Handicapping 101
Reading the form and factors to consider.
Handicapping is the art and science of analyzing races to identify which horses offer value. It's what separates informed bettors from those just picking pretty names. Learning to read the form is the first step toward making smarter wagers.
Reading the Past Performances
The "PP" or form guide contains everything you need to evaluate a horse:
Key Past Performance Data
| Data Point | What It Tells You |
|---|---|
| Finish Position | How the horse placed in recent races |
| Speed Figures | Numerical rating of performance (Beyer, TimeForm) |
| Class Level | Type of race and purse level |
| Distance | Performance at today's distance |
| Surface | Dirt, turf, or synthetic record |
| Trainer/Jockey Stats | Win rates and patterns |
| Days Since Last Race | Freshness factor |
| Running Style | Front-runner, stalker, or closer |
Speed Figures
Speed figures assign a numerical rating to each race performance:
- Beyer Speed Figures – Most popular in the US (0-100+ scale)
- TimeForm – Common in UK and increasingly in US
- Higher number = faster race
- Adjusted for track variant and conditions
Strategy Insight
Class and Form
Class Levels
Horses compete at different "class" levels:
Common Class Hierarchy (US)
| Level | Description | Example Purse |
|---|---|---|
| Grade 1 | Elite stakes competition | $500K+ |
| Grade 2/3 | High-level stakes | $100K-$500K |
| Listed Stakes | Quality stakes below graded | $50K-$100K |
| Allowance | Conditions races, non-claiming | $40K-$75K |
| Claiming | Horses available for purchase | $5K-$50K |
| Maiden | First-time winners | $30K-$75K |
Good to Know
Current Form
Is the horse improving, declining, or stable?
- Improving form – Each race better than the last
- Peak form – Just ran a big race, might regress
- Declining – Getting slower, often from age or fatigue
Pace Analysis
Early pace can determine race outcomes:
- Speed duel – Multiple front-runners = closers benefit
- Lone speed – One front-runner = easy lead, hard to catch
- All closers – No pace = whoever leads wins
Strategy Insight
Key Handicapping Angles
Class Drops
Horse dropping into easier competition. Premium angle when form is good.
Jockey/Trainer Patterns
Some trainers excel with first-time starters or after layoffs. Track records.
Distance Changes
A sprinter stretching out may tire. A router shortening might lack speed.
Surface Switches
First-time turf horses, or returning to preferred surface.
Layoffs
Fresh horse after break—some trainers excel here.
Track Bias
Some tracks favor inside speed or outside closers on a given day.
Trip Handicapping
Watch the races, not just the results:
- Wide trips – Horse ran extra ground, unlucky finish
- Bumped/blocked – Didn't get clear running room
- Perfect trip – Stalked and pounced, saved ground
Pro Tip
Building a Handicapping Process
- Review the field – Look at every horse briefly
- Eliminate non-contenders – Who has no chance?
- Compare top contenders – Speed figures, class, form
- Analyze pace scenario – Who controls the race?
- Look for value – What are the morning line odds?
- Structure your bet – Win? Exotic? How much?
Key Takeaways
- 1Speed figures provide objective performance ratings
- 2Class movements (drops/rises) are powerful indicators
- 3Pace analysis predicts how races unfold
- 4Trip handicapping reveals hidden form
- 5Build a systematic process and stick to it