Four years into her riding career, Anna Johnston is still searching for that first winner. Seven rides over the past twelve months without a victory tells its own story — but context matters here. Breaking through as a jockey is genuinely hard. Most professionals go months between wins even once established, and Johnston is still building the experience and the the yard with trainers that eventually turn into opportunities.Based on TrackLab's AI analysis
A snapshot of this jockey's performance over the last 12 months
7
Races
0
Wins
0%
Win rate
avg ~10%
42.9%
Place rate (top 3)
avg ~30%
🔍 Full Analysis
TrackLab's AI-generated assessment based on career data and recent form
TrackLab's Jockey Breakdown
Auto-Generated
What the numbers don't capture is the sheer difficulty of getting rides in the first place. Every time Johnston saddles up, she is competing against jockeys with years more experience, bigger reputations, and established relationships with yards. Seven rides in a year is a modest book of work, which likely reflects where she is in her career rather than any lack of ability. The wins will matter less than the lessons learned in those seven races — how to read a pace, how to place a horse, how to build trust with a trainer who might then offer her the ride again.
She is four years in, still young in jockey terms, and the story is very much unwritten.
📈 Form Trend
How this jockey's win rate has changed month by month
Monthly win rate
2024–2026
100%
Apr
0%
May
50%
Dec
0%
Jan
0%
Feb
0%
Mar
0%
Apr
0%
May
0%
Nov
0%
Jan
🎯 Where This Jockey Thrives
Performance broken down by ground, class, and track type
🌧 Ground Conditions
Good (firm-ish)
Unknown
Good to soft (some give)
Unknown
🏅 Competition Level
Class 3 (mid-level)
Unknown
Class 4 (standard)
Unknown
Class 5 (entry-level)
Unknown
🏟 Track Shape
Left-handed, tight turns
Unknown
Left-handed, long straights
Unknown
Right-handed, hilly
Unknown
🏇 Trainer Partnerships
The trainers they work with most, sorted by rides together