ETOBICOKE, Ontario – Perhaps the biggest handicapping story of the Woodbine meet, which wraps up on Sunday, is how biased the Tapeta has been toward the inside, especially on the far turn. Rail speed has been effective, and horses saving ground have been able to angle wide in the stretch and win with regularity, which was the case last Friday after speed dominated early on the card. Gotme Good drew the rail in Friday’s sixth race and shouldn’t mind turning back to seven furlongs from route racing, which has been his speciality. Trainer Don MacRae claimed Gotme Good for $25,000 in Oct. 10, when the 3-year-old bombed on the drop from $40,000 company. In his first try for MacRae and owner Randy Exelby, he led all the way in a slow-paced $25,000 claiming race on Nov. 14. Gotme Good moved out a sixteenth to 1 1/8 miles most recently in his first try at Friday’s $15,000 nonwinners-of-three class. After dueling through quick fractions, he gave way late to finish second to a dropping Adapted in a valiant effort. Apprentice Pietro Moran retains the mount on Gotme Good, who graduated over 7 1/2 furlongs on the inner turf with a career high 71 Beyer Speed Figure in June. Moran is 4 for 18 at the meet for MacRae, who has impressive numbers going from a route to a sprint. :: Access the most trusted data and information in horse racing! DRF Past Performances and Picks are available now. Padraig could be set to graduate over $25,000 maidens in the seventh race from the two-hole, a post where his tactical speed may come in handy. He just missed when shortening up from a route to seven furlongs most recently and could benefit from a further cutback to six furlongs with Eswan Flores retaining the mount. Good to Be Lucky, who could vie for favoritism with Padraig, benefited from an inside bias when second off a 13-month layoff Nov. 23. The other seventh-race protagonists are Souper Vinnie, Speedy Connection, and Spikephil. Switzler Jammin ran a hole in the wind up front after making his way to the golden rail on the turn last Friday, beating $5,000 nonwinners-of-two stock with a 73 Beyer. Under leading rider Rafael Herandez, he drew inside post in the eighth race and should be favored to win his third in a row in the $5,000 conditioned claiming race. Those looking for an alternative to bounce candidate Switzler Jammin might settle on Cut’em Loose, who pressed a fast pace before weakening to fourth in a similar spot Nov. 22. The top two finishers from that event, Echo With Laughter and Heat Merchant, both came back to run strongly. Skye Chernetz retains the mount on Cut’em Loose for trainer Devon Gittens, and they’re a combined 10 for 57 this year. Those looking for a single in the late pick four could opt for You and Me Baby in the ninth, a $10,000 maiden-claiming event. Trained by Bill Tharrenos, You and Me Baby is coming off back-to-back thirds for $25,000 going the seven-furlong distance of this contest. The 62 Beyers that he’s been putting up easily exceed the Beyer par of 56 for this level. :: Want to learn more about handicapping and wagering? Check out DRF's Handicapping 101 and Wagering 101 pages.