Aqueduct Picks – Saturday, April 25, 2026

Horse race at Aqueduct Racetrack with crowd and city skyline

A poor finishing day at Keeneland with the chalk dominating means the Conductor isn’t headed to Louisville just yet. He like the card at Aqueduct as long as the races stay on the turf.

Aqueduct – Saturday, April 25, 2026

  • Race 1: 5,6,8 / 1,3
  • Race 2: 5,6 / 3,4,7
  • Race 3: 7 / 2
  • Race 4: 3 / 1,4,6
  • Race 5: 3,2 / 1,4,5,8
  • Race 6: 1,5,7,8,9
  • Race 7: 2,6 / 3,4,8,10
  • Race 8: 8,7 / 2,3,5
  • Race 9: 2,3,5,7 / 6,9
  • Race 10: 3,6 / 1,2,7,9

Let’s have a prosperous day in New York

Keeneland Closing Day – The Conductor’s Picks

Horse race underway at Keeneland racetrack with crowd watching near finish line

Sunday’s 8th dropped a 152/1 exacta, hope you were aboard. Closing day at Keeneland is bittersweet. The Conductor will miss the turf, and somebody up top really does need to do something about the CAWS. One more swing before the meet packs up.

RaceA ContendersB Contenders
137, 2
258
31, 25, 7
43, 4, 5, 7, 82
534, 6
64, 51, 6
79, 41, 2, 3, 5, 6
81, 93, 6
961, 7, 8
104, 6, 8, 111, 9

See you trackside. Then we’re off to Louisville for Derby prep next week. Skip

Keeneland Saturday Picks — April 18, 2026 | Full Card Contenders

Jockeys riding horses in a race on Keeneland racetrack with spectators in stands and along the rails

The Conductor sucked yesterday. Let’s be honest about it. The 15/1 horse in the turf sprint that got steamed down to 6/1 after the gates opened, and then won on the lead for fun — when he’s never been on the lead in his life — really soured the Conductor on Keeneland.

It’s tough to love this game when the CAWS are in bed with the tracks and the greedy bastards don’t give a shit about the horseplayer. That’s not a game. That’s a tax collection dressed up in silks.

But the Conductor doesn’t quit. The passengers don’t quit. We show up. We cap harder. We try again. Skip.

A Word on the Weather

Be wary of the rain today — there might be some late scratches. The forecast doesn’t look bad enough to take the races off the turf, but watch the board before post time. Scratches reshape this card. Adapt accordingly.

Today’s Contenders

RaceContenders
Race 11 / 2, 4
Race 23, 4 / 2, 8, 9
Race 33, 7 / 1, 8, 9, 10, 12
Race 42 / 7
Race 59, 10, 11 / 1, 7, 8
Race 63 / 4, 8 / 7, 9, 10
Race 71 / 3, 4, 7
Race 83, 6 / 1, 11
Race 91, 5, 8 / 4, 6
Race 102, 4 / 1, 3, 5
Race 1112 / 3, 5, 7, 10

Good Luck Passengers

Watch the scratches. Don’t chase the steam. And remember — the Conductor doesn’t owe the CAWS a damn thing. We ride at our own pace.

New passenger? Subscribe to The Conductor’s Scroll — free to board, First Class for the full weekend card. And if you want to understand what the Conductor is actually doing before he writes these, start with the beginner’s guide to handicapping a horse race.

2026 Kentucky Derby Picks, Contenders & Handicapping — The Conductor’s Guide to the Run for the Roses

The first Saturday in May. Twenty three-year-olds line up at Churchill Downs to run a mile and a quarter under the most scrutiny any horse will see in its life. Half the country watches. Most of it bets. Almost none of it handicaps.

This is the Conductor’s living guide to the 2026 Kentucky Derby. Contenders, pace scenario, prep-race analysis, and pick updates as the field is finalized. Bookmark this page — it gets updated every week between now and post time.

What the Kentucky Derby actually is

The Kentucky Derby is the first leg of the Triple Crown. It is run at 1¼ miles on the dirt at Churchill Downs in Louisville, Kentucky, on the first Saturday in May, for three-year-olds only. The field is capped at 20 starters — making it the largest race most of these horses have ever run in, and a pace scenario unlike anything on the calendar.

Entry is governed by the Kentucky Derby Points System. Horses earn points by running well in a series of designated Derby prep races from the previous fall through April. The top 20 point-earners make the gate.

The 2026 Derby prep trail

The Derby prep season runs from the fall of the prior year through the last major preps in April. The biggest points-earning preps on the 2026 trail were:

  • Breeders’ Cup Juvenile (G1) — the first serious juvenile championship and an early Derby future-book mover.
  • Rebel Stakes (G2) — Oaklawn Park, early March.
  • Fountain of Youth Stakes (G2) — Gulfstream Park, early March. Our Gulfstream Park coverage is here.
  • Tampa Bay Derby (G2) — Tampa Bay Downs, early March.
  • Louisiana Derby (G2) — Fair Grounds, late March.
  • Florida Derby (G1) — Gulfstream Park, late March / early April.
  • Blue Grass Stakes (G1)Keeneland, early April.
  • Santa Anita Derby (G1)Santa Anita, early April.
  • Wood Memorial (G2) — Aqueduct, early April.
  • Arkansas Derby (G1) — Oaklawn Park, mid-April.
  • Lexington Stakes (G3) — Keeneland, mid-April. Final points-earning prep.

How to handicap the Derby

The Derby is a different animal than any other race these horses have run. Four things to keep front of mind:

1. The pace always melts down

Twenty horses, a 1¼-mile distance almost none of them have seen, and adrenaline. The pace is almost always faster than it should be. Closers and mid-pack stalkers have won far more Derbies in the modern era than frontrunners.

2. Post position matters more than usual

Post 1 (the rail) and posts 17–20 (the far outside) have historically been burial grounds. The rail horse gets buried in the pack. The wide horses burn energy getting over. The sweet spot is typically posts 5–15.

3. Pedigree matters at 1¼ miles

Most of these colts haven’t been beyond 1⅛ miles. A third of them will not get the distance. Look at the dam side — proven distance sires like Tapit, Curlin, Into Mischief, and Uncle Mo produce horses that finish their races. Quick-closing sires that mostly get sprinters do not.

4. Trust the prep form, not the hype

The Derby winner has almost always run a sub-100 Beyer in one of its last two preps, broken well, and shown the ability to rate. Horses that need a perfect pace to win don’t win Derbies. Horses that can overcome traffic do.

2026 Kentucky Derby picks & contenders

This section updates weekly as the prep trail concludes. Final picks, best bets, and exotic ticket construction will post the Thursday before Derby Day.

Check back for:

  • The Conductor’s top-3 ranking as the field is finalized.
  • Full pace scenario breakdown (who’s on the lead, who’s pressing, who’s closing).
  • Post-position analysis once the draw happens.
  • Value plays vs. the morning line.
  • Exacta, trifecta, and superfecta ticket constructions.
  • The Conductor’s bet-the-farm best bet.

How to bet the Kentucky Derby

The Derby is the one day of the year when everyone bets. That matters, because it creates value. Casual money floods in on the names — past Derby winners’ sons, horses with good stories, the favorite. That pushes live longshots to bigger prices than they deserve.

  • Win pools usually have the worst value on the day — the chalk gets hammered.
  • Exactas often have the best value when there’s a strong chalk-bomb combination.
  • Trifectas and superfectas are where casual money overbets obvious combinations. Construct tickets that include a longshot anchored by a solid closer.
  • Pick 4 and Pick 5 sequences ending with the Derby are where the sharpest money goes — carryover from earlier races in the sequence rewards patient ticket building.

New to handicapping? Start with our beginner’s guide to handicapping a horse race before you dig into the Derby form.

Where to follow along

The Conductor publishes picks every Friday, Saturday, and Sunday during Derby prep season — Keeneland, Gulfstream Park, Churchill Downs, and Santa Anita. Follow every prep race and you’ll head into Derby Day with a real read on this year’s class.

Subscribe to The Conductor’s Scroll — free to board. First Class passengers get the full Derby Day card, the Conductor’s final ticket construction, and every exotic play 48 hours before post time.

How to Handicap a Horse Race — A Passenger’s Guide from The Conductor

Handicapping a horse race is the art and science of reading the past and deciding what will happen next. You are, quite literally, handicapping the competitors — assigning each horse a probability of winning, losing, or hitting the board — and then comparing those probabilities to what the betting public is willing to pay. The whole game lives in the gap between what you think will happen and what the tote board says will happen.

This is the Conductor’s guide for new passengers. If you’ve never opened a Daily Racing Form, never made a bet more complicated than a win wager, or you have and you keep getting your pocket picked, read on. We’re going to cover the past performances, the figures that matter, the angles that don’t, and how to manage a bankroll that outlives a single bad Saturday.

What handicapping actually is

Betting a horse race is not a game of finding the best horse. It is a game of finding the best price. A 3/5 favorite that wins 60% of the time is a losing bet long-term. A 20/1 longshot that wins 8% of the time is a winning bet long-term. Your job as a handicapper is not to pick winners — it’s to identify horses whose true chance to win is better than what the board is paying.

Hold that thought. Everything below is in service of it.

How to read a past performance

The past performance (PP) is the biographical record of a single horse: the last ten or so races it ran, line by line, with enough detail to recreate each trip. The Daily Racing Form (DRF), Brisnet, and Equibase all produce their own versions. They look intimidating at first — dense columns of numbers and abbreviations — but the skeleton is simple.

From top to bottom, a horse’s PP shows you:

  • Identification: name, age, sex, sire, dam, color, owner, trainer, career earnings, career record.
  • Lifetime record: starts, wins, places, shows broken out by surface (dirt, turf, synthetic), track condition (fast, wet, firm, yielding), and distance.
  • Workouts: recent morning drills with times, surface, and how many other horses the clocker saw work that morning.
  • Race lines: one row per race, showing date, track, surface, distance, class level, post position, running positions at each call, beaten lengths, speed figure, jockey, weight, odds, and a short “trip note.”

When you open a PP, your eye should move in this order: class level → speed figure → pace figure → trip note → workouts → trainer angle. If the top four answer your questions, you don’t need the rest.

Speed figures: the single most useful number

A speed figure is a single number that tells you how fast a horse ran a given race, adjusted for the speed of the track that day. Beyer Speed Figures (published in the DRF) are the best-known, but Brisnet, Timeform, and Equibase all produce their own. The higher the number, the faster the race.

Rough rules of thumb for Beyer Figures on dirt:

  • 60–70: low-level claiming, state-bred maidens.
  • 80–90: mid-tier allowance, solid open-claiming horses.
  • 95–105: stakes quality. Graded stakes horses live in the high 90s and above.
  • 110+: Grade 1 winners. The Kentucky Derby winner typically runs around a 100–105.

Do not fall in love with a single big figure. Look at the pattern: is the horse’s last three figures trending up? Flat? Declining? A horse that just ran a career-best figure is often primed to “bounce” (regress) next time out. A horse that’s been steady for three races in a row at a given level is a profile you can trust.

Pace figures: how the race sets up

A speed figure tells you how fast the horse finished. A pace figure tells you how the race was run. Was the early pace blazing or crawling? Did the winner set it or run it down? This matters because horses win by getting the trip that suits them.

The four basic running styles:

  • Frontrunner / speed: wants to lead from the gate. Dangerous if no one else shows speed (lone speed).
  • Stalker / pace presser: sits 2nd–3rd, a length off the leader. The most versatile style and generally the winningest.
  • Closer: runs from well back, aiming to pick off tired horses in the stretch. Needs a fast early pace to have something to run at.
  • Deep closer: last to next-to-last early. High variance — huge days when the pace melts down, empty trips when it doesn’t.

Before you bet a race, play it out in your head. Who’s on the lead? Who’s pressing? Is there a pace duel coming? If there are three frontrunners entered, they’ll likely hook up, burn each other out, and set it up for a closer. If there’s a lone speed with a live rider, bet that horse.

Class: who the horse has been running against

Speed figures without class context can mislead. A 90 Beyer in a $10,000 claimer at Mahoning Valley is not the same as a 90 Beyer in a Grade 3 at Keeneland. You want to know not just how fast the horse ran, but what level of competition it ran against.

The American class ladder, from bottom to top:

  1. Maiden Claiming — horses that have never won, eligible to be claimed for a tag.
  2. Maiden Special Weight — horses that have never won, not for sale.
  3. Claiming — open company, all horses eligible to be claimed.
  4. Allowance (Alw, OC, N1X, N2X, etc.) — non-claiming, with eligibility conditions.
  5. Starter / Optional Claiming — hybrid conditions.
  6. Listed / Black-type Stakes — non-graded stakes races.
  7. Graded Stakes: G3 → G2 → G1 — the top of the sport.

Pay special attention to horses dropping in class from a stakes race into an allowance, or from a $25K claimer into a $10K claimer. A class drop from a savvy barn often signals a live horse. Equally, a horse stepping up off a dominant win at a lower level is not automatically dead — look at the figure and the way it won.

Trainer angles: the humans matter

Trainers are not interchangeable. Each has a pattern they win with. Some barns light up with first-time starters (debut runners). Some hit huge with horses returning off a 90-day layoff. Some win at a 25% clip when they add blinkers; others win when they take them off.

The DRF and Brisnet publish “trainer stats” right in the past performances — win percentage and return on investment (ROI) for specific moves: 1st off the claim, 2nd off a layoff, dirt-to-turf, adding Lasix, shipping out of state, and so on. When a trainer is running +$1.00 or better ROI on a specific angle, pay attention. That is a dog whistle.

Name trainers to know on the East Coast: Chad Brown (turf king), Todd Pletcher (quality barn, deep book), Bill Mott (maidens and layoffs), Brad Cox (all-around machine), Saffie Joseph Jr. (Gulfstream base, sharp with claims). West Coast: Bob Baffert, John Sadler, Tim Yakteen, Doug O’Neill. Read who’s running hot at the current meet — trends matter.

Surface, distance, and post position

A horse bred and built for dirt sprinting will often be a different animal on turf going two turns. Scan the PP for how the horse has handled the exact surface and distance it faces today. First-time turf, first-time around two turns, first-time dirt — all of those “first time” angles are opportunities or red flags depending on the pedigree and the barn.

Post position matters differently at every track. At Keeneland on dirt, the inside posts tend to be golden. At Saratoga in turf sprints, you can live just about anywhere. Outside posts in two-turn dirt races at most tracks are a mild negative because the horse loses ground on the first turn. Know your track’s bias before you bet.

Workouts: evidence of fitness

Workouts are the morning drills the horse does between races. A horse that has been working sharply — a bullet work (fastest of the day at the distance), or a pattern of four or five steady, progressive drills — is telling you it’s fit. A horse that hasn’t worked in two weeks is telling you something else.

Workouts are most useful for first-time starters and horses returning from a layoff, where you don’t have a recent race to lean on.

Putting it together: a five-minute process

When the Conductor opens a new race, the process is roughly this:

  1. Read the conditions — what level, what distance, what surface.
  2. Scan the field for early speed. Identify frontrunners, stalkers, and closers. Guess how the pace will set up.
  3. Rank the horses on top speed figure. Who’s been running the biggest numbers recently?
  4. Rank on class. Who’s been running against the toughest competition?
  5. Cross-check with trainer angles. Anyone hitting a live move?
  6. Check for trip notes — any horse that ran better than it looks in its last race?
  7. Build a preliminary top three. Then look at the morning line and ask: are any of these prices wrong?

The last step is the bet. If your top pick is 4/1 and the board has it at 8/1, you have an overlay — play it. If your top pick is 4/1 and the board has it at 6/5, you have an underlay — pass, or use it underneath in an exotic. You will not bet every race. You are not supposed to.

Bankroll management: the only lesson that matters long-term

You can be the best handicapper in the world and lose money if you bet too much of your bankroll on each race. You can be an average handicapper and grind out a profit with discipline.

  • Decide on a bankroll. Say, $500. This is money you can afford to lose.
  • Bet no more than 2–5% of bankroll on any single race. For a $500 bankroll, that’s $10–$25 per race.
  • Keep a log. Every bet, every outcome. If you can’t stomach looking at your own results, you’re gambling, not betting.
  • Chase value, not losses. Doubling up on the last race to “get back even” is how bankrolls die.

Common beginner mistakes

  • Betting the favorite because it’s the favorite. Favorites win about 33% of races. That sounds like a lot until you remember you need 3/5 or better on every single one of them to break even.
  • Betting names. Last year’s Kentucky Derby winner is not necessarily live at 3/5 today. Read the form, not the headline.
  • Ignoring pace. Three frontrunners in a field kills all of them.
  • Falling in love with a horse. Doesn’t matter how pretty it looked in the paddock. The price is the price.
  • Exotic bet abuse. Trifectas and Pick 4s have a ticket-building skill that takes years to learn. Start with win wagers. Earn your way into exotics.

Where to go next

The Conductor publishes race-by-race handicapping breakdowns every Friday, Saturday, and Sunday for the major tracks — Keeneland, Saratoga, Gulfstream Park, Belmont Park, Churchill Downs, and Santa Anita. Reading along for a few weekends while you study the PPs will do more for your handicapping than any book.

Subscribe to The Conductor’s Scroll — free to board, First Class for the full card — and join the passengers who stopped guessing and started handicapping. The Conductor sees what others cannot. The Scribe will get it to you before post time. What you do with it is, as always, entirely your own problem.

Keeneland Picks & Contenders — Friday, April 17, 2026 | Full Card Analysis

Racehorses with jockeys rounding curve at Keeneland with spectators

All aboard. The Conductor has been staring at past performances since before the sun came up, and after a weekends worth of handicapping the well has run dry. You’re getting the numbers. You’re not getting a lecture.

Today’s Contenders

RaceContenders
Race 12 / 3 / 7
Race 25, 7 / 2, 3, 6
Race 31, 5, 6 / 2, 3
Race 41, 3, 5 / 6, 7
Race 53 / 5, 7, 8
Race 61, 2, 3 / 4, 5, 6
Race 72, 4 / 1, 3
Race 81, 6, 9 / 10
Race 91 / 3, 4, 7
Race 103, 5 / 7

Good Luck Passengers

Keeneland Sunday Picks — April 12, 2026 | Full Card Handicapping

Keeneland racecourse grandstand alongside dirt track and grassy infield with American flag

Decent Saturday for the Conductor at Keeneland. Expensive Queen winning outright instead of a dead heat would have been nice. Alas, we move on to another beautiful Sunday. Let’s finish the weekend strong. Skip.

Race 1: 8 / 10 / 5,6
Race 2: 2 / 4,5
Race 3: 3,4,6 / 7,9
Race 4: 5,7,11 / 2,6,10
Race 5: 1,2,11,12 / 3,4,6,8
Race 6: 1 / 2,4
Race 7: Giant’s Causeway (G3): 11 / 9,10,13,15 / 1,2,3,7,12 / 4,6
Race 8: 8 / 1,6
Race 9: 1,12 / 4,11


Keeneland Saturday Picks — Lexington Stakes & Jenny Wiley Analysis (April 11, 2026)

Thoroughbred horses racing on Keeneland dirt track with grandstand and statue

Tricky Friday for the Conductor, but Echo Zulu taking down the Maker’s Mark at 4/1 was nice. Solid Saturday card up next headlined by the Lexington Stakes and the Jenny Wiley. Looks like 72 and sunny and the Conductor will be there sipping on his stew. He continues to be generous with his picks. Skip.

Race 1: 9 / 2,5,6
Race 2: 1,5,8,14 / 6
Race 3: 7 / 4,6
Race 4: 2 / 4,8
Race 5: 2,4,5 / 6,10,12 / 3
Race 6: 2 / 1,7
Race 7: 4,7 / 6,9
Race 8: 3,4,10 / 1,5,11,12
Race 9 — Jenny Wiley (G1): 1 / 6,7 / 9,10
Race 10 — Stonestreet Lexington (G3): 10 / 1,7,9,11
Race 11: 6 / 3,4,8 / 2,11