Four years into a training career, A Fabre is already making the kind of impression that takes some trainers a decade to achieve. With 3 winners from 14 runners over the past twelve months — that's roughly 1 in every 5 — the numbers alone suggest a yard operating well above the average. But it's the quality, not just the quantity, that tells the real story.Based on TrackLab's AI analysis
A snapshot of this trainer's performance over the last 12 months
14
Races
3
Wins
21.4%
Win rate
avg ~10%
42.9%
Place rate (top 3)
avg ~30%
🔍 Full Analysis
TrackLab's AI-generated assessment based on career data and recent form
TrackLab's Trainer Breakdown
Auto-Generated
That one Class 1 win, landed at Newmarket in April 2025, is the standout moment so far. Newmarket is the home of British flat racing — a straight, unforgiving track where horses have nowhere to hide and pace judgement is everything. Winning a top-level race there, among the best horses and trainers in the country, is a serious statement from a yard that has only been running since 2021. Most trainers spend years building toward a moment like that.
The one partnership worth watching with interest is the ongoing combination with First Look, who has run three times for the yard without a win. Three races together without a breakthrough isn't a crisis, but it's a puzzle — a horse good enough to keep being sent out, and a trainer clearly believing the right day is coming. Whether that combination eventually clicks will be one of the small storylines worth following as the season develops.
📈 Form Trend
How this trainer's win rate has changed month by month
Monthly win rate
2024–2026
0%
Mar
0%
Apr
0%
Jun
0%
Aug
0%
Dec
50%
Apr
0%
Jun
0%
Jul
0%
Aug
0%
Oct
0%
Dec
28.6%
Mar
🎯 Where This Trainer Thrives
Performance broken down by ground, class, and track type
🌧 Ground Conditions
Good (firm-ish)
Likes
Standard (all-weather)
Ok
Heavy (very wet)
—
Good to firm
Avoids
🏅 Competition Level
Class 1
Ok
🏟 Track Shape
Wide and galloping
Likes
Right-handed, wide and galloping
Ok
Left-handed, wide and galloping
—
🏇 Jockey Partnerships
The riders they work with most, sorted by rides together