Our Melbourne Cup 2025 betting preview delivers best bet, value roughie and main danger with odds, track pattern notes, rain-track form, and betting angles.
Our Melbourne Cup 2025 betting preview delivers best bet, value roughie and main danger with odds, track pattern notes, rain-track form, and betting angles.

It’s that time again — the race that stops a nation. On the first Tuesday of November, Flemington turns into a pressure cooker of form, tempo and tactics as stayers from here and abroad stretch to the famous two miles.
This year’s Cup shapes up as a true stamina test with rain about, live chances sprinkled right through the market, and a couple of class internationals squaring off against hardened locals.
We’ve sifted the lead-ups, tracked the trials and weighed the weather to land on our best bet, a value roughie, and the main danger. Settle in: whether you’re chasing the quinella or just a winner to cheer from the clock tower, our 2025 Melbourne Cup tips have you covered.


The Cup often turns on who handles the deck, and Presage Nocturne is built for a rain-affected Flemington. With heavy rainfall over the last day or so, a genuine soft to heavy surface brings him right into the race. He’s a proper stayer — we’ve already seen him run boldly at 3000m and 3100m in France, which is the kind of deep aerobic base that turns two miles into a strength rather than a question.
His local platform is rock-solid as well: a strong fourth in the Caulfield Cup behind Half Yours, River Of Stars and Valiant King was the perfect Cup primer — touched up late but still finding through the line. If he’s in the mix turning for home and they can make ground on the day, he’s the one to be on.

Smokin’ Romans is the forgiving bet of the race. Put a line through the last run with post-race vet checks finding him lame, so you can bin the figure and rate him off prior work. He loves getting his toe in, maps to be on-pace, and his Cup chances rise or fall with the pattern. If the earlier races show leaders and rails are holding, he’s a massive improver at a price. If they’re running on, we trim expectations. Either way, the wet is a plus and the set-up screams Melbourne Cup glory.

That Caulfield Cup win from Half Yours was the performance of a horse right on song, a change-up sprint when it mattered, and nothing fluky about it. The query is whether he’s already peaked this prep. Each run have been to the eyeballs but there’s little to knock in the body of work. He has handled all conditions this campaign, and a profile of 7 wins and 3 placings from 14 starts reads like a horse still climbing. If he holds that level, he’s again one they have to beat.






















