Speed map
There is no confirmed leader in this 1590m race, which makes the first 300 metres more about intent than raw pace. There is no deep line of natural pressers behind that, so the race can become tactical. With the rail at True and the track listed Heavy 10, the tempo reads as unconfirmed and likely controlled unless one rider makes an early decision; the important point is not just who lands first, but which horses can hold a rhythm without being forced wider than their map allows.
The money part of the map is this: . There are no listed picks to anchor the map, so the race read is driven by position and the historical profile. If the front half walks, the race favours those already within striking range; if they overdo it, the midfield and back markers get their only clean invitation.
Historical overview
The broad 1590m profile is based on 9 races. Its clearest barrier pointer is middle (5–9), which has supplied 55.6% of winners, while the strongest settling band is leaders (1–3) at 44.4% with an A/E of 0.89.
The more specific 1590m · True sample has 5 races and keeps the emphasis around leaders (1–3) and wide (10+); that gives the map a practical lane rather than a bare average. The market line has generally been usable: pop ($2–5) runners account for 55.6% in this set, while the rougher end is much less reliable when its share is low.
- Leaders (1–3) is the main run-style clue — 44.4% at A/E 0.89 across 9 races, pointing most directly at none.
- Barrier shape matters — Middle (5–9) has produced 55.6% of winners, so gates and early position are tied together rather than separate factors.
- Market discipline is still needed — Pop ($2–5) has the largest historical share at 55.6%, which argues against chasing a runner only because it maps neatly.
Overall assessment
From the jump I expect the race to be decided by how quickly 1. Flying Bat, 3. Five Rings and 4. In The Fine Print sort their positions. The best run belongs to the horse that can be close enough before the turn without spending the middle stages chasing, because the race profile is not kind to runners who concede both position and momentum.
Key chances
- 3. Five Rings — maps midfield from barrier 3, which does not perfectly match the main historical lane used above. The jockey Danny Peisley angle adds a measured tick at this track (14.3% strike rate, A/E 1.02) without overriding the map.
- 4. In The Fine Print — maps midfield from barrier 4, which does not perfectly match the main historical lane used above.
- 5. Sinatra — maps midfield from barrier 2, which does not perfectly match the main historical lane used above.
The published numbers have not flagged a runner here, so there is no listed pick to defend or oppose. That leaves the assessment with the map, the track profile and the curated connection angles rather than a selection anchor.
The race comes undone for this read if the early tempo is stronger than expected and brings 1. Flying Bat and 3. Five Rings into the race before the leaders have balanced for home.