Racecourse Guide

Redcar
Flat

Redcar, North Yorkshire · the seaside racecourse on the North Sea coast

⬤ Flat Turf
Turf
Left-Handed
Flat Galloping
Two-Year-Old Trophy Listed

Round Course
1m6f narrow oval
Straight Course
1m flat
Direction
Left-handed
Surface
Turf
Run-in
5f home straight
Key Race
Two-Year-Old Trophy Listed

Course Overview

Track Character

Redcar sits on the North Sea coast in North Yorkshire, just to the north-east of Middlesbrough and within sight of the beach. It is one of the most underrated flat tracks in Britain – a narrow, left-handed oval of approximately 1 mile and 6 furlongs with a separate straight mile course used for races between 5 furlongs and a mile. The track is perfectly flat with two sharp bends, but is otherwise a fundamentally galloping course with a five-furlong home straight. The chalk drainage keeps the going firm through most of the summer, and Redcar’s calendar runs March through November with sixteen meetings per year.

The track is fundamentally galloping in character but it does not ride as straightforwardly as the geography suggests. Ridges have developed in the running surface over years of use, the bottom turn is notoriously tricky to navigate, and the 5-furlong home straight is deceptively long – races repeatedly change shape after the home turn. Former jockey Jason Weaver, in the At The Races View From the Saddle Redcar guide, identifies the riding challenge precisely:

“A few ridges have developed at Redcar over the years and you definitely need to keep on the right side of those. The bottom turn is tricky to navigate too – there’s been more than one problem there – and the straight rides tremendously long. So, although it’s flat enough, races seem to change three or four times after the home turn. If you happen to be in front with one breathing down your neck, you have little chance of getting home, so patience is the key. Playing your cards late is the best option.”
— Jason Weaver, former jockey (At The Races View From the Saddle)

Weaver’s “play your cards late” is the practical key to Redcar handicap analysis. The deceptively long home straight punishes front-runners who hit the rising winning line with a horse breathing down their neck – they get caught more often than the flat geography would suggest. Patient ridden horses with finishing speed are repeatedly the winning profile. Combined with the track’s other defining feature – the Two-Year-Old Trophy roll of honour that includes Pipalong (1998), Somnus (2002, European Champion Sprinter the following year), Body And Soul (2012) and Limato (2014, who went on to win the July Cup) – Redcar punches well above its general profile. The race weights are decided by stock value of the sire rather than form, attracting Group-class juveniles racing on favourable terms. Pay closer attention to Redcar juvenile form than the market does. Draw bias is going-dependent: on good ground at sprint trips, middle draws have a slight edge because jockeys gravitate to the centre rather than either rail. On soft ground the low-draw bias is significant – bettingsites.co’s 528-race study found 12.5% wins for low vs 4.4% for high on soft.

Course Facts

  • Configuration Narrow left-handed oval approximately 1 mile 6 furlongs; separate straight mile course for 5f-1m races
  • Topography Perfectly flat throughout; banked sharp bends counter the geometry
  • Run-in 5 furlongs from the home turn to the line – one of the longer home straights in Britain
  • Drainage Chalk-based – drains exceptionally well; default going is good or faster
  • First raced Coatham Sands beach racing from the 18th century; current racecourse opened 1872

The Two-Year-Old Trophy

  • Format Listed 6f handicap; weights based on stock value of sire rather than form
  • Field size Routinely 20+ runners – one of the most competitive juvenile races in Britain
  • Pipalong (1998) Won the Trophy then went on to win the Great St Wilfrid; Group 1-placed sprinter
  • Somnus (2002) Trophy winner who became European Champion Sprinter in 2003
  • Limato (2014) Trophy winner who went on to win the 2016 July Cup and Prix de la Foret

Run Style & Draw

  • 5f-6f good ground Middle draws marginal edge – jockeys race down centre, not either rail
  • 5f-6f soft ground Strong low-draw advantage – 12.5% win rate for low vs 4.4% for high in 528-race study
  • 7f-1m straight No meaningful draw bias on good ground; pace matters more than position
  • Round course No draw bias at any trip – the long home straight gives the field time to organise
  • Pace bias Front-runners favoured on fast ground; closers come through on soft when stamina test emerges

Calendar & History

  • Founded Current racecourse built 1872; previous racing on Coatham Sands from the 18th century
  • Fixtures 16 meetings per year, mostly summer, with September/October the headline late-season fixtures
  • Two-Year-Old Trophy Listed 6f late September/early October – the seasonal highlight
  • Guisborough Stakes Listed 7f for 3yo+ run on the same card as the Trophy
  • Zetland Gold Cup Late-May handicap over 1m2f – Sir Michael Stoute trained Kingdom of Fife to win in 2009

Draw Bias by Distance

Draw Bias Strength by Distance
Based on Horse Race Base stall analysis data. Higher bar = stronger draw bias. Note: sprint straights favour low draws; round course flips to high.
5f straight
247 races

Low Draw ★★

6f straight (big fields)
470 races

Low Draw ★

7f straight
421 races

Marginal Low ★

1m straight
344 races

Broadly Fair

1m2f round (big fields)
316 races

High Draw ★

1m6f round
160 races

High Draw ★

Strong bias — material handicapping factor

Moderate lean — worth noting

Broadly fair — not a primary factor

Source: Horse Race Base stall analysis data for Redcar (all-going, all-age aggregate). 247 races at 5f straight, 470 at 6f straight, 421 at 7f straight, 344 at 1m straight, 56 at 1m1f round, 316 at 1m2f round, 160 at 1m6f round. The pattern: low draws favoured on sprint straights in big fields; high draws favoured on the round course in handicap-sized fields.

5f (247 races)
Low Draw ★★
Across all 247 races, low draws won 38.5% vs mid 34.0% and high 27.5%. In 10+ runner fields the bias magnifies: 39.3% low, 29.0% mid, 31.8% high. The minimum trip at Redcar is a clear low-draw advantage – the opposite of the general “middle is best” reputation. Combined with front-running pace this is the cleanest Redcar angle.
6f (470 races)
Middle Edge (small fields) ★
Across all 470 races, the picture is mixed: low 32.3%, mid 37.2%, high 30.6%. But in 12+ runner handicap fields, low draws dominate: 38.1% low, 35.8% mid, just 26.1% high. The Two-Year-Old Trophy at 6f routinely runs 20+ runners – bias is real and significant at that field size.
7f (421 races)
Low Edge ★
Across all 421 races, low 35.6%, mid 32.3%, high 32.1% – a modest low-draw edge that emerges more clearly in 10+ runner fields (37.5% low, 33.9% mid, 28.7% high). Less pronounced than at 5f but still a meaningful angle in larger handicap fields.
1m straight (344 races)
Broadly Fair
The longest straight-course trip is genuinely draw-neutral: 34.8% low, 33.0% mid, 32.2% high across 344 races. The 1m chute joins the home straight and the field has ample time to organise. Pace, jockey craft and the long home straight dominate over draw position.
1m2f round (316 races)
High Edge (big fields) ★
The round course flips the pattern. Across all 316 races: low 32.8%, mid 33.8%, high 33.4%. But in 10+ runner fields the high-draw edge becomes clear: 37.7% high, 32.9% low, 29.5% mid. High draws coming into the left-handed bend can overlap onto the inside; the Zetland Gold Cup at this trip is the prime example.
1m6f round (160 races)
High Edge ★
Strongest round-course bias. Across all 160 races: high 36.3%, low 33.1%, mid 30.6%. In 8+ runner fields the pattern holds at 35.9% high, 34.4% low, 29.7% mid. The longer the trip on the round course, the more meaningful the high-draw advantage becomes – opposite to most British flat tracks.

The summary corrects a common Redcar myth: the “middle draw is best” rule that appears in secondary sources is not what the Horse Race Base data shows. Real pattern: sprint trips on the straight course favour low draws (especially in big fields), the mile straight is genuinely fair, and the round course tilts to high draws in handicap-sized fields. Combine this with Weaver’s “play your cards late” patient riding rule for the cleanest Redcar reads. Front-running profile + low draw at 5f-7f handicaps; patient finishing speed + high draw at 1m2f-1m6f round-course handicaps.

Top Trainers & Jockeys

Source: Compiled from irishracing.com Redcar statistics (multi-year aggregate, all flat fixtures). Wins, Runs and Win% are real; A/E and P/L not available from public sources.

TrainerRunsWinsWin%PlacesPlace%A/EP/L
1 Tim Easterby15421237.98%
2 David O’Meara74011014.86%
3 Richard Fahey79810513.16%
4 Michael Dods6607110.76%
5 Kevin Ryan4215011.88%
6 C Johnston (fmr M Johnston)3244814.81%
7 William Haggas1364230.88%
8 David Barron3284012.20%
9 Nigel Tinkler471388.07%
10 John Quinn3433610.50%
11 K R Burke2693412.64%
12 Bryan Smart340339.71%
13 Mick Easterby427317.26%
14 Ruth Carr429317.23%
15 Paul Midgley363318.54%
16 Declan Carroll2662710.15%
17 Tracy Waggott341236.74%
18 Ed Bethell882225.00%
19 David Nicholls1692213.02%
20 Roger Varian802126.25%

William Haggas at 30.88% strike from 136 Redcar runners is the elite per-runner angle – 33% with 3yo (25 wins from 74) and 35% with 4yo+. Haggas ships horses to Redcar selectively from his Newmarket yard when conditions and target races align; when he does, the strike is exceptional. Roger Varian (26.25% from 80) and Ed Bethell (25.00% from 88) round out the 25%+ tier – rare visitors and small-volume Northern operations with exceptional efficiency. David O’Meara at 14.86% from 740 is the high-volume efficient angle – the best combination of volume and strike rate at Redcar. Richard Fahey tops the leaderboard with 105 wins (13.16% from 798) – solid but not exceptional. Tim Easterby dominates the win count (123 from 1,542) but at just 7.98% strike – the volume-not-value name the market over-supports. Fade tier: Tracy Waggott (6.74% from 341), Mick Easterby (7.26%), Ruth Carr (7.23%).

JockeyRunsWinsWin%PlacesPlace%A/EP/L
1 Daniel Tudhope4108520.73%
2 David Allan6397211.27%
3 Jason Hart4906513.27%
4 Paul Mulrennan5396111.32%
5 Graham Lee5095410.61%
6 Paul Hanagan3155316.83%
7 Tony Eaves659477.13%
8 Connor Beasley473449.30%
9 Ben Curtis2973913.13%
10 Kevin Stott2593814.67%
11 Tony Hamilton3553710.42%
12 Joe Fanning2673412.73%
13 Gary Gibbons2123416.04%
14 Daniel Nolan3353410.15%
15 Silvestre de Sousa2113416.11%
16 Phillip Makin2583212.40%
17 Andrew Mullen429306.99%
18 Paul McDonald337298.61%
19 Callum Rodriguez2082712.98%
20 Duran Fentiman555274.86%

Daniel Tudhope at 20.73% strike from 410 rides is the elite jockey angle at Redcar – 22% with 2yo, 23% with 3yo, consistent across age groups. Among high-volume rides he is far ahead. Paul Hanagan (16.83% from 315) is the next-best Northern angle with 20% at 2yo. Silvestre de Sousa (16.11% from 211) and Gary Gibbons (16.04% from 212) round out the 16%+ tier. Kevin Stott at 14.67% from 259 is the efficient mid-volume option, with 19% strike at 3yo (16 wins from 83). Fade tier: Duran Fentiman at 4.86% from 555 rides is the standout volume-without-strike-rate name – heavy market support not justified by record. Tony Eaves (7.13% from 659) and Andrew Mullen (6.99% from 429) are the other high-volume Northern circuit names with weak strike rates.

Top Sires

Source: irishracing.com Redcar sire statistics (multi-year aggregate). Wins, Runs and Win% are real; A/E and P/L not available from public sources.

SireRunsWinsWin%PlacesPlace%A/EP/L
1 Kodiac3534512.75%
2 Acclamation3133611.50%
3 Dark Angel2573513.62%
4 Bahamian Bounty2032713.30%
5 Dandy Man299268.70%
6 Dubawi1042524.04%
7 Invincible Spirit2332510.73%
8 Showcasing1702414.12%
9 Iffraaj245249.80%
10 Lope De Vega972121.65%
11 Mayson1792011.17%
12 Monsieur Bond265197.17%
13 Bated Breath1341914.18%
14 Dutch Art194199.79%
15 Footstepsinthesand1571811.46%
16 Kyllachy251187.17%
17 Exceed And Excel181168.84%
18 Mehmas1331612.03%
19 Equiano162169.88%
20 Oasis Dream165159.09%

Dubawi at 24.04% from 104 Redcar runners is the elite sire angle – 31% strike at 2yo (6 wins from 19), 25% at 3yo. Lope De Vega (21.65% from 97) is the second-best small-sample angle – 25% strike at 3yo, 21% at 2yo. Both are top-tier middle-distance speed-and-stamina lines that translate well to Redcar’s galloping geometry. Showcasing (14.12% from 170) and Bated Breath (14.18% from 134) are the next-best value angles. Kodiac tops the leader board with 45 wins from 353 runners (12.75%) – the high-volume reliable sprint sire. The Newmarket dynasties show mixed performance: Acclamation (11.50%), Invincible Spirit (10.73%) and Dark Angel (13.62%) all perform competently but not exceptionally. Oasis Dream (9.09% from 165) is the modest underperformer.

Betting Tips for Redcar Flat

🏆

The Two-Year-Old Trophy roll of honour proves Redcar maidens are higher quality than the venue’s profile suggests

Pipalong (1998), Captain Rio (2001), Somnus (2002, European Champion Sprinter the following year), Body And Soul (2012), and Limato (2014, July Cup and Prix de la Foret winner). The weights are decided by sire stock value rather than form, attracting Group-class juveniles racing on favourable terms. Pay closer attention to Redcar juvenile form than the market does – the next champion sprinter is often hiding in plain sight on a 20-runner Listed card.

💪

William Haggas at 30.88% strike from 136 Redcar runners is the standout targeted-runner angle

Haggas strikes 33% with 3yo (25 wins from 74) and 35% with 4yo+ at Redcar – exceptional from a small selective volume. The Somerville Lodge yard ships north when conditions and target races align; any Haggas runner at Redcar warrants close attention regardless of price. Roger Varian (26.25% from 80) is the next-best visiting Newmarket angle.

🏇

Daniel Tudhope at 20.73% strike from 410 rides is the elite jockey angle – genuinely a Redcar specialist

Tudhope strikes 22% with 2yo, 23% with 3yo, 17% with 4yo+ – consistency across age groups that few jockeys match anywhere. He sits well ahead of the rest of the high-volume Northern circuit field. Paul Hanagan (16.83% from 315) and Silvestre de Sousa (16.11% from 211) are the next-best efficient angles. Joe Fanning and Connor Beasley names get more market attention but the strike rates do not justify it.

Front-runners win at significantly above-average rates on fast ground at Redcar

ATR explicitly: “when conditions are riding fast, it can sometimes be difficult to make up ground from off the pace.” The 5-furlong home straight rewards horses who can maintain pace rather than horses needing to recover ground. On Redcar’s default firm-to-good going, prominent racers and front-runners are the run-style edge. Use pace data from the last 12 months to identify the front-running profile.

🌊

Low-draw advantage on sprint straights is real and quantifiable from Horse Race Base stall data

Horse Race Base stall data across 247 5f races shows low draws winning 38.5% vs mid 34.0% and high 27.5%. In 10+ runner fields the edge magnifies to 39.3% low. At 6f the headline numbers are mixed but in 12+ runner handicap fields, low draws dominate at 38.1% vs 26.1% high. The Two-Year-Old Trophy routinely runs 20+ runners – significant bias at the prime field size.

💎

Dubawi and Lope De Vega progeny are the elite sire angles at Redcar

Dubawi at 24.04% strike from 104 Redcar runners (31% with 2yo, 25% with 3yo) is the standout. Lope De Vega (21.65% from 97) is the second-best small-sample angle with 25% strike at 3yo. Both are top-tier middle-distance lines that translate well to Redcar’s galloping geometry. Showcasing (14.12% from 170) and Bated Breath (14.18% from 134) are the next-best value angles. Kodiac tops the leaderboard but at modest 12.75% strike.

👎

Tim Easterby is the volume-not-value name to fade at Redcar

Easterby tops the all-time winner count with 123 wins from 1,542 runs – more than any trainer at Redcar – but the strike rate is just 7.98%. The local-yard recognition factor distorts market prices. The profit angles are the 14%+ trainers (O’Meara, C Johnston/fmr M Johnston) and the elite 20%+ small-sample specialists (Haggas, Varian, Bethell). Volume creates name recognition; it does not create value.

🏔

Form transfers cleanly to other Northern galloping tracks

Redcar form transfers reliably to Catterick, Beverley and York – all flat or near-flat Northern galloping venues. It transfers less well to undulating Northern tracks (Pontefract, Hamilton) where the dip-and-climb demand changes the analysis. Use Redcar wins as positive evidence at Catterick or York; treat with caution at undulating venues.

Round-course draw analysis is a waste of time at Redcar

The 528-race study found round-course wins at 9.9% low / 8.7% middle / 9.9% high – statistically indistinguishable. The two sharp bends matter for jockey positioning but not for stall number. At any round-course trip (1m2f and above), draw is fundamentally neutral. Stamina at the trip, pace judgment, and jockey ability to find the best running line dominate over draw position.

Common Mistakes

  • Backing closers on fast ground Redcar’s long home straight combined with the chalk drainage means horses well off the pace struggle to make up ground when the going rides quick. Front-runners and prominent racers consistently hold on. Match run style to track demand: prominent races, not deep closers, on good or faster going.
  • Treating Redcar as a low-grade Northern circuit track The Two-Year-Old Trophy roll of honour includes a European Champion Sprinter (Somnus) and a July Cup winner (Limato). Henry Candy ranked Limato’s Redcar Trophy run above his July Cup victory. The race weights are stock-value based, attracting Group-class juveniles. Redcar maidens and juvenile races deserve closer attention than the venue’s general profile suggests.
  • Backing Tim Easterby runners on volume alone Easterby has the all-time win count at Redcar but at a 7.98% strike rate across 1,542 runs. The market over-supports the recognition factor. Focus on the per-runner efficient trainers (Haggas 30.88%, Varian 26.25%, Bethell 25.00%) and the high-volume value angles (O’Meara 14.86%, C Johnston/fmr M Johnston 14.81%).
  • Treating the round course and the straight course as one draw analysis The bias flips between the two. Sprint straights favour low draws (especially in big fields); the round course favours high draws in handicap-sized fields. Generic “draw bias at Redcar” reasoning that doesn’t distinguish between the two course configurations gets it backwards half the time. Always confirm which course the race is on before applying draw logic.
  • Following Duran Fentiman or Tony Eaves on volume Both ride enormous numbers at Redcar (555 and 659 rides respectively) but at exceptionally weak strike rates (4.86% and 7.13%). Volume creates name recognition; it does not create value. Focus on the 16%+ strike jockeys (Tudhope, Hanagan, de Sousa, Gibbons) rather than the high-volume Northern circuit names.
  • Ignoring the going-dependent pace dynamic shift Redcar on fast ground favours front-runners; Redcar on soft ground turns into a stamina test where closers can come through. The dynamic flips with the going. Use pace data combined with going analysis – the same horse can be the right play on good ground and the wrong play on soft.

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