Daily Racing Form National Digital Edition

Experiment­al Free Handicap nixed

- By Matt Hegarty

The Experiment­al Free Handicap, an annual ranking of 2-year-old horses by a theoretica­l assigned weight, has been discontinu­ed due to “waning relevance and interest,” according to The Jockey Club, which oversaw the compilatio­n of the list.

The decision to discontinu­e the Experiment­al Free Handicap may be mourned by some in the racing industry, but the annual list had become increasing­ly anachronis­tic as horses race less and less often as 2-yearolds and the relevance of handicap racing continues to wane. The rankings were compiled by committees of racing secretarie­s who spent hours poring over the past-performanc­e data of hundreds of juvenile horses.

The Experiment­al Free Handicap was first published in the U.S. in 1933, modeled on a similar ranking produced in England (the list has been produced every year since 1935, as no official list was produced in 1934). In 2017, The Jockey Club renamed the list the Annual Top 2-Year-Old Rankings.

All 2-year-olds regardless of sex were initially ranked on the same list. In 1985, the lists were split into male and female rankings. The top male was expected to be assigned 126 pounds unless extraordin­arily impressive or uninspirin­g, while the top female was expected to be assigned 123 pounds. The weight was based on a theoretica­l race at 1 1/16 miles on dirt.

While the list usually predicted the top 3-year-old horses of the following year, its “waning relevance” was most starkly illustrate­d by the 2018 list of the top 2-yearolds of 2017. The list does not include Justify, who won the 2018 Triple Crown, because the horse did not run as a juvenile.

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