Maxbet
Journeyman
- Joined
- Dec 31, 2013
- Messages
- 2,059
The following is the transcript by the guy who does the synopsis styled commentary for the Racing Post. You have to laugh for he is obviously another heart rules the head Our Conor lover.
To race read correctly you must peripherally look at all four runners and then use your intellect to analyse what is actually happening. This is how he sees it...sorry, twists it to suite...
Hurricane Fly: “Settled behind leader, led narrowly before last where slight mistake and headed briefly, rallied well run-in to regain advantage far side and stayed on well to extend advantage towards finish”
Our Conor: “Held up in 3rd, headway going well from 2 out to challenge, led briefly from last, soon headed under pressure and kept on well towards finish without matching winner.
Captain Cee Bee: “Led, reduced advantage before 4th, ridden and strongly pressed between last 2, headed narrowly before last, no impression on leaders in 3rd run-in, kept on well towards finish”
Jezki: “Settled in rear of quartet, took keen hold, not fluent 5th, took closer order behind leaders from 2 out where pushed along, closed on outer and ridden before last, no impression on leaders run-in, kept on same pace.
He suggests that Our Conor keeps on well towards the finish without matching the winner, at the same time that both Captain Cee Bee and Jezki give him the visual impression that they were keeping on well too.
If all four horses are relevant to each other would you be able to differentiate and form an opinion, I think not. It’s one or the other, Captain Cee Bee can’t have his advantage reduced before he is strongly pressed and headed then say they appear to be keeping on towards the finish without the eye and the brain working together and using an exponent to measure against.
He uses his peripheral vision to conclude an impression and then blatantly denies what’s actually happening. Our Conor’s back peddling is the real reason for them appearing to keep on, because measured against Hurricane fly the same statements aren’t true.
Peripherally we have a blind spot, its slightly to the side and up, I have a new name for it, it’s called the Our Conor spot.
Our Conor lovers are blind...lol
To race read correctly you must peripherally look at all four runners and then use your intellect to analyse what is actually happening. This is how he sees it...sorry, twists it to suite...
Hurricane Fly: “Settled behind leader, led narrowly before last where slight mistake and headed briefly, rallied well run-in to regain advantage far side and stayed on well to extend advantage towards finish”
Our Conor: “Held up in 3rd, headway going well from 2 out to challenge, led briefly from last, soon headed under pressure and kept on well towards finish without matching winner.
Captain Cee Bee: “Led, reduced advantage before 4th, ridden and strongly pressed between last 2, headed narrowly before last, no impression on leaders in 3rd run-in, kept on well towards finish”
Jezki: “Settled in rear of quartet, took keen hold, not fluent 5th, took closer order behind leaders from 2 out where pushed along, closed on outer and ridden before last, no impression on leaders run-in, kept on same pace.
He suggests that Our Conor keeps on well towards the finish without matching the winner, at the same time that both Captain Cee Bee and Jezki give him the visual impression that they were keeping on well too.
If all four horses are relevant to each other would you be able to differentiate and form an opinion, I think not. It’s one or the other, Captain Cee Bee can’t have his advantage reduced before he is strongly pressed and headed then say they appear to be keeping on towards the finish without the eye and the brain working together and using an exponent to measure against.
He uses his peripheral vision to conclude an impression and then blatantly denies what’s actually happening. Our Conor’s back peddling is the real reason for them appearing to keep on, because measured against Hurricane fly the same statements aren’t true.
Peripherally we have a blind spot, its slightly to the side and up, I have a new name for it, it’s called the Our Conor spot.
Our Conor lovers are blind...lol
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