21st October 2005, 02:12 PM
|
Member
|
|
Join Date: Dec 2004
Posts: 11,994
|
|
I agree. I like it to be either genuinely dry or genuinely wet, because then you can rule horses in or out. When it's just a dead track and you don't know if it's going to improve or get worse, you don't know what to do. I worked all my Melbourne form out for Dead-Slow ground. If it ends up being Good, I'll have to adjust things quite dramatically.
|