Racing Insights, Monday 27/02/23
We make one of the racecards tools free to all each day and on Mondays the freebie is PACE, an often over-looked facet of UK betting, but if you know how horses are likely to approach a race, you've a better chance of working whether they're going to be in with a shout of winning. We log the pace of every horse in every race and we show their last four outings under the pace tab on our racecards. We think pace is so important that we open the pace tab up to all readers for all races not once, but twice a week.
That's right, the pace tab is freely available on Sundays and Mondays, including our daily 'races of the day', which for Monday are...
- 3.50 Ayr
- 4.25 Ayr
- 5.30 Wolverhampton
And I'm going to look at the last of those three, because the pace-map looks like this...
...and I'm going to try and see if attempting to make all is the right approach to winning the 5.30 Wolverhampton, a 10-runner, Class 4, 4yo+ A/W handicap (amateur jockeys) over a left=handed 1m1½f on standard tapeta...
Super Den is clearly the 'form' horse here, having won his last two and with three wins/two places from his last five. We've no other LTO winners here, but top weight The Menstone Gem and Dream Harder are both two from five, whilst May Night is the only other runner in the field with a 'recent' win.
We've lots of class movers here, as only four of these (The Menstone Gem, Society Red, Visibilty and Sir Plato) ran at Class 4 LTO. Four (Precision Storm, Dream Harder, May Night and They Don't Know) drop in from Class 3, but Super Den is up a class and bottom-weight Taqwaa is up two from Class 6.
Sir Plato is making a yard debut today, as he runs for the first time since mid-November, but aside from The Memstone Gem's near three month break and the 33 days since Society red's last outing, the other seven have all raced in the last seventeen days with Visibility out as recently as Friday here at Wolverhampton.
He was only 4th of 7 here on Friday, but Visibility is a former course and distance winner, as are Precision Storm, Dream Harder and Society Red. The only other course winner, May Night, scored here over both 7f and 1m½f, whilst elsewhere The Memstone Gem has won over 1,1f at Newmarket and over 1m2f at Newcastle.
Today's free feature is, of course, pace and I'll add some meat shortly to the bones of the pace map I posted at the start, but I wanted to add that Precision Storm, May Night and Super Den have all been denoted as fast finishers. We know how our course, distance and C&D winners, but Instant Expert also gives us the lowdown on going, class and weights v last win...
...where fast-finishing May Night would be a definite eye-catcher on a slightly slower surface, although he has also won on the rarely seen Standard to Fast here at Wolverhampton! Society Red's numbers are pretty consistent and Dream Harder would make even more appeal at Class 5, where he's 3 from 6. I'm concerned about Precision Storm's 1/13 at C4, he's also better a grade lower. Visibility likes it here and gets the trip, but would also suit being a class lower, whilst They Don't Know and Taqwaa are 0/15 and 0/10 respectively on the All-Weather!
Sir Plato is a whopping 12lbs higher than his sole A/W win from six attempts, way back in March 2017 and is still 8lbs higher than his most recent turf win seven starts ago and Society red is now 6lbs lower than his C&D win her a year ago, but has won off today's mark on turf since then. The others are 4-6lbs higher than their own last A/W wins.
And now back to the pace map that we started with, but with runner's names and individual pace scores from their last four outings...
...where it's top weight The Memstone Gem who'll probably attempt to make all from stall 3. To work out whether this is a good or bad tactic, let's consider which pace tactics have worked best here previously, which draw(s) are the best (if any) and how the pace and draw have worked together, starting with past race pace profiles...
...which suggest that those who lead do well, which is good news for The Memstone Gem on the face of it, but the truth is that there's not that much in it, as long as you're not on a hold-up type. The chances of winning or placing do diminish the further back you race, but the differences between leading and running in mid-division are negligible here, so let's see if there's a draw bias to be had from those 160+ races above...
Based on these numbers, the place to be drawn is anywhere from stalls 3 to 7, which would be good news (on paper, at least) for the likes of The Memstone Gem, Precision Storm, Sir Plato, Visibility and Taqwaa, so you'd now be expecting The Memstone Gem fondness of leading allied to his draw to give him a great chance here and the pace/draw heat map says that he is in a really good place to be...
...but a fair distance shy of the success achieved by high-drawn mid-divisional runners and by overlaying this field's draw and recent pace averages, we can see if anyone fits that bill...
...and this suggests a trio of May Night, Super Den and They Don't Know has having the best of it.
Summary
May Night, Super Den and They Don't Know come out best on pace/draw with The Memstone Gem handily placed too. The latter is the likely pace-setter here and his chances of success will rest upon how much daylight he can put between himself and the pack early doors, but he's currently 9/1 with Hills and wouldn't be a terrible E/W option, especially as his form on Tapeta reads 12213.
As for the high-drawn mid-dvisional trio, They Don't Know is least likely to be involved because although he has a 40% place strike rate on the A/W, he's still winless in 15 in this sphere and hasn't made the frame in three tapeta outings. May Night also looks a reasonable E/W bet at 8/1 a fortnight after finishing less than a length and a half further back than Precision Storm over this course and distance at a higher grade. Precision Storm is the 3/1 favourite here, but May Night runs off the same mark as LTO whilst the fav is up 2lbs and there's a good chance of the placings being reversed.
Which leaves us with Super Den, who has been in cracking form on the A/W this winter finishing 13211 and although he's up in trip, class and weight, he certainly looked like having plenty ion hand when scoring by two and a quarter lengths last time out, suggesting a 5lb rise might not yet be enough to anchor him. He's by no means a cert here, but a 4/1 pricetag looks fair if nothing else.



















































































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