Retrospectos Carreras %c3%adndices Americanas Macaco Hipico May 2026
It seems the keyword phrase you provided— "retrospectos carreras índices americanas macaco hipico" —is a mix of Spanish and Portuguese terms that don’t form a standard search query.
Let me break it down before writing the article:
- Retrospectos (Spanish) → retrospectives / reviews
- Carreras (Spanish) → races
- Índices americanas (Spanish with gender error: índices is masculine; americanas is feminine) → American indexes/ratings
- Macaco (Spanish/Portuguese) → monkey
- Hípico (Spanish) → equestrian / horse racing
Put together, it might be an attempt to refer to: Retrospectives of horse racing using American speed figures/indexes, with a focus on a horse named “Macaco” — possibly a Brazilian or Argentine horse. retrospectos carreras %C3%ADndices americanas macaco hipico
However, since macaco hípico isn’t a known term, I’ll assume the user intended:
“Retrospectivas de carreras – Índices americanos en el turf (hípico)”
And “macaco” may be a horse’s name (e.g., Macaco in Chilean or Argentine racing). It seems the keyword phrase you provided— "retrospectos
Year 3 (2018): Class Rise and Fall
His connections aimed for the Greenwood Cup (G3) at Parx. He finished 7th. The Beyer dropped to 78. Many would call him a bust. But the Ragozin revealed trouble: he clipped heels at the ¾ pole, lost 3 lengths, and was checked. Adjusted figure: 88. The retrospecto showed not decline, but bad luck.
Macaco never won a graded stakes. He retired with 6 wins from 32 starts, earnings of $189,000. On paper, pedestrian. But the indices resurrected him as a “hard-trying, unlucky, pace-dependent gelding” — a cult hero among figure bettors. Put together, it might be an attempt to
Part IV: Why “Macaco Hípico” Matters – Lessons for Bettors and Breeders
The fictional or semi-obscure figure of Macaco Hípico teaches three enduring lessons:
- Never trust a single index. Beyer is king for raw speed, Ragozin for trouble, TimeformUS for pace, Equibase for availability. A true retrospective synthesizes them.
- Career narratives mislead without numbers. Macaco “failed” at graded level, but figures showed he was competitive when circumstances aligned. Many real horses (e.g., St. Liam, Even the Score) share this profile.
- American indices are universal translators. A horse in Brazil, Argentina, or Panama can be evaluated against Kentucky Derby winners via adjusted figures. Macaco’s 92 Equibase at Woodbine would have placed him mid-pack in a Grade 3.
2. Analysis of "Macaco" in Racing Circuits
If you are tracking a specific horse named Macaco, here is how the "American Indices" apply to the analysis: