What we do know is that the breeding is interesting. The father, Ubettabelieveit, was a speedy American horse who excelled over short distances, which hints that Ubetawatchout could be quick and sharp rather than a horse built for long, grinding races. The mother's side brings in Galileo, one of the most influential stallions in modern racing history, famous for producing horses with stamina, class, and a serious turn of foot. Blending speed on one side with Galileo's quality on the other is a combination plenty of trainers would be happy with.
The trainer, Nigel Tinkler, operates out of Langton in North Yorkshire and has had a productive season — 37 winners so far is a healthy return that tells you this is a yard in good form and getting its horses ready to race well. Tinkler has a long track record of developing young horses, and sending a two-year-old out on debut when the yard is firing like this is a reasonable sign of confidence. Debut runners from yards in form are always worth watching closely.
Beyond that, the honest answer is we simply wait and see. A first race tells you an enormous amount about a young horse — how it handles the crowd, the noise, the pressure of competition — and sometimes a debut winner emerges who goes on to be something special. Whether Ubetawatchout is that horse, nobody yet knows.