Speed map
1. Artistic Endeavour has the clearest early-speed profile, and that makes the tempo controlled rather than frantic for a 6-runner 1110m race. The first pressure line is 2. Machtig Havanagila, 3. Dominator, 5. Mini Boo, 6. Listen Jani; they are the runners most likely to keep the leader honest without necessarily turning the race into a burn-up. Behind them, 4. Extreme Taste look the main settling group, while few genuine backmarkers are the ones most dependent on the race being run truly enough to drag them into it. There is enough recent settling evidence to make the map reasonably clean.
The money point is how compressed the first half becomes. If 1. Artistic Endeavour gets across without being eyeballed, the handy runners can hold the race in their keeping; if the lead line is made to work, the best run is likely just behind them rather than right at the tail. The flagged runner position is dealt with below, but the broad map says the race should be won by something close enough to the speed to use the turn, not by a runner needing the whole field to fold.
Historical overview
The 1110m profile is usable across 52 races and gives the first guide before narrowing into today's conditions. Leaders (1–3) has produced 42.3% of winners at 14.7%, while Inside (1–4) has produced 61.5% of winners at 15.6%. That makes this less a race for generic swoopers and more one where early position, lane and the ability to hold a spot all matter.
The more specific 1110m · Soft layer has 22 races. Leaders (1–3) has produced 40.9% of winners at 15.0%. Inside (1–4) has produced 72.7% of winners at 18.6%. Pop ($2–5) has produced 50.0% of winners at 25.6%.
- Trip shape — Leaders (1–3) has produced 42.3% of winners at 14.7% across 52 races, which frames where the first winning zone usually sits.
- Draw pattern — Inside (1–4) has produced 72.7% of winners at 18.6% across 22 races, so gate position matters but does not override tempo.
- Market read — Pop ($2–5) has produced 50.0% of winners at 25.6%, a guide to how much respect the shorter-priced runners deserve.
Overall assessment
From the gates, 1. Artistic Endeavour should define the race, with 2. Machtig Havanagila, 3. Dominator, 5. Mini Boo, 6. Listen Jani parked close enough to apply pressure before the bend. That scenario gives the on-speed and stalking group first use of the race, but it does not hand them a blank cheque: if the leaders are forced to spend from the jump, the midfield runners with cover become much more dangerous. Frederick Larson (Jockey) brings a 7.7% strike rate and A/E 1.68 here with 5. Mini Boo Michael Freedman (Trainer) brings a 23.7% strike rate and A/E 1.15 here with 3. Dominator
Key chances
- 3. Dominator — Maps on-pace from gate 6, so it gets a stalking run close enough to use the forward pattern. The case is strongest if the tempo lands as mapped rather than turning into a stop-start sprint.
- 5. Mini Boo — Maps on-pace from gate 5, so it gets a stalking run close enough to use the forward pattern. The case is strongest if the tempo lands as mapped rather than turning into a stop-start sprint.
- 1. Artistic Endeavour — Maps lead from gate 4, so it sits in the first-three band that the profile keeps rewarding. The case is strongest if the tempo lands as mapped rather than turning into a stop-start sprint.
No runner is flagged as a pre-race pick here, so the race read leans entirely on the map, the track profile and the listed stable/rider angles.
The cleanest way this read fails is a different early decision: one rider pressing harder than the settling pattern suggests would turn a controlled map into a pressure race and bring the second wave into play earlier than expected.