The most encouraging piece of the puzzle is who is doing the training. William Haggas, based in Newmarket, is one of the most respected names in British racing, and his yard has sent out 170 winners already this season — a figure that speaks to serious horsepower and a team that knows how to get results. Being trained by Haggas is not a guarantee of anything, but it does mean Adamlyi is being prepared by people who consistently produce winners at the highest level. Horses in that yard tend to be given time and placed thoughtfully, rather than thrown in at the deep end and forgotten about.
The recent form reads 5-2-5, which tells a slightly mixed story. That middle run — a second-place finish — is the standout, showing Adamlyi can get competitive when things click. The two fifth-place efforts either side of it are less eye-catching, but in a yard with this much experience, even a horse yet to win can be quietly improving in ways the record does not immediately reveal. With a race just yesterday, this is a horse very much in active training and racing, not one being managed through a quiet period.
No wins from three races is a straightforward fact, but for a three-year-old with a placed run to their name and William Haggas in their corner, the story is far from over.
| Course | Races | Results | Last visited | Win rate |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Nottingham Galloping |
1 | 1 other | 19 May | 0% |
| Newmarket Galloping |
1 | 1 other | 26 Sep | 0% |
| Great Yarmouth Galloping |
1 | 1 second | 30 Apr | 0% |