It’s obviously never paid off. This year, I’m just picking a name I like. Saves time.
Don't take time picking
During that research time, at some point I’ll consider putting money on every horse in the field. So when the winner crosses the line, I’m left thinking, ‘Gold Trip, yes, I was going to put money on that one!’ Never fails. Just pick one and stick with it.
Don't give advice
Since I’m the “sports” guy in the office, I often get asked for advice on Cup day. Due to my losing streak, I’m aware of leading people in the wrong direction, but a few years ago a couple of colleagues pushed me for a pick. I said Americain. They went with my tip and the horse went on to win. I, of course, didn’t put money on Americain.
At least consider the favourite
I never pick the favourite because I consider it being the “easy” option. But a favourite horse has won the Melbourne Cup 32 times out of 163 races - that’s 19.6 per cent of the time. I’d take one win every five years over none in 21 years... and we’ve had just one favourite that has won in the last 19 years. We’re due for a favourite to win.
Don't pick the favourite
Or look at it this way... four out of five times, that favourite doesn’t win.
Don't go against history
In 2004 and 2005, I didn’t pick Makybe Diva because I have a theory that’s it’s such a massive race, surely no horse can win it twice in a row, or even three times straight. I didn’t back a back-to-back to go back-to-back-to-back. I was wrong.
Bet on the right race
I’m not that inept, but it happens. Remember it’s meeting seven, race seven.
Right horse, wrong bet
The only time I do pick one of the top three horses, it just happens to be in a trifecta where the two other horses finish well off the pace. Either box or avoid all trifectas.
Don’t read X
Everyone in the office is a racing expert on Melbourne Cup day and that continues on to X (formerly Twitter), where a large percentage of the people I follow feel the need to declare who they are backing. It fills my feed with a wide range of bets that sway my opinion.
Avoid barriers seven, 15 and 18
They have produced just one winner. Barriers five and 11 have seen the most winners - nine.
...and don’t pick Sheraz
Because I have $5 for a win. It took me two seconds to decide, and I’m sticking with it. If I’m true to form, the horse will lead for a large chunk of the race before finishing at the back of the pack. That’s a dead cert.