logo
Horse racing tips: Thursday, June 26

Horse racing tips: Thursday, June 26

Telegraph26-06-2025
It's the first day of Newcastle's Northumberland Plate meeting, so there's a decent card at the Gosforth Park track. There's also a Listed race on Newmarket's July course, with the Empress Stakes for the two-year-old fillies having been moved from its usual Saturday slot.
Ron Wood has a fancy in the latter contest and a NAP selection in a good handicap at Newcastle.
Ron Wood's selections
Odds provided by William Hill and correct at the time of writing. Stars denote strength of selection (max 5).
If you already have a William Hill account and are looking for a new bookmaker to use for this week's racing, check out more free bets from the best betting sites, reviewed by our experts.
3.35 Newmarket – Empress Fillies' Stakes (Listed, 6f)
It's hard to know what MIDNIGHT TANGO achieved in a Hamilton maiden on her second start, but she won despite making an awkward start and taking a keen hold.
She looked held heading into the closing stages, which would have been no surprise given her early exertions, so it was striking how strongly she finished to be well on top at the line.
Midnight Tango is a well-bred runner who goes for Ed Walker, who trained the 9/1 winner of this race last year, a filly who had a similar profile.
Walker teamed up with the selection's jockey, Kieran Shoemark, for two big-priced winners at Royal Ascot last week, and this one is open to plenty of improvement if she can become more professional.
3.45 Newcastle – Class 2 Handicap (1m)
GODWINSON (NAP) hasn't been seen since narrowly winning the Lincoln handicap on his seasonal reappearance at Doncaster in March, but he goes particularly well when fresh and this test looks like suiting him. And he can rate higher still.
He's a late-May foal who has had just 10 starts, for a patient trainer, and he's a half-brother to Tiber Flow, a Group 3 winner at Newcastle for the same connections. His dam also won at Group 3 level.
Therefore the surface should suit him and the stiff finish can also play to his off-the-pace style, especially as he stays a little further than the one-mile trip.
If you want to find more odds and offers, take a look at our list of the best betting sites and free bets
Today's UK and Irish racing
(Flat unless stated)
Newmarket 1.50-5.20
Newcastle 2.00-6.05
Nottingham 2.12-5.07
Hamilton 5.45-8.45
Leicester 6.00-9.00
What does NAP mean?
NAP is a word used in betting circles to describe a prediction that a tipster thinks has a particularly strong chance of winning.
Many horse racing tipsters pick out a 'NAP of the day', which is their favoured selection from all the races across the different meetings.
The term NAP derives from the French card game Napoleon. When players of this game thought they had a particularly strong hand that they would win with, they would shout 'Napoleon'.
What is an each-way bet?
An each-way bet is a popular type of wager, particularly with horse racing fans. It is essentially two bets, both of which have the same size stake.
An each-way bet features one bet on the selection to win and the other bet on the selection to place.
So a £10 each-way bet will cost you a total of £20. There will be one £10 bet on the selection to win and another £10 on the selection to place.
It's a popular bet because it offers punters the chance of a return, even if the horse in question fails to win. Bookmakers will pay out at a stated percentage of the odds for a place finish, for example one-fifth of the starting price (SP) for finishing in the first three.
The more runners there are in a horse race, the more places will be on offer. In races that feature lots of runners, the horses will be available at bigger odds, making an each-way bet a wise choice.
Ron Wood 2025 horse racing P/L
Star ratings explained
⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ - confident selection
⭐⭐⭐⭐ - strong fancy
⭐⭐⭐ - fair claims
⭐⭐ - tentative choice
⭐ - minimum confidence
If you want to find more odds and offers, take a look at our list of the best betting sites and free bets
Check out our list of the best casino bonuses in the UK
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Digested week: Wimbledon joy and the canny PR of the Dalai Lama
Digested week: Wimbledon joy and the canny PR of the Dalai Lama

The Guardian

time20 minutes ago

  • The Guardian

Digested week: Wimbledon joy and the canny PR of the Dalai Lama

As someone who enjoys the women's tennis at Wimbledon, so to speak, the tournament's opening days are an annual joy and this week has been electric. Emma Raducanu leads the rise in British women powering up the world rankings, which makes the era of women's tennis I grew up in – I have a lot of time for Jo Durie, but those were hard years – seem like the 19th century. Today, after two stunning opening-round matches, Raducanu will meet Aryna Sabalenka, the mighty Belarusian world number one, which means tomorrow I will be on court one (in the park) knocking imaginary clay dust from my shoes and pretending to be in the final. If the tennis is sublime, the crowd so far has been slightly under par – although it's early days. Last year, the title of Wimbledon best dressed went for my money to Greta Gerwig, in a tan suit the provenance of which I still can't track down, as well as Zendaya in Ralph Lauren and Julia Roberts in Gucci. This week in the royal box and around the grounds we've had Cate Blanchett, who is welcome in any setting, Olivia Rodrigo and Russell Crowe, who combed his hair and dug out a tie for Centre Court. (Esquire ran a story about the £65,000 Rolex he was wearing, which if it was intended to set us against him, won't work – I won't hear a word against Rusty.) There were also, as usual, a high turn out of what my teenage tennis partner and I used to refer to nastily as Midweek Ladies, a crowd who, off-court, wear floral, ankle length dresses in pale shades and on court, are always one double fault away from losing their nerve and reverting to an underhand serve. Everyone should watch My Mom Jayne, the documentary about Jayne Mansfield made by her daughter Mariska Hargitay, released this week on HBO Max and a jaw-dropper of revelations and sadness. You may know Hargitay from her role as Detective Olivia Benson in Law & Order: SVU – I didn't even know she was Mansfield's daughter – and she was three years old in 1967 when her 34-year-old mother was killed in a car crash outside New Orleans. The film is heartbreaking, not least because Hargitay, who has no memories of her mother, was in the car with her siblings when it crashed. All three children survived and were raised by their father, but as Hargitay reports, she grew up feeling vaguely ashamed of her mother, a Hollywood sex bomb who spoke in a breathy voice that a generation later fell out of usage. As Hargitary digs into the history of the mother she never knew, she discovers Mansfield was an accomplished pianist and violinist, a brilliant, ambitious woman trapped by the only persona Hollywood allowed her – until now. Finally, someone has greeted the release of a new Brad Pitt movie not with praise-be gratitude for America's ageing sweetheart, but by looking at Pitt's success in shrugging off an allegation of domestic abuse. While in most of the entertainment press, Pitt's new film is treated to the customary chuckling puff piece, New York magazine runs the headline Brad Pitt is Fooling You and proceeds to get into it: the actor's image preservation, the crisis management PR he retains (former client: Johnny Depp) and the details of Angelina Jolie's allegation that he assaulted her and one of their children on a private plane. As the piece concludes, nobody cares. There's been a vibe shift since #MeToo, which let's not forget, Brad Pitt's production company, Plan B, aligned itself with by co-producing the movie adaptation of She Said, about the exposing of Harvey Weinstein – a sterling piece of allyship from America's most sensitive male feminist, or something else entirely. Either way, nothing sticks. In the last five years, the worst coverage Pitt has had is for Bullet Train. There was a story in the Sun mid-week about Pitt's ex, Jennifer Anniston, or rather, about a 43-year-old man from Southampton who believed himself to be in a Facebook relationship with the Hollywood star, who had reached out to him asking for a loan. That might have been your first clue, Paul, that something about this – hard to put your finger on what exactly – didn't smell right. It wasn't the first time the unfortunate victim had been targeted over social media by scam accounts claiming to be Hollywood stars. But when 'Jennifer Anniston' sent him a copy of her driving license, along with the message 'I love you', it was enough to clinch things and convince the hapless Facebook user he was at the start of a beautiful relationship. As requested, he sent the former Friends star the £200 of Apple gift cards she was asking for and never heard from her again. Oh, to have the confidence of the Dalai Lama that we'll all get a second go-around at this. Ahead of his 90th birthday this weekend, the Tibetan spiritual leader discussed arrangements for his successor, by which, per Buddhist beliefs, he means the body into which he will be reincarnated. This is as much a political as a spiritual consideration and in his address, the Dalai Lama pushed back against the Chinese government's insistence on preapproving the reincarnation, remaining firm that when the time comes, he'll be reincarnated in line with Tibetan tradition and with no interference from Beijing. He has also dangled some spoilers, suggesting, tantalisingly, that the new Dalai Lama may not be a baby, as he was, and – in what would represent a reboot more shocking than the new Dr Who and Ghostbusters combined – may not even be male. Which goes to show that even spiritual leaders these days have a canny knack for PR.

Formula 1 has pole position in UK's £16bn motorsport industry
Formula 1 has pole position in UK's £16bn motorsport industry

Times

time32 minutes ago

  • Times

Formula 1 has pole position in UK's £16bn motorsport industry

With his neon yellow baseball cap turned backwards on his head and sporting a wristful of beaded bracelets, Lando Norris casually signed autographs for a crowd of fans as he arrived at Silverstone on Thursday. The McLaren driver, 25, is expecting strong support at the Formula 1 British Grand Prix this weekend, especially from those in the 'Landostand', the grandstand newly named after him. He may have looked relaxed but the pressure is on. Wearing the brand's papaya and black colours, the young Briton will be hoping to compound his success at last week's Austrian Grand Prix, against his team mate Oscar Piastri. More than 480,000 people are expected to attend the sold-out event, 160,000 of them on Sunday for the main race. Hype around racing is even more frenzied than usual, driven by Brad Pitt's new film, F1, co-produced by Lewis Hamilton, in which he plays Sonny Hayes, Formula 1's most promising driver in the 1990s until an accident nearly ended his career before he stages a comeback. Although the excitement surrounding the F1 racing event is the most obvious aspect of its impact on the economy around Silverstone, its influence extends well beyond the weekend crowds and into the broader British tech ecosystem. Sport has long been a driver of technological innovation as teams strive to get an edge over one another, and nowhere is this more so than in motor racing. Over its 75-year history the premier motorsport series has brought some extraordinary inventions, including developing a breathing device in only four weeks during Covid, applying pitstop techniques within Great Ormond Street Hospital to cut errors after surgery on infants and introducing regenerative braking on London buses to cut emissions. The financial impact is huge. UK motorsport and engineering services turned over £16 billion in 2023 and employed 50,000 people, according to a report by the Motorsport Industry Association (MIA) and Grant Thornton. From next year, ten of the eleven Formula One teams will have either headquarters or a base in the UK: Cadillac F1 and Audi F1 will both be joining the grid next year and opening facilities in Britain. More than 50,000 people are employed by the 4,500 companies that make up F1's supply chain. Off the track, the popularity of ESports, virtual or 'sim' racing, is gaining ground and proving another lucrative source of income. To capture some of this energy, a group called the Silverstone Technology Cluster was started in 2017 by Pim van Baarsen to foster engineering, software and electronics businesses located by the track, which is nestled almost exactly between Oxford and Cambridge, an area dubbed UK Motorsport Valley. More than half its businesses are in motorsport and automotive but others are harnessing the innovations born out of motorsport to push the boundaries in fields such as aerospace, energy and healthcare. One example, based in the business park around the track, is Dumarey Flybrid, set up in 2007, which developed a small flywheel system for building sites. Its product stores kinetic energy and works alongside a traditional generator to power tower cranes. It started because Formula 1 implemented an 'engine freeze', a rule that stopped further pushes to improve engines and instead challenged racing teams to develop hybrid power systems, and it was the first business to use kinetic energy in motor car racing. Another is Wirth Research, which specialised in computational fluid dynamics, computer simulation used to study flows around objects, in F1 car design. The idea is to help engineers to understand how air moves over a car or how water flows through pipes so they can design things more efficiently and solve problems before building them. Wirth has used this expertise to branch out into products used by supermarkets to improve the efficiency of their chillers and cut energy consumption. British car racing champions play a central role in this halo effect of tech, especially one of the world's most successful: McLaren. Once dubbed the Manchester United of the sport, it was founded in 1963 by Bruce McLaren, a New Zealand-born racing driver who was killed at Goodwood aged 30. Ever since, it has become a global powerhouse in motorsport, winning numerous championships in the 1980s and 2000s with drivers including Ayrton Senna and Lewis Hamilton. It is recognised for its cutting-edge technology, engineering expertise and contributions to the broader automotive and tech industries. The brand is also a magnet for others who want the cachet of its association, and its partners include Dropbox and Lego. Dan Keyworth, director of business technology at McLaren Racing, said the emphasis on tech was only increasing: 'I think it's seen as one of the major battlegrounds across the teams … a lot of the teams will be continuing to focus on the technology race off track: who can bring the best tools, systems, software to the game. 'We have a great phrase here — for every pound we spend on the car, we spend a pound on tools, methods and technology — because there has to be an equitable investment in what we do,' he told the TechRadar website. Racing is not an easy world to be in. McLaren has been under financial strain over the past few years and underwent a substantial restructuring in 2020, cutting more than a thousand jobs, compounded by Covid as supply chains were upended. Then there were problems with its new Artura hybrid sportscar. The latest accounts for Maclaren Racing, filed in September, revealed that it made £431 million in revenue and a profit of £30.4 million for the year ending December 2023. In March last year the Bahrain sovereign wealth fund Mumtalakat bought the McLaren Group, which includes McLaren Automotive, which hand-builds lightweight supercars, and a majority stake in McLaren Racing. Airports such as Heathrow use technology developed by McLaren to receive real-time data on departures and arrivals, allowing them to predict delays and manage congestion. High-performance luxury UK car companies such as Aston Martin, McLaren and Morgan account for a mere 4 per cent of UK car production but are responsible for 12 per cent of its value and employed 15,000 people, according to a recent study by the Society of Motor Manufacturers and Traders. Norris is the most likely British driver to win the Grand Prix but another Brit, George Russell, could also have a chance of victory, with the cooler conditions in England lending themselves to his Mercedes, which struggles in the heat. Hamilton, the nine-time winner, is aiming forten; he is yet to stand on the podium for his new team, Ferrari. Spectators' eyes will be on the hotly contested 2025 British Grand Prix at Silverstone, but there is a far more complex engine under the bonnet, which continues beyond the wave of the chequered flag.

Wimbledon 2025 live: scores, updates and analysis from day 5
Wimbledon 2025 live: scores, updates and analysis from day 5

Times

time32 minutes ago

  • Times

Wimbledon 2025 live: scores, updates and analysis from day 5

It is no reflection on Dan Evans that Novak Djokovic cruised through to the third round of Wimbledon with a straight-sets victory that was rounded off with the dreaded 'bagel' (Stuart Fraser writes). This was the most efficient performance by the 38-year-old Serb since this time last year. Djokovic did not waste any energy with a masterful display on Centre Court, seeing off Evans 6-3, 6-2, 6-0 in one hour and 47 minutes. 'A Brit in Britain is never easy to face,' Djokovic said. 'Dan is a good quality player that possesses a lot of talent, a lot of great touch. He can be causing a lot of trouble to you if you are not on top of your game, which I think I was from the very beginning. That was necessary. I executed it [his game plan] perfectly.' • Read more: Evans toyed with by efficient, effortless Djokovic Jack Draper hoped to blaze a trail for a new era but ended up just trailing a battle-hardened vet from an old one in the duel of the big-hitters on No1 Court (Rick Broadbent writes). Marin Cilic, a finalist eight long years ago, belied his age, knee operations and lowly ranking of 83, to inflict a chastening second-round defeat on Britain's leading man. Draper was hurting after the 6-4, 6-3, 1-6, 6-4 setback. He was magnanimous about Cilic's evergreen brilliance, but criticised replacing line judges with AI and a disembodied voice, along with his own flawed ability to master the grass. 'I don't think it's 100 per cent accurate,' he said when asked about the advent of AI. 'It's millimetres. I think it's a shame for tradition that umpires aren't involved.' It should be stressed that he was not using that as an excuse, but he questioned a couple of calls and suggested they were 'a little bit off'. Rage, rage against the dying of the lino. For Cilic it was just the more normal 'light'. • Read more: 'It's not 100% accurate' — Draper takes aim at AI after Cilic defeat If the all-powerful Aryna Sabalenka turns up on Centre Court on Friday, it is going to be a challenging evening for Emma Raducanu (Annabel Croft writes). But if it is the erratic Sabalenka who can be prone to losing her cool, then this Wimbledon third-round contest could get interesting. The world No1 is such a force. When she was a little girl Sabalenka said that she wanted to play like Serena Williams and hit the ball harder, and she often does. But there are times when she mentally loses her way on the court, which results in a sudden burst of errors. Raducanu is clearly the underdog. While the 22-year-old possesses much talent as a grand-slam champion, there is a significant gap between her and the best players in the world. Notably, though, this is the first time that Raducanu has faced a top-eight player at Wimbledon, where the British crowd will obviously be willing her on in this primetime encounter. If she can keep the scoreline tight, the partisan support could prove a factor in the big points. • Read more: Emma Raducanu can rattle Aryna Sabalenka by being brave (all courts 11am BST start unless stated) Centre Court (starting 1.30pm)Taylor Fritz (5) vs Alejandro Davidovich Fokina (26)Jan-Lennard Struff vs Carlos Alcaraz (2)Aryna Sabalenka (1) vs Emma Raducanu No 1 Court (starting 1pm)Diane Parry vs Sonay KartalMattia Bellucci vs Cameron NorrieElise Mertens (24) vs Elina Svitolina (14) No 2 CourtAnastasia Pavlyuchenkova vs Naomi OsakaLaura Siegemund vs Madison Keys (6)Nicolas Jarry vs Joao Fonseca No 3 CourtDalma Galfi vs Amanda Anisimova (13)Andrey Rublev (14) vs Adrian MannarinoNuno Borges vs Karen Khachanov (17) Court 12Solana Sierra vs Cristina BucsaKamilla Rakhimova vs Linda Noskova (30)Kamil Majchrzak vs Arthur Rinderknech Court 18Doubles TBADoubles TBALuciano Darderi vs Jordan Thompson TV: BBC One, BBC Two, iPlayer So, the bad news is that Jack Draper is out (taking a good chunk of British hopes with him). The good news is that Emma Raducanu, Cameron Norrie and Sonay Kartal are still alive and kicking. The bad news (there's more?) is that Raducanu takes on Aryna Sabalenka, the world No1. Well, it wouldn't be a British sporting summer without a healthy dollop of misplaced optimism — so grab yourself some Pimm's and strawberries and settle in for what promises to be a boom or bust day at SW19.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store