Speed map
There is no confirmed leader, so the better-drawn midfield runners may have to create the tempo rather than simply follow one. The expected tempo is uncertain and potentially controlled, not a race where every runner can be gifted the same comfortable spot. 8. Gossamer Glow, 9. Katie Aine, 10. Voltessa should be looking for cover rather than trying to force the issue, while there are few confirmed backmarkers at the rear. If any runner with unconfirmed early speed jumps sharply, that is the main way the map changes.
The decision point is where the listed pick sits: no listed pick. The most valuable positions are the leader's back, the outside stalking line and the first midfield pair with cover. The first few in running get first use of the bend, while 2. Fawunderpar, 4. Miss Dechambeau, 5. Para Park Ruby need either pressure or traffic ahead to become winning players.
Historical overview
The broad Sunshine Coast 1000m sample is usable at 127 races. Its strongest settling band is Leaders (1–3) at 41.7% of winners and a 18.6% strike rate, while Inside (1–4) barriers lead the draw table at 45.7%. The more specific 1000m · Soft · +12m ±1m view is 8 races, so it is smaller but still relevant. It has Leaders (1–3) on 37.5% and Middle (5–9) barriers on 50.0%, which reinforces the broad profile. That makes the historical read a guide to race shape rather than a rigid rule; the horse still has to land in the right part of today's field.
Soft 7 with the rail at +12m means the specific sample is important where available, but small samples are treated as support only when they line up with the broader pattern. Because there is no confirmed leader, tactical intent from the riders becomes more important than a simple bias call. The practical takeaway is to be wary of runners that need to make up too much ground unless the map is likely to generate pressure.
- Settling zone — Leaders (1–3) has produced 41.7% across 127 races, pointing most clearly at the runners able to hold the first half of the field.
- Barrier shape — Inside (1–4) gates have supplied 45.7% across the same sample, so the draw matters as much as raw speed.
- Market note — Pop ($2–5) runners are the leading historical market band at 44.9%, which helps frame price discipline rather than certainty.
Overall assessment
The race should unfold around the first rider willing to press forward. They are the runners with the clearest chance to control when the sprint starts, while the midfield and back-half runners need the tempo to be stronger than comfortable. The notable track-angle ticks are 4. Miss Dechambeau (A J Edmonds trainer, 33.3% strike, A/E 1.34); 10. Voltessa (Billy Healey trainer, 16.8% strike, A/E 1.25).
- 4. Miss Dechambeau — needs the race to open from the back, and gate 3 gives a concrete map reference. This is a race-shape case, not a certainty, with the historical read used as support rather than a guarantee.
- 10. Voltessa — needs tempo from midfield, and gate 6 gives a concrete map reference. This is a race-shape case, not a certainty, with the historical read used as support rather than a guarantee.
No listed pick is carried for this race, so the final view is driven by the map, history and track-angle evidence rather than a flagged selection. My read is strongest where the speed map and the historical settling band meet; it is weaker where a runner is relying on tempo from behind. The biggest risk is an unexpected early move from a runner with limited settling evidence, because that would change both the pressure level and which horses get the economical trail.