Dave
Gelding
Most post-race analysis starts and ends with the result. This one starts where the result stops with the furlong-by-furlong sectional data from RaceIQ, and a question that rarely gets asked: was the race actually run at a true pace, or did a slow early tempo turn the finish into a sprint and inflate every finishing speed reading in the field?
That distinction matters enormously. FSP (Finishing Speed Percentage) is one of the most powerful tools in sectional analysis but only when the race it comes from was genuinely run. A field-wide FSP spike above 105% can mean you have identified a group of exceptional closers. It can equally mean the race crawled for four furlongs and then everyone accelerated together. The two situations look identical in the headline number. They are not the same thing at all.
How the Analysis Works
The June 2026 (part 1) review runs furlong-by-furlong leader split time analysis across every race in the dataset, comparing average early and late sectional times to classify each race as truly run, moderate pace, or slowly run. Only horses whose FSP readings come from genuinely true-paced races make the cut. Several of the highest headline FSP figures from the period — including horses from Doncaster's evening card on 5th June and the Newbury novice on 11th June were generated in races that accelerated sharply in the closing stages. Their numbers are real. They are also misleading.
What remains after that filter is a smaller, more reliable list. One Must Follow. Five One to Watch. Three Keep Safe. Every horse carries a specific forward recommendation — trip, going, track type, race shape — because a sectional reading without context is just a number.
The Stand-Out Performance of the Fortnight
The highest validated FSP of any horse in any genuinely-run race across the first two weeks of June belongs to a two-year-old filly who finished second in a three-runner novice stakes at Ripon on 3rd June. She was last of the field through three furlongs. The pace profile of the race shows flat, even splits throughout no sprint finish, no slow early tempo. What she produced in the closing sectional, she produced honestly, in a race that beat par by half a second on Good ground.
Her FSP: 107.31%. Her composite Perf_Score: 1.2224 the highest of any horse in any truly-run race in the period. She is the Must Follow.
What the Pace Filter Revealed
Applying the pace distribution analysis to every race in the fortnight produced some uncomfortable conclusions about the most-discussed sectional performances of the period. The Doncaster 7f evening handicap on 5th June where five horses all posted above 105% FSP was classified as a slowly-run race, with a +0.60 second acceleration across the split times. The Newbury 1m1f novice on 11th June, which produced two FSP readings above 108%, showed an acceleration of +1.20 seconds. Both races were real. The FSP readings were real. The race shapes, however, turned the final sectional into a sprint which is precisely what inflated the numbers.
This does not mean the horses in those races are without merit. It means their FSP readings tell us less than the headline figures suggest, and identifying them as bankers on closing speed alone would be a mistake. The full article explains which horses from slowly-run races might still be worth following for other reasons, and which ones to set aside entirely.
Read the Full Analysis
The complete June 2026 Part One review — Race of the Month, full horse-by-horse entries with sectional figures, pace classification context, and specific forward recommendations — is published on Hidden Performances on Substack. Read the full article here.
Hidden Performances is built on thirty years of studying pace, draw bias, and sectional data in British flat racing, and a database of RaceIQ figures that goes well beyond what appears in the race replay. The analysis is designed for punters who want to understand why a result happened, not just what it was.
— Dave Watts | Hidden Performances | open.substack.com/pub/hiddenperformances
That distinction matters enormously. FSP (Finishing Speed Percentage) is one of the most powerful tools in sectional analysis but only when the race it comes from was genuinely run. A field-wide FSP spike above 105% can mean you have identified a group of exceptional closers. It can equally mean the race crawled for four furlongs and then everyone accelerated together. The two situations look identical in the headline number. They are not the same thing at all.
How the Analysis Works
The June 2026 (part 1) review runs furlong-by-furlong leader split time analysis across every race in the dataset, comparing average early and late sectional times to classify each race as truly run, moderate pace, or slowly run. Only horses whose FSP readings come from genuinely true-paced races make the cut. Several of the highest headline FSP figures from the period — including horses from Doncaster's evening card on 5th June and the Newbury novice on 11th June were generated in races that accelerated sharply in the closing stages. Their numbers are real. They are also misleading.
What remains after that filter is a smaller, more reliable list. One Must Follow. Five One to Watch. Three Keep Safe. Every horse carries a specific forward recommendation — trip, going, track type, race shape — because a sectional reading without context is just a number.
The Stand-Out Performance of the Fortnight
The highest validated FSP of any horse in any genuinely-run race across the first two weeks of June belongs to a two-year-old filly who finished second in a three-runner novice stakes at Ripon on 3rd June. She was last of the field through three furlongs. The pace profile of the race shows flat, even splits throughout no sprint finish, no slow early tempo. What she produced in the closing sectional, she produced honestly, in a race that beat par by half a second on Good ground.
Her FSP: 107.31%. Her composite Perf_Score: 1.2224 the highest of any horse in any truly-run race in the period. She is the Must Follow.
What the Pace Filter Revealed
Applying the pace distribution analysis to every race in the fortnight produced some uncomfortable conclusions about the most-discussed sectional performances of the period. The Doncaster 7f evening handicap on 5th June where five horses all posted above 105% FSP was classified as a slowly-run race, with a +0.60 second acceleration across the split times. The Newbury 1m1f novice on 11th June, which produced two FSP readings above 108%, showed an acceleration of +1.20 seconds. Both races were real. The FSP readings were real. The race shapes, however, turned the final sectional into a sprint which is precisely what inflated the numbers.
This does not mean the horses in those races are without merit. It means their FSP readings tell us less than the headline figures suggest, and identifying them as bankers on closing speed alone would be a mistake. The full article explains which horses from slowly-run races might still be worth following for other reasons, and which ones to set aside entirely.
Read the Full Analysis
The complete June 2026 Part One review — Race of the Month, full horse-by-horse entries with sectional figures, pace classification context, and specific forward recommendations — is published on Hidden Performances on Substack. Read the full article here.
Hidden Performances is built on thirty years of studying pace, draw bias, and sectional data in British flat racing, and a database of RaceIQ figures that goes well beyond what appears in the race replay. The analysis is designed for punters who want to understand why a result happened, not just what it was.
— Dave Watts | Hidden Performances | open.substack.com/pub/hiddenperformances