Great Yarmouth
Flat
North Denes, Norfolk · 70 miles east of Newmarket on the Norfolk coast
Turf
Left-Handed
Galloping Oval
John Musker Stakes Listed
Course Overview
Track Character
Great Yarmouth – or simply Yarmouth to the racing world – sits at the North Denes on the Norfolk coast, a stone’s throw from the sandy beach and only 70 miles from Newmarket. The course is a narrow left-handed oval of roughly one mile and five furlongs with a 5-furlong run-in (one of the longest in Britain) and a separate one-mile straight chute that joins the home straight at the start of the run-in. Despite the sharp bends the track is fundamentally galloping in nature. At The Races describes it as “perfectly flat” apart from a slight fall just before the run-in. The chalky, sandy soil drains exceptionally well, so the going is rarely truly testing and is regularly officially good or faster.
Yarmouth’s defining feature is its relationship with Newmarket. The proximity makes it the natural choice for HQ trainers wanting racecourse experience for promising horses. The maiden and novice races here are routinely of high quality. Dubai Millennium – the 1999 Dubai World Cup winner who at his peak had a Timeform rating of 140 – won his 2yo maiden debut at Yarmouth in October 1998 for David Loder. Ouija Board, the seven-time Group 1-winning filly, also won her maiden here. Raven’s Pass (2008 Breeders’ Cup Classic winner) is another graduate. The pattern is consistent: top Newmarket yards use Yarmouth as a classroom for horses too good for AW maidens but not ready for Newmarket itself.
The straight mile was relaid in 2015 to remove the previous undulations. The home straight is now considered one of the best in the country – level, fair, and giving jockeys ample time to organise from the turn-in. The relaying has materially changed the draw bias picture: older sources flagged a high-draw bias in big-field handicaps on the straight course, but post-2015 analysis (bettingsites.co’s 113-race study) shows low/middle/high draws winning at 9.7%, 9.4% and 9.7% respectively – draw bias has effectively been engineered out. The track is now genuinely draw-fair across all distances. Former jockey Nicky Weaver, in the At The Races View From the Saddle Yarmouth guide, captures the current state of the course:
— Nicky Weaver, former jockey (At The Races View From the Saddle)
Weaver’s hard-luck-on-the-far-rail caveat is worth carrying through to handicap analysis: with no draw bias to navigate, the most common cause of avoidable defeat at modern Yarmouth is a horse drawn or positioned tight on the far rail getting trapped on the bend or in traffic on the long run-in. Pace bias matters more than draw bias here. The 5-furlong run-in rewards horses ridden with restraint who can quicken once the field has organised; sprint front-runners who burn early often get caught. The galloping geometry rewards big, long-striding types – the same physical profile that wins at Newmarket Rowley Mile and York. Form transfers cleanly between Yarmouth and Newmarket in both directions, and to a lesser extent to other galloping tracks.
Course Facts
- Configuration Left-handed oval, narrow, ~1m5f circuit with separate 1m straight chute
- Run-in 5 furlongs from the turn into the home straight – one of the longest in Britain
- Topography Perfectly flat with a slight fall just before the run-in (per At The Races)
- Surface Chalky, sandy soil drains exceptionally well – going rarely soft, often firm in dry spells
- 2015 relaying Home straight relaid to remove ridges; now one of the best straight miles in the country
Newmarket Connection
- Distance 70 miles from Newmarket via A47 and A11 – heavily used by HQ yards
- Maiden quality Some of the best maidens in the country thanks to Newmarket trainer support
- Dubai Millennium Won 2yo maiden debut here October 1998 for David Loder – peak Timeform 140
- Ouija Board 7x Group 1 winner; won her maiden at Yarmouth before going global
- Raven’s Pass 2008 Breeders’ Cup Classic winner; another Yarmouth maiden graduate
Run Style & Draw
- Draw bias (post-2015) Effectively neutral – bettingsites.co 113-race study shows low/mid/high all at 9.4-9.7%
- Horse type Big, long-striding gallopers – same physical profile as Newmarket Rowley Mile
- Pace 5f run-in punishes early burners; reward goes to horses ridden with restraint
- Weaver caveat “A few hard-luck stories tight on the far rail” – traffic on the bend is the main risk
- Form transfer Transfers cleanly to/from Newmarket; reasonable to other galloping tracks
Calendar & History
- Fixtures 24 flat fixtures a year, late April through October
- John Musker Stakes Listed 1m2f September fillies race – headline of the Eastern meeting
- Eastern Festival 3-day September meeting – the highlight of the Yarmouth calendar
- Owner Arena Racing Company majority shareholder since 2001
- Lord Nelson Grandstand Built 2004 under ARC investment
Draw Bias by Distance
Source: bettingsites.co 113-race round-course study (post-2015), horseracingbettingsites.co.uk Yarmouth guide, safebookmakerssites.com Yarmouth analysis, At The Races course guide. The 2015 relaying of the home straight materially changed the draw picture – older sources showing high-draw bias are no longer reliable. Modern Yarmouth is one of the most draw-fair tracks in the country.
The summary: Yarmouth post-2015 is one of the few British flat tracks where draw bias has effectively been engineered out. Older sources flagging high-draw bias on the straight course are out of date and should not be applied. Focus instead on pace bias (closers benefit from the 5f run-in) and on positional analysis – horses likely to be trapped tight on the far rail are the most common avoidable losers. For everyday Yarmouth handicap analysis, draw is a non-factor.
Top Trainers & Jockeys
Source: Compiled from irishracing.com Yarmouth statistics (multi-year aggregate, all flat fixtures). Wins, Runs and Win% are real; A/E and P/L not available from public sources.
| Trainer | Runs | Wins | Win% | Places | Place% | A/E | P/L |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 William Haggas | 420 | 108 | 25.71% | — | — | — | — |
| 2 John Gosden | 355 | 97 | 27.32% | — | — | — | — |
| 3 Michael Bell | 431 | 74 | 17.17% | — | — | — | — |
| 4 Chris Wall | 305 | 59 | 19.34% | — | — | — | — |
| 5 Roger Varian | 284 | 59 | 20.77% | — | — | — | — |
| 6 David Simcock | 326 | 56 | 17.18% | — | — | — | — |
| 7 P McBride | 224 | 45 | 20.09% | — | — | — | — |
| 8 C Johnston (fmr M Johnston) | 298 | 43 | 14.43% | — | — | — | — |
| 9 C A Dwyer | 339 | 41 | 12.09% | — | — | — | — |
| 10 Stuart Williams | 391 | 40 | 10.23% | — | — | — | — |
| 11 Sir Michael Stoute (ret. end 2024) | 214 | 40 | 18.69% | — | — | — | — |
| 12 James Fanshawe | 269 | 38 | 14.13% | — | — | — | — |
| 13 Sir Mark Prescott | 158 | 37 | 23.42% | — | — | — | — |
| 14 George Margarson | 353 | 35 | 9.92% | — | — | — | — |
| 15 Charlie Appleby | 114 | 34 | 29.82% | — | — | — | — |
| 16 Julia Feilden | 447 | 33 | 7.38% | — | — | — | — |
| 17 Mike Appleby | 346 | 32 | 9.25% | — | — | — | — |
| 18 Jamie Ryan | 345 | 32 | 9.28% | — | — | — | — |
| 19 Ed Dunlop | 324 | 31 | 9.57% | — | — | — | — |
| 20 Marco Botti | 280 | 31 | 11.07% | — | — | — | — |
| Jockey | Runs | Wins | Win% | Places | Place% | A/E | P/L |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 Silvestre de Sousa | 441 | 88 | 19.95% | — | — | — | — |
| 2 Jamie Spencer | 464 | 84 | 18.10% | — | — | — | — |
| 3 Ryan Moore | 306 | 82 | 26.80% | — | — | — | — |
| 4 William Buick | 336 | 75 | 22.32% | — | — | — | — |
| 5 Luke Morris | 512 | 56 | 10.94% | — | — | — | — |
| 6 Jack Mitchell | 367 | 55 | 14.99% | — | — | — | — |
| 7 Andrea Atzeni | 316 | 55 | 17.41% | — | — | — | — |
| 8 Pat Cosgrave | 295 | 49 | 16.61% | — | — | — | — |
| 9 Tom Marquand | 263 | 45 | 17.11% | — | — | — | — |
| 10 Rob Havlin | 302 | 42 | 13.91% | — | — | — | — |
| 11 Hollie Doyle | 194 | 42 | 21.65% | — | — | — | — |
| 12 James Doyle | 170 | 39 | 22.94% | — | — | — | — |
| 13 Daniel Muscutt | 324 | 39 | 12.04% | — | — | — | — |
| 14 Tom Queally | 380 | 37 | 9.74% | — | — | — | — |
| 15 Hayley Turner | 280 | 37 | 13.21% | — | — | — | — |
| 16 Paul Hanagan | 157 | 33 | 21.02% | — | — | — | — |
| 17 David Egan | 293 | 32 | 10.92% | — | — | — | — |
| 18 Jim Crowley | 154 | 32 | 20.78% | — | — | — | — |
| 19 Ted Durcan | 240 | 32 | 13.33% | — | — | — | — |
| 20 Kieren Fallon | 188 | 32 | 17.02% | — | — | — | — |
Top Sires
Source: irishracing.com Yarmouth sire statistics (multi-year aggregate). Wins, Runs and Win% are real; A/E and P/L not available from public sources.
| Sire | Runs | Wins | Win% | Places | Place% | A/E | P/L |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 Oasis Dream | 329 | 52 | 15.81% | — | — | — | — |
| 2 Kodiac | 301 | 49 | 16.28% | — | — | — | — |
| 3 Dubawi | 220 | 48 | 21.82% | — | — | — | — |
| 4 Dark Angel | 315 | 48 | 15.24% | — | — | — | — |
| 5 Invincible Spirit | 268 | 42 | 15.67% | — | — | — | — |
| 6 Exceed And Excel | 312 | 40 | 12.82% | — | — | — | — |
| 7 Acclamation | 277 | 32 | 11.55% | — | — | — | — |
| 8 Frankel | 112 | 31 | 27.68% | — | — | — | — |
| 9 Mayson | 168 | 27 | 16.07% | — | — | — | — |
| 10 Iffraaj | 230 | 25 | 10.87% | — | — | — | — |
| 11 Showcasing | 236 | 24 | 10.17% | — | — | — | — |
| 12 Shamardal | 166 | 24 | 14.46% | — | — | — | — |
| 13 Kheleyf | 218 | 24 | 11.01% | — | — | — | — |
| 14 Sea The Stars | 143 | 23 | 16.08% | — | — | — | — |
| 15 Kyllachy | 190 | 23 | 12.11% | — | — | — | — |
| 16 Dutch Art | 143 | 23 | 16.08% | — | — | — | — |
| 17 Lope De Vega | 161 | 23 | 14.29% | — | — | — | — |
| 18 Night Of Thunder | 122 | 22 | 18.03% | — | — | — | — |
| 19 No Nay Never | 107 | 21 | 19.63% | — | — | — | — |
| 20 Dansili | 132 | 21 | 15.91% | — | — | — | — |
Betting Tips for Great Yarmouth Flat
Newmarket-trained 2yo and 3yo maidens at Yarmouth are routinely the best educated horses in the field
The Newmarket prep-school pattern is the headline angle at Yarmouth. Dubai Millennium, Ouija Board and Raven’s Pass all started here before going global. Modern Charlie Appleby strikes at 29.82% from 114 Yarmouth runners; Gosden 27.32% from 355; Haggas 25.71% from 420. When a top Newmarket yard sends a horse to Yarmouth, especially in a maiden, the horse is being targeted to win.
Frankel progeny strike at 27.68% from 112 Yarmouth runners – the elite sire angle in the country
Frankel’s runners hit 36% strike at 3yo at Yarmouth (18 wins from 50). The galloping geometry suits his long-striding stock perfectly. This is a real, repeatable, multi-year angle – not a sample-size artefact. Any Frankel-sired 3yo in a Yarmouth maiden or low-class handicap deserves first look.
Newmarket sprint sires DO NOT fade here as they do at Goodwood or Epsom
Oasis Dream (15.81%), Kodiac (16.28%), Invincible Spirit (15.67%), Exceed And Excel (12.82%) – all perform at or above their general averages at Yarmouth. The galloping geometry rewards the same speed-of-foot profile that wins at Newmarket Rowley Mile. This is a meta-pattern Scott can apply: where these sires fade matters, where they don’t is equally informative.
Ryan Moore at 26.80% strike from 306 Yarmouth rides is the elite jockey angle
Moore’s record at Yarmouth – 25.77% with 2yo, 27.94% with 3yo, 26.03% with 4yo+ – is consistent across all age groups, which is unusual at any track. Combined with the Coolmore/Stoute/elite-yard runners he typically rides here, his bookings are a strong positive signal. James Doyle (22.94%) and William Buick (22.32%) are the next-best Newmarket-stable angles.
Older sources flagging a high-draw bias on the straight course are out of date
The 2015 relaying of the home straight engineered out the previous draw bias. The bettingsites.co 113-race study found low/mid/high draws winning at 9.7%, 9.4%, 9.7% respectively – statistically identical. Any tipping service still flagging high-draw bias at Yarmouth is using pre-2015 data. Treat as a draw-fair track in all field sizes.
The 5-furlong run-in punishes sprint front-runners who burn too early
One of the longest run-ins in Britain. Sprint horses who lead from the stalls and rely on holding on frequently get caught in the final furlong. Reward goes to horses ridden with restraint who can quicken once the field has organised. Use pace data: front-runners win less often at Yarmouth sprints than at most flat tracks because the long uphill home straight gives closers time to come.
Sir Mark Prescott at Yarmouth – 23.42% strike, 35% with 3yo (33 wins from 92) – is a targeted-runner specialist
Prescott runs only 158 horses at Yarmouth across his career but strikes at 23.42%, with the 3yo figure jumping to 35%. The Heath House yard targets Yarmouth specifically when it suits the horse. Any Prescott runner here warrants closer-than-usual analysis. Roger Varian (20.77% from 284) is the next-best 20%+ small-volume angle.
Form transfers cleanly between Yarmouth and Newmarket in both directions
The galloping oval with long run-in is the closest analogue to Newmarket Rowley Mile in the British flat calendar – sharper bends, smaller scale, same demand for galloping power and finishing speed. Form transfers reliably. Use Yarmouth runs as positive evidence for Newmarket; use Newmarket form as positive evidence at Yarmouth. The pattern does NOT extend to Epsom, Goodwood or Brighton (different demands).
Watch for hard-luck stories tight on the far rail – Weaver’s specific track risk
Per Weaver’s At The Races analysis: horses positioned tight on the far rail can get trapped behind tiring runners on the long run-in. Not a draw bias per se, but a positional risk that creates avoidable losses. Use pace replays to identify horses that suffered traffic problems; they often run better next time at the same trip.
Common Mistakes
- Applying pre-2015 high-draw bias on the straight course The 2015 relaying engineered out the bias. The bettingsites.co 113-race study shows low/mid/high all at 9.4-9.7%. Any source still recommending high draws is using stale data. Treat Yarmouth straight-course racing as genuinely draw-fair.
- Discounting Newmarket maidens because of low prize money Maiden races at Yarmouth are some of the best-quality maidens in Britain because Newmarket yards use the track as a classroom. Future Group 1 winners frequently start here. The horses are not lower-grade than at Newmarket – just earlier in their careers. Pay attention to debut runners from top yards.
- Backing Tom Queally or Luke Morris on volume alone Both ride enormous numbers at Yarmouth but with weak strike rates (Queally 9.74%, Morris 10.94%). Volume creates name recognition, not value. Focus on the 22%+ Newmarket-stable jockeys (Moore, J Doyle, Buick) and the high-strike specialists (Hollie Doyle, Hanagan, Crowley) rather than the volume names.
- Assuming the galloping geometry suits small, nimble types It does not. The combination of long straight chute, sharp bends, and 5f run-in suits big, long-striding gallopers – the Newmarket Rowley Mile profile. Small, sharp-track types from Epsom or Brighton frequently underperform at Yarmouth. Match horse physique to the track demand.
- Treating Yarmouth form as transferable to switchback tracks Yarmouth form transfers cleanly to Newmarket, reasonably to other galloping tracks (Doncaster, Salisbury), poorly to switchback tracks like Epsom, Goodwood or Brighton. Use Yarmouth wins as positive evidence at galloping venues; treat with caution at switchbacks. The horse needs different attributes there.
- Ignoring the run-in pace dynamic The 5f run-in is one of the longest in Britain. Front-runners who lead from the stalls often get caught in the final furlong; closers can come from behind. Use pace data from the last 12 months to identify run-style edges. Hold-up rides work at Yarmouth in a way they do not at shorter run-in tracks.
Want the thinking behind Great Yarmouth turf bets?
FormDial posts every selection before the off with the full reasoning – the angle, the price, the logic. See how course knowledge feeds into real tips.