Handicapping in this country is a shambles.
If it was announced that every student would get an “A” for matric, we would laugh at such ignorance because common sense tells you it’s unworkable. We have no problem wanting the handicappers to keep every horses’ rating down…this makes sense to us.
Beyond the normal and accepted handicapping practices, the handicappers in South Africa are issued with a sub-set of rules which they are forced to follow blindly. Over time these rules have changed the landscape of results and the career paths of many horses.
Common sense tells you that if all the rules the handicapper MUST use are tailored to trim ratings down race after race, that over time the gaps between horses will get compressed.
In a letter to the Sporting Post I pointed out some horses where the rules had forced the handicapper to ignore their improved ratings. Even though I expected them to go on and do well, I was stunned as all 3 won their next starts; 2 being feature races and another went to win again immediately.
One of the ‘flaws’ in the rules seems to concentrate around Graduation Plates (a race with set weights for 0,1 and 2 time winners). The rule that applies to this type of race is that the handicapper may only increase the rating of the winner (up to 6 points) and all other runners may stay the same or go down.
On Friday, TALES OF BRAVERY won a handicap race at Kenilworth after being heavily backed. This horse had placed and won in his first 3 races earning a rating of 85. Post maiden he ran 6th and then ran 32 lengths last and was dropped 3 points (although please will someone explain how a 3 point adjustment has anything to do with being 18 L behind the horse in front of you that is also being beaten by 14 L).
At this point TALES ran a decent 5th off the 82 and but got lowered again to 78. His trainer apparently calls the Handicapper and tells them they are wrong because he wants to run the horse in the Derby. I would love to have heard the conversation, but clearly the Handicapper was having non of it and TALES remained 78. One would think that warning bells would be ringing...loudly.
Next he runs great 2nd in his 6th race (a Graduation Plate of course) running easily back to his original 85. The trainer was correct and the Handicapper is trapped in his mistake and unable to correct the rating so TALES OF BRAVERY suddenly became the proverbial penalty kick in the Handicap (!) on Friday, running off a very wrong 78 and say 3.5kg better off. The horse was claimed and backed heavily after the claim and won by a casual 4 ¼ lengths. So much for “every horse has a fair chance to win” in a handicap.
This is just one example of what is repeatedly happening. I may be making heavy weather of this but spare a thought for the runner up (CANUTE) who had to give 2.5kg to the winner. Ironically, CANUTE also ran 2nd to PERGAMON ALTER about 10 weeks ago when he too got the exact same Graduation Plate advantage (and was also claimed in his next Handicap race). To add insult to injury CANUTE again met PERGAMON ALTER, again gave him the ½ kg, and got beaten again.
The point is not that the handicapper should be ‘stopping’ TALES OF BRAVERY or PERGAMON ALTER but rather that capping of ratings is patently unfair, especially if you neglect to drop other horses around them.
The Handicapper is dropping some horses arbitrarily and not dropping others. It seems as if the rules are also a convenient raincoat to avoid the splash.
Possibly horses should just be rated properly in the first place?