A track inspection on Saturday morning will determine the fate of the Warwick Farm meeting after more rain on Friday put the eight-race program in jeopardy.Warwick Farm has been the least hit of the four Sydney racetracks that have been lashed by rain this week, but a heavy (10) rating is the best it will be should racing go ahead.The southwestern Sydney track has received 84mm in this week's deluge with 39mm of that falling since 5pm on Thursday."I was confident this morning that we would be ra

A track inspection on Saturday morning will determine the fate of the Warwick Farm meeting after more rain on Friday put the eight-race program in jeopardy.

Warwick Farm has been the least hit of the four Sydney racetracks that have been lashed by rain this week, but a heavy (10) rating is the best it will be should racing go ahead.

The southwestern Sydney track has received 84mm in this week's deluge with 39mm of that falling since 5pm on Thursday.

"I was confident this morning that we would be racing but there was some good steady rain," track manager James Cataldo said.

"It's in the lap of the gods, but we're probably the driest track in Sydney at the moment.

"Stewards will be here at 5.30 in the morning to do a check and make a final decision."

Cataldo said there was "the odd spot" of surface water but not a lot.

Randwick has been the worst hit of the Sydney tracks with more than 200mm of rain this week.

Canterbury, which had a meeting called off on Wednesday, has had over 170mm and Rosehill more than 100mm.

Gosford on the NSW central coast had its meeting on Thursday abandoned and Newcastle's Saturday fixture has already been postponed.

Joe Pride trains arguably the most exciting horse set to go around at Warwick Farm in the aptly-named Rain Affair, winner of five of his six starts, and the trainer is hoping the meeting won't be lost.

Rain Affair is $1.35 favourite for the At Sea Handicap (1200m).

"For sure I hope they are still on," Pride said.

"I don't like losing any meeting, even if I didn't have the horses I have going to the races tomorrow."

Pride admitted finding a plan B for Rain Affair would not be an ideal scenario, with the trainer likely to be forced into stepping the exciting sprinter up into stakes company before he had even started in Open company.

"I don't want to think about that until I have to, but I have had a little look," Pride said.

Rain Affair scored by 3-1/4-lengths over 1100m when he resumed from a let-up at Rosehill three weeks ago and is proven in the wet.

"He's done really well and I'm very happy with him," the trainer said.

Viva Las is set to have her first start for the Pride stable in the Happy 35th Birthday Mario Tartak Handicap (1200m).

"She's settled in well here and I like the look of her record for this kind of race," Pride said.

A heavy track also poses no fears for Hot Fox in the One Club, One ATC Membership Handicap (1400m).

"If they start, she'll start," Pride said.

"Prior to her last start she won two in a row and they were both on heavy tracks so there's no dramas there."