Gillian Boanas has been training racehorses for four years, and over that time she has built a career total of 30 winners — a respectable foundation for a yard still finding its feet in a fiercely competitive sport. But the last 12 months have been a difficult stretch. Across 31 runners this season, she has yet to get one across the line first, a run that follows a modest 2% win rate last year — roughly 1 winner in every 50 races. For context, even the sharpest trainers in Britain have lean spells, but going a full season without a winner from over 30 runners is the kind of run that tests everyone in the yard.Based on TrackLab's AI analysis
A snapshot of this trainer's performance over the last 12 months
31
Races
0
Wins
0%
Win rate
avg ~10%
32.3%
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
Two names crop up repeatedly in her recent record without yet producing a result. The horse Leader Wing has run 15 races under Boanas's care without winning, which is a long wait for a partnership that has clearly been given every opportunity to click. Jockey Jamie Hamilton has partnered her horses on 14 occasions this season and is also still looking for that first win together. When the same combination keeps being tried without reward, it either says something about patience and loyalty — or signals that a change might be overdue.
The honest truth is that this season's numbers don't yet tell an encouraging story. Thirty career winners show that Boanas knows how to get a horse ready to win, and four years in training is still a relatively early stage for any yard. The question is whether the runners coming through can return her to the kind of form that built those 30 wins in the first place.
📈 Form Trend
How this trainer's win rate has changed month by month
Monthly win rate
2025–2026
0%
Mar
0%
Apr
0%
May
0%
Jun
0%
Jul
0%
Aug
0%
Oct
0%
Nov
0%
Dec
0%
Jan
0%
Feb
0%
Mar
🎯 Where This Trainer Thrives
Performance broken down by ground, class, and track type
🌧 Ground Conditions
Good to soft
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Good (firm-ish)
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Standard (all-weather)
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Soft (muddy)
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🏅 Competition Level
Class 3
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Class 4
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Class 5
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Class 6
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🏟 Track Shape
Left-handed, undulating
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Left-handed, wide and galloping
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Right-handed, tight turning
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Left-handed, tight turning
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Right-handed, wide and galloping
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Right-handed, undulating
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🏇 Jockey Partnerships
The riders they work with most, sorted by rides together