I think you\'re being way too hard on the product, Jimbo. I only used the sheets, not the analysis, and they pointed me to a lot of scores on Oaks and Derby Day.
TG numbers don\'t exist in a vacuum, and I\'ve read enough of your posts to know that you do not just blindly apply them without any context. And there was a lot of context: the track was clearly playing toward forwardly placed horses on both days, and seemed to be favoring outside paths. If you factored that in, you could then eliminate a lot of horses which otherwise did look good on TG.
The 9/5 shot in Race 12 was a gift; there was no other horse in the race that was even close on TG; on Beyer, there were a few horses who looked like they could challenge him if they ran back to a good fig - if you linked him up with the very plausible 20-1 winner in Race 13 and spread a bit in the Derby, you had a nice Pick 3. Or if you just took half of whatever you lost in the Derby and put it on his nose, at least you got out for the day.
The analysis is written about 48 hours ahead of time - we have to do our own handicapping at some point. Even so, of course it is going to be wrong more often than it is right. Why should the Derby be any different? If it were perfect, the analysis would have pointed us all to IHA, and you would have gotten 1-9 on him.
Was TG \'wrong\' on the Derby (and the Oaks)? Yeah, I guess, but as JB has stated, it\'s just one race. We would all be well-served to remember to treat it as such. And yes, I did get crushed in the Derby - but there is no way can you say that IHA was an inexplicable winner - he just wasn\'t a standout. It\'s the springtime, they are 3 year olds; unexpected sh#t happens. Horses with good recent figures must be used in horizontals - there is no reason, in the age of fractional betting, not to run some 50 cent P3 and P4 savers through horses such as Groupie Doll and Silver Max and IHA, who clearly don\'t have to bounce, even if they are likely to.
I know I am not telling you anything you don\'t know, but I think you\'re speaking more from frustration than belief.