Every system has a personality. Some grind out small profits over long periods with high strike rates and short prices. Others swing for the fences, accepting long losing runs in exchange for the occasional big-priced winner. Stacked Metric sits in the first camp, and right now it is operating at the sharp end of what that approach can deliver.
Over the last seven days, Stacked Metric has picked 41 runners and found 16 winners, a strike rate of 39%. That is unusually high even for a system built around convergence and overlapping positive signals. The win profit-and-loss stands at +4.11 points, which means the system is not just finding winners but finding them at prices that pay. The place figures are less impressive at -3.37 points from 24 placed runners (58.5% place rate), which suggests the winners are coming at slightly shorter prices than the place market can absorb. In practical terms: follow this system for win bets, not each-way.
What does Stacked Metric actually do? It identifies dogs where multiple data points stack up in agreement: composite score, speed rating, track suitability, class movement, and recent form all pointing the same way. When the signals converge, the system fires. When they diverge, it stays quiet. That selectivity, 41 picks from a full week of racing, shows real discipline.
Today the system has seven picks, all at Hove: Punkrock Mercury (trap 6), Droopys Delux (trap 3), Annadown Paddy (trap 5), Flushing Fiftys (trap 1), Sharp Surprise (trap 6), and Ardera Sal (trap 6), plus Westfield Tigris (trap 1) at Star Pelaw. That cluster at Hove is worth noting. When a convergence-based system concentrates its picks at a single track, it often means the track's data is producing particularly clean signals that day.
