Those two wins came in quick succession: first at Fairyhouse on 5th April 2026, then at Punchestown just days ago on 30th April. Winning at two different tracks within a month suggests this isn't a horse that only comes alive in one specific place — there's genuine form here, not a fluke. The recent sequence of 1-1-2-4-5-6, read from most recent backwards, tells its own story: this horse was struggling to land a blow a few runs ago and is now right at the sharp end.
One detail worth noting is the partnership with jockey E Walsh, who has ridden Come Walk With Me five times without a winner between them. Both of the career wins have therefore come with someone else in the saddle — which is the kind of thing that makes racing maddening and fascinating in equal measure. It doesn't mean Walsh is doing anything wrong, but the numbers are what they are.
Trainer Edward Cawley operates a small yard out of Batterstown in County Meath, and Come Walk With Me represents his sole winner of the season so far. For a smaller operation, having a horse in this kind of form is genuinely significant — one horse carrying the whole yard's winning tally is a big deal, and it puts real pressure on, and real excitement into, whatever comes next. The horse raced just yesterday and is clearly in an active campaign right now, which means the yard — the team at Batterstown — will be looking to make hay while the sun shines.
| Course | Races | Results | Last visited | Win rate |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Fairyhouse Galloping |
3 | 1 win, 1 second, 1 other | 5 Apr | 33.3% |
| Navan Galloping |
3 | 1 second, 2 other | 16 Nov | 0% |
| Leopardstown Galloping |
2 | 1 second, 1 other | 3 Mar | 0% |
| Punchestown Galloping |
1 | 1 win | 30 Apr | 100% |
| Galway Tight |
1 | 1 other | 25 Oct | 0% |
| Naas Galloping |
1 | 1 second | 9 Mar | 0% |