Mystik Dan Wins the Kentucky Derby!
Woah! What a weekend I this was in sports.
First, I explained how F1 driver Charles Leclerc had a significant riddle for him this weekend centered on the number 16. In the very first Practice session, Leclerc immediately spun out on Turn 16 and caused a Red Flag.
Earlier today, I made this post that examined a deep numerical riddle for Mystik Dan in the Kentucky Derby, and how it connects to the Synchromystic Dan Behrendt. Sure enough, despite 18-1 odds at post, Mystik Dan held a fierce charge at the end and won by a nostril:
This photo finish was definitely the closest I’ve ever seen in a horse race. However, earlier this year, there was a closer photo finish in NASCAR’s second race of the season. Check out the post I made after that happened.
Two years ago, I made this post after the 2022 Kentucky Derby. In my live stream on the race, I spoke about how I thought it was some sort of Jesuit magic ritual.
The following year, in 2023, I made this post after that year’s winner turned out to be Mage. “What are the odds?”, I asked.
Well now, the very next year, a horse named Mystik Dan wins?! And there’s a Synchromystic named Dan who helped inspire the work I do today?
Seriously, what kind of bizarro world did I wake up in, and when exactly did it happen? Is anyone else seeing how weird this dimension is?
To reiterate – no, these races are not rigged. The argument that all horses are simply run behind the horse chosen to win beforehand falls apart when you see that winning times throughout history remain remarkably similar, despite the wide margins from first-to-last. Couple this with the fact that bookies can’t lose with perimutuel betting and there’s simply no way to reliably do it – particularly when the top three runners finish within the margin seen above.