The Melbourne Cup is the richest horse race in Australia and it is the race that stops a nation, well two nations counting New Zealand. There will not be that many people in either country who have not had a financial interest in the outcome of the race even if it is just the work sweepstake. For many people, their annual flutter on this great race will be their only wager on the horses for the year but whether you are a once-a-year-punter or like to follow the horses regularly then the tips given here may be helpful in sorting the wheat from the chaff when in comes to narrowing the field down to the likely winner.
When one talks about selecting the winner of the Melbourne Cup I am not talking about a system based on lucky numbers or colours and just picking names out of a hat, I am rather talking about using form and previous statistics to reduce the field to a handful of contenders.
The trick is to find a horse which likely to be at peak fitness come Melbourne Cup day. Many horses are in good form during the lead-up races to the Melbourne Cup but have gone off the boil come cup day. Form can give you some clues in this respect. For example a horse that lines up in the Cup with form figures such as 1116 I would be wary of and would prefer something with 002 which shows that the horse ran his best race of the season at it's most recent race.
Many of the lead-up races can provide clues to each individual horse's form. Some of the main lead up races being the Cox Plate, Moonee Valley Cup, Geelong Cup, Lexius Handicap, and the McKinnon Stakes. These races are all within two weeks of the Melbourne Cup. The Caulfield Cup has at times proven to be a good guide but this is more than two weeks prior to the Melbourne Cup and my preference is to stick with horses that have run within this two-week period.
The foreign horses always add a lot of international interest to the race but it would pay to only back those that have raced in Australia prior to the Cup because since Vintage Crop, an Irish trained horse who won the Cup in 1993 at his first Australian start, 90 others have tried and failed to win the Cup since though many have been placed.
The Melbourne Cup is the richest horse race in Australia and it is the race that stops a nation, well two nations counting New Zealand. There will not be that many people in either country who have not had a financial interest in the outcome of the race even if it is just the work sweepstake. For many people, their annual flutter on this great race will be their only wager on the horses for the year but whether you are a once-a-year-punter or like to follow the horses regularly then the tips given here may be helpful in sorting the wheat from the chaff when in comes to narrowing the field down to the likely winner.
When one talks about selecting the winner of the Melbourne Cup I am not talking about a system based on lucky numbers or colours and just picking names out of a hat, I am rather talking about using form and previous statistics to reduce the field to a handful of contenders.
The trick is to find a horse which likely to be at peak fitness come Melbourne Cup day. Many horses are in good form during the lead-up races to the Melbourne Cup but have gone off the boil come cup day. Form can give you some clues in this respect. For example a horse that lines up in the Cup with form figures such as 1116 I would be wary of and would prefer something with 002 which shows that the horse ran his best race of the season at it's most recent race.
Many of the lead-up races can provide clues to each individual horse's form. Some of the main lead up races being the Cox Plate, Moonee Valley Cup, Geelong Cup, Lexius Handicap, and the McKinnon Stakes. These races are all within two weeks of the Melbourne Cup. The Caulfield Cup has at times proven to be a good guide but this is more than two weeks prior to the Melbourne Cup and my preference is to stick with horses that have run within this two-week period.
The foreign horses always add a lot of international interest to the race but it would pay to only back those that have raced in Australia prior to the Cup because since Vintage Crop, an Irish trained horse who won the Cup in 1993 at his first Australian start, 90 others have tried and failed to win the Cup since though many have been placed.
The Melbourne Cup is the richest horse race in Australia and it is the race that stops a nation, well two nations counting New Zealand. There will not be that many people in either country who have not had a financial interest in the outcome of the race even if it is just the work sweepstake. For many people, their annual flutter on this great race will be their only wager on the horses for the year but whether you are a once-a-year-punter or like to follow the horses regularly then the tips given here may be helpful in sorting the wheat from the chaff when in comes to narrowing the field down to the likely winner.
When one talks about selecting the winner of the Melbourne Cup I am not talking about a system based on lucky numbers or colours and just picking names out of a hat, I am rather talking about using form and previous statistics to reduce the field to a handful of contenders.
The trick is to find a horse which likely to be at peak fitness come Melbourne Cup day. Many horses are in good form during the lead-up races to the Melbourne Cup but have gone off the boil come cup day. Form can give you some clues in this respect. For example a horse that lines up in the Cup with form figures such as 1116 I would be wary of and would prefer something with 002 which shows that the horse ran his best race of the season at it's most recent race.
Many of the lead-up races can provide clues to each individual horse's form. Some of the main lead up races being the Cox Plate, Moonee Valley Cup, Geelong Cup, Lexius Handicap, and the McKinnon Stakes. These races are all within two weeks of the Melbourne Cup. The Caulfield Cup has at times proven to be a good guide but this is more than two weeks prior to the Melbourne Cup and my preference is to stick with horses that have run within this two-week period.
The foreign horses always add a lot of international interest to the race but it would pay to only back those that have raced in Australia prior to the Cup because since Vintage Crop, an Irish trained horse who won the Cup in 1993 at his first Australian start, 90 others have tried and failed to win the Cup since though many have been placed.
The Melbourne Cup is the richest horse race in Australia and it is the race that stops a nation, well two nations counting New Zealand. There will not be that many people in either country who have not had a financial interest in the outcome of the race even if it is just the work sweepstake. For many people, their annual flutter on this great race will be their only wager on the horses for the year but whether you are a once-a-year-punter or like to follow the horses regularly then the tips given here may be helpful in sorting the wheat from the chaff when in comes to narrowing the field down to the likely winner.
When one talks about selecting the winner of the Melbourne Cup I am not talking about a system based on lucky numbers or colours and just picking names out of a hat, I am rather talking about using form and previous statistics to reduce the field to a handful of contenders.
The trick is to find a horse which likely to be at peak fitness come Melbourne Cup day. Many horses are in good form during the lead-up races to the Melbourne Cup but have gone off the boil come cup day. Form can give you some clues in this respect. For example a horse that lines up in the Cup with form figures such as 1116 I would be wary of and would prefer something with 002 which shows that the horse ran his best race of the season at it's most recent race.
Many of the lead-up races can provide clues to each individual horse's form. Some of the main lead up races being the Cox Plate, Moonee Valley Cup, Geelong Cup, Lexius Handicap, and the McKinnon Stakes. These races are all within two weeks of the Melbourne Cup. The Caulfield Cup has at times proven to be a good guide but this is more than two weeks prior to the Melbourne Cup and my preference is to stick with horses that have run within this two-week period.
The foreign horses always add a lot of international interest to the race but it would pay to only back those that have raced in Australia prior to the Cup because since Vintage Crop, an Irish trained horse who won the Cup in 1993 at his first Australian start, 90 others have tried and failed to win the Cup since though many have been placed.
The Melbourne Cup is the richest horse race in Australia and it is the race that stops a nation, well two nations counting New Zealand. There will not be that many people in either country who have not had a financial interest in the outcome of the race even if it is just the work sweepstake. For many people, their annual flutter on this great race will be their only wager on the horses for the year but whether you are a once-a-year-punter or like to follow the horses regularly then the tips given here may be helpful in sorting the wheat from the chaff when in comes to narrowing the field down to the likely winner.
When one talks about selecting the winner of the Melbourne Cup I am not talking about a system based on lucky numbers or colours and just picking names out of a hat, I am rather talking about using form and previous statistics to reduce the field to a handful of contenders.
The trick is to find a horse which likely to be at peak fitness come Melbourne Cup day. Many horses are in good form during the lead-up races to the Melbourne Cup but have gone off the boil come cup day. Form can give you some clues in this respect. For example a horse that lines up in the Cup with form figures such as 1116 I would be wary of and would prefer something with 002 which shows that the horse ran his best race of the season at it's most recent race.
Many of the lead-up races can provide clues to each individual horse's form. Some of the main lead up races being the Cox Plate, Moonee Valley Cup, Geelong Cup, Lexius Handicap, and the McKinnon Stakes. These races are all within two weeks of the Melbourne Cup. The Caulfield Cup has at times proven to be a good guide but this is more than two weeks prior to the Melbourne Cup and my preference is to stick with horses that have run within this two-week period.
The foreign horses always add a lot of international interest to the race but it would pay to only back those that have raced in Australia prior to the Cup because since Vintage Crop, an Irish trained horse who won the Cup in 1993 at his first Australian start, 90 others have tried and failed to win the Cup since though many have been placed.
The Melbourne Cup is the richest horse race in Australia and it is the race that stops a nation, well two nations counting New Zealand. There will not be that many people in either country who have not had a financial interest in the outcome of the race even if it is just the work sweepstake. For many people, their annual flutter on this great race will be their only wager on the horses for the year but whether you are a once-a-year-punter or like to follow the horses regularly then the tips given here may be helpful in sorting the wheat from the chaff when in comes to narrowing the field down to the likely winner.
When one talks about selecting the winner of the Melbourne Cup I am not talking about a system based on lucky numbers or colours and just picking names out of a hat, I am rather talking about using form and previous statistics to reduce the field to a handful of contenders.
The trick is to find a horse which likely to be at peak fitness come Melbourne Cup day. Many horses are in good form during the lead-up races to the Melbourne Cup but have gone off the boil come cup day. Form can give you some clues in this respect. For example a horse that lines up in the Cup with form figures such as 1116 I would be wary of and would prefer something with 002 which shows that the horse ran his best race of the season at it's most recent race.
Many of the lead-up races can provide clues to each individual horse's form. Some of the main lead up races being the Cox Plate, Moonee Valley Cup, Geelong Cup, Lexius Handicap, and the McKinnon Stakes. These races are all within two weeks of the Melbourne Cup. The Caulfield Cup has at times proven to be a good guide but this is more than two weeks prior to the Melbourne Cup and my preference is to stick with horses that have run within this two-week period.
The foreign horses always add a lot of international interest to the race but it would pay to only back those that have raced in Australia prior to the Cup because since Vintage Crop, an Irish trained horse who won the Cup in 1993 at his first Australian start, 90 others have tried and failed to win the Cup since though many have been placed.
The Melbourne Cup is the richest horse race in Australia and it is the race that stops a nation, well two nations counting New Zealand. There will not be that many people in either country who have not had a financial interest in the outcome of the race even if it is just the work sweepstake. For many people, their annual flutter on this great race will be their only wager on the horses for the year but whether you are a once-a-year-punter or like to follow the horses regularly then the tips given here may be helpful in sorting the wheat from the chaff when in comes to narrowing the field down to the likely winner.
When one talks about selecting the winner of the Melbourne Cup I am not talking about a system based on lucky numbers or colours and just picking names out of a hat, I am rather talking about using form and previous statistics to reduce the field to a handful of contenders.
The trick is to find a horse which likely to be at peak fitness come Melbourne Cup day. Many horses are in good form during the lead-up races to the Melbourne Cup but have gone off the boil come cup day. Form can give you some clues in this respect. For example a horse that lines up in the Cup with form figures such as 1116 I would be wary of and would prefer something with 002 which shows that the horse ran his best race of the season at it's most recent race.
Many of the lead-up races can provide clues to each individual horse's form. Some of the main lead up races being the Cox Plate, Moonee Valley Cup, Geelong Cup, Lexius Handicap, and the McKinnon Stakes. These races are all within two weeks of the Melbourne Cup. The Caulfield Cup has at times proven to be a good guide but this is more than two weeks prior to the Melbourne Cup and my preference is to stick with horses that have run within this two-week period.
The foreign horses always add a lot of international interest to the race but it would pay to only back those that have raced in Australia prior to the Cup because since Vintage Crop, an Irish trained horse who won the Cup in 1993 at his first Australian start, 90 others have tried and failed to win the Cup since though many have been placed.
The Melbourne Cup is the richest horse race in Australia and it is the race that stops a nation, well two nations counting New Zealand. There will not be that many people in either country who have not had a financial interest in the outcome of the race even if it is just the work sweepstake. For many people, their annual flutter on this great race will be their only wager on the horses for the year but whether you are a once-a-year-punter or like to follow the horses regularly then the tips given here may be helpful in sorting the wheat from the chaff when in comes to narrowing the field down to the likely winner.
When one talks about selecting the winner of the Melbourne Cup I am not talking about a system based on lucky numbers or colours and just picking names out of a hat, I am rather talking about using form and previous statistics to reduce the field to a handful of contenders.
The trick is to find a horse which likely to be at peak fitness come Melbourne Cup day. Many horses are in good form during the lead-up races to the Melbourne Cup but have gone off the boil come cup day. Form can give you some clues in this respect. For example a horse that lines up in the Cup with form figures such as 1116 I would be wary of and would prefer something with 002 which shows that the horse ran his best race of the season at it's most recent race.
Many of the lead-up races can provide clues to each individual horse's form. Some of the main lead up races being the Cox Plate, Moonee Valley Cup, Geelong Cup, Lexius Handicap, and the McKinnon Stakes. These races are all within two weeks of the Melbourne Cup. The Caulfield Cup has at times proven to be a good guide but this is more than two weeks prior to the Melbourne Cup and my preference is to stick with horses that have run within this two-week period.
The foreign horses always add a lot of international interest to the race but it would pay to only back those that have raced in Australia prior to the Cup because since Vintage Crop, an Irish trained horse who won the Cup in 1993 at his first Australian start, 90 others have tried and failed to win the Cup since though many have been placed.
The Melbourne Cup is the richest horse race in Australia and it is the race that stops a nation, well two nations counting New Zealand. There will not be that many people in either country who have not had a financial interest in the outcome of the race even if it is just the work sweepstake. For many people, their annual flutter on this great race will be their only wager on the horses for the year but whether you are a once-a-year-punter or like to follow the horses regularly then the tips given here may be helpful in sorting the wheat from the chaff when in comes to narrowing the field down to the likely winner.
When one talks about selecting the winner of the Melbourne Cup I am not talking about a system based on lucky numbers or colours and just picking names out of a hat, I am rather talking about using form and previous statistics to reduce the field to a handful of contenders.
The trick is to find a horse which likely to be at peak fitness come Melbourne Cup day. Many horses are in good form during the lead-up races to the Melbourne Cup but have gone off the boil come cup day. Form can give you some clues in this respect. For example a horse that lines up in the Cup with form figures such as 1116 I would be wary of and would prefer something with 002 which shows that the horse ran his best race of the season at it's most recent race.
Many of the lead-up races can provide clues to each individual horse's form. Some of the main lead up races being the Cox Plate, Moonee Valley Cup, Geelong Cup, Lexius Handicap, and the McKinnon Stakes. These races are all within two weeks of the Melbourne Cup. The Caulfield Cup has at times proven to be a good guide but this is more than two weeks prior to the Melbourne Cup and my preference is to stick with horses that have run within this two-week period.
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