There is not much of a record to go on yet, and that is entirely the point — Nikki Henton only started training in March 2025, which means she is barely months into the job. Six runners and no winners from the past twelve months tells you very little about what kind of trainer she will become; every yard that exists today once looked exactly like this.Based on TrackLab's AI analysis
A snapshot of this trainer's performance over the last 12 months
6
Races
0
Wins
0%
Win rate
avg ~10%
33.3%
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
What the numbers do suggest is a trainer working carefully and deliberately rather than flooding the track with runners. Six races in a year is a modest tally, and that can reflect a small string of horses, a cautious approach to picking the right races, or simply the reality of getting a new operation off the ground. Building a stable takes time, contacts, and patience — the wins tend to follow later.
The only honest thing to say right now is that the story has barely started.
📈 Form Trend
How this trainer's win rate has changed month by month
Monthly win rate
2025–2026
0%
Mar
0%
Apr
0%
Jan
0%
Feb
0%
Mar
🎯 Where This Trainer Thrives
Performance broken down by ground, class, and track type
🌧 Ground Conditions
Soft (muddy)
—
Good (firm-ish)
—
Good to soft
—
🏅 Competition Level
Class 5
—
🏟 Track Shape
Left-handed, tight turning
—
Right-handed, wide and galloping
—
Right-handed, undulating
—
🏇 Jockey Partnerships
The riders they work with most, sorted by rides together