Speed map
2. grinzinger bishop and 3. valimi shapes the early picture, with no strong on-pace line the most likely pressure or stalking line. That leaves 1. Alpine Flyer and 4. Zestiman to find cover through the middle of the field, while 5. Grinzinger Lass and 6. Rosebud Lass either settle rearward or have no confirmed early pattern. The tempo looks genuine enough because more than one runner has shown early speed; it is not a race to assume every runner presses forward just because the field is compact.
The money point is where the reliable early-speed horses land relative to the barriers. 2. Grinzinger Bishop and 3. Valimi should get first option on position, while runners parked midfield need the leaders to do enough work to bring them into it. The published numbers have not isolated a selection in this race, so the read has to come from the map, the track profile and any stable or rider angles rather than forcing a bet. Wide or uncertain runners have to prove their spot early, because conceding cheap control to the forward group would make the race difficult to unwind.
Historical overview
The 1400m profile at this track is usable across 47 races. The clearest barrier note is Inside (1–4) winning 72.3% of those races at a 18.3% strike-rate, which matters for today's low-draw runners before the speed map is overlaid.
For today's rail and going, the most specific sample is 1400m · Good · True across 47 races. Its barrier shape points to Inside (1–4) with 72.3% of wins, so the draw is not a throwaway detail here; runners posted in the weaker zones need a race-shape reason to offset it.
The settling data that is classified points first at Leaders (1–3), with 0.0% of wins and A/E 0.0; in this field that points at 2. Grinzinger Bishop, 3. Valimi and 1. Alpine Flyer as the group most likely to occupy the first three settling spots. The market split is led by Pop ($2–5) with 68.1% of wins, so price discipline still matters.
- Barrier lean — Inside (1–4) has produced 72.3% of wins from 47 races, helping those drawn to hold a economical run.
- Settling lean — Leaders (1–3) is the named band to respect, mapping today to 2. Grinzinger Bishop, 3. Valimi and 1. Alpine Flyer rather than only the formal leader.
- Market read — Pop ($2–5) supplies 68.1% of wins, so the race is not a pure roughie hunt.
Overall assessment
From the jump, the race should be decided by whether 2. Grinzinger Bishop and 3. Valimi can hold the front without dragging too many rivals into a fight. No strong on-pace line are the immediate tactical dangers if they can sit close without burning fuel, while the midfield and rearward runners need either a lift in pressure or a rider willing to move before the turn. That puts the first half of the race under the microscope: if the front is cheap, the back half of the map is relying on others to make the race for them.
Key chances
- 2. Grinzinger Bishop — Barrier 6 and a lead map mean it is close enough to the pace to use the map. The trainer angle through Kym Healy is a positive, with A/E 1.13 from 57 runs.
- 3. Valimi — Barrier 1 and a lead map mean it is close enough to the pace to use the map.
- 1. Alpine Flyer — Barrier 2 and a midfield map mean it is drawn to save ground despite a midfield map. The trainer angle through Kym Healy is a positive, with A/E 1.13 from 57 runs.
The published numbers have not isolated a selection in this race, so the read has to come from the map, the track profile and any stable or rider angles rather than forcing a bet. The notable human-factor ticks are jockey Jade Doyle brings a 22.7% strike-rate and A/E 1.59 at this track for 2. Grinzinger Bishop; jockey Jessie Philpot brings a 17.1% strike-rate and A/E 1.16 at this track for 6. Rosebud Lass; trainer Kym Healy brings a 17.5% strike-rate and A/E 1.13 at this track for 1. Alpine Flyer; trainer Kym Healy brings a 17.5% strike-rate and A/E 1.13 at this track for 2. Grinzinger Bishop. My read is to keep the strongest respect with the runners whose map position and draw let them control their own race, then use the historical notes as a filter rather than as a standalone tip sheet. The way this read gets beaten is if the early speed is misread and a runner with no recent pattern either leads uncontested or takes the pressure off the expected pace horses.