Reading this email will get you a very valuable free report!
There was a time when I would devote hours to form study to improve my chances of finding winning horses...
And I was pretty good at it back when I was prepared to spend those hours. But it was head achingly tedious quite frankly and the hard part was always getting started each day.
And then of course there were the distractions, the supposed "magic pills" that took away the need for such form study. And, guess what, it was hard not to be tempted by them (especially after a loser or two) but, of course, they never worked.
Magic pills, automation software that could pick the winner for you, the very latest tricks from some genius Oxford educated mathematician and, of course, special "hot" insider information.
All of these used to hit my inbox multiple times every day. None of it worked or works now, none of it could because horses are fundamentally flawed. They are inconsistent and moody and, just like people and they have good days and bad days. But also, just like people, they get used to performing better in certain places and in certain conditions. Just like people, you can't make them perform in every place and in all conditions.
And what about insider information - so someone has heard from his contacts that a certain trainer has his horse absolutely ready for this particular race. Well whoopee, so have a few other trainers in that same race.
We need facts and consistent information to work with, not whispers from the yard!
Even in my earliest days of becoming interested in horse racing I discovered three important things that never change:
1) The odds of finding winners are simply better with National Hunt racing than they are with flat racing.
2) And, whatever you do, you must do consistently based on good quality information that can be verified from many sources as only consistent behaviour pays off in the end.
3) And also that trainers are creatures of habit and generally do better when they know a track like the back of their own hand and know how to train a horse specifically to produce its best at that track.
And knowing all that, even if you are studying form big time, day in and day out and you have absolutely all bases covered, you still need a little help sometimes to find those regular winners.
I have found myself largely infected with laziness where it comes to form study in recent years and so I look for good help wherever I can find it. And on that note the one report I do genuinely look forward to each year and have looked forward to since right back in 2006 has been the Trainer Track Stats (TTS) report.
Magic pill? No! Clinical, consistent profit maker? Yes!
It's the original and best guide to regular national hunt racing profits and the results year on year speak for themselves with a strike rate of 40%. And with odds typically up to 10/1 it really is the "must have" assistant to jumps racing. I could go back to studying form until my eyes glazed over but I would still consult TTS during the jumps season.
Trainer Track Stats has been the jump race fan’s punting bible since it was first published in 2006 for the 2006/7 jumps season and is always that little help I first look for to get started each NH season.
Back in 2006/2007, David Pipe won more races than any other - 134 - and yet he ranked 32nd last term with just 33 winners from 361 runners;
Willie Mullins trained 79 winners in Ireland, 23 behind Noel Meade in 2006/2007 - he trained 210 last campaign and Meade 57; and Gordon Elliott had no winners from 30 runners in his first full season training in Ireland… but he did saddle the Grand National winner in England!
So what exactly is Trainer Track Stats?
Well, if you’ve not heard of it before – it is, as the name suggests, a guide to the very best trainer/track combinations in Britain. It enables you to focus your betting efforts on the most profitable meetings/races form the start.
While most of the trainers have a negative profile overall, there are places they like to target with particular types pf horse. Trainers, like all of us, are creatures of habit: what has worked for them in the past is what they look to replicate in the future.
The guy behind the TTS manual, and the original creator of the format back in 2006, Matt Bisogno, has whittled 410 candidate trainer/track combinations down to just 45. That small subset form the ‘A Team’ in this free report and are expected to provide an average of two bets a day throughout the season.
I've known Matt personally for all of that time and I can honestly say that he walks the talk. He is all about racing and nothing else. His entire work focus is on racing and, unlike most horse racing pundits, there is little about the sport of Kings that he does not know intimately. Last season’s TTS qualifiers amassed a whopping ‘five bags’ - £5,095.20 – to £20 stakes. And they did so at a strike rate of 40.58%, with winners at up to 10/1. And don't forget, we are talking Betfair SP odds here. Download your copy of TTS hereFor those who like a bit more action, Matt has included a ‘Director’s Cut’ in the back of the guide which contains the next best 61 trainer/track combinations, all of which have passed strict criteria for inclusion even on that ‘second tier’ list. It’s all free for just the next few days, and you can get your copy here The worst thing that could happen here is you download it and then, for some strange reason, you don't use it. Of course, that would be like having a fully paid pass to an all you can eat buffet but then still deciding to pay for it!
John
Nb - Links Not Working? Try this: https://www.profitmagnets.com/TTS
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