
A tough day was had on Saturday with only one winner from our suggested bets and our best bet of the day scratched on race morning due to the state of the track.
Overall, we are still showing a POT of 18.53% from 78 meetings, with a $20 per unit investment returning a healthy $3,065 profit.
We head out of town this Saturday for Ballarat Cup Day, where we will be striving to return to the winner’s circle.
It was a mixed bag at Caulfield on Saturday with just one winner delivered from our suggested bets, and our best pick scratched on race morning due to the state of the track. Yet that kind of unpredictability is exactly why race fans keep coming back: what we might lose in certainty, we gain in the thrill of the unknown. As pointed out in our latest Racing Tips result, patience and discipline remain as important as ever.
Still, there were a few encouraging flashes. As form guides showed ahead of the meeting, the depth of fields at Caulfield with roughly twelve runners per race across 10 events meant that any small edge could pay off. Even if it wasn’t our day, it’s clear that a well-timed tip can land with impact.
Looking forward, this is precisely when sensible Horse Racing Tips matter most. Studying how horses handled the soft track, how they settled early, how they finished those details often separate a near-miss from a winner. And that’s where a good racing blog or a thoughtful Racing Podcasts conversation can help sharpen perspective: by reflecting on race shape, pace, and performance rather than just chasing favourites.
We’re now turning our eyes to Ballarat Cup Day hoping to regain momentum. When punters follow form, consider track conditions, and combine that with a bit of gut feel, those three parts often add up. In the meantime, digging into previous race results helps build context, reminding us that every run tells a part of a longer story.
So whether you listen in on a podcast while poring over numbers or simply scroll through results and split times staying engaged, informed and patient remains key. Because in racing, as in life, persistence sometimes delivers when you least expect it.