I kinda like it too. I'm getting great value on the win bet if the morning line odds hold up on Tenfold, which they very well should. Have a couple of nice prices included in that exacta box. I have Catholic Boy covered in the exacta already, so I don't feel I need him in 1st the way the trifecta is structured, which is also in line with my own opinion. Have the best horse in the race keyed in the super and that allows me one more insurance horse underneath with Bravazo, who should be a great price. The only position I don't have covered is Vino Rosso in 1st. But I don't think he's as strong a win candidate as some others here, and will be bet down more than some considering his trainer, jockey, New York owners, etc. Plus if Vino does win that likely has much to do with the pace dynamics of the race, and if he gets the pace, that means Gronkowski will also be getting the same benefits of the pace and stands a chance to hit the board. I want to be against Gronkowski completely to even finish in the super, so by default I have to be against Vino in the win spot. Vino is the better horse of the two, though. He ran the better race in the Belmont of the two despite finishing a bit behind Gronkowski, who got a perfect and lucky rail trip that race after all the other horse had already taken their shots at Justify around the turn and then faded. That was a classic "suck up" effort by Gronkowski that race. We see that quite often in these big 3 year-old races. Commanding Curve, Golden Soul, Tale of Verve, Lookin At Lee, etc, etc. Horses who don't get involved in the race at all until the very end and only do so after the other horses in the race have taken their shots at the leader, have been repelled, and start to tire out/give up the chase. Then we never hear from them again because they weren't that good to begin with. Just got the ideal "suck up trip" one time in their careers on a big stage. Until he proves otherwise, to me that's Gronkowksi. He had a racing post progression of 95-100 in his previous races before the Belmont, but then all of a sudden was given a 119 or something like that under ideal circumstances for him (and perhaps the benfitted from some medical "help"). Plus there's just the natural regression that usually comes with horses who run figures so much better than what they had done previously. I'm pretty sure I gave out the stats it the past when it comes to horses running a new top figure by a big margin, but you can pull up any random PP's from any given race and see for yourself. Very few maintain that figure. The vast majority regress and a lot of them in a huge way. A horse who runs recent speed figures of 63, 86, 79, 84, 83, 85, and then suddenly jumped up to a 105 isn't really a 105 horse. That's not a true representation of his ability. That's a mid 80's horse who just happened to have a career best day one time due to race dynamics and everything working in his favour (trip, pace, race shape, etc). But he'll be bet like he's a 105 horse by so many people when it comes to big days like tomorrow. Especially when that 105 came on a day when a triple crown was on the line and when millions and millions of people were watching. Plus he's got the name as well. But yeah, getting back to Vino, Gronkowski is a big reason why I don't want to include Vino in 1st, because even with a regression on the horizon, Gronkowski will have a chance to hit the board again just because the race will have played out similar to the Belmont where race dynamics are in his favour once again. Make sense?