![]() ![]() Ok so you can see from the line graph that distance is correlated with both a letter and number score. Before I explain further I think a picture will help explain it better. Anyone familiar with these scores already, be aware I tweaked them a bit, I added a new category called endurance. Well the CD (or Center of Distribution) lets you know which distance a horse is best at. Now you may be asking "ok, but what are those Predicted CD and CD columns about. ![]() Again it is easy to sort through everything showing the best females, or the best milers at the top (or hell the best female milers). Although I do not include the 2 year old wins in this statistic, as those do not paint an accurate picture of the horse's preferred distance, which usually increases after that. The numbers 5-16 represent furlong distances. To the far right, I include what distances they've achieved "featured wins" over. The cells again automatically change color based on what numbers you enter, your best score will be dark green, your worst dark red. To get their score, I multiplied their G1 wins by 3, their G2 wins by 2, and their G3 wins by 1 (so just counted them) added all those together and you get a simple score. To do so I recorded their graded stakes wins, (again all at the same age or it is unfair). That wasn't enough for me though, I needed to know how these horses performed on the track as well. or lets say I only wanted to look at my mares, with 2 clicks I could completely remove my stallions from the list. Say I was consistently breeding horses with perfect Potential but wanted to improve Extra Speed Rating, I could sort the "Extra" column "highest to lowest". Since it's a table with headers an individual is able to sort through their horses very easily. I set the boxes to automatically color code the data for me, dark green being the best, grey being average, and dark red being the worst. If you're recording some horses at 3 and some at 5, it's not gonna be fair to the younger animals. What does matter is that you record every horse at the same age. It doesn't really matter at which age you record, I personally do so at the end of my 4 year old season. ![]() Anyone with excel would find it pretty simple to use and very informative!Īs you can see from this pic, I record all the data. I just started my breeding operations again after another crash (really need to start keeping backups)Īnyway, I was figuring since it wouldn't give much away about the quality of my horses (they're all pretty awful still) I figured I could post up how I figure things out! If anybody is interested I'd be willing to clear my sheet and make it downloadable. This has been updated after I realized a slight error of foal calculation on the Sires Page, if only your first stallion's foals were being counted, this problem is now fixed Horse Data 3.1 - Additional Features This update adds in the Prospective Foals Page, it also adds in Win% to the Lifetime Scores page, as well as the Sire/Dam scores page. Horse Data 2.1 - 11/29/15 Aesthetic Update This update simply lets you stop typing in those 0s on the "Lifetime Score" page. Horse Data 2.0 - Now with Breeding Sheets ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |