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Tuesday, 23 June 2026
Free greyhound tips and AI-powered predictions for today's racing at Newcastle. 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 Newcastle greyhound tips for Tuesday, 23 June 2026.
Newcastle Greyhound Stadium is one of the most prominent racing venues in the North of England. Located in the Newcastle area, the stadium has long been a flagship for greyhound racing in the region, attracting top-quality dogs and trainers from across the North East. The venue hosts busy meeting schedules with competitive fields across all grades.
Newcastle is managed to a high standard with modern facilities, good kennelling, and a well-maintained racing surface. Its meetings are broadcast nationally, giving it a strong profile in the off-course betting market. The track regularly hosts feature events and competitive open races that draw the best animals from the region.
The North East has one of the strongest concentrations of greyhound trainers in Britain, and Newcastle benefits directly from this — the standard of competition is consistently high, which makes for form-true racing where quality metrics are reliable predictors of performance.
Track details: 430m sand circuit, 105m run-up to first bend. Races: Multiple meetings weekly.
Newcastle races on a circuit of approximately 430 metres in circumference. The bends are medium-width — fair and manageable for most dogs without the extreme characteristics of either very tight or very wide circuits. This gives Newcastle a balanced racing profile where neither front-runners nor closers have a dominant structural advantage.
The run-up to the first bend is of standard length, and both straights provide adequate racing distance. The home straight gives closers a fair shot at catching leaders, while the bends are tight enough that a good start and early position still confer a meaningful advantage. The overall effect is a track that rewards all-round ability.
The surface is well-maintained and drains effectively. Newcastle's urban location provides some shelter from the worst weather, though the North East climate means conditions can vary, particularly in winter. The going tends to stay in the normal-to-slow range, with genuinely fast conditions less common than at southern tracks.
Newcastle is a medium-fair track that rewards quality without heavily penalising draw. Dogs need a good blend of early pace and stamina — pure front-runners can succeed from favourable draws, while genuine closers with quality finishing speed can find opportunities on the home straight.
The track suits experienced, well-schooled greyhounds. Dogs that race cleanly through the bends, avoid interference, and maintain their effort are the ones that produce consistent results at Newcastle. Because of the strong local training community, the dogs that race here regularly tend to be well-drilled and competitive, which means that form figures are particularly reliable.
Performance ratings and class movement are the strongest predictors at Newcastle. The fair track means that a genuinely class-superior dog will usually express that advantage, while at tighter, more chaotic venues, quality can be undone by bad luck. Our composite scores work well at this venue.
Newcastle rewards balanced form analysis. Weight your selections towards performance ratings and class, with trap draw as a secondary consideration. The medium-fair bends mean that inside traps have a small edge but it's not dominant enough to override clear quality differences.
The strong competition at Newcastle means that grade for grade, the dogs here tend to be well-matched. This makes value harder to find in obvious places but creates opportunities for punters who can identify subtle edges — class droppers, course specialists, and dogs with trainer angles. Our suitability scores, which measure track-specific performance, can highlight dogs with a proven affinity for Newcastle.
Keep an eye on the going. Newcastle can race quite differently on slow-to-heavy going compared to normal conditions. When the going deteriorates, inside-drawn dogs gain extra advantage and front-runners hold their positions more easily. On normal-to-fast going, the track is at its fairest.
For detailed trap statistics, trainer form, and historical race data, visit the Newcastle track analysis page. For tips across all UK tracks today, see our free greyhound tips today page.
Every Newcastle 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 Newcastle 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.