What Is Race Workout?

Race Workout examines a completed race and tracks what every runner did next. It answers the question: was this a strong race? Did the runners go on to win, place, or improve their ratings?

It is available on the Race Result page as the third tab, alongside Full Results and Rating Changes.

How to Access It

Open any race result page and click the Race Workout tab. You can also reach it from form lines in the racecard popup — click the trend icon next to any past run to jump straight to that race's workout analysis.

Key Metrics

The summary cards show eight statistics at a glance. Qualifying Horses is the count of runners who have raced again. Subsequent Runs, Wins, and Places track aggregate performance. Average PRB (Percentage of Rivals Beaten) measures overall competitiveness.

Net OR Change shows the combined Official Rating movement of all qualifiers. Average H Rating and Net H Change show the RaceMetrics Rating picture — whether runners have generally improved or declined since the race.

Per-Horse Table

Below the summary, each qualifying horse is listed with their original finishing position, subsequent runs, wins, places, average PRB, Official Rating change, RaceMetrics Rating at the time of the race, rating change since, and best speed figure from subsequent runs.

Green values indicate improvement; red indicates decline. A dash means no data available for that column.

Controls

Three controls let you refine the analysis. Min Runs sets the minimum number of subsequent starts a horse needs to qualify. Max Runs caps how many subsequent starts are counted per horse. The Filter dropdown lets you focus on all finishers, winners only, or placed horses only.

Your control bar choices are saved between sessions, so your preferred settings persist.

Identifying Strong Form

A race where most runners went on to win or place, with a high average PRB and positive rating changes, is strong form. Conversely, if subsequent runs produced few winners and negative rating changes, the form may be weak. Use this when assessing runners whose recent form includes that race.