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Templegate's Tote Placepot tips for Goodwood day one with huge £200,000 guaranteed

Templegate's Tote Placepot tips for Goodwood day one with huge £200,000 guaranteed

The Sun2 days ago
GLORIOUS GOODWOOD gets underway TODAY with five days of top class action to get your teeth stuck into.
Our man Templegate is back with his Placepot tips in the hope of helping you towards a share of the mammoth £200,000 guaranteed pot!
The Placepot is a bet where you select a horse to be placed in the FIRST SIX races of any meeting.
You can pick more than one horse in a race – you just multiply the number of selections in each race to calculate your stake. So for staking it's 2x2x2x2x2x2 which adds up to 64 lines.
You can stake what you want upwards from 5p a line which would cost a total of £3.20. 10p a line is £6.40 and so on. Provided at least one in each race is placed, we get a payout!
Goodwood Tuesday placepot
LEG 1: Grey Cuban, Jolly Jack Tar
GREY CUBAN clocked a massive personal best when scooting in at Chester last week and looks a fair price to go close again. The booking of Oisin Murphy takes the eye and he is best over this trip on fast or sticky ground.
JOLLY JACK TAR is improving with every run and looks the main danger. This is his turf debut for the Gosdens but he had plenty in hand when scoring at Chelmsford last time. He's up 9lb for that but stays and can progress again.
LEG 2: Dorset
DORSET looked the latest future star off the Balldoyle production line when stepping up from his debut to win impressively at The Curragh. As you'd expect he's from a high-class family and likes this trip. He should take another big step forward under Ryan Moore.
LEG 3: Noble Champion, Kinross
NOBLE CHAMPION was impressive when winning the Group 3 Jersey Stakes at Royal Ascot last time. Being gelded over the winter has clearly worked wonders as he looked a different horse and clocked a decent time despite drifting across the track late on. He's proven over the trip and is open to plenty of improvement.
KINROSS still looks the main danger at the age of eight. He's won this twice and has been placed on his two other attempts. He was just behind Ten Bob Tony – who has an each-way shout here – at Haydock last time but is better off at the weights today and will have needed that comeback.
LEG 4: French Master, Illinois
FRENCH MASTER put himself right in the picture for the Goodwood Cup when running away with the Copper Horse Handicap at Royal Ascot last time. He won that competitive contest over 1m6f like a top-quality Cup horse in the making.
ILLINOIS sets the standard after his second in the Ascot Gold Cup last time to the gutsy Trawlerman. That was his first crack over two miles or more and he saw it out well enough, still finishing ahead of some useful marathon runners.
LEG 5: Dream Composer, Redorange
DREAM COMPOSER has a cracking record at Goodwood and looks a big price in a wide-open race. He's dropped to his last winning mark and went close at Pontefract last time. A repeat of that gives him a solid chance.
REDORANGE was beaten just half a length in hot company at Ascot last time despite having the worst of the draw. That was after an excellent third at the Royal meeting and he's a threat.
LEG 6: Naval Light, Anashhad
NAVAL LIGHT ran well in the Norfolk Stakes at Royal Ascot despite still running really green and can improve for Karl Burke who does well with juveniles.
ANASHHAD has looked decent in a couple of good maidens and can figure again for Roger Varian.
Remember to gamble responsibly
A responsible gambler is someone who:
Establishes time and monetary limits before playing
Only gambles with money they can afford to lose
Never chase their losses
Doesn't gamble if they're upset, angry or depressed
Gamcare – gamcare.org.uk
GambleAware – GambleAware.org
For help with a gambling problem, call the National Gambling Helpline on 0808 8020 133 or go to gamstop.co.uk to be excluded from all UK-regulated gambling websites.
*New customers online only. Eligibility restrictions apply. One welcome offer per customer. Bet a minimum of £/€10 at odds of 1/1 (2.0) or greater across sports or racing (if EW then min £/€10 Win + £/€10 Place) within 7 days of registration to qualify. Receive £/€20 Tote Credit, £/€10 sports Free Bet and 20 Free Spins on Big Bass Bonanza within 48 hours of qualifying bet settlement. Qualifying bet is the first racing pool or sports bet added to the bet slip. 7-day expiry. 18+. Full T&Cs apply. Gambleaware.org. Full T&Cs apply.
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Gambhir's India can't escape the Fortis-verse on rain-hit day
Gambhir's India can't escape the Fortis-verse on rain-hit day

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  • The Guardian

Gambhir's India can't escape the Fortis-verse on rain-hit day

Nothing does irony quite like Test cricket. Say what you like about the world's most desiccated, Miss Havisham-ish team sport, out there trailing around the post-colonial world still dressed in its yellowing wedding dress. It's definitely got a sense of humour. On day one of the fifth England-India Test this was expressed in cosmic terms, and a single bold and improbable dramatic arc. Talk about groundsmen a lot. Tell groundsmen they're nothing. One thing is for sure. You're going to find yourself spending quite a lot of time watching groundsmen. Or in this case watching the personage we must now refer to as controversial groundsman Lee Fortis, celebrity Oval pitch curator Lee Fortis, an otherwise peripheral figure with a name that sounds like an Anglo-Saxon burial site in Norfolk, but who was promoted in the buildup to this Test into an instrument of the sporting-political power struggle. 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There are Fortis YouTube clips (jerky spat footage; weird ad hoc media huddle) that have been viewed two million times. Lee Fortis stuns fans with body transformation. This simple Lee Fortis trick will change your life for ever. Seventeen times Lee Fortis broke the internet (No 12 will shock you!) More fuel was added overnight as R Ashwin labelled Fortis a habitual offender. Really? It's not the first time he's yelled at people to get off his square? You shock me. Meanwhile, the groundsman community has sprung to his defence, a Facebook page speaking for this maligned minority demanding respect, understanding, a safe space for its members. What next? A Fortis spin-off vehicle. The Fortis origins story. A Fortis male grooming range. Jake Paul calls out Lee Fortis in sensational Vegas standoff. Or perhaps it won't come to that. 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Sign up to The Spin Subscribe to our cricket newsletter for our writers' thoughts on the biggest stories and a review of the week's action after newsletter promotion It is a fairly simple divvying up at this point. Gambhir was always in the wrong here. First because all groundsmen are grumpy. They have to venerate, love and fetishise this patch of green. They have the artist's temperament. They feel the hand of history. They basically just want you to stay off their square and stop playing cricket. But mainly Gambhir was wrong because of the ugliness of his choice of words, and the sense of punching down. England got to show their boorishness in Manchester. This was India's turn. India's coach is a born-to-rule type, high caste Hindu, private schoolboy, son of a wealthy industrialist, BJP politician, a Jay Shah man, a Modi guy. It sits a little uncomfortably to hear anyone with such privilege dismissing a bloke with a bucket as 'nothing', unqualified to make demands of his betters. 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Josh Tongue's wild bowling breaks India but England's fifth-Test hopes hurt by Chris Woakes injury
Josh Tongue's wild bowling breaks India but England's fifth-Test hopes hurt by Chris Woakes injury

The Independent

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  • The Independent

Josh Tongue's wild bowling breaks India but England's fifth-Test hopes hurt by Chris Woakes injury

Josh Tongue 's first ball of this fifth Test at The Oval travelled so far down the off-side it was heading for Lord's by the time it hit the boundary rope for five wides. A moment later, he sent the ball off in the direction of Eden Gardens for five more. It was one of the worst overs you're likely to see in a Test match: India hit a solitary single and jumped from 18-1 to 30-1. Tongue was unplayable, just not in the way he might have imagined. The morning's conditions had seemed like a bowler's paradise, on an unpredictable green pitch under skies so murky that groundstaff switched on the floodlights before midday. Shubman Gill lost India's 15th toss in a row in all formats – a feat with a probability of 1 in 32,768 – and England's stand-in captain Ollie Pope naturally elected to field. But England failed to take full advantage, and Tongue was not the only one with a wayward radar. 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‘What's wrong with him?' – Bizarre moment Havertz fouls the WRONG Tottenham player after Arsenal star sent for a hotdog
‘What's wrong with him?' – Bizarre moment Havertz fouls the WRONG Tottenham player after Arsenal star sent for a hotdog

The Sun

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‘What's wrong with him?' – Bizarre moment Havertz fouls the WRONG Tottenham player after Arsenal star sent for a hotdog

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