AGE
Can
Three-year-olds beat older horses?
Yes and No. It depends:
1. On the kinds of races
2. On the time of the year
When
races are carded for horses 3 and up, handicappers best prefer
the three-year-olds or older horses variously, as follows:
Three-year-olds
Maiden
Allowance, NW1x
Allowance, NW2x
Allowance, NW3x,4x
4 and up
Claiming
Classified Allowance
Stakes
Age
is not a meaningful factor in Maiden-Claiming races
In
comparison to older horses, Three-year-olds run considerably
slower early in the calendar year, but comparably faster as
the year progresses.
By
summer, better Three-year-olds can compete well enough in
stakes open to older horses and top Three-year-olds can win
these races. By fall, good Three-year-olds can defeat older
runners in many Stakes, including the Breeders' Cup Championship
Races.
Cheaper
Three-year-olds, the claimers, are notoriously inconsistent
and unreliable. Good races are not repeated. Form reversals
are common.
During
the first half of the year especially, to less extent later,
any 3YO moving from an even effort or acceptable performance
in an allowance race to a claiming race limited to Three-year-olds
is making a big drop in class and may be the best bet of the
day or week.
When
Three-year-olds turn 4, during Jan-Feb look for claiming horses
moving from races open to 4 and up to races limited to four-year-olds.
A good effort in the 4 and up race may translate to an easy
win in the race restricted to four-year-olds.
Older
horses generally dominate the Three-year-olds in claiming
races, but not as much in low-level claiming races ($10,000
and below) or in restricted claiming races, limited to non-winners
of two races lifetime at today's claiming price.
Two-year-olds
tend to run as fast as they can for as long as they can. Prefer
the Two-year-olds having the highest speed figures.
The
Two-year-olds that win sprint stakes during spring and summer
tend not to win route stakes during fall. Look instead for
Two-year-olds that have already run well at the route or are
bred to go long.
Claiming
horses aged seven and older tend to decline. If their performance
ratings have slipped, prefer the four-year-olds and five-year-olds
against them.
When
leading stakes winners turn 5, look to see if their speed
figures have begun to decline. If so, discount them, unless
they are taking a drop in class.