The most consistent horse in the field on paper — two races, two third-place finishes — and she is yet to finish out of the frame. That makes her arguably the most reliable pointer of ability among the runners who have actually raced, and she draws low (stall 2), which is the best part of the track here. At 5-1 she is the second-shortest price, and if those back-to-back thirds translate into a win, this is the most logical place for it to happen.
Never raced on normal groundLightly raced (2 career races)
Making her debut today and priced at 5-1, which makes her joint second-favourite despite never having raced — a sign the market respects her potential. Her sire Wootton Bassett has built a reputation for producing horses that are sharp and ready to perform early, which could matter on a first outing. Her jockey-trainer combination wins roughly 1 in 3 races together, one of the better ratios in the field.
The market favourite at 4-1, and the editorial verdict singles her out as the one to beat — normal improvement from her debut fifth at this same course should be enough. She has the most recognised yard in this group of lightly raced debutants and one-run horses, and returning to a track she already knows is a genuine advantage. With just one race behind her, she remains largely unknown, but the market clearly believes there is more to come.
Never raced on normal groundLightly raced (1 career races)Market favourite (4.0)
One race, one fourth-place finish, and nothing more to go on — but she does draw the low stalls (draw 3), which historically gives runners a better chance at this course and distance. Her sole outing came on a different surface at Dundalk, so normal ground here is uncharted territory. The jockey-trainer combination has won roughly 1 in 8 races together over a large sample, which at least suggests a working partnership.
Never raced on normal groundLightly raced (1 career races)
Wearing cheekpiecesTrainer in formWon 0 of last 5Raced here before
TrackLab Insight
Trained by Aidan O'Brien, who has sent out 2 winners from 5 runners in the past two weeks, and Pink Coral draws stall 1 — the very lowest draw at a course where low stalls have the best record. One race, one fifth-place finish, and no experience on normal ground, so there is not much form to lean on. But the combination of trainer pedigree and favourable draw makes her worth keeping an eye on.
Never raced on normal groundLightly raced (1 career races)
Also trained by Aidan O'Brien, like stablemate Pink Coral, and finished fifth on her only outing at Gowran Park — beaten nearly 11 lengths. She draws stall 4, which is within the low draw range that performs best at this track. With one run and one modest result, she offers little form to go on, but the stable form is solid and this is a wide-open race.
Never raced on normal groundLightly raced (1 career races)
Another first-time runner, but one with notably strong bloodlines — by Camelot, a classic winner who has become a reliable source of talented offspring. She draws stall 8, which sits at the upper end of the low draw range that historically performs best here. Her jockey has won 2 from 4 rides in the past two weeks, making this one of the more interesting debut runners in the field.
A first-time runner at 21-1 with no form to assess, and a jockey-trainer combination that has won just once from 34 races together — a very low success rate over a meaningful sample. The breeding has some interest, with an American classic-winning sire, but that only tells us so much. On available evidence, this looks like one of the harder horses in the field to make a case for.
Making her racecourse debut today with nothing in the form book to go on whatsoever. At 51-1 the market is not expecting much, and with a jockey-trainer combination that has won just once from one previous race together, there is little external evidence to suggest otherwise. An unknown quantity on her first public appearance.
The only four-year-old in the field, yet has the worst form of any runner here — finishing 17th last time out, beaten nearly 90 lengths. Her odds have collapsed dramatically, drifting from near-certainty to a 67-1 outsider, which tells its own story. Two races, zero wins, zero places, and no experience on normal ground: there is very little here to work with.
Never raced on normal groundLightly raced (2 career races)
Two races, two sixth-place finishes, beaten nearly 30 lengths last time out — the form figures here are the worst of any runner who has actually raced. At 101-1 she is a clear outsider, and the market has not been kind since opening odds were set. With no experience on normal ground and nothing in the form book to suggest a turnaround, it is hard to make a case for her here.
Never raced on normal groundLightly raced (2 career races)Jockey in best form (1 from 11 last 2wk)
How do odds work?The first number is what you win, the second is what you bet. So 5/2 means you win £5 for every £2. 4/1 means you win £4 for every £1. The bigger the first number, the less likely bookmakers think the horse will win — but the more you'd win if it does.