a valuable handicap at Kelso. The collateral form holds up.

And here's my trump card: Dan Skelton doesn't enter novices in the County Hurdle unless he knows something the handicapper doesn't. I've seen this movie before, mate. The pattern is the pattern. You can build all the causal diagrams you like, but sometimes the answer is simpler than the question: this horse is well handicapped, and the trainer knows it."


๐ŸŽ™️ Philip Challenges Pearl

"Pearl, you've made Wilful your headline act, but he's a seven-year-old who's run just five times this season, his peak form was at Ascot — a flat, galloping track — and now he's coming to the New Course at Cheltenham, which is a very different beast. Aren't you conflating venue-neutral ability with course-specific performance?"


๐Ÿ”— Pearl — Rebuttal

"It's a reasonable challenge, and I'll concede that Cheltenham's New Course is a unique environment — the undulations, the crowd noise, the uphill finish. We don't have direct Cheltenham form for Wilful, which is a gap in the evidence. But I'd push back on the framing. Ascot over two miles with good-to-soft ground and a competitive Grade 3 field isn't a soft touch — it's one of the sterner examinations in the handicap hurdle calendar. And Wilful didn't just win there, he won going away. The finishing effort — sustaining pace through the final two furlongs — is exactly the quality that transfers to Cheltenham's New Course run-in.

The critical variable isn't whether he's been to Cheltenham before; it's whether his running style is compatible with the demands of the track. Horses who finish strongly from off the pace are advantaged on the New Course because the longer run-in gives them time to deploy their effort. That's Wilful's modus operandi.

I'd also note that the absence of course form is already priced in. At 14/1 in a race where his speed figures and form credentials arguably make him a single-figure price, the market is already discounting the unknown. I'm saying the discount is too steep."


๐ŸŽ™️ Philip's Summary

"So we have genuine divergence here, which is exactly what you want from a County Hurdle preview — if everyone agreed, you'd know something was wrong.

Mick is all-in on the Skelton plot with Sinnatra at 6/1, arguing the mark is a lagging indicator and the trainer's intent is the strongest signal in the race. He's got Wilful at 14/1 as his safety net and Bowensonfire at 18/1 as his each-way value from the Elliott yard. Pearl is more cautious about Sinnatra, questioning whether inflated figures against weak opposition translate to a twenty-four-runner Festival handicap. She's put her flag in Wilful at 14/1 as the horse with the most legible form, supported by Karbau at 9/2 as the Mullins structural play and Joyeuse at 10/1 as a reactivation angle from the Henderson yard.

The fascinating thing is that both of them like Wilful — it's just a question of whether he's the headline or the understudy. And they both have a healthy respect for the Mullins/Townend axis with Karbau.

For my consolidated selections, I'm going to lean toward the convergence. My main pick is Sinnatra at 6/1 — I think Mick's trainer-intent argument is persuasive, the weight is right, and the ground suits. My each-way backup is Wilful at 14/1, the horse both panelists respect and the one with the most transparent form profile. And as a risk add, I'll take Pearl's suggestion of Joyeuse at 10/1 — the Henderson Festival base rate is real, the weight is attractive, and the switch back to hurdles on better ground is a genuine positive intervention.

As someone once said, in racing as in philosophy, certainty is the enemy of wisdom. And if there's one race that punishes certainty, it's the County Hurdle."


๐Ÿงข Weekend Warrior — Live Longshot

"And now for the segment that keeps me young, or at least keeps me poor. My Weekend Warrior this week is Ndaawi at 33/1.

Here's the narrative. This is a six-year-old trained by Gordon Elliott who won the Galway Hurdle at Grade 3 level last July with an RPR of 152 — a performance that stamps him as easily the highest-rated horse in this field on his day, with an official mark of 156 and top weight of 12st 0lb. That sounds like a burden, until you realise his jockey Josh Williamson claims five pounds, bringing the effective weight down to 11st 9lb. Suddenly you've got the most talented horse in the race carrying a workable weight relative to his ability.

Now, the wrinkle. He's spent the winter running on the Flat — third at Dundalk most recently, and a couple of turf handicaps before that. He hasn't been over a hurdle since November 22nd, when he ran third in a Grade 1 at Punchestown behind Lossiemouth. On the surface, that's a worry. But Elliott has form for these schemes — keep the horse ticking over on the Flat, maintain fitness without exposing the hurdle mark, and arrive at a big Festival handicap with the public scratching their heads. The 33/1 tells you the crowd hasn't connected the dots.

Good ground helps him enormously — his Galway win came on good — and if Williamson can get him into a rhythm in mid-division and save his effort for the hill, the raw class could carry him into the places.

He's not in the model, barely in the market, and his recent form looks like a different horse entirely. But that Galway Hurdle win is burning a hole in my racecard. If he frames the finish, I'll be insufferable through the weekend. You know the drill."


๐Ÿ“‹ Quick Racecard Crib

  • Race: County Handicap Hurdle (Grade 3), 2:00pm Friday
  • Course: Cheltenham, New Course — 2m 179y, Good ground
  • Field: 24 runners (maximum), OR range 132–156
  • Key claims: Josh Williamson 5lb (Ndaawi), Conor Stone-Walsh 3lb (Sixandahalf), Fern O'Brien 5lb (Tripoli Flyer), Daire McConville 7lb (Bowmore)
  • Mullins treble: Karbau (Townend), Murcia (Danny Mullins), Absurde (P W Mullins)
  • Skelton double: Sinnatra (Harry Skelton), Tellherthename (Kielan Woods)
  • Elliott double: Ndaawi (Josh Williamson), Bowensonfire (Jack Kennedy)
  • Prize fund: £61,897 to winner
  • New Course note: Longer run-in favours sustained finishers over tactical speed

๐Ÿ“Š Guide Odds — Panel Selections

Horse Odds Panelist(s) Role
Sinnatra 6/1 Mick ✅, Philip ✅ Win pick
Karbau 9/2 Pearl ✅ Each-way structural
Joyeuse 10/1 Pearl ✅, Philip ✅ Progressive risk / risk add
Wilful 14/1 Pearl ✅, Mick ✅, Philip ✅ Win (Pearl) / EW safety (Mick, Philip)
Bowensonfire 18/1 Mick ✅ Value swing
Ndaawi 33/1 Philip ๐Ÿงข Weekend Warrior

๐ŸŒ Web Sites (Alphabetical)


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

Thursday, March 12, 2026

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

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

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.

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



๐Ÿด Hippos Handicapping — LLM Virtual Panel — Post-Race Review

Cheltenham | Thursday 12 March 2026 | Pertemps Network Final Handicap Hurdle | 2m 7f 213y | 24 runners


๐ŸŽ™️ Philip Opens

Philip: Well. Good evening, and welcome to what I can only describe as the most comprehensive humbling this panel has experienced since we started doing these reviews. Let me state the facts plainly and without adornment, because the facts are damning enough on their own. The Pertemps Network Final Handicap Hurdle was won by Supremely West, returned at 100/30, trained by Dan Skelton, ridden by Harry Skelton. He travelled strongly throughout, made headway to join the leaders before five out, took it up before the last, and kept on well to win by three and a half lengths from Lavida Adiva at 22/1. Third was Ikarak at 40/1, beaten six lengths. Fourth was Letos at 22/1.

Now, for those of you who didn't read our preview — and frankly, if you followed our advice, I envy your ignorance — let me remind the audience of the panel's position heading into this race. We identified Supremely West, unanimously, as the "false favourite." Those were our words. We labelled him a horse who had "no business being favourite for a Cheltenham Festival handicap." We built an entire analytical edifice around opposing him. Our consensus win selection was Kikijo at 16/1. Kikijo finished eighteenth. Our structural fit selection was Electric Mason at 11/1. Electric Mason finished tenth. Our consistent form selection was Ace Of Spades at 12/1. Ace Of Spades finished thirteenth. My Weekend Warrior, Staffordshire Knot, pulled up before the last. This is, and I'm choosing my words carefully here, a total and unmitigated disaster. Mick, I think you owe the audience an explanation. Possibly an apology. Where do we even begin?


๐Ÿ—‚️ Mick — Post-Race Reflection

Mick: Yeah, look. No dressing this up. No wriggling out of it. No "approximately right" about this one, mate — we were precisely, spectacularly, catastrophically wrong. I sat here yesterday and told the audience that Kikijo beating Supremely West by a combined fifty-six lengths in two runs was the story of the race. I said the market was "insane" to have Supremely West as favourite. I said — and this is the bit that's going to haunt me — "the form is the form." Well, the form wasn't the form. Or more accurately, I was reading the wrong form.

Let me face the music, horse by horse. Kikijo was my primary win selection at 16/1. He went off 14/1, so the market actually agreed with me and shortened him. And he finished eighteenth. Eighteenth out of twenty-four. The race comment says he was prominent, in touch with the leaders at halfway, and then "weakened on the turn before last." He didn't just fail to win — he collapsed. He had nothing left when the race got serious. And the reason is staring me in the face: the ground. Those two demolition jobs over Supremely West came on Soft at Cheltenham and Soft at Sandown. Thursday's ground was Good, and Kikijo simply couldn't reproduce that form on a faster surface. Pearl flagged this in the preview. She said the margins might compress on Good ground but she didn't think the causal mechanism would reverse entirely. She was half right — it didn't just compress, it inverted. Kikijo was a different horse on Good ground, and I didn't weight that variable heavily enough. Lesson learned the hard way.

Ace Of Spades, my each-way play at 12/1, went off at 16/1 — actually drifted from the preview price, which should have been a warning signal — and finished thirteenth. The race comment is telling: "prominent, in touch with leaders before fourth, not fluent three out, weakened before two out." He was never travelling and the mistake at three out killed whatever chance he had. To be fair to the horse, he's from the Skelton yard that actually produced the winner, but I picked the wrong Skelton runner. That stings.

Champagne Chic at 20/1, my value swing, went off 18/1 and finished twelfth. "Held up in rear, some headway before last, stumbled after last, no impression." He was never competitive. The progressive lightweight theory was nice in the abstract but didn't translate to the reality of a Festival handicap where he simply wasn't good enough.

And then there's the winner. The horse I spent four hundred words telling everyone to oppose. Supremely West travelled strongly — the race comment couldn't be clearer about that — headway to be in touch with leaders before five out, led before the last, kept on well. This wasn't a scrappy, lucky handicap win. He dominated the finish. He looked like, dare I say it, the best horse in the race. On Good ground, with a prominent position, he was a completely different proposition to the horse who got hammered on Soft ground at Cheltenham and Sandown.

The biggest mistake I made was treating form on Soft ground as transferable to Good ground without proper adjustment. I've seen it a hundred times when other punters do it, and I've always said "different surface, different race." But when Kikijo's margins were so enormous — twenty-four and thirty-two lengths — I convinced myself the gap was too big for conditions to close. It wasn't. The ground didn't just close the gap, it reversed the order entirely. Seen this before, actually, and I should have known better. A good smack around the head is sometimes the best education money can buy.


๐ŸŽ™️ Philip to Pearl

Philip: Pearl, in the preview you were the one who actually raised the ground question head-on. You said, and I'm quoting, "I don't think the underlying causal mechanism reverses entirely." But it did reverse — completely. Your primary selection Electric Mason finished tenth, your each-way Kikijo finished eighteenth, and your progressive risk Absolutely Doyen finished eighth. The winner was the horse all three of us opposed. So my question to you is surgical: your causal framework identified the right variable — the ground — but then drew the wrong conclusion from it. What went wrong in the reasoning chain?


๐Ÿ”— Pearl — Causal Post-Mortem

Pearl: This is a genuinely instructive failure, and I want to be precise about where the reasoning broke down, because the breakdown is more interesting than the failure itself.

My framework correctly identified ground as the key mediator in the Kikijo-Supremely West dynamic. What I got wrong was the magnitude of the effect. I treated ground as a continuous variable — one that would compress margins proportionally — when in reality it operated as something closer to a threshold variable. Below a certain firmness, Kikijo's stamina and grinding style dominated. Above that threshold, on genuine Good ground, his advantage evaporated entirely and Supremely West's latent class reasserted itself. The relationship wasn't linear. It was binary, or close to it. That's a fundamental modelling error on my part, and it contaminated every downstream prediction I made.

Let me take my selections in order. Electric Mason at 11/1 was my primary pick, and he went off at 9/1 — the market shortened him significantly, which means I wasn't alone in my assessment. He finished tenth. The race comment reads "soon prominent, lost position before second, headway and in touch with leaders before fourth, dropped to midfield before seventh, no impression." That's a horse who was struggling from the early stages, never found a rhythm, and couldn't sustain any forward momentum. I flagged the four-month layoff as a risk factor in the preview but argued it was a "planned absence" rather than a symptom. The evidence suggests I was wrong about that, or at least that even a planned absence left him short of peak fitness for a Festival cavalry charge. The confounder won.

Kikijo at 16/1 as my each-way pick — I've already agreed with Mick's diagnosis. The ground mediated the entire form picture and I underestimated its effect. I said in the preview that his Aintree fourth on Good ground, beaten three lengths, proved he "handled a drier surface adequately." But handling a surface adequately and handling it well enough to win a Festival handicap are categorically different things. I committed a classic error of conflating sufficiency with optimality.

Absolutely Doyen at 14/1 as my progressive risk selection finished eighth, off a starting price of 8/1 — he was heavily backed. The race comment says he was "in touch with leaders, midfield before fourth, outpaced after two out, rallied before last, not reach leaders." That's actually a more creditable run than I feared. He wasn't disgraced — he ran his race — but the five-timer was always against the base rates for horses stepping up to Festival level, and so it proved. Interestingly, my caveat in the preview was that his opposition quality in those five wins was a confounding variable, and the Festival exposed exactly that. A horse whose best RPR came at Musselburgh could not sustain that level at Cheltenham. The confounding variable I identified was the right one. I just should have weighted it more heavily and moved him down the pecking order rather than including him at all.

Now, the critical failure. I need to address why I opposed Supremely West. My causal framework said: this horse has been beaten a combined fifty-six lengths by Kikijo in two runs, therefore he is inferior. But I failed to condition on the right variable. Those defeats were on Soft ground. On Good ground, the entire causal chain that produced those defeats ceases to operate. I should have asked: what is Supremely West's form on Good ground specifically? His earlier form, before those two hammerings, included a third at this course on better ground. His official rating of 135 was earned through performances that the handicapper believed warranted that mark. And crucially, as a Dan Skelton-trained eight-year-old with Harry Skelton in the saddle, he represented a stable that knows how to target Festival handicaps. The data spoke, but I was listening to the wrong frequency.


๐ŸŽ™️ Philip Challenges Both

Philip: Let me be blunt with both of you, because the audience deserves it. You each identified pieces of the puzzle — Mick saw the collateral form, Pearl saw the ground variable — but you assembled them into the wrong picture. The winner was staring at you from the top of the market at 7/2, and your combined response was to label him a fraud. But here's what really troubles me: the placed horses. Lavida Adiva at 22/1 finished second. Ikarak at 40/1 finished third. Letos at 22/1 finished fourth. None of these horses received a single mention in our preview. Not one word. We discussed nine different selections across the panel — Kikijo, Electric Mason, Ace Of Spades, Champagne Chic, Absolutely Doyen, Staffordshire Knot, and we banged on about Supremely West for half the preview — and we didn't even nod toward any of the placed horses. Mick, is the honest answer simply that in a twenty-four-runner handicap, we overthought this so badly that we talked ourselves past the obvious?


๐Ÿ—‚️ Mick — Rebuttal

Mick: Yeah, Philip, and it's worse than overthinking. It's a case of narrative capture. We built a story — "Supremely West is a false favourite, Kikijo is the key" — and every piece of analysis we did after that was in service of that story. Pearl's ground analysis was used to test whether Kikijo would still beat Supremely West, not whether Supremely West might actually win. My collateral form work was one-dimensional, as you pointed out in the preview itself. You literally asked me, "aren't you making a one-dimensional case?" and I batted it away by pointing to Kikijo's RPR and the handicapper's mark. You were right and I was wrong.

On the placed horses — Lavida Adiva was trained by Ruth Jefferson and ridden by Brian Hughes, a northern combination that wouldn't have been top of anyone's Festival shortlist, but the horse ran a stormer, held up and making steady headway, went second before the last. Ikarak at 40/1 for Olly Murphy and Sean Bowen rallied on the run-in from the rear. Letos at 22/1 was the Anthony Mullins and Danny Mullins combination from Ireland — travelled strongly, prominent throughout, just found the hill too much in the final hundred and ten yards. Could I have found any of these? Honestly, probably not on the evidence I had. But that's the point about twenty-four-runner handicaps. Sometimes the honest answer is "I don't know," and the bet is smaller or doesn't happen at all. Instead, I went in heavy on Kikijo as a "consensus win" and the result was an eighteenth-place finish. That's the price of conviction without humility.

The one thing I'll say in partial defence is that the market as a whole didn't find these horses either. Lavida Adiva went off at 22/1, Ikarak at 40/1, Letos at 22/1. This wasn't a case where the market screamed "look over here" and we ignored it. The entire betting public was largely blind to the placed horses. The only entity that wasn't blind was the favourite's connections, and they turned out to be right.


๐Ÿ”— Pearl — Rebuttal

Pearl: I want to add a structural observation to Mick's honest assessment. When I look at the first four home — Supremely West, Lavida Adiva, Ikarak, Letos — they share a common tactical profile. The race comments tell the story: Supremely West was "held up in midfield" before making headway from five out. Lavida Adiva was "held up in midfield" before making steady headway from two out. Ikarak was "held up in rear" before steady headway from two out. Letos was "prominent" and "travelled strongly" throughout. Three of the first four were held up and came from behind, making their moves late, while the one who raced prominently had the benefit of travelling strongly throughout on ground that suited.

Now compare that with our selections. Kikijo was "prominent, in touch with leaders halfway, weakened on turn before last" — he raced too prominently on ground that didn't suit and emptied. Electric Mason "soon prominent, lost position" — he was in the wrong position from the start. Ace Of Spades was "prominent, not fluent three out, weakened" — again, too forward too soon. Our entire selection set was populated by horses that either raced prominently and couldn't sustain it, or needed different ground to produce their best. The New Course configuration I discussed in the preview — with its longer run-in favouring horses who can grind up the hill on a protracted approach — actually played out exactly as described. We just backed the wrong horses for that profile.

The counterfactual I should have explored is: what happens to Supremely West when you remove Soft ground from the equation? Instead, I asked: what happens to Kikijo when you remove Soft ground? The asymmetry in my questioning was the asymmetry in my error. I investigated the risk to my preferred selection rather than investigating the upside of the horse I was opposing. That's confirmation bias dressed up in causal language, and I should know better.


๐ŸŽ™️ Philip's Synthesis

Philip: Let me try to salvage some educational value from the wreckage. The panel's fundamental error was not analytical — it was epistemological. We confused a specific, ground-dependent form line with a universal truth. Kikijo beat Supremely West by large margins on Soft ground, and we promoted that observation to a law. But it wasn't a law. It was a conditional statement that applied on Soft ground and failed on Good ground. The moment conditions changed, the conclusion evaporated.

There's a deeper lesson about the architecture of our reasoning. Mick built his case from collateral form — his case-based reasoning drew on vivid, memorable margins. Twenty-four lengths and thirty-two lengths are dramatic numbers that lodge in the mind. Pearl's causal framework correctly identified ground as a mediating variable but drew the wrong conclusion about its magnitude. And I, as the supposed synthesist, saw the two analytical streams converge on the same answer and mistook convergence for validation. Three people agreeing on the wrong answer doesn't make it right. That's the textbook definition of groupthink, and I flagged it in my own summary — I said our consensus was "either a sign of genuine insight or a spectacular case of groupthink." Turns out it was the latter.

What would have pointed us toward the winner? Honestly, the market itself. Supremely West was 7/2 favourite for a reason. The Skelton yard had targeted this race specifically. Harry Skelton chose to ride him over Ace Of Spades, which tells you which horse the yard fancied. The official rating of 135 was competitive. And his earlier Cheltenham form — a third at the course — showed he could handle the track. We dismissed all of this as "anchoring on a name and the Skelton brand." Sometimes the crowd is right, and the clever money is stupid.

On the positive side — and there isn't much — the panel's observation about the New Course configuration proved entirely correct. Held-up horses who could grind up the long run-in dominated the finish. We just failed to identify which held-up horses would do the grinding. And Pearl's caution about Absolutely Doyen's five-timer was vindicated — he finished eighth, unable to sustain his unbeaten record at Festival level. But these are crumbs from a very sparse table.


๐Ÿงข Weekend Warrior Review

Philip: And so to the Weekend Warrior, which this week reads less like a speculative flutter and more like a cautionary tale. My pick was Staffordshire Knot at 20/1, the top-weighted Grade 2 winner with Jack Kennedy aboard. I made a stirring case about class prevailing, about Kennedy choosing this horse out of the entire Elliott string, about twelve stone not being an insurmountable burden in a compressed handicap. I even said, with characteristic modesty, that if he landed a blow I'd be insufferable until the Gold Cup.

Well. Staffordshire Knot was pulled up before the last. The race comment is grim: "jumped right on occasions, prominent, lost position before three out, weakening when jumped badly right two out, pulled up before last." Kennedy reported the gelding jumped badly right-handed throughout, and the vet had nothing to report. So this wasn't a fitness issue or a ground issue — the horse simply wouldn't jump straight on the track. He went off at 14/1, shortened significantly from the 20/1 I quoted, so real money came for him, which means I wasn't alone in my delusion. But a pull-up is a pull-up, and no amount of narrative dressing can disguise a horse that refused to co-operate.

The lesson is one I should have tattooed on my forehead by now: top weight in a twenty-four-runner Festival handicap is a structural headwind, not a style choice. The class argument sounded wonderful in the preview, and the connections clearly believed in the horse given the market move, but when a horse is carrying twelve stone in a staying handicap and then adds jumping issues on top, you're fighting gravity. I will not be insufferable until the Gold Cup. I will not be insufferable until the weekend. I will be buying the first round at the bar and hoping everyone forgets by morning.


๐Ÿ“‹ Key Takeaways

  • Ground is not a modifier — it can be a transformer. The panel treated the shift from Soft to Good as a variable that would compress margins, when in fact it fundamentally rewrote the form hierarchy. In future Pertemps reviews, collateral form from different ground conditions must be treated with far greater scepticism, especially when the margins are extreme. Extreme margins on one surface may reflect surface-specific superiority, not absolute class.

  • Beware of narrative capture in consensus picks. When all three panelists converge on the same opposition play — in this case, opposing Supremely West — the convergence itself should trigger a stress test. The panel should ask: "Are we converging because we've independently found the same evidence, or because we're building on each other's assumptions?" Here, Mick's collateral form case fed Pearl's causal framework, which fed Philip's synthesis, creating a closed loop of mutually reinforcing error.

  • The market favourite deserves the presumption of innocence. At a meeting as fiercely competitive as Cheltenham, the favourite is favourite for a reason. The crowd isn't always right, but opposing a 7/2 shot requires more than one line of form — it requires evidence that the horse cannot win under the conditions of the actual race, not just the conditions of its worst runs.

  • Held-up horses thrived on the New Course configuration. The panel's structural analysis of the Thursday course — longer run-in, later hurdle positioning, premium on stamina over tactical speed — was correct. Three of the first four were held up and produced late surges. This is a replicable insight for future New Course handicaps.

  • Layoff horses struggled. Electric Mason (four months off, finished tenth) and the panel's dismissal of freshness as a factor proved costly. Campaign-hardened horses who had been through the qualifying route had the fitness edge in a genuinely run staying handicap.

  • Jockey choice is a signal, not noise. Harry Skelton chose Supremely West over Ace Of Spades from the same yard. Jack Kennedy chose Staffordshire Knot but the horse let him down through jumping. When a top jockey picks one stable companion over another, that's information about the yard's private view, and we underweighted it for Supremely West while overweighting it for Staffordshire Knot.


๐Ÿ’ญ Final Thought

Philip: The philosopher Karl Popper once said that the mark of a genuine theory is its capacity to be proved wrong. Well, our theory about this race — that Supremely West was a false favourite, that Kikijo was the answer, that the collateral form was dispositive — was proved wrong in the most emphatic fashion imaginable. The horse we told you to oppose won by three and a half lengths. The horse we told you to back finished eighteenth. The horse I picked as my longshot didn't finish at all. In the cold light of a Cheltenham evening, that's the game. You study, you reason, you construct your arguments with all the rigour and wit you can muster, and sometimes the horse just runs fast and you look like an idiot. The only honest response is to learn, recalibrate, and come back tomorrow with a better question. Which is precisely what we intend to do. Good evening.


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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

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