DC Market Intelligence Report –Mar 21, 2026
Yesterday’s reportable activity was concentrated in a defined set of **15 strong steamers** (≥15% contraction from 10am to final), cut out of **37 races / 357 runners**. The tape was dominated by two types of moves: (1) **big-price collapses** that never fully crossed into “short” territory, and (2) **mid-market tightening** that pushed runners into genuine contention late.
The headline contraction was **Jamestown (Dundalk AW)**, smashed from **29.00 → 11.00 (62.1%)**, although notably it **drifted at SP to 15.00**. That’s the first warning sign on the day: the strongest early-to-final contraction did not align with the on-course/off-time settlement.
Two other heavy hitters followed similar profiles:
– **Empire De Maulde (Newbury)**: **26.00 → 11.00 (57.7%)**, and **held SP at 11.00** (no late give-back, but no result either).
– **Penzance (Wolverhampton AW)**: **67.00 → 29.00 (56.7%)**, ending with **SP 26.00** (late strength relative to final).
There was also sustained interest in the deep outsiders:
– **Dublinofficecallin (Musselburgh)**: **151.00 → 81.00 (46.4%)**, **SP 81.00**.
– **Selective Power (Dundalk AW)**: **81.00 → 51.00 (37.0%)**, **SP 51.00**.
At the more actionable end of the book (single-digit/low double-digit finishes), the market consistently tightened:
– **Eazy On The Eye (Wolverhampton AW)**: **9.50 → 5.50 (42.1%)**, **SP 6.00**.
– **Scriabin (Musselburgh)**: **8.00 → 5.00 (37.5%)**, **SP 6.00**.
– **Sporting Hero (Dundalk AW)**: **19.00 → 12.00 (36.8%)**, **SP 13.00** *(and this one actually paid the bill)*.
– **River Derwent (Dundalk AW)**: **21.00 → 13.00 (38.1%)**, **SP 13.00**.
Finally, one move deserves a separate flag because it was the cleanest “pressure to the front of the market” shift:
– **Desert Belle (Lingfield AW)**: **4.00 → 2.38 (40.5%)**, **SP 1.91**.
That is a serious compression from a workable price into near-favourite territory—exactly the kind of profile that’s meant to convert more often than it did yesterday.
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## 2) Landed vs Went Astray – keep it ruthless
### Landed (from the strong-steamer set)
Only **one** of yesterday’s **strong steamers** actually won:
– **Sporting Hero (Dundalk AW)** — **19.00 → 12.00 (36.8%)**, **SP 13.00**, **won**
That’s the hard truth: the “strong steamers only” filter produced **15 qualifiers**, and **1 winner** from that specific list.
### Went Astray (the strong steamers that lost)
This is where the damage was done. The market found plenty to back—then got plenty wrong.
The worst losses weren’t subtle either:
– **Jamestown (Dundalk AW)** — massive move, **finished 4th**; plus **SP 15.00** after a **final 11.00** tells you late layers weren’t buying it.
– **Empire De Maulde (Newbury)** — held its price at **11.00 SP**, but **finished 7th**: stable money is not the same as correct money.
– **Penzance (Wolverhampton AW)** — **finished 12th** despite a 56.7% contraction: classic “market interest ≠ competitiveness.”
Painful near-misses also matter because they confirm the signal can be directionally right without paying:
– **Eazy On The Eye (Wolverhampton AW)** — **9.50 → 5.50**, **2nd**
– **Desert Belle (Lingfield AW)** — **4.00 → 2.38**, **SP 1.91**, **2nd**
And then you had the dead runs where the money simply didn’t translate at all:
– **River Derwent (Dundalk AW)** — **21.00 → 13.00**, **12th**
– **Jewel Maker (Wolverhampton AW)** — **51.00 → 29.00**, **9th**
– **Meet Me In Meraki (Wolverhampton AW)** — **26.00 → 15.00**, **7th**
Bottom line: yesterday’s “strong move” cohort was **overconfident** on outcomes. The market was active, not accurate.
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## 3) Trainer & Jockey Support – who the money followed repeatedly
### Trainers most followed (from strong steamers)
The market repeatedly leaned into a small group, with mixed (often poor) conversion:
– **David Marnane: 3 backed / 0 won**
Three separate strong-money runners, no return. Whatever the driver was, it didn’t cash yesterday.
– **Adrian McGuinness: 2 backed / 1 won**
More efficient: two supported, one converted.
– **Adam Nicol: 2 backed / 1 won**
Similar story: support wasn’t blind, one of two got home.
– **Thomas Coyle: 2 backed / 0 won**
– **Lucinda Russell & Michael Scudamore: 2 backed / 0 won**
– **Joey Ramsden: 2 backed / 0 won**
Single-appearance stables were perfect on the day (within this supported subset):
– **William Durkan: 1 / 1**
– **Donnacha Aidan O’Brien: 1 / 1**
– **Dan Skelton: 1 / 1**
– **Stuart Edmunds: 1 / 1**
– **Denis Coakley: 1 / 1**
– **Laura Hourigan: 1 / 1**
### Jockeys most followed (from strong steamers)
– **Chris Hayes: 4 backed / 2 won**
Clear headline. When the market repeatedly landed on Hayes mounts, it got paid twice.
– **Ryan Mania: 2 backed / 1 won**
Solid strike in a small sample.
The repeated support that didn’t deliver:
– **Luke McAteer: 2 backed / 0 won**
– **Craig Nichol: 2 backed / 0 won**
– **Ronan Whelan: 2 backed / 0 won**
And a cluster of single backed rides converting:
– **Mr Sean O’Connor, Charlie Hammond, Oisin Orr, Billy Loughnane, Rory Mulligan: all 1 backed / 1 won**
Interpretation stays disciplined: this is not “top jockeys” talk—this is simply where **yesterday’s money kept returning**.
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## 4) What It Means – practical execution & discipline, no fluff
1) **Treat contraction as information, not instruction.** Yesterday proved the point brutally: heavy contraction produced activity, not a clean edge. A strong steamer is a *pointer* to intent/positioning, not a guarantee of ability or suitability.
2) **Respect late disagreement (Final vs SP).** Jamestown is the template: a huge 10am→final move, then **SP worse than final** (11.00 final, 15.00 SP). That’s not noise—it’s the market telling you confidence wasn’t unanimous when it mattered most.
3) **Don’t confuse “into the front of the market” with “done deal.”** Desert Belle went **4.00 → 2.38** and still got beaten (**2nd**) even with an **SP 1.91**. That’s exactly why staking and exposure caps exist. Even the cleanest-looking move loses.
4) **Use repetition signals selectively.** Chris Hayes being **4 backed / 2 won** is the kind of repeat-follow pattern worth tracking—*but only as an overlay*, not as a standalone angle. Conversely, when a yard gets multiple strong-money runners and doesn’t convert (David Marnane **3/0**), you don’t chase— you tighten.
5) **Execution discipline:** when the board is throwing strong steamers that don’t win, your edge is protected by process: price sensitivity, limited exposure per qualifier, and acceptance that some days the “right” market read doesn’t pay.
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**Disclaimer:** This is market intelligence, not a guarantee. Market moves indicate where money went and how prices evolved, but they do not ensure performance, suitability, or race outcomes.
**CTA:** Members can pull up **today’s qualifiers** in the DC Network tool and filter by contraction strength to stay aligned with the live market.
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### Data Appendix (auto)
– Report generated: 2026-03-21 06:27:31
– Yesterday: 2026-03-20
– Strong steamer threshold: 15%
– Races: 37
– Runners: 357
– Strong steamers listed: 20
– Landed: 8
– Missed: 49
– False steamers (listed): 10
– Trainers in support table: 12
– Jockeys in support table: 12
– Qualifiers provided today: 0
**Today CTA:** https://dc-network.co.uk
## 🟢 Today’s Live SP Qualifiers
Live qualifiers update automatically inside the tools below:
📉 10am Market Plunge List
Horses heavily backed last time and historically profitable to oppose next run.
📊 Market Form Lay Angles
Big drifters and weak market profiles to oppose at SP.
These tools update automatically throughout the day as qualifiers appear.
—
### Data Appendix (auto)
– Report generated: 2026-03-21 06:27:31
– Yesterday: 2026-03-20
– Strong steamer threshold: 15%
– Races: 37
– Runners: 357
– Strong steamers listed: 20
– Landed: 8
– Missed: 49
– False steamers (listed): 10
– Trainers in support table: 12
– Jockeys in support table: 12
– Qualifiers provided today: 0
**Today CTA:** https://dc-network.co.uk
