Newbury win rate by stall & distance
Each row splits the draw into low, middle and high thirds relative to the field size, then shows how often each third actually wins. With no draw bias every third would win ~33%.
| Distance | Races | Low stalls win | Middle | High stalls win |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 5f–6f (sprints) | 269 | 27% | 34% | 39% |
| 7f–8f (mile) | 427 | 27% | 31% | 42% |
| 9f–12f (middle) | 290 | 28% | 35% | 37% |
| 13f+ (staying) | 54 | 30% | 29% | 41% |
Green = a meaningful edge (≥6 points above the opposite third). Figures from our settled-results database, all Newbury races with 8+ runners.
How to use this
If a distance shows a strong high- or low-draw edge, it's a genuine factor to weigh — a well-drawn horse gets a head start, a badly-drawn one needs to be good enough to overcome it. Our model already bakes draw into every Newbury selection, so you don't have to: see today's Newbury tips, or the full Newbury form guide.
Why trust these numbers
This isn't a pundit's hunch. It's every Newbury race in our database, settled from official results, recomputed automatically. The same engine that measures this draw bias scores every runner at Newbury each morning — logged before the off, win or lose, on our public track record.