Finding The Grand National Winner

It has been some time since I’ve made a post to my Punters Notebook site but The Grand National is a race that captures an audience from around the world  and hence the right time to launch again and share with you the most amazing system for predicting the winner that I have discovered.

Here is a method of reducing the 40 runner field of the Grand National to the few horses that have the necessary profile of a winner.  Contrary to popular myth.The Grand National is not the lottery that most people believe it to be.  It is a race with very strong trends and the winner will most likely fit 80% of them.

Nick Mordin, author of “Betting For A Living” and several other books, is a student of systems, writes in the Racing Post Weekender on 11 April 2012 about the one he has developed one over the last 20 years for the Grand National that has predicted the winner of the last nine Grand National’s from a short list that averages seven selections including Silver Birch at 33/1 and Mon Mome at a masssive 100/1..

The System evolved and has been refined over the years and currently awards 5 points for each of 16 criteria.  The winner of the last nine National’s have scored at least 65 points

This year nine horses rate 65 or more.

Sunnyhillboy                   80

Organisedconfusion        75

Killyglen                          65

Mon Mome                       65

The Midnight Club        65

Always Right                    65

Shakalakaboomboom     65

Synchronised                  65

Treacle                           65

Backing all of them with no further thought should produce the winner but some can be eliminated for various reasons and his preferred shortlist consists of the four which are in bold type.

His suggestion is to back all four to win and to perm them in 24 straight forecasts.

You can read the full article written by Nick Mordin in the Racing Post Weekended which was published this week on Wednesday 11th of April..

 

 

So Close

The results didn’t quite go our way in the Grand National but the top rated Sunnyhillboy ran an absolute cracker of a race and was just caught on the line by Neptune Collonges. The narrow defeat has not put me off my belief in the National is a strong trends race.   There is no doubt that Nick Mordin will make adjustments to the system again next year and I’ll look forward with confidence to the shortlist getting back on track..