You don\'t care about pedigree historical data when handicapping a given race, because it doesn\'t apply to these accomplished horses? Do you think TG data is produced from stakes winners only? Do you think they throw out the horses that run those 28s?
I (and others on this board) don\'t \"pedigree handicap\" - we recognize it being a factor to consider, along with all the other things considered, when handicapping a race at a new distance for the runners involved (especially as they have often been stretching out prior)...you keep saying it means nothing, they\'re all physiologic freaks so they can go 8, 8.5, 9, 10F in top company like an EverReady Bunny. It might not matter to the degree some make it out to be, that other factors are more relevant (this is getting monotonous, sorry), but saying it\'s a nonexistent factor because you can alibi every subpar performance in another language is stretching credibility.
There is good data regarding pedigree influence on distance aptitude, AND IT IS BASED UPON GRADED STAKES WINNERS ONLY, not horses that run \"28 TGs\"; if you want to prove that top horses don\'t follow pedigree/distance aptitude relationships (again, it\'s a distribution, not 100%), then YOU provide that data.
To repeat: the data relating pedigree and distance aptitude is based upon populations of graded stakes horses, precisely the population you claim it doesn\'t apply to; TG data used for sire indexes and Thoro-patterns uses all class levels of runners in its data.
You can start with Teuflesberg, the horse you stated you bet along with Street Sense, presumably because of his good-looking pattern. Breeding for the trip suspect (Johannesburg/Devil\'s Bag mare). Close at 9F (Blue Grass) when they went 51.2 for a half/1:16.3 for 6F. In the Derby he may have run to his predicted pattern - for a mile. He ran to his pedigree for the mile and a quarter. Of course he bounced...you would say he needed another week; another view would say he bounced on both stretchouts at two, overextended himself at 8-8.5F leading up to a irrelevantly-paced race at 9F, and showed his true self at 10F and every race he ran thereafter.