Southwell – All Weather Guide

Racecourse Guide

Southwell
All Weather

Rolleston, Nottinghamshire · 15 miles north-east of Nottingham

⚫ All WeatherTapeta SurfaceLeft-HandedYear-Round & Floodlit
Shape
Oval 1m2f circuit
Straight
5f
Home Straight
3f
Surface
Tapeta
Direction
Left-Handed
Track Type
Galloping

Course Overview

Southwell All-Weather course map

Southwell’s all-weather track sits inside the turf course at Rolleston in Nottinghamshire, left-handed and flat across a mile-and-a-quarter oval. The geometry matters: two fairly sharp bends feed into long back and home straights, producing a layout one analyst described as the nearest thing British racing has to a small American dirt circuit. The three-furlong run-in is long enough to expose a front-runner who has burned through his reserves, but not long enough for a deep closer to make up serious ground from the rear. Southwell rewards horses that can be positioned — prominently, not necessarily on the lead, but within striking distance when the final turn comes.

The track opened its all-weather chapter in November 1989 with Fibresand — a deep, demanding surface that became synonymous with course specialists and kickback problems. It was the only Fibresand circuit in Britain for its entire 32-year life. Yards within an hour’s drive — Mick Appleby the prime example — turned it into a production line. Then, in December 2021, ARC relaid the circuit with Tapeta, aligning Southwell with Newcastle and Wolverhampton. The pace dynamics shifted. Front-running remained advantageous, but the premium on raw early speed reduced; tactical rides from handy positions became viable across all trips.

“A lot of my horses acted better on Fibresand than any other surface. Year after year we bought horses specifically to race on it — but the biggest challenge now is to find those that will be just as effective on the Tapeta there.”

— Mick Appleby, eight-time All-Weather Champion Trainer, At The Races

What Tapeta did not change is the track’s core character: stamina counts. The long straights mean horses work hard for longer than on the tighter UK ovals. Sprint races use a dedicated chute to produce a genuinely straight five furlongs — the only straight-course distance at Southwell — and that is where draw matters most. Beyond five, the round course bends shape the race far more than stall positions. In longer handicaps, pace shapes everything. A race run at a genuine gallop over ten furlongs tends to sort out the genuine stayers, and Southwell produces repeat course-and-distance winners at a higher rate than almost any other UK track precisely because the specialist profile is so specific.

Track Specs

  • SurfaceTapeta (since Dec 2021; Fibresand 1989–2021)
  • Circuit1m2f flat oval, left-handed
  • Straight5f via chute/spur
  • Home Straight3 furlongs
  • Track TypeGalloping — long straights, two sharp bends
  • FloodlightsLED (installed 2019, upgraded 2021)
  • Fixtures50+ AW flat meetings per year

Track & History

  • 1897Racing opened on the current Rolleston site
  • 1989Fibresand AW track opened — the UK’s first year-round all-weather circuit
  • 1994All-weather jump racing discontinued on safety grounds
  • 2012Flooding forced temporary closure; fixtures transferred to Wolverhampton and Lingfield
  • 2013Reopened February 5 following major renovation
  • 2019LED floodlights installed, enabling evening racing year-round
  • 2021Tapeta surface laid; first meeting December 7

Draw Bias by Distance

Draw Bias Strength by Distance
Based on winners from 2010 (all field sizes, Fibresand era). Higher bar = stronger draw advantage. Note: predominantly Fibresand-era data — Tapeta patterns at 5f confirm the low-draw bias; other distances should be monitored as the Tapeta sample grows.
5f (Straight)
876 races

Low Draw ★★★

6f
986 races

Broadly Fair

7f
984 races

Broadly Fair

1m
1,143 races

Mid–High ★★

1m3f
332 races

Broadly Fair

5f — Straight Course
Low Draw ★★★
876 races from 2010. The straight chute removes the bends from the equation entirely — it is a pure stall lottery and the lowest draws win it. In 8-runner fields stall 1 produces 23 winners against 12 for stall 8. Stalls 1–4 account for the majority of winners in every competitive field size from 6 runners upward. Tapeta-era data confirms the pattern continues: stalls 1–4 carry a combined PRB of 0.57 on the new surface.
6f — Round Course
Broadly Fair
986 races from 2010. One left-hand bend quickly redistributes the field. Middle stalls edge it in several common field sizes — stall 5 leads in 8-runner races, stall 3 in 7-runner races — but no stall holds a consistent, material advantage across field sizes. The race is more likely to be settled by early position and pace than by where a horse breaks from.
7f — Round Course
Broadly Fair
984 races from 2010. The extra distance gives horses time to find their positions before the bend. No stall dominates consistently — in 8-runner races stalls 7 and 8 actually lead with 20 winners each, while 9-runner data shows stalls 2 and 7 tied. The data is scattered. Pace and running style are the variables that pay at this trip, not stall number.
1m — Round Course
Middle–High Draw ★★
1,143 races from 2010 — the largest sample in this dataset and the most counterintuitive result. In 8-runner races stall 6 produces 26 winners against just 9 for stall 1. Stalls 5–8 consistently outscore stalls 1–3 across 7, 8 and 9-runner fields. The first bend comes early at the mile start; wider-drawn horses may cross and find the rail before the back straight, while low-drawn horses get squeezed at the turn. Worth factoring in competitive 7–10 runner handicaps.
1m3f — Round Course
Broadly Fair
332 races from 2010 — the smallest sample here. No consistent stall advantage emerges across field sizes. Results are broadly distributed. At staying trips, stamina and pace are the race-shaping variables. Draw is a footnote.

Strong bias — material handicapping factor

Moderate lean — worth noting

Broadly fair — not a primary factor

Top Trainers & Jockeys

TrainerRunsWinsWin%PlacesPlace%A/EP/L
1 Mick Appleby4164310.34%13031.25%0.73-190.14
2 Michael Herrington2173817.51%8539.17%1.33+74.75
3 A W Carroll3143210.19%9229.30%0.83-40.79
4 J P Owen1402719.29%6546.43%0.95-12.83
5 K R Burke1432618.18%5739.86%1.02-36.37
6 Scott Dixon397266.55%8220.65%0.87-145.24
7 Andrew Balding1432215.38%6444.76%0.76-36.56
8 S R Bowring1162118.10%4337.07%1.19+13.28
9 David Loughnane1131916.81%4237.17%1.25+19.03
10 Ivan Furtado266197.14%6122.93%0.80-124.42
11 Ian Williams1481812.16%4631.08%0.82-42.04
12 Grant Tuer771722.08%2836.36%1.48+27.04
13 David Simcock1091715.60%4339.45%0.87-36.71
14 Antony Brittain1551610.32%4730.32%1.03+8.25
15 Richard Fahey177169.04%4223.73%0.75-45.42
16 George Boughey1011514.85%3736.63%0.73-45.96
17 David O’Meara1081513.89%3330.56%0.99-31.42
18 D Shaw213157.04%5626.29%0.71-148.62
19 Charles Hills431432.56%2251.16%1.45+18.91
20 Mrs R A Carr1171411.97%4135.04%1.28+39.33

Southwell all-weather, last 5 seasons. Mick Appleby leads by wins (43 from 416) but loses heavily at SP — the volume specialist. The real signals are Michael Herrington (17.51% SR, A/E 1.33, +74.75 P/L from 217 runners) and further down Grant Tuer (22% SR, A/E 1.48, +27.04) and Charles Hills (32.56% SR, A/E 1.45, +18.91). David Loughnane’s A/E 1.25 is another sharp angle — these are the yards worth tracking over the volume-play names.
JockeyRunsWinsWin%PlacesPlace%A/EP/L
1 Jason Hart3104414.19%10634.19%1.03+6.71
2 Rossa Ryan2314117.75%10545.45%0.81-37.32
3 David Muscutt2113617.06%9042.65%1.04-8.14
4 Hector Crouch1303325.38%5643.08%1.22+10.95
5 Lewis Edmunds2853010.53%7827.37%0.89-82.12
6 Luke Morris344298.43%9828.49%0.75-163.16
7 Tom Eaves2372610.97%7431.22%1.10-50.46
8 Kieran O’Neill284269.15%8429.58%0.97-86.59
9 David Probert1672414.37%5532.93%0.87-33.63
10 Joanna Mason263249.13%6926.24%0.82-90.02
11 Daniel Hogan1462315.75%5134.93%1.35+67.04
12 Billy Loughnane1812312.71%7139.23%0.66-88.10
13 Jack Mitchell1422114.79%5639.44%0.84-45.01
14 Cameron Hardie336216.25%7722.92%0.70-224.49
15 Kieran Shoemark1032019.42%4341.75%1.10+16.97
16 Robert Havlin1092018.35%4238.53%1.14+7.95
17 S H James1401913.57%3927.86%1.07-30.63
18 P J McDonald1421812.68%4833.80%0.87-33.91
19 Jason Watson1441711.81%4531.25%0.81-66.76
20 Clifford Lee1681710.12%5432.14%0.75-66.86

Jason Hart leads by wins but Hector Crouch’s 25.38% SR with A/E 1.22 from 130 rides is the single sharpest signal in the data. Daniel Hogan (+67.04 P/L, A/E 1.35) is a market edge on smaller volume. Kieran Shoemark, Robert Havlin and Tom Eaves are the other A/E-positive names in the top 20 — worth noting when they ride the track.

Top Sires

SireRunsWinsWin%PlacesPlace%A/EP/L
1 Mehmas (IRE)2023416.83%7637.62%1.06+42.79
2 Dark Angel (IRE)2723312.13%9635.29%0.81-59.18
3 Showcasing2053014.63%7134.63%1.19+47.37
4 Lope De Vega (IRE)1642515.24%5734.76%0.95+20.98
5 Kingman1322317.42%6146.21%0.94-3.85
6 Oasis Dream1532315.03%4428.76%1.12+0.49
7 Exceed And Excel (AUS)1812212.15%6033.15%0.87-64.64
8 Mayson1862211.83%5227.96%1.01-30.97
9 Bated Breath1671911.38%5130.54%0.87-77.41
10 Dandy Man (IRE)261197.28%6123.37%0.70-124.12
11 Sea The Stars (IRE)881820.45%4045.45%1.14-11.93
12 Cable Bay (IRE)1231713.82%4738.21%1.10-16.04
13 Kodiac280176.07%6723.93%0.56-124.50
14 Pride Of Dubai (AUS)441534.09%2352.27%1.88+19.96
15 Blue Point (IRE)771519.48%2937.66%1.08-6.29
16 Havana Gold (IRE)931516.13%3335.48%1.09-21.59
17 Muhaarar1081412.96%3128.70%1.00-35.44
18 Havana Grey1221411.48%4839.34%0.80-38.32
19 Iffraaj1221310.66%3528.69%0.93-6.21
20 Profitable (IRE)1131210.62%3934.51%0.85-50.93

Southwell all-weather, last 5 seasons. Mehmas and Showcasing lead on both volume and value — both profitable at SP with positive A/E. Pride Of Dubai is the standout niche sire: 34.09% SR with A/E 1.88 from 44 runners. Sea The Stars strikes at 20%+ with A/E 1.14 on a smaller sample. The volume names at the bottom of the table (Kodiac, Dandy Man, Kodiac again) drain the ledger at SP — market knows them too well.
🏃

Front-runners and prominent racers on the round course

The three-furlong home straight sounds generous but the tight bends make it nearly impossible to make up more than a length or two from off the pace. At all round-course trips, prioritise horses that race prominently. This is the single most reliable structural edge at Southwell all-weather.

🎯

Low draws in the 5f sprint

The straight chute produces a consistent, measurable draw bias toward the low numbers. Stalls 1–4 show a combined PRB of 0.57 on Tapeta — already a meaningful edge in post-2021 data. Stall 1 alone clocks 0.66. In a full-field sprint, anything drawn double figures requires serious justification before backing.

📍

Mick Appleby — the local specialist

Appleby’s yard sits near Oakham in Rutland, under an hour from Southwell. He trained the dominant percentage of Fibresand winners and has adapted his operation to the Tapeta era. Eight all-weather championships aren’t won by accident. When Appleby sends a runner here, the stall draw is rarely his problem.

🔄

Course and distance specialists

Southwell produces repeat winners at a higher rate than almost any other UK track. The specific surface profile — neither as quick as Kempton’s Polytrack nor as wide-open as Newcastle — filters out horses that don’t genuinely like it. Proven course and distance form is worth a length or more in the handicap ratings here.

💪

Back genuine stayers at 1m3f+

The long home straight exposes horses running on borrowed time. Pace collapses are commonplace at staying trips — jockeys routinely go hard early on a track that looks flat and easy but isn’t. A horse with a proven stamina profile and a turn of pace in the straight can clean up repeatedly at these distances.

📊

Jason Hart, Danny Tudhope and Ben Curtis bookings

Hart leads the course by winners; Tudhope posts a 24% strike rate; Curtis built his Southwell reputation on Fibresand and his Tapeta record is worth tracking as the sample grows. When any of the three takes a booking here, the implied confidence from the sending trainer carries weight.

⚠ Common Mistakes to Avoid
  • Treating Tapeta as interchangeable with Polytrack. The surfaces share a synthetic base but the track profiles reward different horses. Kempton form does not transfer automatically to Southwell and vice versa. Each page of form needs to be read on its own merits.
  • Over-weighting draw on the round course. Beyond 5f, stall position is largely irrelevant unless the field has 12 or more runners at 7f to a mile. Pace and running style are the variables that pay. Draw obsession at 6f and beyond is a consistent money-loser at Southwell.
  • Ignoring course specialists. Southwell’s specific surface profile creates repeat winners more reliably than almost any other UK track. A horse with multiple Southwell wins is telling you something concrete. It is not coincidence — it is specialisation.
  • Carrying Fibresand form into Tapeta assessments. Pre-December 2021 Southwell all-weather form is largely irrelevant. The two surfaces reward different horses. Any analysis treating a Fibresand run as proof of suitability for the current track is working from a false premise.

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