Speed map
1. Alvin, 3. Cash Pit, 5. Frosty's Gotcha give this map a defined front end. There is enough genuine early speed to make the first 300m important rather than a crawl. 4. John's Road, 7. Check One Two are the horses most likely to apply the first layer of pressure, so the race should be decided by whether the leaders get across cheaply or have to keep absorbing company before the bend. The final map is deliberately conservative: runners without recent early-position evidence have not been promoted into the speed line just because the field looked short of pressure.
The first chasing line is 4. John's Road, 7. Check One Two, while 6. General Gordon, 8. Silvertail, 9. Willow Capri, 10. Frosty Queen sit midfield. That matters because the published pick and the key chances do not all land in the same lane. A horse drawn low with tactical speed can make the race simple, but anything settling midfield needs the tempo to stay honest. If the front group steadies, the first-three and on-pace runners get first use; if they overdo it, the midfield horses with cover become more relevant late.
Historical overview
The 1560m profile at Mackay is led by Leaders (1–3): 39.4% of winners across 33 races came from that band, with A/E 1.06. The draw picture points to Inside (1–4), which has supplied 48.5% of winners at A/E 0.72. In practical terms, this is not a race where I want to be forgiving a horse that has to concede both position and ground unless the pace set-up clearly invites it.
Rail-and-going history is either the same cut or too thin to lean on separately, so the base distance profile carries most of the weight. The market has generally been most productive through Pop ($2–5), which has produced 54.5% of winners at A/E 0.79. That does not make the favourite automatic, but it says the race usually has enough structure for the better-fancied horses to show up when they also map cleanly.
- Settling zone — Leaders (1–3) has 39.4% win share with A/E 1.06 across 33 races, so today's first few positions matter.
- Draw shape — Inside (1–4) accounts for 48.5% of wins at A/E 0.72, which points at the runners drawn to secure economical runs.
- Market guide — Pop ($2–5) owns the biggest share at 54.5% with A/E 0.79, so price still has to be respected rather than chasing map alone.
Overall assessment
The race sets up around whether 1. Alvin, 3. Cash Pit, 5. Frosty's Gotcha can control the first turn and keep the chasers from stacking up. I want runners who either own that first-three position or can land immediately behind it without being dragged wider than necessary. The historical profile gives a clear enough steer to be wary of horses needing everything to collapse from too far back.
Key chances
- 3. Cash Pit — lands right in the first-three settling band that owns 39.4% of the 1560m wins.
- 7. Check One Two — maps on-pace from barrier 2, close enough to the race's preferred zones to get a proper chance. The inside draw also matches the strongest barrier band (48.5% win share).
The published pick is 7. Check One Two (fair $4.03, target $4.84, early $2.75). 7. Check One Two maps on-pace from barrier 2, so the speed map supports the pick; the historical read is strongest when that position aligns with Leaders (1–3) rather than leaving it to make a long run. Where my read differs, it is because the map and history are being weighted ahead of price alone; where it agrees, it is because the pick gets a position that the track profile has repeatedly rewarded.
This assessment is most exposed if the tempo is misread: a softer-than-expected lead would make the front almost impossible to run down, while a stronger burn would give the midfield horses more say than the base numbers suggest.