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Tuesday, 23 June 2026
Free greyhound tips and AI-powered predictions for today's racing at Kinsley. Our model analyses composite scores, performance ratings, speed ratings, and suitability to produce the top pick from every race. Below you'll find our three best Kinsley greyhound tips for Tuesday, 23 June 2026.
No Kinsley greyhound tips available yet today.
Tips are generated once the racecard is published — usually by 10am on race days. Check back later or visit the free tips page for all of today's picks.
Kinsley Greyhound Stadium in West Yorkshire is one of the most distinctive tracks in British greyhound racing, primarily due to its unusual topography. The track features a downhill run to the first bend, which creates racing characteristics quite unlike any other venue. This physical feature accelerates the field towards the first turn at higher speeds than normal, making the break from the boxes and the position at the first bend even more critical than at standard tracks.
Kinsley operates regular meetings and is part of the national BAGS circuit with meetings broadcast across betting shop screens and streaming platforms. The card features a range of graded racing that attracts dogs and trainers from across Yorkshire and the wider North of England.
Understanding Kinsley's unique downhill start is the single most important factor for betting at this venue. Dogs that can exploit the gradient to gain early position have a structural advantage that translates directly into winning margins.
Track details: 390m sand circuit, 80m run-up to first bend. Races: Regular weekly meetings.
Kinsley's most distinctive physical feature is the downhill gradient from the starting boxes to the first bend. This slope accelerates dogs towards the first turn, meaning the field arrives at the bend at higher speeds than at flat tracks. Combined with moderately tight bends, this creates a first-bend dynamic where position is established very quickly and is extremely difficult to change once set.
The bends themselves are tight enough to penalise wide running, and the downhill start amplifies this by ensuring dogs are at full speed when they reach the first turn. Dogs on the inside rail can maintain their line more easily, while dogs running wide are carrying extra speed into a tight turn — a combination that often leads to checking or loss of ground.
The straights are of moderate length. The home straight provides some opportunity for closers, but the advantage accumulated by front-runners through the downhill start and tight first bend is usually too great to overcome. Traps 5 and 6 are notably disadvantaged at Kinsley due to the extra ground they cover through the bends.
Kinsley is a front-runner's track. The downhill start and tight bends create one of the strongest inside-draw biases in UK racing. Trap 1 and trap 2 dogs with quick-breaking ability are heavily favoured, while traps 5 and 6 face a significant structural disadvantage that only exceptional class differences can overcome.
Early speed is everything at this venue. Dogs that break quickly and exploit the downhill gradient to reach the first bend in front typically maintain that advantage throughout the race. The tight bends compound the initial advantage — a dog that leads through the first two bends on the rail rarely gets caught.
For punters, Kinsley is one of the most draw-dependent tracks in Britain. While this makes it less interesting from a pure form perspective, it creates clear betting opportunities — the bias is measurable and consistent, and if you weight your analysis accordingly, you can find value where the market underestimates the draw effect.
At Kinsley, trap draw is the primary factor in your analysis. Start with traps 1 and 2, assess which has the better early pace, and that's your most likely winner. It's that simple at this track — the structural advantage of inside draw combined with the downhill start creates one of the most reliable biases in UK racing.
Avoid backing dogs drawn in traps 5 and 6 unless they have a massive class advantage over their rivals. The numbers consistently show that outside draws are heavily penalised here, and the market often doesn't fully discount these positions.
Win betting on well-drawn front-runners is the optimal strategy at Kinsley. Place betting is less reliable because while the winner is often predictable, the finishing order behind the leader can be chaotic as dogs jostle through the tight bends. Keep your bets simple — good draw, good early speed, and you have your selection.
For detailed trap statistics, trainer form, and historical race data, visit the Kinsley track analysis page. For tips across all UK tracks today, see our free greyhound tips today page.
Every Kinsley greyhound tip on this page is generated by the RateThat.Dog AI prediction model. The model scores each runner on a composite scale from 0–100, combining multiple independent signals: recent performance across all races, adjusted speed ratings, suitability to today's specific track, distance and trap, class movement (whether a dog is running up or down in grade), and green-flag conditions that indicate a dog is in peak form.
Where our deep reasoning engine has analysed the race, you'll see a detailed write-up for each selection explaining the key factors — pace dynamics, trap advantages, recent form trajectory, and how each dog shapes up against its rivals today. These picks are updated every morning once the Kinsley racecard is published.
For full racecards including all six runners, speed rating tables, pace maps, and live exchange odds, visit the individual race pages linked above.