THE great triviality that is horse racing is full of unanswered questions, most of which are destined to remain unanswered for as long as thoroughbreds are raced. However, today for the very first time, one such question can finally be addressed using robust statistical evidence that has never before been collected or examined.
The effect that being in-foal has on the racing performance of fillies has been the subject of discussion for decades. Every year without fail, fillies win races in the 120-day period during which they are permitted to race after becoming pregnant.
There are multitudes of examples of this occurring from the lowest levels of the sport right up to the headline-making Group 1 wins of in-foal fillies such as Indian Queen and Chinese White. All of these successes have understandably served to reinforce what is a very commonly-held theory that pregnancy can often correlate with improved racing performance in fillies.
On the face of it, the theory seems to carry plenty of weight. As well as masses of anecdotal evidence of the fairer sex winning whilst in foal, there are seemingly sound physiological explanations for why pregnancy could well lead to an improvement in racing performance.
It is well known that being in season can detrimentally affect both the behaviour and racing performance of fillies. Thus, the fact that fillies cease to come into season once they are in foal is considered a significant positive offshoot of pregnancy in a racing filly. As well as that, the calming effect of the hormone progesterone which is produced during pregnancy could also have a positive impact on racing performance.
MUCH DEBATE
That said, there has always been the possibility that the perception of this apparent correlation has been exaggerated by the confirmation bias caused by the racing public only tending to be made aware of or take notice of the fact that a filly is in foal after they have won a race.
Sceptical observers suggest that there are likely to be multitudes of in-foal fillies that race without success that the racing public doesn’t hear about and that if we were privy to all of those, the full set of data would show that it isn’t the key to improvement that many consider it to be.
While there has been unending conjecture on the subject from both sides of the debate, until now the matter has progressed no further than that. The primary reason for this is that while it has been considered on numerous occasions in multiple racing jurisdictions, it has never been made compulsory for trainers to declare if the fillies in their care are in foal.
This lack of reliable official information has made it very difficult for anyone to draw a robust evidence-based conclusion on the matter.
However, that doesn’t mean that this long-standing question is destined to remain unanswered. Indeed, I believe I have answered it with a strong degree of certainty using historical data that has been hiding in plain sight all along.
WEATHERBYS’ RECORDS
Weatherbys require owners/breeders to formally report the last date that their filly/mare was covered by a sire, as well as the result of that covering including the date that those which successfully carried their pregnancy to full term give birth to their foal. Thus, while it was anything but a quick and easy process, it was possible to source that information from Weatherbys and cross reference it with a racing form database on a case-by-case basis to identify those that raced after their last covering date and subsequently carried their pregnancy to full term.
By only including fillies/mares that carried their pregnancies to full term, we can be all but certain that they were indeed pregnant in all of their runs that came after the date of their last covering. Thus, this methodology is exceptionally unlikely to throw up false positives and therefore provided a reliable set of data which can be used to better answer the question at hand.
As is the case with any statistical study, one of the most important requirements is that there is enough data collected to make the conclusions drawn from it as reliable as possible. With this in mind, I examined all the data from the seven years from the beginning of 2009 through to the end of 2015. This resulted in the identification of a total of 443 qualifiers that raced on the flat in Great Britain and Ireland while in foal.
Once this set of data was isolated, the next step was to come up with a fair methodology to assess their racing performance whilst pregnant. In terms of the basics, the number of runs and wins after their last covering date was recorded in each case. After that, “improvement” was defined as registering a career-best Racing Post Rating whilst in foal. This improvement was then measured by the difference between their best pre-pregnancy rating and their best rating whilst pregnant.
RESULTS
Here is what the research revealed:
The 443 in-foal fillies/mares had a total of 1,549 starts whilst pregnant, an average of 3.5 starts each, and they achieved a win strike rate of 8.26%.
To put that into context, the win strike rate of the entire population of three-year-old and older fillies/mares in Great Britain and Ireland in the same period was 9.35%.
Thus, the strike rate of pregnant runners was 11.7% lower than non-pregnant fillies/mares. This is a statistically-significant difference that would not have been at all expected by many.
What makes this so surprising is that even if pregnancy had no positive effect on racing performance, it would have been expected that the strike rate of pregnant runners would have been higher than that of non-pregnant runners, as there is almost certainly a positive selection bias at play in the pregnant group.
As well as it being likely that the quality and pedigree of those chosen to race whilst pregnant would be above average, what is certain is that with their trainers having a maximum of just 120 days to race them whilst pregnant, they would be pulling out every stop to get them in the winner’s enclosure and/or show improvement. Thus, for them to have a below-average strike rate is very much an unexpected eye-opener.
MORE SURPRISES
There were more surprising results to be found when the sample was examined in search of how many of the pregnant runners showed improvement. Just 67 (15.1%) of them produced career-best efforts while pregnant, with the average rate of improvement being 5.8lb. Just 13 of them (2.9%) improved by 10lb or more and 23lb was the most improvement shown by an individual.
While there isn’t an appropriate means to compare these percentages against the overall population as was done with the win strike rates above, given just how widely it is considered that pregnancy brings about improvement in racing performance, that 84.9% of the fillies/mares in this sample did not show any improvement is likely to come as a major surprise to many.
Similar statistics were revealed when the performance of fillies/mares that raced over jumps while in-foal during the same period were examined as part of this study.
While the sample is smaller with just 169 qualifiers, their strike-rate over jumps was 7.4% compared to 7.81% for all four-year-old and older fillies/mares over jumps in the same period.
The percentage of those that produced career-best efforts over jumps while pregnant amounted to just 12.4%.
NEGATIVE INFLUENCE
Thus, rather than supporting the commonly-held view that being in-foal is a positive for a racing filly/mare, this data makes the quite sensational suggestion that being in-foal could actually have a negative influence on racing performance.
While it remains to be seen whether this significant new evidence will have any effect on the popularity of putting fillies/mares in foal while they are in training, it will hopefully serve to better inform breeders, pundits and racing public in how they consider such situations.
The widely-believed theory of the “improving in-foal filly” has escaped rigorous statistical examination for decades, but the above study goes a long way to debunking it.
This article originally appeared in Thoroughbred Daily News
NOTES
IN FOAL HALL OF FAME
Group 1 winners
Group 2 winners:
GROUP 3 WINNERS:
Stand out
One of the most eye-catching qualifiers in this study was Your Gifted. Having been covered on May 13th 2011, the sprint handicapper raced more times (15), won the joint-most races (four) and showed the joint-second highest amount of improvement (22lb) when in-foal than any other qualifier in the seven years examined. While the foal she subsequently produced didn’t show much ability on the track, Your Gifted was put back in training the year after giving birth and has gone on to win five more races. She is still racing and has had more than 100 career starts.