Answering all questions live tonight at 9ish pm eastern...
MiracleManDan’s Belmont 2026
“You know, I won five Belmonts.” - Woody Stevens, who rather incredibly did have five consecutive Belmont Stakes victories (1982–1986 with Conquistador Cielo, Caveat, Swale, Creme Fraiche, and Danzig Connection).
In my Kentucky Derby post I talked about the breed, that it has been saved from becoming like Eureopean royalty, and that using metrics like AWD may be relevant to the hadicap, as it was years ago. I did cash a saver ticket, but oh! if only I had gone for it with that angle. Shouldas Couldas, and Wouldas.
So this time we go for it.
#5 Ottinho (18-1) is best bred by the numbers.
#4 Renegage (9-5 favorite) also scores high.
#3 Chief Wallabee rounds out our keys.
$20 to win #5
$5 Exacta Box 3-4-5
$1 Triples: 4-5 with 4-5 will all, 4-5 with all with 4-5
Let's get 'em
First, four factors dictate whether there is major turnover in the Senate in a midterm election independent of the favorability of the Senate map (due to only one-third of seats being up in any given midterm). Often, as was the case in both 2018 and 2022, is that incumbents are not destined to lose seats, outside of realigning elections in unfavorable maps. This cycle's map favors the GOP, which is why the prediction markets and most forecasters expect a GOP majority in the 2027 Senate. The four factors that prove dangerous to the incumbent party are: first, a recession or cost of living crisis; second, a war; third, a major scandal; and fourth, a sense of betrayal in the voter group that backed the incumbent amongst some portion of their prior electoral coalition. Five midterms feature some combingation of those factors in some significant degree: 1930, 1946, 1958, 1974 and 2006.
Without those factors present in multiple forms, the incumbent party can expect to hold on to seats in states it previously won outside the national margin. When those factors are present, the landscape shifts dramatically. Examining those White House incumbent seats that showed a state-wide election decided by single digits in the prior decade produces the following probabilities: the incumbent White House party lost at least 67% of its incumbent held seats, as much as 85% of its incumbent held seats, and an average of 75% of its incumbent hold seats, rarely upsetting the opposition party in any seat and often losing a surprise or two in seats considered completely safe.