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Mumhan

There is a simplicity to Mumhan's record that actually tells you quite a lot: two races, one win, one place finish. That is a horse who has never really had a bad day at the office. For a three-year-old still finding its feet in the sport, going through the first two runs of your career without a poor result is a decent foundation to build on.Based on TrackLab's AI analysis
Quick Facts
Age
3 years old
Sex
Colt
Colour
Bay
Father
Mehmas
Mother
Yes Oh Yes
Trainer
Owner
Mrs J S Bolger

📊 Key Numbers

Career statistics for this horse
2
Career races
1
Wins
50%
Win rate
avg ~10%
50%
Place rate (top 3)
avg ~30%
162 days
Since last race

🔍 Full Analysis

TrackLab's AI-generated assessment based on career data and recent form
TrackLab's Detailed Breakdown
Auto-Generated

That sole win came at The Curragh in late September 2025, one of Ireland's most prestigious racecourses and a track that regularly hosts the country's biggest races. Winning there as a young, lightly raced horse is not nothing — it suggests Mumhan has enough ability to handle a proper stage. The form line reads 1-5 in reverse chronological order, meaning the win came most recently, which is the right way round. You want horses improving and peaking, not fading.

The one note of caution is the gap since that victory. Mumhan has not raced in roughly five months, which is a significant break at any stage of a career, let alone for a three-year-old still developing. There can be perfectly good reasons for a long absence — horses need time, and trainers manage them carefully — but it does mean there is a question mark over how Mumhan returns from the layoff. The first race back after a long break is often more about getting the horse race-fit again than winning.

The trainer behind all this is J S Bolger, one of the most respected names in Irish racing, operating out of Coolcullen in County Carlow. His yard has sent out seven winners already this season, so there is form in the operation. Bolger has trained classic winners and big-race horses throughout a long career, which means Mumhan is in knowledgeable hands. When a trainer of that calibre runs a young horse twice, places it once and wins once, and then gives it a long winter break, it tends to suggest they see something worth protecting.

Strengths & Risks AI Analysis

What the data says works for and against this horse
⚠ What to watch out for
Returning from a 162-day absence

🎯 Where This Horse Thrives

Performance broken down by ground, distance, class, and track type
🌧 Ground Conditions
Yielding to soft
📏 Race Distance
5F – 6½F
7F – 1M
🏟 Track Shape
Left-handed, wide and galloping
Right-handed, wide and galloping

📅 Recent Runs

The last 10 races, most recent first
18 Oct
5th
Leopardstown
7f – 1m · Yielding_To_Soft · 5 runners
27 Sep
🏆 Won
The Curragh
5f – 6½f · Yielding_To_Soft · 16 runners

🏇 Jockey Partnerships

Every jockey who has ridden this horse, sorted by rides together
100%
Win rate
1/1
Won / Rode
0%
Win rate
0/1
Won / Rode

🏟 Track Record

Win rate at each course this horse has visited
CourseRacesResultsLast visitedWin rate
The Curragh
Galloping
1 1 win 27 Sep 100%
Leopardstown
Galloping
1 1 other 18 Oct 0%