Peter Chapple-Hyam has built quietly but steadily since taking out his trainer's licence in 2021, and four years in, the numbers are starting to take shape. Thirty-six career winners is a solid foundation for a yard still finding its feet, and the fact that seven of those have come in the last twelve months — from 93 runners — shows things are ticking along at a rate of roughly 1 in every 13 races. That might sound modest, but in a sport where patience is everything, consistency matters more than the occasional flash.Based on TrackLab's AI analysis
TrackLab's AI-generated assessment based on career data and recent form
TrackLab's Trainer Breakdown
Auto-Generated
The most telling detail in his record is how the yard performs on normal ground conditions. Three wins from just 20 races in those circumstances works out at 15%, or 3 in every 20 — and that is genuinely good. It suggests Chapple-Hyam has horses that travel well when the ground is fair, and that he knows when conditions suit his string. A trainer who can read their horses and pick the right moments is far more valuable than one chasing winners in unsuitable conditions.
His most productive partnership is with jockey Harry Davies, who has ridden 20 times for the yard and come home in front twice — a win rate of 10%, or 1 in every 10 rides. That is ahead of the overall yard average, which suggests Davies and Chapple-Hyam have developed a working relationship worth watching. In racing, the trainer-jockey combination matters enormously; a jockey who understands how a yard's horses are prepared can coax out performances that others might miss.
Four years in, 36 winners, and a clear preference for good ground — this is a trainer who knows what he has and works with it. The next chapter will be interesting.
📈 Form Trend
How this trainer's win rate has changed month by month
Monthly win rate
2025–2026
0%
Apr
0%
May
0%
Jun
7.7%
Jul
20%
Aug
23.1%
Sep
6.7%
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 (firm-ish)
Loves
Standard to slow (all-weather)
Likes
Good to soft (some give)
Likes
Standard (all-weather)
Ok
Heavy (very wet)
Unknown
Good to firm (drying out)
Avoids
Soft (muddy)
Avoids
🏅 Competition Level
Class 1 (elite)
Avoids
Class 2 (high-level)
Avoids
Class 3 (mid-level)
Likes
Class 4 (standard)
Loves
Class 5 (entry-level)
Ok
Class 6 (grassroots)
Avoids
🏟 Track Shape
Right-handed, long straights
Loves
Long straights
Likes
Right-handed, tight turns
Likes
Left-handed, long straights
Ok
Left-handed, hilly
Unknown
Left-handed, tight
Unknown
Left-handed, tight turns
Avoids
Right-handed, hilly
Avoids
🏇 Jockey Partnerships
The riders they work with most, sorted by rides together