Speed map
4. Moonan Quartz is the clearest leader in this field and has the map to control the first section if it begins cleanly. The on-speed group around 6. Loyalty Counts and 7. Bertus can keep it honest, but they are more likely to trail than force a burn-up. That points to a controlled tempo, so the horses already in the first half get first use of the race and the deeper closers need the leader to come back to them. The map is therefore less about a full-field roll call and more about which runners can own the first half without spending too much petrol. There are enough recent settling references to make the broad shape fairly clear.
The tactical pressure points are specific. 6. Loyalty Counts and 7. Bertus need to find cover or rhythm before the race settles, while the deeper half of the field will be relying on the leaders and pressers to bring them into it. The published pick, where present, has to be judged against those lanes rather than its name alone; a good draw helps only if it lets the horse occupy the part of the race the track has been rewarding.
Historical overview
The broad 1400m sample says the trip has been shaped by 4–6, with 25 wins and A/E 0.94. That is the starting point, not the finish, because today's going and rail can shift the winning lane. The most specific usable lens is 1400m · Soft, built from 28 races, so it takes precedence over the broader 1400m pattern where the two differ.
In the relevant sample, 1–3 is the clearest historical zone, while middle (5–9) is the strongest barrier pointer. Market-wise, the most reliable band has been pop ($2–5) with 11 wins and A/E 0.7; that keeps the race price-sensitive rather than a blind favourites-only setup. The sample sizes are not huge in some of these subgroups, but the lane is still decision-relevant when it lines up with the map.
- The key settling lane is 1–3 — 11 wins from 28 races in the 1400m · Soft sample, A/E 1.02, which points to 4. Moonan Quartz, 6. Loyalty Counts and 7. Bertus.
- Barrier shape matters — middle (5–9) has 14 wins and A/E 0.97, so 1. Damehood, 5. Diamond Show, 6. Loyalty Counts and 7. Bertus get the draw-side tick.
- The broader 1400m profile is the cross-check — its strongest settling band is 4–6 with 25 wins, so any clash with today's more specific lane should be treated as a conditions adjustment rather than ignored.
- Human-factor note — jockey Jake Bayliss brings a 117 race track sample at A/E 1.11 for 8. Hermione Prancer, a useful support but not enough by itself to override the map.
Overall assessment
The race should be decided by how cheaply the first wave gets across and whether the historical lane is close enough to the actual pace shape. On this map, 4. Moonan Quartz are the runners that control the early picture, while 1. Damehood, 2. Our Smokeshow, 5. Diamond Show and 8. Hermione Prancer are the ones waiting for any over-racing or wide working in front of them. The more the race is run at an even tempo, the more the draw and settle-row evidence matter.
Key chances:
- #4 Moonan Quartz — lands around settler #1 in the 1–3 band, the lane carrying 11 wins and A/E 1.02 in the relevant sample. From barrier 4, that is a workable profile if the race develops as mapped.
- #6 Loyalty Counts — lands around settler #2 in the 1–3 band, the lane carrying 11 wins and A/E 1.02 in the relevant sample. From barrier 5, that is a workable profile if the race develops as mapped.
- #7 Bertus — lands around settler #3 in the 1–3 band, the lane carrying 11 wins and A/E 1.02 in the relevant sample. From barrier 9, that is a workable profile if the race develops as mapped.
The published pick 1. Damehood maps as midfield from barrier 8 and sits around settler #6 in the 4–6 band; on this read the map and history undercuts it because it does not land in the strongest historical settling lane. Its fair price is listed at $2.98 against a target of $3.58, so the case still has to be price-led. My read is anchored to the horses that combine a usable map with the strongest historical lane; if that differs from the published pick, the difference is map-based rather than a knock on the horse. The concrete risk is that an unknown or mixed-pattern runner is ridden more aggressively than its available evidence suggests, which would change the pressure profile before the first turn.
For betting purposes, this is not a simple fastest-horse exercise. The usable edge is in matching each runner's likely early position to the part of the track and field that has converted before, then demanding the right price when a runner is forced away from that lane. That is especially important on affected ground, where a small change in tempo can turn a historical advantage into a tactical trap.