December Results 2013

RACING NOTEBOOK

Based on races viewed, Spy’s list of horses worthy of serious consideration next time:

Saturday December 28th:

Newbury Results

In the juvenile hurdle, a strong-travelling Baradari showed he had learned plenty from an undistinguished debut here when twenty-eight lengths behind Calipto at the end of November.

The form from that race is already looking strong; this well-bred French import was beaten too far to directly boost it, but on this evidence could be half-decent.

This time Baradari loomed in the straight and only had to be pushed out to score from moderate opponents. The penalised Cadoudoff did his best under a 10lbs penalty in second. Hurdling debutant Ronaldinho looks the part but his jumping let him down. By Jeremy, the inference could be he failed to get home. It is early days for such a conclusion. If his jumping sharpens-up, he may improve on an easier track and on better ground.

The once-vaunted Mandarin Chase is no longer the race it was. This year, Financial Climate won from a mark of 118 from Faultless Feelings – who jumped impeccably throughout but was unable to quicken on the run-in.

The Grade 1 Challow hurdle was not easy to unravel beforehand as it featured up-and-coming contenders that by and large had been quietly campaigned up to now.

Oscar Rock – behind subsequent Cheltenham winner Ballyalton last time – and Timesremembered – favoured on revised terms with Creepy – headed the market.

It was left to Captain Cutter, a recent Market Rasen winner, to make a successful step up in grade. Dropped out at the rear, stalking the field, he arrived strongly over the last two to pick it up approaching the last. He stayed the trip well to beat Timesremembered and Oscar Rock, whose light went out pretty quickly.

The consistent Whisper gained some well deserved compensation for a couple of narrow defeats in hot handicap company in the Class 2 hurdle. His handicap mark is creeping up, but he seems to be improving with it. Black Thunder, back to hurdles after a soft fall on his chasing debut, did not convince.

Fair play to both McCoy and Stand To Reason for recovering from a near race-ending error at the third-last in the introductory hurdle.

McCoy kept his cool and his mount together, coming back into contention towards the last. Having stepped at the second-last, Wilde Blue Yonder did the same at the last when back in front and apparently all set to win. Whereas McCoy was brilliant on Stand To Reason, Thornton was less so on Wilde Blue Yonder. It was a heavy and sickening fall, and one which may make the horse think twice about the game next time.

Chepstow Results

Deputy Dan drew well clear of his rivals in the maiden hurdle. The winning distance on such a soft surface is often flattering; what it did tell us is that he stays 2m 4f on his head and can gallop all day.

The Grade1 juvenile hurdle was effectively reduced to a field of four (the rag, Arty Campbell having no chance).

Four became three, became two on the run to the last when confirmed mudlark, Le Rocher, made a promising start to his career over here with a hard-fought success.

Kentucky Hyden – said to have thrown his race away at Cheltenham in the paddock last time – made most of the running and went down fighting. Like the winner, the runner-up is proven on heavy ground. Sandown winner Violet Dancer found this company a little too hot.

The slog that was the Welsh National went to Mountainous from Hawkes Point (who may be open to improvement over extreme distances later in the season). The hero was surely top weight Tidal Bay, who has surely advertised possible Grand National claims having run a screamer under the circumstances.

Three came clear in the closing stages of the Lexus, where, head down and giving it his all, Bobs Worth helped turn round the fortune of the Nicky Henderson stable. In cutting back First Lieutenant and Rubi Ball on the run-in, the Gold Cup winner reinstated his position as one of the best chasers around.
December 27th

Kempton Results

Having underperformed at Cheltenham on his British debut behind Ballyglasheen in a race that made only partial sense, Vicenzo Mio strolled home to victory in the Class 3 for juveniles.
He acted very well on ground described as soft to score with ears pricked from a couple of average types in Stephen Hero and Raven’s Tower. French import Astre De La Cour found it all a struggle and was well beaten-off from the home turn.

After chase wins here and at Cheltenham, Dodging Bullets beat his only serious rival, Grandouet in the Grade 2 Wayward Lad Chase.

Taken at face value, a ten length defeat of Grandouet reads well, but Grandouet did fold remarkably quickly and it seems fair to say this did not represent a reproduction of his recent Sandown form. Turning for home it seemed as if he was going at least as well as the winner, but the complexion of the race changed in a stride as Grandouet – who is yet to win over fences – virtually sat down.

The ground seems the only reasonable explanation. Dodging Bullets is getting better all the time over the larger obstacles and provided a quick double for the in-form Paul Nicholls stable.

Mickie (odd name for a mare) plodded home despite being out on her feet in the Class 2 handicap hurdle for mares. She successfully conceded fifteen pounds to the runner-up Cannon Fodder and defied a rise of 7lbs for a length- and-half win at Newbury last time.

Hang around long enough and all the greats get beaten some time or another. It happened to Sprinter Sacre in the Desert Orchid after he made a needlessly extravagant leap on the last of the fences on the side of the course before turning onto the far-side.

Two stuffy jumps followed (got in tight) and just as Fago and a chasing Sire De Grugy were getting away, Barry Geraghty (not a man to overreact) called it a day before the next.

Hardly believing his luck, Jamie Moore kicked Sire De Grugy on to beat eleven-year-old Oiseau De Nuit. Although it looked unlikely beforehand, if ever Sire De Grugy was to beat Sprinter Sacre – on this ground, and after a well-publicised setback to the unbeaten and generally acknowledged champion – this was likely to have been the day.

It remains to be seen if we will see Sprinter Sacre in action again, and if we do, whether he will ever be quite the same horse. He did look somewhat sorry for himself afterwards and initial reports suggest he returned with an irregular heartbeat. Great credit must go to Geraghty for acting so swiftly under such difficult circumstances.

As if to emphasise his overall brilliance, Barry Geraghty gave Ma Filleule the ride of a lifetime in the Class 2 handicap chase. It was X-rated stuff in these conditions, but once headed over the last, Geraghty drove the mare back to the front from Valaroso. As a race it is unlikely to be referred to again for any other reason other than as an example of outstanding jockeyship.

At the end of two days of racing that featured more than one perplexing result, Three Kingdoms inched out Vibrato Valtat, who was travelling oh so well for so long in the Class 3 handicap hurdle.

Second to yesterday’s disappointment Vaniteux at Sandown, having gone so close in such a hot handicap, means Vibrato Valtat has advertised form that already looked strong.

December 26th:

Kempton Results

At least they raced, but the ground was soft bordering on heavy. On the face of it with his main rivals underperforming big-style, Vaniteux’s failure to land the Class 2 novice hurdle was disappointing.

Champagne At Tara refused to settle and despite the best efforts of A P McCoy had run his race well before the home straight. Dubai Prince (such an easy winner at Leicester and Group class on the Flat), was snuffed out like the proverbial candle early in the straight.

Vaniteux’s nemesis proved to be the hurdles. He got half of them right but those he got wrong cost him valuable impetus and ground. His failure to negotiate the last properly when staging a rally meant all chance was gone.

Having created such a favourable impression at Sandown, it is premature to write him off. Kempton may not have suited and he is in good hands.

Amore Alato caused something of a shock but he came into this on the upgrade and, although dangerous to take this win at face value, he deserves respect in similar company until he proves otherwise.

In second, Fascino Rustino had been beaten a long way in a good novice event at Newbury that was won by Wilde Blue Yonder. Even so, this represented major improvement. In third, Sgt Reckless had finished behind the winner at Wincanton before winning here next time, so who knows – maybe the form is half-decent.

Loose Chips kept up a strong gallop in the handicap chase, holding on in the face of a furious sprint from Ohio Gold on the run-in that would have prevailed in another couple of strides.

Newcomer to fences, Urbain De Sivola made up a trio that was clear. He has shaped with promise and will not always face such a searching test.

The other chase debutant, Western Warhorse, looked like a crackpot. Charging to post and then getting loose, his withdrawal must have been welcomed by all concerned. Over hurdles at Newbury, his rider had been blamed for making too much use of him when trying to make all over three miles; however, on this showing, he looks his own worst enemy.

The Grade 1 Feltham looked sub-standard beforehand and so it proved. Sent off in front, Annacotty galloped legless rivals into submission. Green Flag plugged on in second. At as Newbury, Third Intention found little from a long way out. The favourite, Just A Par got very tired and eventually finished fourth of five.

As expected, the Grade 1 Christmas Hurdle developed into a match between Champion Hurdle pretenders, My Tent Or Yours and The New One. On this sharp track, against a proven stayer that has won over further, conditions ought to have suited My Tent Or Yours better, but the result was tight and a mistake at the last arguably cost The New One dear.

n front from three out, The New One met the last a length in front from his already closing rival. The New One dipped on landing and My Tent Or Yours saw it out to the line. The impression formed at the last was that he was coming to win his race in any case. According to McCoy, the winner needs to improve again, but is getting there all the time.

Neither look outstanding Champion candidates at this stage but they are pretty good. Come Cheltenham in March that may be enough for one of them to prevail.

Silviniaco Conti, the horse that arguably was about to win – or certainly go close – in this year’s Cheltenham Gold Cup before falling at the top of the hill, had his big day in the King George.

After finishing only third in the Betfair at Haydock, this was another masterly piece of training from Paul Nicholls. Having been in the first two throughout, when it came to a war of attrition, Silviniaco Conti, who with the exception of the third-last had jumped brilliantly all the way, outstayed a tiring Cue Card.

In trying to make all, Cue Card made a valiant attempt, handling these fences with ease. Having enjoyed an uncontested lead at Haydock, his rivals were alive to the dangers of letting him slip clear a second time. Although harried by the winner all the way, he looked to have burnt him off on the run to the last.

Then his stride shortened and although leaping the last safely, he could offer no more. The Gold Cup trip is likely to find him out.

Despite a couple of minor errors, Al Ferof kept on in atrocious conditions and, although this trip may be at the furthest point of his stamina, he did stay. Two-and-half would be right up his alley.

Stuttering his way round to a degree, Mount Benbulben stayed on for fourth. The big disappointment was Dynaste, who was never in a satisfactory rhythm at any stage and was never going to offer any kind of threat. He jumped sluggishly, getting underneath several fences and was niggled from a long way out. It may have been the ground but this was nowhere near the form he is capable of.

Not everything went according to plan at Leopardstown, the other big venue of the day.

Clondaw Court scrambled home in the maiden hurdle; heavily-backed Analifet pulled up in the juvenile, leaving Guitar Pete to underline the worth of his second to subsequent flop Royal Irish Hussar at Cheltenham. Arkle favourite, Champagne Fever was beaten a total of over fourteen lengths in the Grade 1 novice chase and is another to blow apart preconceptions
Saturday December 21st:

Ascot results

Very soft ground tempers enthusiasm for the results. Easter Day won the four-runner graduation chase nicely enough and will no doubt face a step up in grade next time.

Without Newbury winner Celestial Halo, At Fishers Cross faced an easier task in the Long Walk Hurdle.

Unbeaten over hurdles before blotting his copybook that day, such was the manner of his lackadaisical showing last time, and his worrying error two out, at odds-on punters were reluctant to support him.

Once again, At Fishers Cross jumped tentatively – more like a novice on his first run – reserving his worst mistake for the last when losing his undercarriage and Tony McCoy. He was beaten anyway but does not look right in himself at present.

Revelling in the soft ground, and winning this Grade 1 for the second year in succession, although not foot-perfect himself, Reve De Sivola made all. Salubrious was another to blunder away any chance at the second-last when looking as if he might present a threat. He did recover and stay on for second.

The handicapper seems to have nailed Houblon Des Obeaux to the cross after his win in the United Chase here in November.

However, in a weak Class 1 handicap (Hennessy winner Triolo D’ Alene was a late defector), he was able to dominate, despite picking up four faults at more than one fence. He is most effective on the soft and did put in his best leaps when it mattered. His current mark of 152 is plenty high enough; a revision will surely take future tasks into the mission impossible category.

Cedre Bleu bore down on Houblon Des Obeaux at the last, but when push came to shove was content to take a lead.

On ground that was officially soft bordering on heavy, carrying top weight of 11st 12lbs from a mark of 151, French four-year-old import, Ptit Zig took the honours in the Class 1 Ladbroke when chasing home the bottom weight, Willow Saviour.

We may not see the runner-up in a handicap again, although in any case his trainer considers him more of a future chaser than a hurdler.

As for the winner, he recorded a hat-trick that was initiated at this track in November from a mark of 115, supplemented it at lowly Musselburgh from 121 and today smashed 130 in one of the most competitive handicap hurdles of the season.

Ever-consistent Flaxen Flare was third despite the fact he is handicapped to the hilt. In fourth, Chris Pea Green ran well enough (Chatterbox should have been alongside but surely floundered in the ground – he was never travelling). The complexion of the race was altered to a degree when Recession Proof came down on the far-side, interfering with several runners that were already feeling the strain.

December 20th:

Ascot Results

It didn’t take Nicky Henderson long to get on the score sheet.

Back in action after a pottery round of chasing at Kempton, Royal Boy, third in the Tolworth in January, cruised to victory in the Class 3 over 2m 6f from stable mate Big Hands Harry and Pleasant Company.

Responsible for the first two and the fourth, the Henderson stable is currently flying.

Irving is gradually working his way up the novice ladder. Useful in Germany, he took the Grade 2 but it would have been tight had not Prince Siegfried crashed out at the last when holding every chance.

Volnay de Thaix suffered a rare reversal at present for the Henderson yard when only second (would have finished third). This assignment was much harder than the two he has so far faced (particularly the egg-and-spoon contest he was gifted at Newbury last time).With easy Aintree winner, Splash Of Ginge a close third, this has to be regarded as strong form.

Coming back in trip (2m 3f), Fox Appeal, who was second in November to the smart Wonderful Charm at Wincanton, came clear of a couple of useful opponents in Raya Star and Mr Mole in the Grade 2 chase.
December 18th

Newbury Racing

Apparently unfancied by his stable when only fourth on debut behind Calipto, Actival and Chocala at this track on Hennessy Friday, Dawalan was very much the market order in the Class 4 hurdle this time round.

Very well-bred – related to several high class members of the Aga Khan’s dynasty – Dawalan only had to be shaken up to win in the manner of a stayer rather than a quickener. His jumping was sketchy early but he did warm to the task, although he gave the second-last plenty of air. This was probably not a strong novice event.

In second, Rayak came into this with only routine form. In third, Certification looks a useful recruit (J P Ferguson has several rejects from Mark Johnston, all of whom have acquitted themselves with promise over hurdles). They finished at long intervals, which, on soft ground that became softer as more rain fell, was to become a feature of the day.

Josses Hill became another winner for the Henderson yard when pulling away on the run-in in the Class 4 for older horses. This was his first effort over timber and it augers well for the future.

Communicator was another to please on his hurdling debut. Proven on soft ground on the Flat, he jumped well enough and saw his race out. He should open his account before too long.

In third, having occupied the same position to Wilde Blue Yonder last month, Tiqris lends credence to the worth of the race. A Hare Breath was fourth – it was then twenty-five lengths back to the next finisher.

Hadrian’s Approach, an early causality in the Hennessy, was nursed round by Barry Geraghty to beat three rivals in the Class 2 graduation chase. Jumping may not be the horse’s strong suit, but on a day when the Henderson stable shone, the jockey ought to take his fair share of the credit.

The Henderson/Geraghty combination was narrowly denied a four-timer when Tistory was run out of the Class 4 novice on the run-in by Brother Brian.

December 13th:

Cheltenham Results

Oscar Whisky may have won the Class 2 novice chase but the plaudits have to go to Wonderful Charm, who was conceding 8lbs.

They dominated from the start, pulling well clear of their three rivals although Close House was in touch in third before taking a heavy fall at the top of the hill. With little between the two main protagonists at the last, they jumped it well but the weight sealed it in Oscar Whisky’s favour.

They are two smart chasers in the making, although, both Jewson-bound, Wonderful Charm appeals as the better prospect.

The Skyfarmer racked up his fourth straight win in the Class 3 handicap hurdle – his first venture outside novice company. His present rating of 123 will be adjusted but he looks a decent prospect.

Lyvius tested him in second, the pair well clear of their rivals. Obviously their fates rest with the assessor but they were certainly much better than today’s rivals.

Hennessy third, Theatre Guide looked to have his rivals stone cold for most of the way in the Grade 3 handicap – a lesser contest than Newbury’s showpiece two weeks ago. Only raised 2lbs, he jumped well throughout but the writing was on the wall at the last when he was joined by strong-travelling Monbeg Dude.

Unable to quicken, possibly Theatre Guide needs even further than today’s extended three miles to be seen at his best. Monbeg Dude is no slouch and in receipt of 9lbs, it was no disgrace for him to beat the runner-up.

The winner’s target is the Grand National. Sixteen lengths away in third, Pigeon Island is now racing from a reasonable mark although needs his sights to be lowered.

Sunnyhillboy rolled back the years when benefitting from a vintage McCoy drive in the Class 2 handicap hurdle.

The runs of the Philip Hobbs trained duo, Return Spring and So Fine in second and third, further underlines the cracking current form of the stable.

Garde La Victoire certainly looks the part and his first defeat over hurdles in the Class 3 should not be taken too literally. A steady early gallop was not ideal and although he powered to the front at the turn, Ballyalton ran him down on the sprint to the line.

The runner-up – who still has something to learn – will get two-and-half on his head. We saw two nice novices here, both of whom are likely to return for the Festival.

The run of Cocktails At Dawn, who finished third after a year’s absence, suggests he is a winner in waiting.

December 14th:

Cheltenham Results

Winner of a Ludlow claimer, Ballyglasheen created a shock in the Triumph Hurdle Trial, achieving form that so far did not seem on his radar.

After a searching pace, he joined issue at the last and toughed it out. Despite winning an egg and spoon event at Sandown which told us little, Kentucky Hyden had the best credentials based on three spins on soft ground in France. He tried hard to peg the winner back, but in what became an uphill walk to the line was narrowly thwarted.

Hurdling debutant Commissioned shaped well in third. Lightly raced on the Flat, he hurdled proficiently in the main and should open his account soon. Vicenzo Mio travelled like the winner for a long way but failed to quicken from the last.

It was a case of perm any one of three in the four-horse novice chase. The three principals had met last time with

Shutthefrontdoor seemingly handed the best chance today at revised weights. Sloppy jumping on the last circuit when the pace upped meant he was the first beaten.

That left Sam Winner and penalised Le Bec to scrap it out – Sam Winner emerging the better, opening his fencing account under attritional circumstances.

Eastlake is developing into a reliable and consistent handicapper. Rated 140, he jumped well and stuck on gamely from the last to win the Grade 2 handicap from French Opera and Astracad. Not many in the field appeal as well-handicapped and it could be life will be tough for Eastlake from here on. However, he does have the right attitude and looks ready for a step up in class.

Only a five-year-old, Kings Palace is beginning to look like a horse brimming with promise after an all-the-way beating of his rivals in the Grade 2 over three miles.

Being picky, it is easy to poke holes in the form of his win. With his nearest market rivals, Saint Roque (looked as if this run came too quickly after last week’s Sandown effort and suffered a tired fall at the last), and Milan Bound never able to land a blow, in beating the rank outsider, Masters Hill, the bare reading does the winner no favours.

However, it does not tell the full story. Kings Palace is an accomplished jumper that makes it all look effortless. He could be top class one day either over hurdles or fences – if not both.

Double Ross took the Grade 3 handicap chase on his sixth start over fences. Despite a mistake, he came back to clear away and then appeared to falter on the run-in. Cantlow closed in second (another to recover from a jolting error and arguably unlucky), ahead of Colour Squadron, who was undone by a 7lbs rise since finishing second in the Paddy Power. He is yet to win over fences.

The cream rose to the top in the Grade 2 hurdle, The New One producing the finishing kick when it mattered to defy a gallant Zarkandar, who rallied on the run-in.

The New One only did what the form book suggested he should have done (certainly over two miles) and Zarkandar (better over two-and-a-half) has run to form in second. The winner is now a fair enough favourite for the Champion Hurdle.

Not for the first time, More Of That impressed – this time in the Grade 2 Relkeel Hurdle. With only three rivals, including French Champion Hurdle winner Gemix (hopelessly at sea over these hurdles), once again, his class was obvious. Slipstreaming Salubrious, he picked him up with something to spare. He continues to progress and, like Kings Palace, is another on the day we have yet to see the best of.

Royal Irish Hussar emptied very quickly at Doncaster in the Grade 2 novice hurdle, not looking the same horse we saw last time at Cheltenham. Making the running as usual, the writing was on the wall some way out. Rather than find his second wind, this time he faded away tamely.

Fox Norton, a neck behind Royal Irish Hussar at Market Rasen before the winner of that day began his upward climb to potential stardom, held on narrowly from hurdling debutant Broughton – another ex-Mark Johnston inmate from the Flat that has joined the Ferguson stable and looks to have a future at this game.

Saturday December 7th:

Sandown Results

Vaniteux’ s win over Vibrato Valtat in the novice hurdle represented smart form.

The runner-up, looking all set to collect when popping the last and apparently in command, had previously finished eleven lengths behind Quick Jack in a competitive Cheltenham handicap. However, under a confident ride Vaniteux quickened in the style of a smart recruit on the run-in, winning with plenty in hand. He looks like another powerful addition to the Henderson yard.

Saphir Du Rheu, the only four-year-old in the line-up, routed the opposition in the Class 2 Pertemps qualifier over 2m 6f. With Home Run and Whisper filling the places (although tagged by the handicapper they are useful sorts), this had the makings of a solid event.

The way the winner cruised to the front and then dispensed with his rivals indicates this step up in trip has brought about plenty of improvement. Currently rated 130 – a mark about to become history – he could be a cut above this level and will likely stay three miles.

The Henry VIII Chase, the first of the Grade 1’s, went to experienced novice Hinterland. Second to Captain Conan in this event last year, he maintained his jumping whilst several fiddled away their chances. Ultimately the best hurdler in the field, Grandouet, provided the biggest challenge. A faller on debut, he handled these fences well. Taquin Du Seuil never looked that happy. On this evidence he found the trip too sharp and probably the ground too lively. A mistake on the far-side did not help, but he did not look an Arkle winner today.

After the run of Vibrato Valtat in the opener, Deep Trouble further franked the Quick Jack form with an extraordinary win in the Listed handicap.

Scything through the field in smooth fashion, he apparently had events under control approaching the last until running down the hurdle, drifting right across the track and leaving his rider without irons.

In gathering him together and keeping him going, this was a great effort from Leighton Aspell. Urbain De Sivola posted a promising first run of the season in second ahead of harshly weighted River Maigue, who needs the handicapper to relent somewhat.

Sire De Grugy had his day in the sun when grabbing the Tingle Creek. A slight fluff five out failed to stop him bearing down on his rivals at the Pond fence, after which he was soon in control.

This was probably him at his best at a track that suits. His record at Cheltenham ( where so far he has failed to shine) means, Sprinter Sacre or not, the Champion Chase may not be his race. Somersby ran on after a mistake five out to grab second from Captain Conan.

The last race – a class 2 handicap ambitiously called the London National – provided brutal viewing in one way or another. Won by There’s No Panic, it will go down as the last leg of a five-timer for the Paul Nicholls yard after two important wins at Aintree and three high-profile successes here.

Aintree Results

Dropped in trip to two miles, Splash Of Ginge made all, drawing clear down the straight in the maiden hurdle.

The opposition may not have been that strong (hurdling debutant Gabrial The Great finished very tired in second), but he was an emphatic winner.

The fairly exposed by now Gitane Du Berlais – behind Guitar Pete in Ireland – made the most of a soft opportunity to beat Mystery Drama in the Listed juvenile. Like the first winner, she made all without being seriously challenged. A clever piece of placing, her win pays credit to Royal Irish Hussar (who beat Guitar Pete with some ease at Cheltenham).

Course winner, Unioniste dished it out to more experienced rivals in the Listed chase. Only five, he made one slight error but in the end outstayed Wishfull Thinking.

Being honest, with The Giant Bolster unseating and Katenko, Our Mick and Wayward Prince all misfiring, it is tempting to wonder what the winner actually achieved. However, Unioniste obviously likes it here, stays and jumps pretty well and should be noted if back here fresh in April.
Friday December 6th:

Sandown Results

Lightly-raced on the Flat and easy winner of his only race over timber at Plumpton, Violet Dancer supplemented that success in the Class 3 novice hurdle.

He should not be dismissed in better company as despite a speedy pedigree, he seems to have taken to this game. His trainer – not normally one to claim his geese are swans – speaks highly of him.

Sweet Deal jumped well on his debut until a couple of novicey errors on the back. Always pushed along to get on terms, he finished a tired fourth.

Second to easy Newbury winner Valdez at Exeter, The Italian Yob defied top weight and a mark of 125 in the Class 3 novice handicap. Feature of his win was an accomplished round of jumping – he never put a foot wrong. This asset will stand him in good stead in this sphere.

There may be another day for Royal Guardsman who, although no star, would have finished closer but for a couple of errors (one at the second-last that was bad enough to put him on the floor. He did well to recover and finish fourth). This was only his second attempt over the big obstacles and three miles round a lesser track should suit.

The Grade 2 novice hurdle looked a match between recent Cheltenham winner Saint Roque and impressive Ascot scorer Beat That.

Both were run down by Killala Quay, who was beaten in a tough handicap at Cheltenham last time and took advantage of a last flight blunder by Beat That. He may have won in any case.

Beat That is a lovely looking big son of Milan but he remains weak. It could be we will have to wait until next season for him to show his best. Without the luxury of being able to dictate in this better company, he was not slick or athletic enough when it mattered. He led approaching the last but landed on all fours, dropping back to third but rallying on the run-in.

Saint Roque made the running until headed before the last and on this occasion could only plug on. He looks more of a three mile chaser.

Only three turned out for the Class 1 chase, won by the outsider of the pack, Vino Griego. Despite a mistake two out, he had the pace to dismiss long time leader Rolling Aces, who jumps well enough but lacks a turn of foot.

Any chance Harry Topper had was sacrificed by a sequence of jumping errors.

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Membership costs £1995 a month  or £995 per month and a £5 per point profit share. There are no long term commitments, so you always know how much you are in pocket. You are in control. And my reputation is on the line.

A final thought…

It is totally different from our previous one bet a day odds to service. On our  dry run with real cash and a real bookmaker this year (2007/8) the result was a fantastic  £85,741.50  profit in 46 weeks! Yet again – we were banned by the bookie (Betfred.com). “You are the most succesful punter percentage wise Betfred have ever had”  … Dont Believe us? We are willing to give you documented proof: Betfred’s letter closing our acount and Betfred’s statement showing, day by day, each bet, its winnings and losses and the final return – £85,741.50  profit in 46 weeks! Just email in and we’ll send one over.

Sounds too good to be true? Well…

After officially launching the text service on 5th June we stand at over £300,000.00 profit at £100 per point stakes since launch. To see details of this take a look at our results page to see the weekly report.

Please Note! To maximise returns from this service you will benefit by having accounts with as many bookmakers as possible so you can always secure the best prices. Using telephone or internet betting accounts you will be able to act swiftly because most of these bets will shorten quickly. ” target=”_blank”>Click here to check for bookmakers you may want accounts with. 

Spy turns quizmaster

Note from Bob

Spy is a very talented odds compiler, race reader and Professional Gambler who amongst his other sins was paid by one of the major bookies to price up races using his wealth of experience.  And of course the information he picked up doing that was invaluable to help us bet many good winners!

We ‘ve worked together for 25 years with one main common bond.

Which horse will win today at a backable price?

Spy is also an author and loves writing. So while I’m pouring over figures and chatting to other connections on the phone Spy will hopefully entertain you as well as point you  in the right direction form time to time

Bob Rothman[/vc_column_text]

Spy_235x156BACK FOR MORE …

For those of you that recognise the style – I have returned. It was a case of a phone call from out of the blue from Bob, a brief exchange as we brought each other up to date. There were tales of near misses and hard luck and here we are, back in business.

Not that we ever went away. We just drifted apart. Of course, racing continued as it always does; they will be calling out the results when the first bomb drops.

There are harder ways to make a living than backing horses. There is professional boxing, wrestling crocodiles or trying to unravel the secrets of the universe to name but three.

Sometimes, for us so-called betting professionals, racing can seem unbelievably cruel. It is the only business I can think of that can chew and spit out so much wasted working time without return. Worse, add to this the cold rain of it actually costing you money in the event of a losing day (often through no fault of ours – at least according to us), and you have the heartbreaking package that threatens pro-punters with sleeping under bridges at night.

Over the past couple of years, I have come across several ex-professionals claiming to have finished with the business. They have the shell-shocked look of soldiers returning from the trenches. In between howling at the moon or snorting deep into pints of bitter, they claim the game is gone. There are too many handicaps on a Saturday; bookmakers have ruined it with an overkill of fixtures. The Racing Post is unaffordable, let alone RUK – the whole business is hopeless! Yet … hold on, what’s that peeping out of their back pocket? Could it be a racing paper? In truth it’s a bit like the line in that song by the Eagles … you know the one: Hotel California: You can check out but you can never leave. Racing is one of those pursuits. Those that master the rules invariably find it is what they do best. Therefore, whether they like it or not, it is something they stick with.

Right now, sticking with anything is hard. That is the resultant bite of a recession. Everything becomes that bit tougher. Profit margins are trimmed; expenses need to be controlled. There is less time to observe niceties or suffer fools. Deadwood has to be cut away. Success requires more effectiveness and efficiency. A recession sorts out the men from the boys. Of course if you are an energy supplier you can merely put up your prices. If in government, you can start another war or create another department or quango. For those of us on the cutting edge, those for whom there is no such lifeline, it is a case of sink or swim; play or pass; win or lose.

Betting for a living is a fragile pursuit, likely to crumble in a pile of dust at any given moment. It exposes all our weaknesses. The timid remain in the shadows; the bold often fall on their swords.

There are numerous sayings associated with gambling, most shrewd and accurate. None more so than the one that states: you will never win if betting with scared money. If you cannot afford to lose in a business overshadowed by such a grim prospect, you have a problem. You tend to back off; approaching each transaction as if it will be your last should it go wrong. Most gamblers I know right now are muttering Private Fraser words of doom. Recently someone told me how you can always recover lost money but not your confidence. That is so true. Once your confidence is shot – so are you.

I could go on with all this negativity. Somehow, against the current odds, I am still betting and still winning – well, now and then.

These days I tend to lay more horses than I used to. After all, despite all the torpedoes launched in their direction, bookmakers remain afloat by doing just that. Right from the moment a horse leaves the warmth and safety of its box to travel to the races, plenty of things can wrong. It can have a bad road journey – particularly in these clammy conditions – or an equally unfortunate passage in the race itself. Jockeys can make mistakes, the ground can suddenly change or uneven watering can have an adverse effect. By definition, winning is harder than losing. This gives the house an advantage. For the punter, like the felon planning a crime, everything has to go right; the layer only needs one component to go awry and, hard luck story or not, they collect.

Not that I am a poacher turned gamekeeper, but needs must. And I am the first to admit that laying a horse is not as rewarding spiritually as backing a winner. However, I am not the Maharishi Mahesh Yogi or the Dalai Lama. I have a mortgage to fund; a wolf is pacing outside my door. Satisfaction is not a currency I can use.

Lately, I have used all my racing expertise to press the right buttons. Actually, luck has not played a part here. I used to provide the Track Notes to this site and a similar approach has paid dividends. Distinguishing good races from not so good is crucial. It allows one to spot the weak link in any case for an otherwise watertight favourite or to support the argument for the overpriced contender. And here, to an extent, bookmakers become victims of their own greedy system. For in their clamour to create a casino atmosphere in their precious offices, they themselves are at full stretch to keep pace with all that happens and therefore prone to error. Cue the professional punter who, like the big cat in the undergrowth, can bide its time, discarding that which is superfluous and concentrating on its unsuspecting prize.

When betting, to maximise profitability, you need to buy when others sell and sell when others buy. You increase your chances of so doing if you pay attention to what you see and keep notes. I believe Phil Bull once said: Place more emphasis on your eyes and less on your ears. These days, tips are aplenty. But, reflected in the market, they quickly enter the public domain. Invariably they are no longer secrets and in most cases do not represent insider information. I would go one-step further and question how many so-called snippets of information are even that. They are more often only someone’s opinion.

There is nothing wrong with opinion. However, if that opinion is widely known and therefore factored into the market, from a betting viewpoint it loses its appeal.

So Bob and I return with Spy take two. Our ethos remains as it was. It has seen us in good stead thus far. The intention is to start where we left off.

To be fair, between us we had a pretty decent and comprehensive website back in the day. Somehow, it became mist in the ether. It is re-forming after a deep breath.

It is mid-summer (no apologies for that obvious statement). There is plenty of mileage left in the Flat season …

Goodwood starts tomorrow. York follows in August. Over the coming weeks we will see what we can do with what they throw our way.

Goodwood’s card looks tough. Maybe we can start with Producer in the 3.05. Seven furlongs is his trip, whereas likely favourite Aljamaaheer (whom he has already beaten at levels and has to concede weight here) is arguably better over a mile. Both are at their best when the ground is on the fast side, which at the time of writing it is. Hold on … That was two minutes ago. It has turned black outside and the end of the world seems imminent. I am sixty miles from Goodwood, but rain is currently hammering the ground outside my window.

I will leave you with Producer as a maybe. Let’s see what tomorrow brings. If I wait any longer to send this, there may be no column left!

I am not too sure what will follow – possibly a trimmed down version of Track Notes tomorrow evening.

In the meantime, welcome back …

Bob Rothman Client Reviews

A massive £1,392.00.

From: Mr J E P, North Yorkshire,

Dear Bob,

Over the last weeks, since joining you and betting “Level Stakes” have not made the amounts as outlined in your weekly report. This is basically due to the small betting bank I have as a 79 year old pensioner.

However, Saturday results proved to be the best returns I have ever had. I decided to try a “lucky 15” and as all four came good my £2.00 x 15 = £30.00 returned a massive £1,392.00.

The odds of 9/2, 9/2, 3/1 and evens obtained with William Hills did the business.

Can we have some more please!!!

Kindest Regards

P.s Just think what £150 would have done?

Ladbrokes paid for this car but sadly limited the account to "schoolboy" size bets after!
Ladbrokes paid for this car but sadly limited the account to “schoolboy” size bets after!

Results: What Clients Say …

“…the best thing I have ever been involved in…” (G.U Dorset)

Making money from our tipping service is possible with only a small investment – the numbers speak for themselves, and lots of people are making good money from following my advice.

This is your chance to make some real money from what is a simple service. And the best part is, you have absolutely nothing to risk by responding to my invitation today, as you’re fully covered by my no-risk money-back guarantee.

Still not sure? Look at what my clients say and imagine how you would feel if you won more than £300 from your very first investment in our service.

Saturday Dec 6th

A stunning day … a couple of text mesages just in! ….

Hi Bob,

Fabulous day. Even though I missed the each way double on Fabula and Three Ducks I cleared £2069 for the day using your recommendations and also putting several in each way cross doubles (my favourite bookie buster)

I only use £20 each way cross doubles so there is no real damage if they dont work but they pay handsomely when they do!

Regards

Richard


A grand each way between 11/2 and 9/2 then price collapsed.

A £12,000 day, pays for our holiday!

Laurie


What  a day! well done

Laurie


Hi Bob

Got the first leg, made £3,000 then decided not to blow 4 grand on the second leg and settled for a £1,500 win bet. Happy with that! Top Tipping!

Laurie


U da man!

thxx

Moens


I just had to put up this wonderful letter I received from Mat … You can imagine how it made me smile because I love to hear any story about my clients winning money off the greedy bookies! Like all my letters it’s 100% genuine and a copy is kept on file which can be inspected by appointment.

Yes it’s true he joined me on a good week  (halfway through week 25) and it always helps when you start with a flyer and have the bookies money in your pocket from the word go. Maybe he wouldn’t have been so delighted if he’d started during one of our occasional bad weeks so I’m pleased he got off to a good start.

Obviously I always want us to have a winning week but we have to be realistic and appreciate that we don’t always win. But we’ve had more good weeks than bad weeks and clients who stayed with me for the long term have had the opportunity to enjoy some spectacular profits. Over the first 25 weeks we’ve had 20 winning weeks and 5 losing weeks. But every month has shown a profit and to date we are up over £200,000 to £100 per point stakes!

And although Mat hasn’t bet before he’s certainly not inexperienced in the business of life. I discovered after asking him for permission to use his letter that he’s already a successful businessman looking for an extra edge (you can see from his letter he has pretty good marketing skills) so I imagine he can spot a good deal when he sees one!

I hope you enjoy reading his letter as much as I did, sadly  the limitations of the text formatting of this website doesn’t do it justice and it looks even better in its orginal format!

Regards Bob


30th Nov

Bob,

Thanks for reply.

Of course you can use my comments in marketing your service – would expect you to.

I own a couple of small supermarkets and so work the usual 70 hour week – a bit like you by the looks of things.

Always looking for an ‘entreprenerial opportunity’ and this has to be it!!!

Thanks for the info re: stakes – I do have available 1000 points at £20 pt but trying to keep feet on ground is difficult!!

Impatiently want to get to the next tier asap but will probably wait until bank can last a few weeks of losses

You dont know next weeks lotto numbers do you????

Best wishes

Matt


I have over £2000 in the pot now AFTER PLAYING WITH SOMEONE ELSES MONEY FOR A WEEK!!!!!

28th Nov 08

Dear Bob,

I am writing to congratulate you on what has been an amazing first week with your company – and all on a free trial!!

I joined your membership last Thursday with a small bank – only a few hundred pounds in the pot – ‘Just in case’!!!!!

I have never bet before and didn’t even really understand the betting exchanges but after joining a few got the hand of them quite quickly.

I had previously tried two other ‘foolproof’ systems – one that wasn’t worth the money it was printed on, and the other a trial with a computer program that ‘calculates winners’ 50% of the time.  – Of course they do!.

I rang your office on Wed 19th Nov and was met with a confident, clear and well spoken lady called Kerri who explained everything – I was sold by the end of the conversation and so using my FREE TRIAL I joined asap.

BY FRIDAY I WAS IN PROFIT!!!

I have been in profit almost everyday and I only started betting £5 a point.

By Monday 24th Nov I had increased my stake to £10 a point as I had become so confident in your system – I have over £2000 in the pot now AFTER PLAYING WITH SOMEONE ELSES MONEY FOR A WEEK!!!!!

Today Friday 28th Nov has been another cracker, your first tip won easily, so did the second, the third was in a winning position but lost and the fourth won!

ALL ON A FREE TRIAL!!!

Two of my best returns were ISSAQUAH which won a clear £625 and DOCTOR DAVID today cleared £350.

Such is my luck that I even backed SNOOPY LOOPY last sat AGAINST KAUTO STAR and it won at 40-1 although this was pure luck and not a sensible bet!

I like your system for many reasons:

  • It is clear and simple
  • It follows a clear staking plan that anyone can follow and is fully proven over 6 months – the results prove that
  • You certainly have some seriously accurate background on each runner as even the losers ONLY JUST LOSE!!
  • You seem just as excited to win as we are
  • I like the £1 point scheme as it shows confidence in your own service

To summarise:

In depth weekly reports

Super service and support

Spectacular resultsAmazing win/loss ratio

Quietly confident bets placed

Unusually high return

very pleasing trial run

Happy happy happy

Bob one final comment    NO BRAINER

PS Please don’t retire just yet!!!!

Best Wishes

Mat


Letter from a Founder Member

Another wonderful letter received from another  delighted client. Alan is one of the founder members of this Service and by contrast to Mat above the day he joined we didn’t have any winners, ouch!  (we had two placed horses which we bet each way)  … and the next day not a single winner again! double ouch!  (although 4 of the 5 bets were placed and we showed a tiny profit after betting them each way)

Alan was clearly a man with an abundance of stamina and vision and was able to see that the selections were sound … and I’m delighted he’s been a member of the team ever since. The accumulated profit to £100 per point has climbed from £14,862.50 at the end of that week to an astonishing £200,000+ today!

A you read Alans colourful narrative you’ll appreciate that betting Professionally isn’t easy! And when he talks about being in awkward places as a plumber I know exactly what he means having had to crawl under floorboards when helping out my uncle (a builder) whilst  refurbishing this house! It isn’t easy to get back out or answer your phone in a hurry I can tell you! You have to be on call at a moment’s notice and the hardest part of the “job” is often getting on at the best prices!

Sadly todays bookmakers are not lihe bookie of old when men like the original Willam Hill founded the bookmaking firm in 1934  and they would stand bets of £50,000.  I have no idea what the equivalent bet would be today but it’s a huge amnount of money,  probably more like £500,000! … shameful when you discover how hard it can be to get a few thousand on today. Even bets in hundreds can get knocked back when the bookies discover you are shrewd and taking them to the cleaners!


your service …

 far exceeds any other tipping service I’ve used

November 28th 2008

Dear Bob

My comments on your excellent service.

I have been with you since Friday June 13th.  I run your service like a business and probably spend around an hour and a half in the evenings typing all the information of that days racing onto my computer.  I just have four betting accounts at the moment, although I plan to open another one when funds allow and, when my wife whinges about the amount of time I spend in my study, I pacify her with one of those crisp £50 notes the bookies have so generously donated!

I have lost in the region of £20.000 in the last 3 years by joining tipsters and betting and had given up betting for 6 months before your missive arrived in the post and with two weeks free trial and a very reasonable subscription decided to give it a go, as they say.

I work as a plumber and very often find myself grovelling around in a confined space covered in the unmentionable when the phone starts bleeping (I have two phones – one is exclusive for your texts) and I then have to extricate myself as quickly as possible, run down to the van, check the meeting and the time together with the horses number (cos in your haste sometimes all is not as it seems!) and phone the bookies while an astonished home owner is staring at me mesmerised.

One aspect of your service I particularly like is a text after the race saying the horse won or in your parlance – bolted up.  As I am working and not prepared to use a mobile to access the results it brings a smile to my face and makes the day a whole lot more enjoyable.

As to winnings: my wife and I were staying with her brother and his wife down in Cornwall in September.  On the day we drove down, Thursday 11th September you gave out 5 bets, 2 wins and a 2nd and for the 5 days we were there you gave out a further 8 winners, needless to say we were all pretty amazed.  If that wasn’t fortunate enough on Friday 22nd August we drove up to Canterbury for my sister’s wedding.  As far as I was concerned I had taken the weekend off so on that Friday and the day of the wedding Saturday I ignored all texts.  On Sunday when we got home I then checked all the bets I’d ignored – second sight or what?

Best bets?  On Friday 1st August my wife and I were sitting outside a café in the Lanes in Brighton.  I had just been to the scrap metal merchants in Brighton to get rid of all my old scrap copper, brass and copper cylinders (scrap copper on that day was £2500 a ton) I trousered £250.00 and was well pleased.  2 hours later outside the café in warm sunshine drinking a coffee, I was playing with my mobile phone wondering whether it still worked because there had been no bets the previous day.  Suddenly you sent a text through for a 50 point win on War Native.  I jumped out of the seat and ran as fast as I could to the William Hill shop in Duke Street and put the whole lot on at Evens.  I wasn’t so lucky when I phoned Ladbrokes, they had already cut the price.  Later on we visited my stepmother and were deciding on who would go for the fish and chips when you sent a text through saying War Native had won.  PRICELESS.

Brighton again.  1st Sunday in November – The London to Brighton veteran car run.  Driven down in the E-Type (12 MPG!) standing outside a shop while the dear girl was inside (I hate shopping) text message comes through from you Shoreacres @11/4.  Ladbrokes shop was 40 yards away.  £60 e/w came out, phoned Bet 365 and Ladbrokes and had a splendid day.  Checked results at home – SPLENDID day.  It’s moments like this that I remember.  Priceless.

Apart from visiting bookmakers when I’m able and not working all my betting is done over the phone to increase my bank.  I’m not at this stage taking anything out, I just want to increase my betting bank so that every now and again as funds grow, I can increase my stakes.

As far as your service is concerned it far exceeds any other tipping service I’ve used including *****  where the long losing runs are demoralizing.  And therein lies the problem – I have to keep reminding myself that you are a professional gambler NOT a tipster.

I would rate your service 10 out of 10 and my only concern is that the monthly subscription will rise.

Criticism:  Out of your hands – mobile phone masts.  My service provider  for my mobile for the last 7/8 years has been 02.  On joining your service I missed an awful lot of bets so I kept 02 as I’m on contract and obtained a Vodafone sim card.  Unfortunately I work in some pretty obscure locations and often can’t get a signal.  I phoned your office to swap the number from 02 to Vodafone so that I had a dedicated phone for your texts but because of poor coverage in some areas the messages sometimes come through an hour AFTER the race has been run.  Any chance you could send the text to both phones?  I realise that someone would immediately think there’s a dodge and two people are getting the texts for one subscription.  They would be sooooooo wrong.  I’m honest.  Vodafone – the one you send the texts to 07*** ****50

02 – the previous number registered with you 07*** ****12

Well there we have it.  I hope this has answered some if not all of your questions.

Regards

Alan S******

*(note from Bob, I’ve deleted references to other tipping organisations because I don’t think it would be fair  for me to bad mouth my competition, though I appreciate Alan’s comments and know where he’s coming from)

Wednesday 26th Nov 11.04 pm

One of the best parts of my “job” is the feedback I get from clients. Here’s an email I opened this evening from Gary, and thought I’d share with you ( and with Gary’s permission).

It  was completely out of the blue as you’ll realise when reading and simply prompted by his first visit to this site. (Most of my clients joined me years ago after receiving a letter in the post and so never had need to visit the site. In fact this website only went live in June 2008 when we launched the new text betting service.

If you ever wondered whether this is a genuine site then perhaps heres’ your answer. Straight from the “horse ‘s mouth” … it’s from a  regular client who’s been with me since the start of the text service and therefore experienced all the downs as well as the ups!

I hope you enjoy reading it as much as I did. It’s a short but totally genuine email from a genuine client. All of my clients are very important to me and I am delighted when the advice I pass on from our team brings pleasure and profit to your life.


Hi Bob
I have been reading your letters Week 24/25.I realize it’s a lot
more work for you, but I personally thoroughly enjoy reading your
weekly reports in exactly the format that they come in now.


By the way this is the first time I have been on your website and
it makes fascinating reading,it almost seems to be too good to be
true,but as I came on board as one of your founder members I know
it’s all perfectly Genuine.

I am not very confident with my computer skills,but I am getting
there slowly.I can’t find the secure areas where I would need to
use the password yet,or the list of various bookmakers I could
use, but I will keep trying.

By the Way I finally got my bottle of Champagne THANK YOU so
much. I haven’t opened it yet I am waiting for a very special
Family occasion before I do.

Anyway Bob keep up the good work. Thank you for all the hours you
put in, and Thank You for All the horses you have put my way, You
have made a real difference to my Life.

Gary *****


£1,504 Today

Monday 10th Nov 5.04pm

Yes great day.   Made £1504.00 today to £10 per point

regards

Richard


Overall Result £2377.00!

Thursday 23rd Oct  8.35pm. Received this text tonight which made me smile. I love it when clients give the bookies a pasting!

Hi Bob, great result today!

I backed all your recommendations plus one of my own(Gangerman 3.45 at Carlisle) to £10/pt and did 6 £20 cross doubles on 4 horses (First Point, Rublevka Star, The Gangerman, and Dareh)

Overall result £2,377. Thrilled!

Keep up the good work!

Richard

it is possible to win money by betting on horses

Testimonial received Oct 16th

Dear Bob

I agree with your other client who says he now believes it is possible to win money by betting on horses so keep your service going Bob.

I enclose your winnings for week 19,  £149.00

Thanks again Bob

I remain a satisfied client

Phyliss

Testimonial Received October 16th

Totesport weren’t happy with that .. win!

Bob

Thank you for some great winners last week

Totesport weren’t happy with That Dazzling Bergum win!

The next racing bet I tried to put on with them, Magicalmysterytour they limited me to £50 each way!

I managed to sting them later in the day on one of those £500 football singles (Kettering at 7/4!)

Ladbrokes weren’t happy with that last minute winner Bold King – next racing bet on Captain raimus they “referred to the Traders”, although they did take the whole bet.

I got them on Saturday with one of those £150 draw doubles (Bournemouth v Rotherham and Gromsby v Wycombe at 5/2 and 5/2) – returned £1,837!

Glad I did Recession Proof with our friends at Paddy Power as I got paid out at 4/1!

By the way agree with you on the strength of each way betting

regards

Howard

PS Great week on the darts too! £600 on Phil Taylor outright at evens – never in danger!

Golden Saturday

From: Stewart P

Received: Tuesday 11th August

And what a golden day it was indeed, dreams do come true!

Overall winnings of £3,856 (I thought I would put that down early as I do so love looking at that number) proved that my fairy godmother is still alive bless her!

To show just how the fates were looking after me I have to tell you the story of this special Saturday and how luck looked after me. Saturdays have not normally been lucky betting days for me, so much that if it wasn’t for bad luck I wouldn’t have any luck at all!

On this Saturday I had arranged to go with a friend to see a friendly pre season soccer match at Fulham. However, I got up late, was suffering the pathetic affects of a pensioners night out, fell over the cat and took one look at the rain teeming down and decided an afternoon watching the racing might prove expensive but less taxing on one’s patience. As I went to pick up the phone to ring my friend, it rang and it was he to say that he had decided against going to football and he was very sorry to let me down. I of course told him just how unreasonable he was to let me down at this late stage and he replied that all he could do was to pass on a tip to me for a horse running called Multidimensional. A subsequent winner at 2-1 and how I came to include it with our 4 winners to put the icing on the cake later on.

So I switched on Oddschecker, duly followed all Bob’s advices and as I usually do, combined them all in small combinations and a £3 each way accumulator on our 4 and then further combinations on all 5. Sat back and watched the drama unfold without once looking to see how the winnings were accumulating but realising that I could probably afford chips with the fish later that evening. Life was of course so good when I saw the number in my balance box on Bet365 that I had mushy peas as well!

Not only that but it was 2 pints of Courages Best on the way to the chippy! How you must envy the life of a successful pensioner!

Mention of the fact that I am a pensioner, although I don’t tell the ladies that, leads me to tell you just how I made that oh so lucky decision to come in with Bob in the first place. I have been a racing person since my father took me racing (at my Mother’s instructions) in the 1950s. I have had a Tote credit account for over 40 years (often suspended) and a third share in 2 horses, one named Heir of Excitement (which it was) and the other Breaking Hearts (which it did). I have been a member of Cheltenham, Towcester and Windsor and Cartmel where the lovely lady secretary rang me to enquire whether I knew where Cartmel was as it was a long way from Oxford – at the time I was member no. 36! So racing runs in the blood and I have been involved -if that is the word-with many ‘tipsters’ over the years stating off in the 60s with one called Juniorator (his dad having been Seniorator). I also must have funded Raceform over the years as I have been subscribing to their daily handicap sheet for over 30 years. And so Bob’s letter arrives and I must have read it at least 5 times and the sensible person in the house is telling me to bin it. I actually live on my own these days but there are 2 people inside me, the sensible retired accountant who says don’t waste time on betting – put it in a safer investment entities like Northern Rock shares – and the inveterate risk taker who loves the thrill of the chase and has gone through 2 marriages, one lost company and a called mortgage. So it was a Friday and I was kicking myself for missing the first week anyway, off goes the application to Bob. Now I am at the lower end of the £s for points as you might well imagine and Mr Sensible in me has been having kittens when a 25 or even God forbid a 50 point text message comes through and 2 weeks pension goes on a horse. Oh the relief and joy (in that order) when they win! Of course Mr Sensible is a total hypocrite and wants to come with me to celebrate at the pub as well. He has to make do with the third pint.

The first 2 weeks of July I was on holiday in Madeira but joys of joys the text came though and William Hill obliged me every time. There was even a cheque from them on my return. Can’t say the lady I was holiday with was that impressed with my inability to escape the texts on holiday, until that is the champagne started to appear at dinner. She got the point then!

Anyway, enough of this as we have now gone full circle as that lovely number mentioned much earlier conjures up just one word, well 2 actually – another holiday!

So thank you Bob – and not forgetting the hard working staff – for some joyous and financially rewarding few weeks so far culminating in the golden Saturday. Sorry but I have to put that number down again £3,856. Oh joy!

All the best, may the winning weeks continue and ad infinitum (they won’t!) but how great it is to be happy enough to buy a few gallons of petrol with a smile!

Sincerely

The Happy Pensioner

a huge thank you for the great tips, total won to date £1,890

From: Sarah B, Leatherhead

Received: Tuesday 12th August

Hi Bob,

As requested I thought I would update you on my experiences so far.

I started off with very low bets as I have lost money in the past on tips that didn’t live up to their promises. I set myself a budget and gradually increased so I am now up to £5 a point. Still nowhere near your level but I would prefer to stay within my comfort zone and build up gradually, than lose the lot and have to give up.

I work full time so unfortunately I have missed a few bets and often struggle to get the odds you quote, so my winning % has been a bit lower than yours. I also made the big mistake of altering the amount per point or not going EW at the beginning – but the last couple of weeks have followed your tips as closely as I can and it works – slowly but surely building up the profit.

Then came Saturday!! I was at home in the morning so was able to act as soon as I got your texts and managed to get all the odds you quoted! I then had to take my 10 yr old son shopping to get him some clothes for his holiday. We were in a shop trying to negotiate how I was going to match my limited budget to his expensive taste, when I got your text saying Perks had won!!! Problem solved in the bleep of a phone.

By the time your next text came through U had just got home and was desperately trying to get online to check how much I had won. £1,005.40!!! Even taking into account the bulging shopping bags, a very decent days profit – just don’t tell my son how much as he would have spent the lot by the end of the evening!!

So firstly a huge thank you for the great tips, total won to date £1,890. Second thank you for the update text, it certainly made for a less stressful shopping trip

Kind Regards

Sarah

A massive £1,392.00.

From: Mr J E P, North Yorkshire,

Received: Tuesday 11th August

Dear Bob,

Over the last weeks, since joining you and betting “Level Stakes” have not made the amounts as outlined in your weekly report. This is basically due to the small betting bank I have as a 79 year old pensioner.

However, Saturday results proved to be the best returns I have ever had. I decided to try a “lucky 15” and as all four came good my £2.00 x 15 = £30.00 returned a massive £1,392.00.

The odds of 9/2, 9/2, 3/1 and evens obtained with William Hills did the business.

Can we have some more please!!!

Kindest Regards

P.s Just think what £150 would have done?

I GOT MARRIED

From: Mr Robin W, Oxon

Received: Wednesday 13th August

Wonderful Stories

I am sitting a little on the side lines trying to fit a staking plan into my means. But I must say I had a wonderful day on Saturday at the age of 73.

I GOT MARRIED

How about that. So I do just love it when you have a day like Saturday. So will now need to sort out this staking plan, so as to keep my new bride in the manor to which she became accustomed with you advices.

All the best

Hope this makes you smile

Robin

I still made a profit on the day

From: Jacqueline E, Petersfield

Received: Wednesday 13th August

Hi Bob,

You wanted feedback from Saturday:-

As you know I am a small player at present. I got my bet on Perks nice one, missed the other as I was at a gay wedding. Well I couldn’t miss that one, to me it was “Priceless” And I still made a profit on the day. Am I your unluckiest punter?

Best Regards

Jacqueline

Results that Count. What Clients say

A recent poll of customers who have signed up to our new Tips By Text service

11th August

Richard F (by text) Hi Bob just a line to say thanks for yesterday’s four winners. I use £10/point at present and made £1,800 yesterday, Thought you would like to know

Phill S            I’m on holiday in Portugal with my daughter and the £2,000 I won on Saturday is exactly what it cost to come here. And I won the spending money on Friday on Battle of Hastings!

Stuart P         Golden Saturday! I’m a pensioner and people disapproved when I joined. I did a Super Yankee and accumulator with 10p bets and won £3,856. It was very exciting and I’m treating myself to a holiday. I dream of winning money like this.

Mr M N           I won £2,100 for £400 and bought my wife a diamond ring. Really really pleased and got money left over.

Rajesh B       Bet £4 a point and was at a wedding so only got 2 bets on but won £200, am increasing to £6 a point

David B         I made £1,300 over the weekend, Very happy trying to build up  my savings every little helps. I bet £10 a point butt couldn’t get the prices though

Chris M          I won £1,200, 6 winners 6 bets, If I’d done an accumulator I’d have won £220,000!

Carl F Really good week. I’m with many tipsters but Bob is No 1. I won £1675 and have been with Bob for years. I did have a break for 2 years then rejoined, am getting on really, really well with it.

5th July

“I have certainly enjoyed the service and find it fascinating. You obviously have a depth of contacts and knowledge. I always have been sceptical of such services, but your service is obviously a bit different”

(K.A. London)

3rd July

“This is only my 3rd week but I have to say that the service works very well and is certainly very profitable. I was a bit sceptical about receiving texts but you have won me over and I am pleased with the results”

( C.C. Essex)

2nd July

“Thank you for keeping in touch so often!!! Very impressed …!!! Also, I think that your new service of Text Message is absolutely  brilliant as sometimes it is difficult to ring, if maybe we are at work or worst in a shop or whatever… and we HAVE to ring otherwise we just miss the bet … So, yes, I appreciate that service very much!!!!”

(N. S. East Sussex)

30thJune

“So far it has been the best betting service I have used. You get the bets early which allows you to get most of the prices available.”

(B.M. Dorset)

“Having signed up 2 weeks ago, I have remained in profit”

(M.P. Surrey)

“I think the text service is a great idea. Apart from the text service the big plus for me is that the points system indicates the strength of your information. My overall view is that this is a good, honest service, warts and all, which is a rarity these days!”

( T.W. Leicestershire)

” I have to tell you that this new text service is the best thing I have ever been involved in; mind you it has caused me a bit of grief with my wife! In the first week there were so many text messages coming through my phone, that my wife thought that I might be having an affair (If only I had the time and energy!!). Then I had to tell her about our new venture.

(G.U Dorset)

28th June

“Firstly, can I thank you for inviting me to join your new Text service which at the moment I am just monitoring. However if you give out just one bet a month like FARAWAY FLOWER then I, and all of your members, will be extremely ecstatic. The weekly newsletter is brilliant and now I’ve seen two weeks results I shall start betting in earnest on 1st July.”

( A.S. Surrey)

27th June

“Having just started putting money on your advises on Friday (what  a start) I am thrilled to bits with it – I hope you have many more like this. I must admit having the bets sent to my phone make it so much easier to place the bets and too get better prices too.”

(D.B. Glasgow)

” Just to let you know this new system is the best I have come across.”

(B.P. Kent)

What clients Say about Bob Rothman

LATEST NEWS:

Best start to Cheltenham EVER… Two winners! and a 29/1 winning double!!!

“Unbelievably fantastic Bob! already my best Cheltenham ever”!

Yet another win!

“Yet another win!  What can I say but thanks for the tip! Enclosed are the winnings for ‘CORONET’ which came in at 3/1 so you should have £150. For myself, I walked away with over £300 profit. As you can imagine I was more than happy. Here’s to

the next winner! All the best” M.B

Thank you so much for keeping your word

“Thank you so much for keeping your word. Never seen so much money! Helps the pension go round and keep up the good work. You are a true gentleman.” R.B.

Stunning beginning to our partnership

“Just a short note to congratulate you on the stunning beginning to our ‘partnership’ in the making. I began your service on Saturday and already I have seen my bank account swell considerably. Thanks again for the fantastic information and all I can say is keep up the good work!” M.M.

Very pleasing to start with a winner

“Many thanks for your information regarding Monday’s easy winner Flashtalkin’ Flood. It was my first recommendation from you, so naturally very pleasing to start with a winner. I placed a £100 bet at 2/1, but I am more than happy to enclose £120 as there is no way I would have normally placed a bet in a race of this type. Clearly your information came from the horses connections.” R.E.

My winnings have zoomed up from over one thousand pounds to nearly five thousand pounds

“What a fantastic three days. My winnings have zoomed up from over

one thousand pounds to nearly five thousand pounds. Your predictions

are first class.” A.M

Seven tips of which six have been winners

“After just several weeks of betting with your selections I have had seven tips of which six have been winners. Needless to say I am absolutely delighted with your service (which is without doubt the best in the world.) Enclosed is forty pounds for Polydamus (Yet another win.)” R.P.

 

I’ve backed more winners so far this year than in the last 12 months

“I’ve backed more winners so far this year than in the last 12 months. I’ve treated my wife to some new clothes and a couple of good nights out. Keep up the good information. Thanks again.” N.T.

 

£2,000 profit yesterday, £2,500 profit Tuesday

“What a great week!! £2,000 profit yesterday, £2,500 profit Tuesday. You may get tired of hearing this but, many, many thanks.” P.W.

 

An effortless winner

“Please find enclosed £125 for Alezal. An effortless winner. I only wish I had more money on it.” L.R

 

You’re doing a great job

“Thank you for a great week, some excellent information and so much of it as well, absolutely fabulous. Keep it coming the more the merrier. You’re doing a great job. Please find enclosed the commission payments for Inchtina, 7/4 and Zomaradah, 5/6. I look forward to getting more info soon. P.S. I have had to change my regular bookie before he gets a bit upset about all the money he

is giving me.” J.Y.

Yet another winner – the sixth in a row!

“Thank you for yet another winner – the sixth in a row! Carry on the great work. Please find enclosed £40. I look forward to calling you again on Thursday 12th.” C.H.

Bookie 'testimonials'

BookieBanText_600x212

Here are some of the letters I’ve received from unhappy bookmakers…

Some of the 25 account cancellation letters I received from the bookies who banned me – from Hills to Mecca and (this year) BetFred –  because I made too much money from them . Download the actual letters…

Originals of all 25 letters are on file at our offices, available for inspection

Results

Important Note

Results are no longer published live on the website because clients were getting their accounts closed or severely restricted too quickly.

Sadly the chicken-hearted  greedy Bookmakers and their spies can read too and it was making it too easy for them to identify clients accounts. That’s why many horses names were ***** out. That’s because those articles were published from time to time. Clients on the service got the weekly email with all horses names in of course.

However you’re probably like me and curious as to what a period of genuine results looks like so I’ve now un-password protected old files from a few years ago.

Study the result and have a look at any week, winning or losing. Everything is 100% as it was sent to clients by private SMS. I think you’ll agree it makes pretty impressive reading. Over £300,000 Profit in one year from £100 per point stakes!

Please also note this particular service is now full although we have a handful of vacancies on the pay as You win Service which you can subscribe to under the “JOIN” tab at the top.

It’s always been our most popular service because it’s (normally) just one bet a day , you choose which days you want to bet and you only pay for the bet after it’s won!

Warm Regards

 

Bob Rothman

The old files are below and on the tabs at the side. Happy reading.


First 6 Months Profit over £200,000!

Click  6 months Profits for the Service to get a graph showing the profits for the first 6 months to £100 per point stakes (June 6th to Nov 30th 2008)

If you want more detailed results then click on the tabs in the left column if you are a member (password required) or peruse the summaries below if you are a visitor and haven’t joined us yet.


Members Only Private Area

Welcome!

Here you  and you alone can view the full details of last week’s betting including the horses names.

After a suggestion from one of the Senior Traders I have adopted this format so that public visitors to the site can only access skeletal details and NOT the actual selections we bet on.

This is because bookmakers can run a query on their betting history to identify who bet which horse. If we give them the horses names then they could identify you more easily and may restrict the size of bets you are allowed faster than they normally would. I hope you are ok with the minor inconvenience of using a password in order to protect your privacy.

Passwords will be sent by text each week

Regards

 

Bob

 (Password Required)

Please click Detailed Racing Results and use your password to access the latest full report  with all names revealed and Full Profits Details  or look at  specific weeks using the links below.

Week 29         Horse Racing Tips –   Weekly Discussion

Week 28         Horse Racing Tips –   Weekly Discussion

Week 27         Horse Racing Tips –   Weekly Discussion

Week 26        Horse Racing Tips –   Weekly Discussion

Week 25         Horse Racing Tips –   Weekly Discussion

Week 24          Horse Racing Tips – Weekly Discussion

Week 23          Horse Racing Tips – Weekly Discussion

Week 22          Horse Racing Tips – Weekly Discussion

Week 21          Horse Racing Tips – Weekly Discussion

Week 20          Horse Racing Tips – Weekly Discussion

Week 19          Horse Racing Tips – Weekly Discussion

Week 18          Horse Racing Tips – Weekly Discussion

Week 6-17will be uploaded shortly …  weeks 1-5 accessed from sidebar


VISITORS

Hi. Feel free to browse our site where everything is on the open. However the actual slections we bet are obscurred to protect clients from having their accounts banned too quickly. However you can view skeltal summaries below which will give  you an accurate feeling for the type of bets and horses we invest on.

Bookmakers read the web as well as anyone else and several Senior Traders have asked me to keep our actual slections private after having their accounts limited by bookmakers very quickly when the selections were made public.

Visitors summares are listed below …

Week 26 – £17,800.00 Profit!

Another excellent week! We had 20 bets and an outstanding 60% strike rate with horses winning or being placed when we bet them win or each way. And the 8 Good winners out of 20 bets represents a 40% strike rate which I consider excellent.

That brings me on to an interesting point. Many friends have forwarded “tipster mailings” to me and asked for my opinion. I’m saddened to see that very many of them make simply outrageous claims that cannot be true. Whenever you see someone advertising a “Guaranteed 70% strike rate” at fancy odds then shove your wallet into your pocket as deep as you can get it and run a mile! In all probability it’s a scam. I’d bet on it! In fact if anyone could get even close to 70% strike rate (at odds against) he could come on my payroll right now and never have to work again!

A realistic strike rate is UNDER 50%. Yep under 50%. I have some of the best people in the Country helping me, spend an absolute fortune of speed figures, form figures, computer analysis, private handicapping not to mention the constant flow of information. And I don’t expect to do any better than 30-40% over a season. Yet at that strike rate we’ve made a small fortune this year. Now it’s not because I’m brilliant because I’m not. But we do have a fantastic team of Professionals all working together to make this work and as a result we bet enough winners at decent odds to win plenty. But we won’t do much better than 30%-40% with our win bets.

Of course we do bet each way a lot. And that does bring up the strike rate no question. As you know I believe we win more by betting each way partly because we can afford to take a bigger risk when you bet each way and partly because I believe the place part of the bet has great value.

£200,000 Profit in First 6 Months!

Last week was a milestone for the service too. It’s been running for 6 months and so to celebrate it’s “half birthday” I’ve produced a graph showing the whole 6 month journey. It’s under the results tab on the www.horseracingpro.co.uk website or if you’d like to go direct to the graph it’s on

If you study the graph you’ll notice a couple of things

  • The trend is UP! That’s excellent just the way we like it. The straight blue line is a “trend line” auto generated by my graphing software and shows the average increase in profits. It works out at about £45,000 profit for every 100 bets or an average 4.5 points profit per bet. That’s incredible but realistically I wouldn’t expect it to be that high in the long term. Let’s face it one or two points a bet would be amazing and enough to live off comfortably! I will try and deliver the same terrific standard but don’t be too disappointed if we only make £100,000 out of the next 500 bets please!
  • There were two severe dips corresponding to the weeks when we had two losing weeks back to back, one around bet numbers 170-200 and one around bet numbers 400-425. We dropped approx 200 and 300 points respectively (£20,000-£30,000 at my stakes! ouch!)
    • The point is you and I know the results overall have been fabulous. But it’s tough when you hit a bad spell. That’s why it’s important to keep your cool and keep the staking under control
    • And can you imagine what someone would have thought about this service if they joined at the beginning of a bad spell? The only people you get staying with you under those circumstances are people with vision and faith who can really see the potential. The rest drop away like flies. And to be fair you can’t blame them. Losing hurts.

Anyway it’s been a good week and a great 6 months. I’ve had some wonderful letters and emails in this week and each one has lifted my spirits and made me smile from ear to ear. I love winning and beating the bookies no question. You can’t beat having a good bet, seeing it storm home and then collecting a big wad of cash afterwards and stuffing it in your pockets! It’s a terrific feeling.

But it makes it even better hearing you’ve won too. I know it may sound corny but I really do get even more pleasure knowing you’ve won (or I assume you have!) whenever one of the selections lands a gamble. Especially if it’s a big price or a big bet. When *********  won on Tuesday for example I was over the moon. A stonking 40 pointer and it won in a canter! That was good! Real good! So please keep the letters and emails coming, let me know when you win, it makes my day reading about it and doubles the pleasure of winning! I’ve set up a special email address at *****************  which you can send them to if you’re an email person! I’m only just getting to grips with it myself to be honest and tend to only read emails when I get a phone call to say “Hey Bob, I’ve sent you an email” when friends are wondering why I haven’t replied! So if you need an urgent answer best to ring the office!

Ok let’s have a quick chat about the highlights of the week…

Monday

Great start! The first bet of the week, ******, wins easily  and unusually for us he ended up a BIGGER price! Lady Luck must have been smiling on us because he met the 3rd last all wrong and almost came down. To the horse’s great credit he was back on the bridle almost immediately, an indication of how much he had in hand. To be fair if you make a mistake in a jump race it usually means it’s all over. He won in a canter and still had plenty up his sleeve. My only regret was not making him a 20 point bet! And if the 9/4 Sp had been available in the morning it would have been a 20 point win or each way bet. You never have enough on the winners especially when they win so easily! A good days “work” and £2,400 profit at the end! Rather better than most have done on the stock market recently I suspect!

Tuesday

A stunning day! We enjoyed a rare, close to maximum bet when we invested a massive 40 points on ******.  Maybe you felt extra confident when you saw it was the same owner/ trainer/ jockey combination as our easy win yesterday? Because it was a leap of faith to back a horse so heavily after a 298 day absence! It’s horses like this that give you confidence in the wonderful team of analyst and informants who provide the flow of information and feedback which is invaluable in the process of making our selections.

******** did not go off a bigger price! …  hardly surprising as every bookie who took a caning the day before must have been pooping their pants again when we hit them with this beauty!

… and just so don’t get the worng impression, I’m sorry but I do NOT get all the *****/*****/***** horses! No-one does. I think ********has over 300 dotted around, ****** has a big stable and ****** could get on most horses if he really wanted to so if you see one of their runners and especially one in ************  famous colours and I haven’t bet it don’t make the mistake of thinking it’s not fancied. Most run on merit and at Cheltenham he may have 2 or 3 runners in a race. It’s not unheard of for the outsider to win and although he’s a big gambler I can assure you that when that happens it’s rarely a plot. Simply the fact that they are all trying and that in a handicap there really isn’t a lot to split the most and least fancied horses.

In any case every day I may hear about 10-50 horses and cannot possibly bet them all. Sure I miss plenty of winners that are fancied but that’s not the point. It’s whether we can make a profit out of the fancied horses we do bet!

Wednesday

************ was a rare ********* horse that let us down although he did finish 3rd. You may have wondered why I didn’t bet him each way at 3/1 as the 8 Points each way returns 12.8 points and reduces the loss to 3.2 points instead of 8 for the straight win.

The reason I didn’t bet him each way is because he can pull hard. Horses that pull rarely win and usually “blow up” in other words they run out of breathe because they waste so much energy fighting their jockey. My information was he was working well and had settled down since last year although still exuberant. So I was a bit worried he might still pull too hard for his own good and that’s why it was a smallish bet and I decided not to risk the place portion of the bet.

Of course I regretted it afterwards but that’s racing. 20/20 is perfect vision and you can only call it the way you see it before the race. He actually did remarkably well to finish in the frame considering how he pulled in the race. He blew up coming to the last and it’s only his class that enabled him to stay in the places whereas most horses would have then been well beaten. If he settles he’ll be dangerous!

I bet you smiled when you saw the next bet! ***********. Beaten by an odds on ********** trained favourite last time and today was taking on what? A Red Hot ********* trained odds on favourite!!

What the heck was going on? Maybe that made you more confident if you were reading between the lines?

I promise you I didn’t know that ********** would fall!! but he wouldn’t have won if he’d stood up! In contrast *********** jumped superbly and absolutely stormed home a very easy winner indeed.

Thursday

A poor days racing and the only bet on the card was ********* horse in the bumper. He was heavily gambled and we had way over the odds but faded when he came to win the race.

Friday

You must have felt like Golden Balls today! It was hard to anything but win! know at least one client enjoyed a lovely 3 doubles and a treble on the 3 winners and collected  around a cool £1,600 for £25 stakes! That’s really handy with Xmas just coming!

What more can I say? 4 early bets and 3 great winners. A terrific day.  ******** was a big gamble at the night meeting and although coming to win the race and trying really hard just wasn’t good enough. He’ll win a modest race.

Saturday

Yet another great winner from the ******** stable (we bet ******** and ********* the day before). You’ll remember we had a big bet on him each way when he had his seasonal debut and only just failed (and should have won) finishing 3rd after making a couple of mistakes and getting badly hampered. You can see now why I wanted such a big bet on him when he made his start to hurdling. he clearly has a big engine and the gallop reports about his sparkling work at home were spot on!

************! How close! A terrific 8/1 each way bet that looked like winning for 90% of the race. Always travelling well just lobbing along he looked really good and traded at odds on in running. When the leader jumped across him at the final flight I thought he had no chance. But then even though he had to be switched he came right back at him and it was under a length at the line. He’d have won with a clear run … and he’d have won easily if the jockey had kicked on when he was cantering instead of letting other horses get into the race. No damage done and a small profit but it could have been an incredible finale to a stunning week.

When I saw the big drift for ********** I was worried he would be a “non trier” or given a gentle introduction because I know the horse needs a lot of driving at home. If you don’t push him along he does nothing! But he has got an engine! It’s just that he’s like an unruly teenager and needs cajoling to use it! He’d be an easy horse to lose on because you have to make an effort 110% of the race. If the jockey missed the break and then just sat on him like so many seem to he wouldn’t stand a prayer. I’m always monitoring the markets to see how honestly horses are likely to run and it was a concern …

It needn’t have been as it turned out because *************  pushed him along in a winning position all through the race and he almost pulled of the coup. He battled throughout with the winner and was only beaten a length in a dead heat for 2nd. Amazingly for one of our horses he went off a bigger price too, 7/1! That’s twice in a week! Are the bookies losing their respect for us? Sadly I doubt it! I wish they would, it’d make it a heck of a lot easier to get bets on and clean them out!

Sunday

– No bets.

Summary

Well that’s now 6 months of rock solid profits and over 500 bets! (519 actually). That’s a massive amount of business and proves beyond any shadow of a doubt there’s no fluke about it. There’s no way you can bet that number of horses and make a profit unless you are betting some seriously well fancied horses. We’ve turned over 8,069 points and won 2,317 that’s a staggering 28.7% profit.

And that’s all starting with a 20 point bet on June 6th. From that point on we’ve always been in profit. Just imagine you could have started with a £200 bet and now have £23,170 in the bank! Of course you wouldn’t have quite that much as you’ll have missed plenty of prices, and inevitably the odd winner as well as some losers too. But I’m sure you’re up a fair bit and I imagine you’ve had lots of fun doing it too!

You can probably see why I love this business so much … and after every winning day I tell myself I am so lucky to be able to be a player in this great game! May the Racing Gods continue to shine on us! Roll on Cheltenham!!

All the best

 

Bob Rothman

PS This week’s password for the secure areas on our website horseracingpro.brookscustomers.com is now ********** ***  **********

Visitors

Here is the Non Members Summary of the week. You can peruse this and decide if our service is for you

Please click Summary  Racing Results and the latest results profits  with names of selections removed

Week 26 Profit account now available (discussion to be loaded later)


Week 25 Profit account now available

Cobham, 10.09 pm Monday 24th Nov

Week 25 – £11,582.50 Profit!

Another solid weeks profits! Ten grand plus! In a week. That’s half a million pounds a year! Amazing really. Can you now see how it really is possible to earn a fabulous 6 figure income … simply betting horses for a living!

Of course that sounds easy and any professional knows it isn’t. There is an enormous amount of work that goes on behind the behind the scenes by the various team members who help us out. Most Professionals I know put in at least 10/12 hours a day solid … and would like to do more!

… and then there’s the sharp end. Getting the bets on. It’s not as easy as people first imagine. In fact I bet most of your friends  have no idea what a sweat it is to try and get the best price. Rushing to the bookies or trying to log onto your internet account before the odds evaporate like Scotch Mist as the yellow-belly bookies dive for cover!

I know how hard you must work getting trying to get the best odds and applaud you for your efforts … many punters think it’s just a question of ringing up your bookies or slapping a grand down on the counter and the bet’s on. I wish! I know how frustrating it is to miss the best prices too.  Because you know that over a period of time you’ll back plenty of winners. And every time the bookies cheat you of a point they are effectively stealing cash out of your pocket.

It infuriates me how they get away with taking any bet off a mug punter who loses all the time … but as soon as you start backing “warm” horses they don’t want to know you. I’ve been rushing around for 20 years opening up accounts and betting under disguises so I know it all too well. If you lose, the bookies welcome you with open arms and a big smile. Then when you start winning … or even looking like you’ll win (because you’re backing the horses they don’t want you to!)

Ok, that’s enough moaning about bookmakers cutting odds too quickly. Because unusually the odds for one of our biggest bets this week, ******* at 5/1 … were there all day long! … and you could still get 5/1 at the off. The bookies took a serious caning and we cleaned up nicely! Ok so how did the week go?

Monday:

Great start again. £3,500 in the bin, a good days “work”!

Tuesday:

Frustrating. ********* was run out of the places and made a 12 point hole in the tank. A so-so day.

Wednesday:

Horrible. ********* blew up after looking like the winner. ******** ran a stinker and connections were mystified. They interviewed the trainer on TV afterwards and he had no clue. Maybe it was the ground. Maybe someone kicked him in the goollies before the race? who knows. He was punted into the ground as if he was a cert .. and ran a shocker. Very odd. Just one of those events in racing you have to take on the chin. Rumble of Thunder ran 3rd but two non runners meant the places were reduced to 2 so he was a loser.

**** *** landed a lovely gamble but the same trainers ********* ran too free and didn’t handle the bend. ******** ran green and will improve. He was disappointing, they expected a win as you could tell from the huge gamble on him.

Thursday:

Two nice winners. A big bet on *** *** *** landed with consummate ease. And another easy 4/1 winner when ******* bolted in on his chase debut. He’d been jumping brilliantly at home. ******** and ******** were both expensive 4ths, just missing the frame and costing us a valuable 22 points.

Friday:

How did ********** not win? Coolly letting the front runner get a 20 length lead he ran him down and took it up looking sure to win. Then got caught close home. Maybe if he’d made his effort earlier and taken it up sooner he would have won easily? It didn’t really matter because we cleaned out the bookies big time with ******* a big 20 point each way bet.

I know we’ve discussed this before but one new client asked me a question I must get asked every week so if I may I’d like to just touch on it very briefly …

“Does an each way bet mean you are less confident?”

NO!!  … absolutely not.

As you know I love betting each way. I’ll bet all sorts of crazy prices each way because I believe we win more by doing so. Of course you don’t have to copy me. But I think you will win more (and lose less) if you do.

For the record if I was only allowed to bet ******* win only for example (as some bookies insist on the racetrack) then my bet would have been a 10 or 12 point win. It’s precisely because of the insurance of the place bet that allows you to bet bigger! Often being able to bet each way make a horse a STRONGER bet, not weaker as we discussed before.

Saturday

The hardest day’s racing of the week because so many owners want to win on a day they can go to the races with friends. They’re all trying! Yet we still managed to put another 21 points or £2,160 on the scoreboard. Let’s face it, if you could make £2,000 every Saturday I’m betting you’d be very happy!

Our two biggest bets won and 4 small bets lost. Yet we still made a good profit. That because we bet in proportion to the winning chance of the horse and the value on the bet not some numpty, level-stake betting system which needs no brains to operate and reduces your profit potential.

Sunday

– No bets.

Summary

Over 25 weeks we’ve made £213,897 at £100 per point stakes. that’s an average of  an average of £9,299.87 per week. So I guess you would say we had an above average week! Of course if I was offered a job at £9,000 a week I think I’d have to seriously consider it even though I love betting horses.  Because there is always the chance you can lose, with a job you get paid (for a while anyway) whether you do a good job or not so good. No luxuries like that in  betting! We have to be excellent all the time to even stand a chance of winning.

Many clients have been with me since the launch in June and know there are ups and downs. I know it seems so easy when we are winning. But please bet sensibly, stake in proportion to your bank and perhaps you’d like to note the guidance I give in the points suggested. It does seem like we always win in the end I know. But we have had two spells of two losing weeks … and so mathematically I guess it’s just as likely to have one spell of 4 weeks instead! Ouch!

Gambling is a volatile business and the rewards can be immense. But there are ALWAYS losing spells and anyone who tells you otherwise is an idiot or a con man. I still remember when I started betting back in 1987. Winning £440,000 in my second year was fantastic!  … but … wait for this … In that year … I had TWO losing months. Hard to believe isn’t it? Trust me I was dumbstruck. But it happens and just as day follows night and summer follows winter you have to pick yourself up, dust yourself off and carry on.

That’s if you can.

 

Because if you lose your tank the game is over. And I’m mentioning this because I lost two clients after our bad spell 2 weeks ago and that makes me really sad. Because if they’d been able to stick it out … they would now have won almost twice as much as they lost over those two weeks … and that’s not even accounting for the massive cushion of profits already built up before.

That’s why your first priority must be always to make sure your bets are small enough that you can withstand a losing run. To win you have to be able to stay in the game. Over 25 weeks I’ve shown you it is possible to win … and win pretty big. Over an enormous number of bets. So clearly no fluke. But I won’t pretend it’s easy and missing a winner or the odds will cost. The good news is the evidence shows if we keep doing what we’ve always done … we should always win eventually.

Great to have you on board because it is so much more enjoyable when I know you’ve won as well. Somehow winning together enhances the experience. I guess winning alone is a bit like being Scrooge at Xmas! So thanks for being part of the team and making it so much more enjoyable for me …

All the best

 

Bob Rothman

PS This week’s password for the secure areas on our website www.horseracingpro.co.uk is now *******


£27,380.00 Profit! The Champagne corks

 were popping in the Rothman household last week!

What a week! We started off with a wonderful near maximum bet winner, with 40 points on ******. In one swoop we’d wiped out all losses from the previous week with a profit on top.

… and then followed that winner up with two more handsome wins at 100/30 and 7/1!  It was stunning day and we’d turned round the previous dry spell with a fantastic £16,800 winning day, one of our best!

When you’re betting good horses you can

go from “drought” to “flood” in days!

That’s one of the most amazing aspects of gambling for a living. You can have a dry spell and be scratching your head wondering when the next winner will ever come! Frankly it’s hard not to lose confidence. We all do and the challenge is that if you lose your confidence your betting goes to pieces. You may start having too much on big priced horses trying to win it all back in one hit. And equally badly there a tendency to scale back big bets on short priced horses. If you just been losing it’s easy to get “gun-shy” and become scared of losing more. So instead of a nice 20 point win on a 6/4 chance you end up having a poxy 4pt win because you can’t stomach a 20 point loss.

Somehow it seems easier to have a few 3 and 4 pt ew bets on big priced horses hoping to fluke a 20 or 30 point win. It doesn’t work and you’ll only ever show a profit in the long run if you stick to a sound staking plan. You know my views on level stake staking. It sucks and it’s for amateur professionals or people who don’t have the time to study and analyse races properly.

The only time it might be appropriate to use level stakes is if you are blindly following a system. Systems don’t differentiate between good, great and stunning bets. They are all the same to a system. But if you get good information, know something about form and ability ratings, can read a race and understand basic principles of handicapping and perhaps have software to help you get it all done quicker then the more complex variable staking methods can work wonders for you. Of course in your case I do it for you and just deliver the end result ie a bet of “x” points at odds of “y”. But there’s nothing stopping you doing it yourself and comparing your deliberations to mine. I’m certainly not infallible and there’s plenty of race handicappers who can read races a lot better than I can. (That’s why I employ a couple to help me out!)

Intelligent Variable staking is a Power Betting Tool

Apart from our information I believe our staking plan delivers a unique advantage and maximises our profits. It’s made fantastic profits for me for years, but I will admit it takes a heck of a lot of work. Instead of the one-size-fits-all simplistic approach of level stakes, our bets are tailor made for each race. Each race has to be studied carefully and the form and messages for all the horse in the race taken into context. And this leads nicely on to a subject I’d like to discuss very briefly. Messages from stables that can lead you astray. Let me give you a hypothetical example to illustrate…

The one mistake stable’s make which

 you must protect yourself from

I don’t know if you’ve ever subscribed to other tipping services but I suspect you may have. Or picked up juicy tips from your own stable contacts. Maybe you know an owner? Maybe you are an owner?

The biggest mistake most stables make in my opinion is not properly evaluating their horses ability IN THE CONTEXT OF THE RACE.

For example a small stable has a horse they call “Superstar”

Superstar  has never run before so they’re not sure how good he is. But he destroys all their other horses on the gallops. All the stable lads love him. They’ve been saving up their weekly wages to back it when it runs. And why not? After all they’ve seen with their own eyes how easily it beats everything at home.

The problem is the stable is a small stable and don’t have any really good horses to test its mettle against. They have say 20 horses and they are all rated between 40 and 60.

Let’s say the second best horse in the yard is called Seaside Donkey, and he’s rated 60. Superstar beats Seaside Donkey by 3 lengths when they gallop at home and the other horses in the stable are some way behind these two.

Now the work looks great to anyone watching. But looking at it logically, unemotionally, all you can really say is Superstar is 3 lengths better than Seaside Donkey … which means he’s 3 lengths better than a 60 rated horse.

Over 5 furlongs a length is general accepted to be worth 3lbs. So Superstar is 3 lengths x 3lbs or 9lbs superior to Seaside Donkey. Ie Superstar is a 69 horse)

Ok so now comes the day when Superstar goes to the races.

They enter it in a maiden at Newmarket even though the powerful Newmarket yards have runners there too. But they figure their best horse should go and run in a decent race to show how good it is!

In this race most of the horses are no-hopers but there are 3 possible dark horses who are all unraced but hail from big powerful stables.  Somehow you’ve managed find out what the word on the street is … and that word is that none of the Newmarket horses are “fancied”

Why not?

Well each of the powerful stables tell you their horse is “rubbish” because he finishes last in his work group. Horses often work in groups of 3 so you might sensibly ask the question “What are the other horses rated in the work group?” before you take this rumour as gospel and fall into the trap that so many people are going to today.

Stable 1 tell you the work group consists of a slow Horse  called Plodder and two 90 rated horses.

Stable 2 tell you their work group consist of 2 95 horses and a slow horse called Sloth.

Stable 3’s work group consists of one slow horse called Dawdler and two 110 horses.

Plodder, Sloth and Dawdler finish last in their groups  and are each beaten say 5 lengths by their quicker companions. That’s a long way to be beaten and that’s why the lads from these stables think these horses aren’t very good.

 Calculate the ability of an unraced horse

by comparing it to the horses it works with …

Plodder is approximately a 75 horse, as he works 5 lengths behind two 90 rated horse. 5 lengths x 3lbs equals 15 lbs. Deduct 15lbs from the 90 rating of his companions and you arrive at a figure of around 75 for his ability ie 90-15=75.

Sloth is approximately an 80 horse (15lbs behind two 95 horses, 95-15=80) and Dawdler is a 95 horse (15lbs inferior to two 100 horses, 110-15 =95)

In the powerful stables’ work groups the horses finishing last in the work groups look poor in comparison to their illustrious stable companions. But they can be different class to the best horse in a small stable.

So if you blindly follow stable messages you’ll think the race consists of three slow horses with little chance (Plodder, Sloth and Dawdler, actual ability levels 75, 80 and 95) and one good horse called Superstar (actual ability 69)

Rate horses by their ability either on the racetrack or on home gallops … not on racecourse rumours

Superstar could end up being a hot favourite because of (incorrect) racecourse rumours about how brilliant he is whereas Plodder, Sloth and Dawdler may become attractive betting propositions at bigger odds and will probably even drift in the betting. Horses like this can become stunning each way bets!

If the race follows gallops work at home the 3 “slow” horses  will finish 1st 2nd and 3rd! … with Dawdler winning the race, Sloth coming 2nd and Plodder 3rd. Poor old Superstar will finish 4th at best!

Many punters will burn their fingers and scratch their heads. But in reality if you’d been able to analsye the horses’ abilities correctly that’s exactly where you’d expect them all to finish.

So “messages” have to be taken in context. Every horse’s ability has to be evaluated in the context of the race it is running in today. Sometimes a horse will be a great bet. sometimes awful. That’s why you have to adjust the stakes to suit the situation

When you have a big advantage … bet big!

Anyway that’s basically why we had a near maximum bet on ****** …

    •  he was rated 56 and my spies had spotted him working well with a horse rated in the high 70’s!
    • So with a potential 20lbs in hand I made him a genuine odds on chance (ie his winning chance was above 50%).
    • … and the final key to the puzzle … the odds available were generous in the context of his winning chance

Now this report is late (live on Wednesday night) partly because it takes me such a long time to compose not being a writer! .. and of course studying racing is my top priority so I can only start writing late in the evening when night racing has finished and I’ve completed my initial study of the following days cards.  I’m considering putting up the Profit Statement on the Website on Monday mornings without a discussion and then adding the discussion later in the week if I have I have time. I’d appreciate your feedback as to which part is the most valuable to you?

And now a very brief chat about the weeks racing. The great thing about a good winning week is it doesn’t need much explanation. If the horse wins we’re all happy! Enough said. I did discuss one bet in detail our 40 pointer on Monday only because I thought it illustrated a point you might find useful when you’re evaluating any other information you may acquire on your racing travels!

Monday

Fabulous start. A near maximum bet winner and two others at decent odds. 3 Great winners on the day at 7/1, 100/30 and 9/4. A day to savor.

Tuesday

One bet, one 5/1 winner! It doesn’t get much better than that!

Wednesday

Tricky day. Two 2nds a 3rd and a 4th made it tough though ********* was an easy 7/2 winner for us and was also heavily gambled. A slight setback day but we were still £13,750 up at the end of it so little damage done.

Thursday

A quiet day.  ******** was 2nd after a big gamble and then a small each way bet at 10/1 didn’t make the frame.

Friday

Another big priced horses day! ****** was a decent 12 Points ew winner at 11/2, ****** won at 5/2 and ******** an each way bet at 9/1 went very close finishing 2nd. A good day and profits now £19,070 on the week. I was hoping we’d hit the £20,000 barrier but with only Saturday (the toughest day’s racing) to look forward to it was no foregone conclusion.

Saturday

The hardest day’s racing of the week because so many owners want to win on a day they can go to the races with friends. They’re all trying!

We did very well with 7 bets of which 5 won or were placed pushing the profits over £20,000 for the week!

Sunday

– A stunning 7/1 winner! … Won in a canter and was very impressive indeed. Unusually for one of our horses we took under the odds! The bet was a decent 8 Points ew at 13/2 and he actually won at 7/1! Great day though. No complaints!

Summary

A stunning week with a profit of £27,380 to £100 per point stakes. Just imagine if you could bet like that for a year … you’d make well over a million!! Lovely thought eh?

Profits have finally crept through the £200,000 barrier to £202,314.50. That’s terrific work for 24 weeks betting! It’s been a marvelous 1st 6 months for the Service and as much as I’d love to keep winning at this rate I d think it’s been especially good. My target for the year was to win an extra £10,000 for you at £10 per point ie £100,000 at my usual £100 per point stakes. We’ve surpassed that 400% and hopefully we’ll continue to add to it. I doubt the next 6 months will be quite so spectacular but you never know! That’s the beauty of racing!

 

All the best

 

Bob Rothman

PS This week’s password for the secure areas on our website www.horseracingpro.co.uk is now ******


Cobham, 2.46pm Monday

Awesome week! £17,255.00 Profit!

 Summary

This is the time of year when our betting on the Flat starts taking 2nd place to the Jumps. Many Flat horses are now losing their summer coat and going over the top making results more erratic. We had more bets over the sticks this week and the week’s results clearly demonstrated that the New Jump Season is now starting to pay its way. Let’s hope it continues as well as it’s started!

6 Bets 4 winners!

We had 6 bets over the sticks with 4 good winners at fantastic prices. We usually have an advantage at the start of a new season because not everyone knows which horses are fit before they’ve run. That means you can get better odds as we did last week.

****** was pretty stunning as an example. It was hard to believe you could bet a horse at 9/1 that was trading at odds-on in running well before the race was over … and at a very short price for most of the time … he was travelling so well you could call him the winner from a long long way out! ****** at 11/2, ****** at 11/4 and  ****** on Sunday at 13/2 were all great big priced winners too so despite a substandard Saturday with several Flat horses running well below expectations and just the one winner we ended up with a handsome 172 points profit on the week! £17,255.00 to £100 per point stakes. Awesome!

Monday:

Nice start to the week with 2 winners 2 seconds. But how cruel was ******? He had to run wide most of the race yet was still well ahead in the last furlong and in the words of the Racing Post was “mown down last strides!”  It was carnage for the “Betting In Running” Professionals who were betting him at 1/5 in the last furlong! Ouch! At least we were on each way at big odds around 11/2 and made a small profit anyway. They lost their shirts! It was one of those races were afterwards you’re left wondering “how the heck did he get beat from there?”

Tuesday:

****** ran too free early on yet was still close up and only run out of second close home. Worth keeping an eye on.

****** battled for the early lead but as a result blew up in the last furlong after looking like he had the race at his mercy. He needs to be ridden with more restraint.

Wednesday:

A Fabulous Day! Two great winners. ****** was the cream! I love backing 9/1 winners don’t you? Even if you missed that and only got 8/1 you had to be feeling pretty smug when he was an enormous gamble just before the off and went off the heavily backed 4/1 second favourite. He’d been schooling brilliantly and I guess when the bookies were hit for 6 they may have finally twigged it was a proper “job”.  The race was named in honour of  ****** and the bookmakers eventually got the clue that ****** might just have laid it out to win this and dived for cover like headless chickens as they so often do when faced with professional money!!

****** was an effortless winner making it a great day.

Thursday:

Profits on the week zoomed up to over £10,000! These are the weeks I love! Our Jump contacts proved they are in excellent form when  ****** was well backed and landed a lovely 11/2 winner for us.   ****** won a decent bet and the other two bets were both placed. I know they can’t all win but I don’t mind if they go close. This was a really good day!

Friday:

A poor day’s racing and looked like we’d have no bets. Then we got a late message for one which was heavily backed yet ran badly. No excuses and odd because our late messages usually run great.

Saturday

On the plus side our sole bet over the Jumps won well.  ****** was another ******  runner that was having his seasonal debut and proved he was as fit as our spies reported, winning easily and being heavily backed to do so.

The Flat horses were disappointing.  ****** won the race last year and had been targeted at it yet ran no race. Afterwards they agreed she gone over the top and the race had probably come a week too late. It is hard to get horses to peak for a race and usually you have a 2 week window where you can keep them at peak fitness before you have to let them down and then build up again.

Our reports on ****** proved to be accurate as we’d heard he was working better than the original favourite (******) at home (both trained by same stable) he beat him in the race but neither were good enough and it looks like their horses have also gone over the top after a long hard season.

****** travelled like the best horse but found disappointingly little when ****** asked him to quicken. They blamed the ground but I’d like to reserve judgment. He’s such a good horse at home he wins his gallops on the bridle so they didn’t know how good he was. It’s possible he’s a “bridle” horse who finds little for pressure and because he’s used to winning easily at home has never had to develop his battling qualities. Rather like humans who have life way too easy and are over-spoilt by rich parents. They may be talented but often are losers in life! Time will tell.

Sunday

What a great way to end the week!  ****** was a stunning 13/2 winner for us. Sorry we missed the early 7/1 because I wanted to study the race for a bit longer after I got the message. After Saturday I was treading a bit carefully.

He was a great winner and it would have been too cruel if he’d got beaten like ******. 18 lengths clear at the second last when he hit it, and then blundered at the last as well! He had enough left to still win but it would have been even more authoritive had he not messed up the last two hurdles! He probably went too far ahead too early but was the best horse at the weights so why not!

All in all a Great Week. 172 Points profit is fantastic for a years betting let alone a week! No complaints even though  ****** getting caught close home cost us another 65 points! Can’t be too greedy I guess! But I do love beating the bookies and giving them a good kick in the pants don’t you?!

All the best

 

Bob Rothman

 

PS This week’s password for the secure areas on our website is ******