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Warm Regards

Bob Rothman

Stacking The Odds in Your Favour


SATURDAY DECEMBER 21st

ASCOT TIPS

3.35:

As you would expect for the prize-money, this is a tough handicap with plenty of possibilities.

Nicky Henderson fields two with real chances in the improvingRolling Star and Chatterbox.

Despite Barry Geraghty’s apparent preference for the former, Chatterbox shaped really well last time at Newbury after a well documented setback and could easily turn out to be the better of the two at these weights. Certainly his chance does not need arguing based on last season’s form. He is seen as holding the best chance of those at the top of the weights as improvement from Newbury is likely.

Flaxen Flare probably has a few pounds too many but should run a race.

Fellow Irish raider, City Slicker has to be respected but, with only limited hurdling experience, faces a stiff task against much better company than he has so far encountered.

Dell’ Arca is another dark horse that is raised 8lbs for his Greatwood win and could easily make his presence felt. Of those lurking at the foot of the handicap,

Totalize has been granted an opportunity by the handicapper with a mark of 131. Relative inexperience in such a cut and thrust handicap is something of a concern but he does have a chance at the weights (particularly with Flaxen Flare after a decent effort at last year’s Festival). He should be fit from a recent Flat outing and would surely not be making the journey south if less than match-fit or not carrying a modicum of stable confidence.

Flying in the face of common sense, Chatterbox may lift this, whilst a prominent showing is expected from the stoutly-bred Totalize.

LINGFIELD TIPS

2.35:

It seems fair to say Gatewood has not progressed since a highly encouraging return to action in this country at Doncaster in September.

He is capable of winning this but it is becoming a long time between drinks for him. Sure be thereabouts, he has most to fear from a possibly revitalised Tales Of Grimm, who got no run here last time. Once again the draw has not been kind to Tales Of Grimm, but with a reasonable slice of luck in running he rates a big danger.

CHELTENHAM 

FRIDAY DECEMBER 13th

(posted Thursday 5.30pm)

12.30:

All things being equal this looks like a two-horse race. Oscar Whisky made a satisfactory fencing debut here last month in a muddling race won by Tarquin Du Seuil.

As he receives 8lbs from his main rival, Newbury winner Wonderful Charm, it is tempting to believe that may make the difference.

These two are chalk and cheese. Wonderful Charm is more of a chasing type that may lack the class of Oscar Whisky, but there is the small matter of the fences threatening to even the contest out. With bookmakers sure to bet tight, there is little percentage in punters’ favour.

1.05:

It is a struggle to uncover an obviously well-handicapped runner here, although two that have raced in Ireland look to have possibilities. Both Friendly Society and Hit The Headlines have chasing experience and may be capable of better than we have seen.

2.10:

Theatre Guide looks a reasonable selection having put up such a giant effort in the Hennessy a fortnight ago. His claims are obvious and providing the run does not come too soon after his Newbury exertions, he is hard to get away from.

3.45:

The card ends as it starts with a novice event, this time seemingly resting between three candidates in previous winners and therefore penalised: Ballyalton, Doctor Harper and Garde La Victoire.

The last named was very impressive last time at Warwick when sauntering away from previous winner Gone Too Far. There seems no reason why we should not take that run literally, in which case Garde La Victoire is taken to shade what should be an informative event.


 

SATURDAY

DECEMBER 7th

(posted Friday 5.45pm)

It seems we have made it to the Tingle Creek meeting at Sandown without incident. Despite Russia’s best attempt at sabotage via a severe mid-week weather front sweeping in from Siberia, the worst is behind us – at least for now.

Staying with the Soviet theme, as always this is a good meeting full of quality and intrigue, but its twists and turns are possibly more suited to a John Le Carre Cold War novel.

1.50:

Taquin Du Seuil lays Arkle pretensions on the line in the Henry VIII Novice Chase.

A determined winner at Cheltenham last time from Oscar Whisky, he gets a chance to take this next step up the ladder.

Second in this event last year to Captain Conan, Hinterland is certainly useful but has not progressed beyond that standard and threatens to be vulnerable once again.

Grandouet, notably a hurdler, needs to improve his jumping to become competitive in this company, whilst well regarded Balder Succes is hard to assess and could be anything.

One mistake could change the complexion of this but, assuming Taquin Du Seuil jumps with the same aplomb as we saw at Cheltenham last time, he looks like the one to beat.

2.25:

After his latest run in a competitive Cheltenham event won by handicap blot Quick Jack, Deep Trouble looks poised to go one better in this listed handicap. He faces several rivals with progressive profiles but looks sure to run his race.

3.00:

The Tingle Creek should only concern Sire De Grugy and Captain Conan, both of whom have won over fences on this track. Talk of Somersby being able to mix it on these terms at this level has so far proved wide of the mark. The same is likely to be the case again. For some reason Sire De Grugy never looked at ease last time at Cheltenham, risking life and limb with some chancy leaps in the closing stages when second to an on-song Kid Cassidy.

From a stable in form, he has every chance but does have two lengths to find on Captain Conan on their running in the Arkle Trial run at Cheltenham this time last year. It promises to be a tight contest.

HENNESSY GOLD CUP DAY

NEWBURY – November 30th

1.50:

After four reasonable efforts over hurdles, Gassin Golf looks tempting in this Class 2 handicap.

It may not look an obvious race in which to break his duck, but as he receives the best part of two stone from many people’s idea of the winner, Gibb River, and sits at the foot of the handicap, this could be the day for an eagle shot.

Providing he does not bounce, from his last winning mark Gibb River has every chance, although it is never easy to lug big weights successfully in these events.

Other question marks pepper this event: Batonnier returns from two years on the sidelines; Punjabi is undeniably well-in if you delve far enough back; but at the age of ten, it is hard to be positive.

Don’t Be Late was an improver when last seen, but along with The Bear Trap – who looks the handicap plot – has yet to encounter opposition of this class. The list goes on, but if you cherry-pick the best of Gassin Golf’s form, a case can be constructed.

3.00:

The handicapper seems to hold sway in the Hennessy.

Class act Rocky Creek is reported to be in tip-top shape for this his debut of the year. A classy chaser with form to back up his claims, he is possibly the one to beat. He would be interesting if carrying a few pounds less.

Those of a similar profile – Houblon Des Obeaux and Lord Windermere – have the same mountain to scale.

Cloudy Too faces his stiffest test and also enters unknown territory as regards trip.

After such an absence, Invictus needs to wind back the clock but has a definite chance from a handicap perspective.

Our Father has a documented record of going best when fresh. Again, he seems to have plenty to do from his current mark.

In addition, late news on Friday night suggests Timmy Murphy (unexpectedly rushed to hospital before the last race after apparently feeling unwell) may not be fit to ride. Rocky Creek looks like the one to take aim at without appealing as a bet at the price.

PS Note from Bob.

A good friend who is a commission agent has also placed money on Super Duty at  20/1 for a stable contact. Obviously a very tough race and rather like the Grand National it’s one where you may be tempted to bet several decent priced horses EW for small stakes. Good luck.


NEWBURY WINTER FESTIVAL

 

 DAY TWO (Friday).

(posted Thursday afternoon)

1.30:

Lightly raced Western Warhorse has a progressive look to him and is taken to justify being the sole selection on Friday’s card.

Having won at Chepstow before battling on up the Cheltenham hill behind Home Run last time when decent handicappers were behind, he looks handily weighted against this opposition.

Minella For Steak and, if able to translate improved Flat form to hurdles, Chiberta King represent two possible dangers in a minefield of a handicap, but Western Warhorse could be too good.


THE HENNESSY HERITAGE FESTIVAL

 

Thursday Nov 28th,

Posted Wed Evening

The Racecourse Newbury – as it likes to call itself these days – stages Day 1 of its Hennessy Heritage Festival tomorrow – Thursday, November 28th. It’s quite a mouthful.

Most racing folk will simply be going to Newbury racecourse for the Hennessy meeting, but perhaps all this rebranding is something to do with the fact the racecourse is building over a thousand new homes on its property.

Clocking in with the first event at 12.25, Day One starts early. Nicky Henderson should open up proceedings when his Volnay De Thaix bids to supplement a facile Kempton win in the cut-up Bet 365 Class 3 novice.

Saddled with a Press Association price of 1/12 in most overnight papers, no one will be getting rich on the strength of this predictable piece of forecasting though. Volnay De Thaix has already scored twice in France and should make light of an 8lbs penalty.

I wish I could reveal a tasty bet on the card. With seven races you would think there ought to be one lurking somewhere, and, who knows, maybe there is… answers in an email please.

The closest I can come is Chatterbox in the Bet 365 Intermediate Hurdle (Listed Handicap) run at 3.15. To give it its alternative title, this race is registered as the Gerry Feilden Hurdle. I have a feeling Large Action is one of its past winners but don’t write in if I am mistaken. I am frequently mistaken about one thing or another these days.

So to get back to Chatterbox in the listed handicap: he looks an interesting prospect, not just in this, but in general.

He might be the sort his powerful stable will consider for the Betfair Hurdle (or, as Boylesports put it, if you’re really old the Schweppes Hurdle).

As for his immediate mission, he now returns to the track and trip responsible for his two wins to date. Having beaten My Tent Or Yours in December last year, he then routed a useful field of novices under a penalty in February. This was followed by a respectable fourth behind The New One in the Neptune at Cheltenham over a trip probably in excess of his best.

The 3lbs he receives from Puffin Billy could be crucial, meaning a bigger threat could be posed by the unexposed and lightly-raced Get Back In Line.

In all, from this quarter it’s a tentative start to the meeting. There are three days after all…


SATURDAY’S RACING

 

NOVEMBER 23RD

(posted Friday lunchtime)

Despite Ascot, Haydock’s card, peppered with established and rising stars, takes centre stage.

12.45:

Four-year-old Far West is first in the spotlight. Caught out by the progressive Melodic Rendezvous in the Elite Hurdle at Wincanton a fortnight ago, but ahead of market rival Rolling Star in the Triumph, he appears poised to take the Class 2 Intermediate Hurdle.

1.50:

This looks like a hot handicap. Unexposed dual-winner More Of That was impressive at Wetherby on what was his reappearance and only his second start. Raised 7lbs for that and a proven operator in the soft, he could easily be better than we have seen, but will need to be against some testing opposition.

Chief opponent could prove to be Zuider Zee, sharpened up after a decent first run of the season at Huntingdon eleven days ago. Once again, the ground will present no problem to this son of Sakhee.

3.00:

The big race of the day is the Grade 1 Betfair Chase – at this stage a mini-Gold Cup and certainly something of a dress rehearsal for Cheltenham.

Current Gold Cup winner Bobs Worth – who runs well when fresh – defends his chasing crown against last year’s winner of this, Silviniaco Conti, considered by many to have been unlucky at Cheltenham when coming down at the third-last. He was still travelling strongly at the time and a subsequent tame effort at Aintree, when he looked below par, should be ignored. With positive messages emanating from both camps, this rematch should prove informative.

After suffering his only defeat in the Jewson at the Festival, Dynaste completed a highly encouraging first season over the big obstacles with Grade 2 victory at Aintree. This represents a major test against top-class opposition; although he needs to find more now, he deserves a place in the line-up.

Long Run can apparently be forgiven his latest defeat in the Charlie Hall due to a bad scope, but it could be argued he comes up short at the highest level.

Cue Card is an unlikely winner. His record to date suggests 2m 4f is his best trip, so an extended 3m here looks unsuitable for a horse that may not be good enough in any case.

Tidal Bay and The Giant Bolster make up the numbers without appearing likely to trouble the judge.

Roi Du Mee does stay well and handles this sort of ground; although, as yet, gives no indication he will deal with opposition of this calibre.

So it’s perm any one from three: Bobs Worth, Silviniaco Conti and Dynaste with bookmakers apparently safely installed in the driving seat.


 

SATURDAY NOVEMBER 16th

Horse Racing Tips

Lingfield Tips

1.25:

Thewandaofu’s claims for favouritism rest on her dubious fifth in the Rockfel to Al Thakhira – who admittedly was out of her depth at Santa Anita but still made no show there.

The Newmarket form looked flaky at the time so a hike from 77(which looked a reasonable mark for Thewandaofu based on all other efforts) to an elevation of 90 seems an overreaction.

With only a Kempton maiden win to her name and having been subsequently beaten at Southwell and Bath before finishing second off 73 in a nursery, her overall form suggests – unless we take the Newmarket form literally and believe she has suddenly made enormous improvement – she is only a mid-seventies filly.

That being the case Epic Voyage makes much more appeal. A solid second on his only outing to Postponed at Yarmouth (winner went on to chase home useful Oklahoma City in valuable sales race at Newmarket, whilst the third was a decent second next time and the fourth has won twice since),

Epic Voyage has a more promising profile and can take advantage of what appears to be an overrated filly.

2.35:

Prince Alzain has the credentials to win this and is taken to get the better of his main, and it is tempting to think, only serious rival – the revitalised Tales Of Grimm.

The latter should reverse recent form with Highland Knight on revised terms. Although it is likely to be tight, Prince Alzain, who is particularly effective on a synthetic surface, gets the call.

Cheltenham Tips

12.40:

The card opens with the first real test of the season for juvenile hurdlers. The line-up looks strong with Azza, Herod The Great, Guitar Pete and Royal Irish Hussar all having rattled off early victories.

The last named – an Aidan O’Brien reject – is a potentially classy recruit to hurdling whose jumping is not bullet-proof as yet, although it improved markedly after a clumsy first round effort at Market Rasen when last witnessed at Wetherby. Cheltenham will expose any weakness in that department but he is in good hands and remains an interesting prospect.

However, today’s opposition, which includes French-import and three-time winner Art Mauresque (representing last year’s winning combination) is another potential danger in a race probably best watched with an eye on the future.

1.15:

Experience could be the key factor here as, despite a 3lbs penalty, White Star Line, placed over fences at the Festival, faces several raw recruits. Le Bec and Shutthefrontdoor look no more than promising at this stage; whilst African Gold faces the larger obstacles for the first time.

White Star Line appears at his best over three miles – attempts beyond that trip have resulted in him being beaten a fair way. Possibly short on speed, having mixed it in decent company, his jumping makes him an attractive proposition against rivals that have plenty to prove.

1.50:

This extended three miles may assist Spring Heeled to pull out a little extra, meaning he could just be ahead of the handicapper right now.

A safe jumper who lines up here with a decent level of Irish form to his credit, he should go well. We do have to take his ability to stay this trip on trust, but he represents connections that know the time of day and the jockey booking adds confidence.

2.30:

As ever, the Paddy Power Chase presents punters with problems aplenty. It is possible to make cases for any number of the runners and the race does have a ‘whose turn is it today?’ look to it.

Without labouring the point, in a first time visor, Astracad makes some appeal from the right end of the handicap after a decent effort last time at Aintree.

Summary

Lingfield supplies the best betting opportunity of the day withEpic Voyage in the 1.25.

Prince Alzain has every chance in the 2.35.

From a betting perspective, Cheltenham is difficult enough.White Star Line is seen as a value alternative to some higher-profiled but less experienced rivals in the 1.15.

Spring Heeled and Astracad are no more than selections in their respective races.

 


Bob: A few thoughts for tomorrow …

 


CHELTENHAM TIPS

 

FRIDAY 15th November

We are off for the first of three days of the Paddy Power meeting.

Bizarrely, the best bet on Day One seems to come in the opening event at 1.05, where Badger Ale winner, Standing Ovation, turned out again under a 7lbs penalty, looks undeniably well-in.

He really ought to win this and given the nature of the race may even start a bigger price than he is entitled to.

His rider is capable enough and it is inescapable that Standing Ovation is receiving weight from opponents he should be conceding it to.

Following anticipated success it what looks like a soft target here, it would not be the biggest surprise were he to be supplemented for the Hennessy at the end of the month. Watch this space…

1.35:

Eastlake looks like a progressive type who continues to thrive. To a degree he is a lazy tip but they all count and he looks sure to play a big part in this having only been raised 5lbs for an Aintree win last month.

2.40:

Upswing is another with a similar early season profile to the preceding selections, although he faces a stiffer task. In a race full of potential improvers, Warden Hill is lightly-raced over timber and may be capable of consolidating a highly promising reappearance run at Kempton last time with a major effort in this company.

 


Bob, thoughts and selections for tomorrow, Cheers, Spy

 

SATURDAY NOVEMBER 9TH

(posted Friday afternoon)

Doncaster Horse Racing Tips

12.40:

Penny Drops stands out after a promising debut at Goodwood, which was followed by an improved effort in a listed event at Newmarket last week. There she was arguably unlucky not to have nearly won when a squeezed-up second to Cape Factor. She should be too good now returned to an ordinary maiden.

1.15:

A winner over 6f in soft, identical conditions should suit Black Caesar who is now dropped 2lb after his latest run over 7f when leaving the impression he failed to get home. As the chosen representative from his powerful stable that fielded a strong five-day entry, he lines up with every chance.

However, in a race that may only concern a few runners, Penina looks potentially well-treated after what was admittedly a flattering fourth to easy winner Aeolus last time.

However, she failed to obtain the clearest of runs (would not have troubled the winner) and the form is bolstered by the second horse, the twice-subsequently scoring Musical Comedy, who was only half-a-length ahead of the filly.

Penina could easily capitalise from a lowly mark of 66 and along with Black Caesar, these look like the two contenders to concentrate on.

1.50:

Favourite Treat is an unexposed contender. After a good effort last time against older horses he looks on an upward curve.

He returns to soft/heavy ground – the surface he scored on when dotting up in a Chepstow maiden by a wide margin. He is potentially well-treated against the usual suspects.

These exclude Magistral who lines up with a similar profile to the selection. Turned out quickly after a decent effort at Newmarket last week, he is clearly in good heart and interesting, but this drop back to 7f may not be ideal.

2.25:

Jack Dexter is the obvious one to beat here but in-form Highland Colori, last year’s winner Eton Rifles and Hallelujah are three obvious dangers along with others likely to pose problems.

3.35:

Conduct was well-backed when a staying on third at York over 1m 2f last time and will surely appreciate this step up to 1m 4f. Representing a stable in fine end-of-season form, and from the same mark as last time, after only two runs this season he lines up fresher than most and is hard to get away from.

Conclusion:

12.40: Penny Drops ought to win but will be short and should only be considered in those miracle multiple bets. It may not be significant, but she was starting to go in her coat last week.

1.15: Penina looks temptingly treated by the assessor. A small bet is advised with a saver on Black Caesar.

1.50: Favourite Treat could be going places and is the call in this hard handicap.

3.35: Conduct is another that looks to hold a clear-cut chance in a competitive event.


 

SATURDAY NOVEMBER 2ND

(posted 5.10pm Friday afternoon)

Newmarket Tips and analysis

1.10:

Having beaten yesterday’s maiden winner Idder by over five lengths at Nottingham last time, Montaly looks a serious opponent to likely odds-on shot Hartnell in the listed contest over ten furlongs. After only two runs the stoutly-bred, Montaly is open to improvement.

This trip in soft ground threatens to provide a slog for two-year-olds but the market leaders are bred for it and to an extent have already demonstrated an ability to stay well. By Authorized, who has had a mixed season, Hartnell won on heavy ground last time over a mile and is clearly the one to aim at.

A proven ability to handle soft ground could be crucial on a day when the ground is likely to be as yielding as it gets at Newmarket.

1.45:

After a clear-cut victory at Leicester on debut, Surcingle, lines up in the listed event as a filly loaded with promise.

However, these opponents represent a considerable rise in quality to those she encountered last time. A tall filly by Empire Maker (often an influence for a soft ground preference), she stayed the trip of a mile well on debut and has an action that suggests easy ground will suit. At this juncture, speed does not seem to be her biggest asset.

Majeyda has to overcome a 3lbs penalty and comes into this on the back of form exposed as below Group standard.

Surcingle could be good enough to take this hike in grade in her stride, but Rosehill Artist may represent value. Although vulnerable to an improver, she was not disgraced when failing to concede 4lbs to Lady Lara in a similar event at Newbury and we know the ground and trip presents no problem.

2.55:

Nabucco returned to action last time to win a heavy-ground handicap at Salisbury early in October and may be fresher than most in this apparently weak listed race.

Wetherby Tips and analysis

3.00:

Over at Wetherby, At Fishers Cross capped a great season with spring wins at Cheltenham and Aintree and should extend his winning sequence to seven in the 3.00.

3.35:

In the Charlie Hall at 3.35, Unioniste lines up with a similar profile to last year’s winner from the same stable, Silviniaco Conti. Receiving 4lbs from Long Run and a winner this time last year at Aintree, this may be the time to catch him in top form.


LAST ROUND UP AT NEWMARKET

Friday Nov 1st

12.30

It’s an early start at Headquarters – with the first race scheduled for 12.30 – more in keeping with a fixture at Exeter! For the present, such a venue is a long way away for contenders in the opening maiden.

Racing on soft ground, one that should cope with conditions is Authenticity. A half-brother to Professor and by Authorized out of a Selkirk mare, he is bred to water ski. Given his connections and against representatives from major yards, he is likely to be a big price; however, if he has any ability at all he may attract a smidgen of support.

There is not a lot to go on here: Sea Defence and Think Ahead only achieved passable form on their respective debuts, whilst shot in the dark Authenticity apart, Certificate, from the in-form Roger Varian stable, makes most appeal of the newcomers.

1.00:

Stetchworth should be hard to beat here having finished third to Pretzel and Mutakayyef in what looked a reasonable maiden at the last meeting.

This event received a tenuous shot in the arm through Gannicus (about four lengths behind Stetchworth at Newmarket) as he had earlier been beaten four lengths by Friday’s Newbury winner, Strait Run. Stetchworth should know more now and sets a good standard.

Zee Zeely and Idder both posted promise on their debuts but take on more now.

1.30:

This has the look of a weak end of season handicap. Squire Osbaldeston is only raised 3lbs for his belated Lingfield win after promise as a juvenile and in the spring. He should prove too good from a mark of 85.

2.00:

Third to the smart Night Of Thunder on debut at Goodwood in the soft when not getting a straightforward passage, Penny Drops is taken to spring a surprise in this listed event. She is open to plenty of improvement against rivals that do not exactly suggest we should run for cover. She probably has most to fear from Expect and Cape Factor.

2.30:

Expert might have been the selection here but for a poor effort last time in similar ground at Salisbury. He is still capable of winning this on his best form; the question being, after a long and hard season – and on this ground – whether he will reproduce it. With Mar Mar also failing to convince, a turn-up may be on the cards.

1.00: Stetchworth looks solid.

1.30: Squire Osbaldeston looks a short-priced winner and one for the multiple bets.

2.00: Penny Drops may spring a surprise.


FLYING THE FLAG

 

Halloween may mean pumpkins, trick-or-treat and scary outfits for some; for others, the last week of October, first in November, means the Breeders’ Cup.

Six thousand miles away from the subsiding rain and winds of Great Britain, somewhere down Orange Highway and in the shadow of the Blue Mountains, they will race round Santa Anita this weekend for the richest collective horseracing purse on the planet.

Every year we Europeans try our luck and, to be fair, during our attempts, although peppered with a harsh helping of heartache, we have had some success.

However, it takes a special horse to win in the USA. What with the travelling, the change of climate and the cut-throat conditions out on the racetrack, only the hardiest take their shots. Those that bring home the biggest prizes are not always the most obvious, nor are they necessarily the best.

From a betting point of view, we often fail to recognise the enormity of the task faced by a traveller. This can be a costly error. It is also worth bearing in mind that the odds this side of the Pond are not always replicated in the US.

We start the two-day meeting with a strong challenge on Friday in the Juvenile Turf over a mile.

Dewhurst third Outstrip appears to have solid credentials, as does Giovanni Boldini – who was third to Toormore in the Group 1 National Stakes and winner of his other two starts, both on Polytrack.

By American stallion War Front – who is making a big impact just now in the UK and Ireland – his chance is further enhanced if, as seems likely according to jockey bookings, he is rated superior to his tough stablemate Wilshire Boulevard.

Even so, the last named was fourth in the Group 1 Prix Jean- Luc Lagardere on Arc day on soft ground and reverts to a more suitable surface now. Wilshire Boulevard is the sort of horse to give it a shot here and he could go well.

Shamson completes the European challenge but has plenty to find. The betting suggests the home-team will struggle – always a dangerous assumption. Despite wide draws, Bashart and Poker Player are powerful threats.

On the face of it, we field one of the strongest teams possible in the fillies’ equivalent.

Cheveley Park winner Vorda – also winner of the Robert Papin and whose only defeat came in the Prix Morny when second to the monster that is No Nay Never – was impressive at Newmarket and is already talked of as next year’s 1,000 Guineas winner. That is of course possible, although a venture to California en route is not usually the ideal preparation. There is also a major stamina question for her to answer. No prisoners will be taken in this field, which will ruthlessly expose any chinks in her armour. She will not win this if she only gets seven-and-a-half furlongs!

There are no stamina doubts about Fillies’ Mile winner Chriselliam but, despite the positivity of her connections after the event, that Newmarket win remains something of a head scratcher for form analysts.

Al Thakhira looked impressive enough when running away with the Rockfel but there has to be a doubt about that form.

Once again we ignore the Americans at our peril: Kitten Koboodle and the wide-drawn My Conquestadory could provide most resistance, but they also have chances with Testa Rossi and Sky Painter.

On Saturday, improving Dank is rightly perceived as having a solid and serious chance in the Filly and Mares event on turf. It would be foolish to counter her claim but 2/1 – or even 7/4 in places – about a filly on a mission a quarter of a world away does assume plenty.

It is not difficult to construct a case for The Fugue in the Breeders’ Cup Turf. After a ‘soft’ season, she routed top class colts in the Irish Champion Stakes and looks to be primed to run the race of her life now in conditions guaranteed to suit. Notwithstanding current odds she faces a tough task though, as she takes on some seasoned American bulwarks.

Despite a name implying otherwise, Big Blue Kitten – a horse and not a mare – will not be distracted by a saucer of milk and a tin of Felix. Along with Point Of Entry (to name just two), they spearhead a potent and beefy threat.

In the Mile, Olympic Glory’s participation on fast ground seems like a decision conjured in the boiler room of doom. What are connections thinking here? All his best form is unquestionably when there is dig in the ground. A revelation when squelching through the Ascot slop in the QEII, conditions in California could not be more different, or, on all known form, more alien.

There is tremendous home confidence behind Wise Dan, whilst Silver Max is an able deputy should the bullets fired by the favourite fall wide.

At around half past midnight our time, we reach the showpiece race – The Classic, run for a colossal purse of over $2.5 million on dirt. This is not a race they tend to give away!

Declaration Of War – an American-bred by War Front – may be bred for the job but has yet to race on this surface.

Game On Dude, last year’s winner Fort Larned, and Mucho Man may not be as classy but have the home advantage.

As a meeting, this is great stuff, but it rarely goes as planned for would-be marauders – for whom even one winner is a major achievement. Taking America by storm is as hard now as it was back in 1775.

It is generally acknowledged that Dank, Vorda and The Fugue represent the best chances for the Europeans; but doubts persist, leading me to believe it is a night to watch rather than one in which to bet.

Don’t forget the time of year… Watch out for Freddy Krueger!


 

SATURDAY OCTOBER 26TH

(posted Friday 2.30pm)

Doncaster Racing Tips and Views

2.05:

With a highly promising profile, Aeolus looks ready for this step up in grade having improved markedly with every run. An impressive specimen, he may have more to offer but faces serious opposition in the penalised Stubbs and the impressive Goodwood winner Night Of Thunder, who has already displayed an ability to handle soft ground. Perm any one from three…

Result

Night of Thunder  1st 5/2 -> 6/4

Aeolus 2nd 100/30

3.15:

As always the sprint handicap is tough. With only limited mileage on the clock, Take Cover looks primed to run a big race despite a 7lbs hike for his latest York success. Unusually for an offspring of Singspiel, it could be argued this drop back to five furlongs has brought about the best in him. He is closely weighted with Steps (may have the best of the draw) and Kyleakin Lass.

A tenuous line through Ancient Cross on York running last time gives Valbchek a credible chance, particularly as he ran out of room at a crucial stage that day and would have finished closer with a clear passage.

Knotty handicaps such as this provide plenty of excuses in advance, but should everything fall right, Valbchek is probably capable of winning this and may be worth chancing at double-figure odds.

3.50:

So we arrive at the last Group 1 of the season – the Racing Post Trophy.

Already spoken of as a possible classic contender, Kingston Hilllooks the form horse after an impressive win at Newmarket last time from Oklahoma City.

A form line through Pupil gives him the clear edge over Pinzolo and he also has the beating of Altruistic through Oklahoma City. He stays this trip well and has a good turn of foot – something he has always demonstrated in his work at home with the likes of the speedy Mishar.

Responsible for Oklahoma City, Aidan O’Brien has something of a lead into the worth of the Newmarket form and his Century looks likely to provide the biggest danger.

Century burst through in the closing stages of his Curragh maiden to win in emphatic style, showing plenty of acceleration and looking a classy prospect. A good-actioned son of Montjeu, soft ground may not be ideal but he is a colt of undoubted promise. It would be dangerous to rule him out of calculations.

This leaves us with the conundrum often faced in contests such as this – whether to latch on to the solid form or take a flyer with a horse of immense promise.

Newbury Racing Tips and Views

2.20:

Like Century in the Racing Post, Galiway lines up here with just a highly promising maiden win to his name, having taken a newcomers’ event at St Cloud in expected manner. Given his connections, he has to be respected but faces a tougher task now against proven rivals.

Form pick, Morning Post may struggle over this trip in what threatens to be heavy ground.

Piping Rock will handle conditions but has something to find; whereas, Trading Profit was not beaten far in a bunch finish for the Mill Reef here when behind Supplicant and has solid each-way claims.

result

Piping Rock 1st 4/1 -> 3/1

Galiway 2nd 5/2

2.55:

A son of Authorized, soft ground seems to favour the late-bloomer Nichols Canyon who was impressive over 1m 6f last time in similar conditions at Ascot.

This is tougher, but if it turns into a slog he will get home when some of his rivals may be floundering. So long as all eight intended runners turn up, he is seen as an each-way alternative to likely favourite – the penalised Prince Bishop.

With Masterstroke having shown nothing since joining Godolphin, and Sugar Boy having tailed-off last time, this is a winnable contest for an in-form Nichols Canyon.

result

Nichols Canyon 2nd

This is not a day for punters to dip too deeply into their pockets. As things stand, each-way interest in ValbchekTrading Profitand Nichols Canyon (as long as all eight run) is advised.


 

FRIDAY OCTOBER 25TH

(posted Thursday Afternoon)

Newbury Racing Tips and Views

1.30:

It is possible Strait Run’s seventh in a Salisbury maiden is better than it looks at first glance. The second won at Lingfield next time, whilst the tenth home was only beaten six lengths by Pretzel at Newmarket on Wednesday.

Of the unraced contingent, the two that stand out are the Galileo colt Impulsive Moment and the New Approach and Godolphin representative, Flight Officer, both of whom have impeccable pedigrees, meaning they could easily be a class apart.

Discussed in notebook

Straight Run Won

Flight officer 2nd

2.00:

Despite a reasonable debut here last month when second to Cape Wrath, Dark Leopard will have to buck a negative trend to win as that race is not working out.

Result Dark Leopard beaten

Cape Wrath made little impact at Newmarket on Wednesday and other runners from that maiden have been beaten a long way on subsequent engagements.

Therefore, it is hard to escape the conclusion (formed at the time) that the race was moderate.

Master Of Suspense has been absent since June, whilst Potentate’s two seconds to date indicate he is capable of winning a maiden without being a good thing to do so.

Of the newcomers, Dutchartcollector – a gelding by Dutch Art out of a Pivotal mare – looks guaranteed to handle soft ground.

2.30:

Carthage’s second at Goodwood sets a beatable standard. The two debutants he has most to fear from appear to be the stoutly-bred Jefferson City and the Derby entrant Observational, both of whom could prove to be serious dangers.

3.35:

Kalispell looks the interesting contender here after a fair comeback run at Sandown after nearly a year in the wilderness. That was her first run since finishing second to The Lark at Doncaster this time last year – a run that, from the lowly mark of 75, would give this Singspiel filly excellent claims today.

Noted in Notebook

Kalispell won very easily 8/1

5.10:

Whatever else happens on the day, Blessington looks primed to take this sprint handicap. He is open to plenty of improvement after an excellent comeback run in a competitive Ascot handicap three weeks ago when a fast-finishing second to Intibaah on a day when little came from off the pace. A 3lbs rise seems fair; in addition, this extra half a furlong should suit, making it one of many components that should enable him to go one better now.

5.10: BLESSINGTON looks the best of the day, with the remainder of the comments only advanced as pointers at this stage.

Result

Ran too bad to be true. Discussed in Notebook


 

Wednesday 23 Oct

(posted Tuesday afternoon)

RIGHT AS RAIN…

You may have noticed it has been raining rather a lot of late. At least it should prevent the water companies from hiking their prices – then again, maybe not – perhaps it is the wrong sort of rain: wet as opposed to not quite so wet.

Come to think of it, isn’t electricity generated in part by water? Maybe those nice executives responsible for allowing us access to the power required to turn on lights, watch our televisions and have hot water and heating, will take pity and reduce prices for a change. Apparently it takes a lot of water to make beer – maybe a pint of bitter will cost a few pence less in the run-up to Christmas. If not, well, paying top dollar for beer is fair enough – after all, it’s beer when all is said and done!

Who am I kidding? Expecting charity from energy suppliers (I am including beer manufacturers here – you get energy of sorts from beer!) is like expecting bookmakers to show generosity at Newmarket tomorrow.

They already have plenty on their side. With half the card consisting of expensive well-bred debutants (at present you buy a small Hebridean island with their joint worth), anything could happen to even the strongly-fancied contenders.

There is a chink of light on the card, but that light could soon become extinguished by either the unknown and largely unfancied runner in the ‘black cap’, or ground conditions these juveniles have not yet experienced.

It doesn’t look like a day that will take care of the latest brown envelope.

On the positive side, we can at least form some sort of opinion in the 3.40, where all the participants have form.

Best of it is represented by Sudden Wonder,  who after two runs at Newmarket, behind smart stablemates Outstrip on debut, and later Pinzolo – both of whom have since won in better company – gets his turn in the spotlight.

This form looks solid from all directions and he is receiving 5lbs from Cape Wraith, who should cope with the ground and the step up in trip, but whose win at Newbury came in a distinctly moderate affair. There is of course a drawback; after all, it wouldn’t be a horserace unless there was more than an element of a doubt now would it?

For a start, we haven’t seen Sudden Wonder since mid-August and, being by New Approach, we have to speculate about his ability to handle ground this soft. Do you ever feel events are programmed to conspire against you?

result

Sudden Wonder won

Cape Wraith 3rd

Half-an-hour later, Munjaz, just behind Sudden Wonder on his debut in August, sets the standard in another maiden.

That run looks in advance of what was no more than a promising debut from Touch The Sky when he finished fourth to Master The World in September.

Again, just to add an element of trickery, Munjaz has been on the sidelines for longer than ideal (68 days).

Godolphin are chucking plenty of darts at the board just now, this time the blue arrow is carried by a Sea The Stars gelding, Moontime.

Best of the unraced would appear to be Munjaz’s stable companion, Danjeu, a Montjeu colt that lines up with something of a reputation.

Result

Moontime won 14/1

Munjaz 2nd 7/4 -> 5/4 (Nose)

The sleight of hand continues at Kempton where the first division of the maiden at 6.50 looks inordinately strong by the track’s normally modest standards. There are no ground worries on the synthetic surface of course.

What appears to be a solid contender in once-raced Moonfaarid lines up as the one to beat after having finished second to Ghazi at Newmarket in August, with reasonable benchmark Pool House in third and subsequent dual winner Outback Traveller in fourth. That form threatens to make him hard to beat, especially from a plum draw. The recurrent theme here seems to be the month of August. Once again Moonfaarid has either been on his holidays or has had a setback of some description.

However, you still have to perm any one of six well-bred newcomers to prove troublesome: The Street Cry Godolphin representative Cry Joy, the flashy American-bred Marzocco, the Sea The Stars colt Moontown, and Warrior Of Light. From powerful stables, Mutamakkin and Steve Rogers deserve respect, but on the face of it appear more stoutly-bred and may be more effective next season.

Result

Marzocco won 7/1

Moonfarid 3rd Evs

There is a whisper for D’Avignon in the second division – who faces an all-together easier assignment than participants half-an-hour earlier.

This time the wild card is the draw. Of eleven runners, D’Avignon is drawn – well, you guessed it didn’t you – widest of all in eleven.

As I write I see the 2.20 at Yarmouth has been won by a 33/1 shot with a 100/1 chance in third.

Good game isn’t it!


 

CHAMPIONS’ DAY

(Saturday 19th Oct)

1.45:

Somehow, Estimate escapes a Group 1 penalty in this Group 3 event that, despite being at the lowest end of the group scale still features a strong line-up. Estimate’s chance and her record at Ascot speaks for itself and she threatens to be hard to beat.

The consistent Ahzeemah should again be on the premises at this level. New kid on the staying block, Eye Of The Storm could be interesting. A third to Trading Leather in the Autumn Stakes last year and a narrow defeat by Sugar Boy in the Classic Trail at Sandown reads well enough but he has looked no more than useful at listed level since. A line through Missunited – whom he has met twice – suggests he is not especially progressive and this represents a tougher task than encountered of late.

Estimate is the filly to beat without making any great betting appeal.

2.20:

Like Estimate in the preceding race, last year’s winner, Maarek is the obvious one here back to six furlongs and on his favoured ground. A tough contender when things are right, he will be hard to beat against largely vulnerable opponents.

Jack Dexter looks solid enough after a giant effort in the Ayr Gold Cup and an earlier fourth in the King’s Stand over an inadequate five furlongs at the Royal Meeting.

On the other hand, Viztoria may struggle against sprinters now she is surprisingly brought back to six furlongs. This will also be her third outing in just over a month, having made little show at Longchamp a fortnight ago.

Slade Power has a chance, whereas only one other horse – drastically overpriced at that – seems in this sort of league. Balmont Mast is a tough globetrotter that has made his mark in Group 1 events in Singapore and Dubai and should not be underestimated. Apparently versatile as regards ground (being an American-bred there is always a suspicion soft may be against him but he has won on it), he arrives here in good form having won last Saturday at the Curragh and looks primed to outrun a double-figure price.

2.55:

A race that includes a German Group 1 winner in Nymphea, recent Prix De L’Opera winner Dalkala, the first and third from the Oaks in Talent and The Lark, one-time Guineas favourite Hot Snap, improving Waila and Belle De Crecy and South African mare Igugu has to be considered a strong one.

Dalkala is in great form and handles the soft, but is arguably best at ten furlongs. She may find a slog in this ground stretching her stamina in this company.

We know Talent stays well although the ground is something of an unknown; whereas The Lark will be ideally suited by ground conditions.

If someone could convince me Dalkala will be as effective over this trip as she was at Longchamp two weeks ago over ten furlongs, I could be tempted. As it is, I am inclined to watch this one.

3.30:

This year’s QEII should only concern the front four in the betting. There has to be a slight question mark hanging over Dawn Approach. On soft ground, if he pulls as he has done in the past, he will surely set the race up for a finisher. In the belief we have seen the best of him I am prepared to look elsewhere.

In top form and back to an ideal trip, Maxios fits the bill having slammed Olympic Glory last time at Longchamp.

It is doubtful whether this ground will bring out the best in Soft Falling Rain.

Gordon Lord Byron does not look up to winning over a mile at this level, nor does mud-loving Top Notch Tonto.

A raft of doubt surrounds Kingsbarns.

That leaves us with Olympic Glory who only has a little to find with Dawn Approach on the latter’s best form and who handles the ground. He lines up as something of an afterthought (Toronado was the intended representative of owner and trainer but was ruled out on this ground); although a reproduction of his fast-finishing second to Moonlight Cloud in the Jacques Le Marios when Intello, Declaration Of War and an intractable Dawn Approach were behind, would make him a dangerous candidate. It seems he ran below par last time but on balance, Maxios seems the safest option. Olympic Glory may follow him home.

4.05:

So we move on to the Champion Stakes, dominated in the betting by a seven-year-old in Cirrus Des Aigles and a five-year-old in Farhh.

Both have had their setbacks this season and the fact they monopolise the front end of the market tells its own story about this year’s Classic crop.

Cirrus Des Aigles writes his own script and no one will begrudge him another success in this event.

Of the rest, Derby winner Ruler Of The World is hard to fancy, whilst Mukhadram has claims but it will be a sub-standard Champion if he wins.

For those in search of value, Morandi will relish the ground and although his form with Intello leaves him with something to find, such improvement of this ground cannot be ruled out.

Another that might belie his odds is Hillstar. Possibly better at 1m 4f, this ground will bring his undoubted stamina into play and it would be a mistake to judge him solely on his run on the firm in the Juddmonte.

The Day’s BETS:

Despite the clear claims of Estimate, Maarek and Cirrus Des Aigles, it may pay to overlook the obvious. MAXIOS is seen as the best alternative in the 3.30.

At prices that look too big, value-seekers might like to considerBalmont Mast and Morandi in their respective events.

FRIDAY OCTOBER 18TH

Something for the weekend Sir?

It looks like we are back in the game.

HAYDOCK RACING

Easy ground calls for caution here but the card is interesting enough, presenting a couple of possibilities:

2.20: The form horse in this is undeniably Newmarket Warrior, who after five attempts is nevertheless making a meal of winning. The right man is aboard now to rectify that record and he has every chance of opening his account.

However, backing horses with his profile is not always the best move and although not a recommendation, it is highly likely we can expect an improved showing from Battersea, a well thought of son of Galileo. Although too green to do himself justice at Newmarket on debut, he looks the part and may know more now. Essentially a race to watch.

2.55: Desert Ace represents a smidgen of value in this nursery after finishing third in the heavy at Salisbury last time to subsequent Middle Park third Justice Day, with talented but unreliable Figure Of Speech back in fourth. Back to the minimum trip and partnered by a talented apprentice that effectively reduces his mark to 80, he looks worth chancing.

4.05: Baarez looks all set to be the rage in this after throwing away a Newmarket maiden won by Mitrad last month.

On the face of it, the charitable among us accredited his antics to greenness, but the fitting of a hood today hints that connections may suspect temperament may be creeping in.

Be that may, at the price he makes little appeal and, being by Hard Spun, is not an obvious candidate to handle soft ground, despite the Monsun line on the distaff side.

Whatever Baarez’s fate, Tall Ship – six lengths behind him at Newmarket and never realistically put in the contest – can be expected to finish much closer now.

CHELTENHAM RACING: Well, it had to happen sooner or later – so here it is. Stash away the light summer suits, dig out the Barbour.

Really do I have to?

Sure do if you want to stay in the game son!

Here goes then:

2.00: Saint Roque should relish this step up in trip and should therefore have a big chance against his most obvious danger – Rum And Butter.

3.15: I would prefer to pass on this if that’s okay with you. However, with Emma Lavelle’s horses in such sparkling form (so I am told), despite top weight, Captain Sunshine has to be respected.

4.25: With some interesting contenders lining up, without information this may not be a race for heavy involvement.

However, Germany Calling should be an interesting recruit to timber and is worth watching both in the betting and in running. Whatever they say about the pretenders, Lac Fontana should be hard to beat after a decent run here in the Triumph Hurdle last season, when he was also close enough to useful types in Forgotten Voice at Kempton and Chatterbox at Newbury.  Whatever happens later in the season, this promises to be his day.

5.30: It is too early to draw a line through the well regarded Four Too who was cantering last Saturday at Chepstow only to fade out of contention in the time it took a lamb to shake its tail. Apparently he needed the run and the fact he is turned out again so quickly and with a tongue tie indicates his powerful stable expect a better showing here.

There are two suggestions on the day:

Desert Ace 2.55 Haydock

Lac Fontana  4.25 Cheltenham.


 Update Saturday Evening

Darwin and  AFONSO DE SOUSA  were non runners due to the ground change

WAR COMMAND WON

PALLASATOR placed at 8/1 in Cesarewitch (Ladbrokes, Bet365 , sky, Tote, Betfred Boyle, Stan James, Paddy Power all paid 5 places)

100% Record Spy. Well done!


 

SATURDAY OCTOBER 12th

(posted Friday afternoon)

We may be in the closing stages of the current Flat season, but the fat lady is not bursting into song just yet. A great day’s racing is in prospect at Newmarket this Saturday – with only one handicap [Cesarewitch] featured on a diamond-studded card.

The Challenge Stakes (Group 2) is first up – a race that promises to supply one of several Irish-trained winners on the day when DARWIN lines up with excellent claims, particularly on the assumption that a return to seven furlongs will suit. He beat Gordon Lord Byron over this trip at the Curragh in July and was a useful juvenile in the US last year. A typical American-bred, he seems best on fast ground, so only a change in the going description threatens to jeopardise his chance. At the time of writing, everything seems in place for a major run.

2.35: The first of two Group 1s for the juveniles, the Middle Park is a prize that again may be gobbled up by the Irish, who field the front two in the market.

Great White Eagle is a good-looking son of Elusive Quality with a big reputation that needs to step up on his Group 3 win at the Curragh last time. He did take time to master his rivals, eventually finishing nicely on top and winning with plenty in hand. He has earned his place in this stronger field; however, it is entirely possible this trip is a minimum for him.

Sudirman, winner of the Group 2 Railways Stakes and the Group 1 Phoenix Stakes – where he beat a ring-rusty War Command – went on to meet his match in Toormore in the Group 1 National Stakes over seven furlongs next time. A return to six is likely to be in his favour now and he lines up boasting the best form.

Hot Streak was a flashy winner of the Group 2 Cornwallis at Ascot last week although, unlike several rivals, was perfectly positioned to strike throughout the race. The form is only ordinary (third Kickboxer well beaten in the nursery at York on Friday) and threatens to be misleading at this level.

Astaire can come out best of the home team, but the inescapable conclusion here is that one of the Irish will prevail. Those backing Great White Eagle row in with potential over solidity in the shape of form horse – at least going into the race – Sudirman.

3.10: A field of six for the Dewhurst is a bit of a disappointment but War Command and Outstrip represent two powerful stables and come to the table with serious claims.

Coventry Stakes winner War Command was a little below-par when reappearing next time at the Curragh (beaten by Sudirman over six), but made no mistake shifted up to seven next time, looking an entirely different proposition. He comfortably asserted his authority in a Group 2 at the Curragh last time with a killer kick of speed and looks top class over this trip. He will be hard to beat.

Outstrip lines up as the biggest and only danger in what appears a two-horse contest. War Command gets a confident nod.

3.50: Built like a proverbial tank, Pallasator looks capable of humping a big weight to mean effect here. He should overturn Haydock form with Platinum from the same mark. Lightly raced (just the one run this year) he has the look of a horse targeted at this end-of-season prize from his shrewd handler.

Tiger Cliff faces a 6lbs rise for his Ebor win, but, to an extent, he has already landed the big race and more is required from top weight.

Smoky Hill is apparently fancied on the back of his fourth to Domeside in the Group 3 Prix Gladiateur last month. Literal translation of that run means he is potentially well treated from his present mark of 91. The possible chink in his armour is the trip, as the Gladiateur is over 1m 7f. He has to prove he stays this extra three furlongs, which is not a given on breeding.

Pallasator may be the safest option.

4.25: Lightning Thunder presented a persistent challenge to the highly regarded Miss France in the Oh So Sharp last time and sets the standard for this. She is a likeable and game filly that has progressed with each run so far. Lustrous, fourth in the May Hill on only her second outing, improved from her Salisbury debut at Doncaster and any further advancement would mean she is a big danger.

4.55: Here we have what promises to be another informative juvenile event with God Willing, Kingston Hill and Mount Logan representing the progressive contingent, whilst Oklahoma City and Pupil line up with undeniable cast-iron form claims. Untangling the likely outcome seems too knotty at present.

5.25: The Group 3 Darley Stakes sets the seal on the day. Plenty line up, although, realistically, very few warrant serious consideration.

Once again, the O’Brien camp fields the one to beat in Afonso De Sousa – a three-year-old that has mixed it with some big names in Ireland. This trip should bring out the best in him.

Kassiano ran like a non-stayer at Newbury in soft ground last time and it would be unwise to dismiss his chance back over a more suitable trip and on better ground.

York offers the hurly burly of tight competitive handicaps – most of which look too hard from a punting perspective. The exception could be the 2.55 – another hot juvenile contest.

Mushir comes here in preference to the Middle Park after a last-gasp debut win at Kempton consolidated a tall home reputation.

Of similar profile is Outer Space, who shaped as if this six furlongs would suit when finishing strongly last Saturday to snatch second in a below standard Cornwallis. That was a much-improved effort that was not a surprise judging by the betting, meaning he could easily win this. He does face serious opposition though.

Betting opportunities on the day are courtesy of Mr Aidan O’ Brien.

DARWIN appeals as the best prospect in Newmarket’s opener at 2.05.

It is tempting to think the stable may have a first and last race double with AFONSO DE SOUSA representing the final leg it. He looks a likely winner of the 5.25.

In between, WAR COMMAND is hard to oppose in the Dewhurst and Great White Eagle could easily supply a four-timer, although facing a strong rival in Sudirman, he may be the weakest link in an otherwise very strong chain.

PALLASATOR is a sporting selection in the Cesarewitch.


 

SUNDAY OCTOBER 6TH

12.45: Don’t fancy Jwala – feel it was a fluke last time. Chances for Maarek (possibly better over six) on ground he likes, also Dutch Masterpiece and Reckless Abandon (unproven on ground), whilst Ballesteros goes on soft. Too many possibilities.
1.55: Forget Wilshire Boulevard – ground is against him. One of the French should win this – question is, which one?
4.40: Don’t fancy Gordon Lord Byron here, surely outclassed byMoonlight Cloud and the progressive Viztoria over this seven furlongs. Could see Garswood running well at a price.


 

SATURDAY OCTOBER 5TH

If it’s the first weekend in October it must be Prix De L’Arc De Triomphe weekend. It is a cracking contest again this year, likely to be run on soft ground. Although it is possible to fancy a couple of horses at the two-day Longchamp meeting, at this stage it may pay to hold fire until we know how it rides. Saturday’s card will be informative – any late news or views to be posted on Sunday.

Closer to home, it appears as if there may be a few opportunities for us on Saturday.

We can start at Ascot where Hot Streak and Extortionist are the ones to beat in the 2.05 Group 3 Cornwallis.

Hot Streak was third in the Mill Reef last time and previously a winner of a listed event at York, but both runs may flatter to a degree.

A line through Supplicant gives the edge to Windsor Castle winner Extortionist, who ran well enough in the Flying Childers last time and has proven experience at this level. He is also suited by five furlongs.

It is possible one of the unexposed contingent may punch a hole in what appears solid form here, but Extortionist is preferred to Hot Streak and given preference in what looks like a sub-standard event.

2.40: The combination of a step up to 1m 4f and rain-softened ground will suit Gatewood after a satisfactory return to action in the UK when a staying-on second to Out Of Bounds at Doncaster.

Royal Empire will have his supporters but the 3lbs penalty proved his undoing last time at Kempton so he remains vulnerable now.

The very likeable Gospel Choir is undoubtedly worth his place in this company but does have to make the transition from handicap company.

The St Leger sixth, Secret Number is yet to win on turf, victories having come at Kempton and Meydan. So far he has run well in Group company without winning and it may be a similar story now.

Mijhaar and Repeater look a moody pair of customers; whereas Gatewood is a solid and consistent contender that ticks plenty of boxes in this company.

3.15: Race conditions suit Soul here who posted a promising effort last time in the Haydock Sprint when fifth to Gordon Lord Byron. A dangerous contender in such company, he relishes easy ground (crucial for his chances) and his proven soft ground record combined with the 4lbs he receives from Heeraat means he has a clear shot here. Again, this is a race long on numbers but short on quality.

At Newmarket, Oklahoma City is handed a real opportunity in the valuable sales race at 2.20. Second to high-profile stablemates, Wilshire Boulevard in July and Geoffrey Chaucer last week, both at the Curragh over, first 6f then a mile, this trip of seven should be ideal. So far he has only encountered decent ground, so any change in the Newmarket surface might be cause for concern.

Assuming conditions remain as they are today, we are looking at four solid and reasonably priced contenders on the day. As things stand, the suggestion is to shuffle them around in a multiple bet of some sort, as they should all be knocking at the door. OKLAHOMA CITY may represent our best chance followed by GATEWOOD and the other two.


 

FRIDAY OCTOBER 4TH:

ASCOT

 

2.30:

From a pound lower mark, Gworn will be many people’s idea of the most likely winner here following his recent second to subsequent winner Ennistown at Haydock. A return to a mile should be in his favour, making him the one to aim at.

Emilio Largo has put a couple of promising runs together of late – most notably last time at Kempton when only four lengths behind Graphic in a competitive handicap. That is strong form, boosted by the runs of both Graphic and Seek Again in Saturday’s Cambridgeshire. Not the sort of horse to provide collateral at the bank, Emilio Largo shapes as if he is coming to hand, races from a handy mark and turns out in a race that has cut up since the five-day stage. He is worth chancing.

3.05:

As befits a Class 2 handicap over six furlongs confined to three-year-olds that has attracted eighteen runners, plenty of questions surround this event.

Twice-raced Blessington was last seen in July 2012 at Goodwood when winning a maiden that contained Garswood among others. His mark of 85 is a bit of a guess this far down the line, as is the absence.

Recently gelded Breton Rock is a winner of three out of his five races and looks progressive. However, a return to six furlongs is not guaranteed to be ideal, although a 5lb weight rise for his latest success is not prohibitive.

We are entering the time of year when finding well-handicapped horses is something of a rarity, but Normal Equilibrium does look well in, particularly when taking into account the 5lbs claim of his excellent young rider, Oisin Murphy. So far so good – he can be fancied here at what is likely to be an attractive price. Here comes the punch line: his two wins have been at five furlongs; although his ventures over today’s six suggest he should be equally effective over this trip, particularly if delivered late and played for speed.

Can You Conga is uncomplicated but although on the upgrade needs a personal best to win.

3.40:

A strong Irish challenge has to be taken seriously here – Dabadiyan and Dark Crusader fielding excellent claims. After a good second last time to subsequent Group 3 winner Camborne at Doncaster, Shwainan may come out best of the home-trained contingent, especially over what threatens to be his ideal trip.

4.15:

Two miles seems to suit the in-form Man Of Plenty who, although hardly well handicapped, faces rivals of a similar level from a handicapping perspective and may just get away with this.

Stand by for a going change and non-runners aplenty at Ascot on Friday.

However, unless it turns into the Somme, small stakes are advised on EMILIO LARGO and NORMAL EQUILIBRIUM, both of whom will have the advantage of racing on the sand-based straight course that should not be too affected by overnight rain.


 

SATURDAY TIPS

 SEPTEMBER 28th

(posted Friday midday)

It’s a big day at Newmarket, kicking off with the Group 2 Royal Lodge Stakes at 2.00, which sees the return to action of Chesham winner Berkshire. Absent since Royal Ascot, Berkshire was impressive at Ascot but needs to regain the threads here, particularly against Somewhat who looks a big danger judged on his latest win at Newbury from subsequent Doncaster scorer Be Ready.

2.35:

Vorda has clear form claims for the Group 1 Cheveley Park having suffered her only defeat in the Prix Morny when second to No Nay Never. On a tenuous line through Rizeena, Kiyoshi has a bit to find with her. Her tendency to drift one way or another may complicate things further across the expanse of Newmarket Heath.

Winner of a maiden at Cork and a Listed at the Curragh, Come To Heel could be anything but faces a stiff test here.

Vorda is the likely winner but backing horses that travel from France at short prices is not always rewarding. Perhaps we should let her win.

3.10:

Sky Lantern has been on the go since April, making it a long season as she lines up for this her sixth race of the year nearly six months on. If she is in the sort of form we saw at Newmarket in the spring and at Royal Ascot in June, she will probably win – something her price already assumes.

The rematch with Elusive Kate adds extra interest to this Group 1.

Rewind the clock to May and the 1,000 Guineas, and Just The Judge could be fancied to reverse that form with Sky Lantern; but, with the exception of her win in the Irish equivalent, it seems fair to say she has not gone on since.

In contrast, Integral is a much-improved filly that has the advantage of having come to hand at this late stage of the season. Whatever excuses are forwarded for apparently luckless Sky Lantern at Goodwood in the Nassau, the fact remains Integral was only a length behind her then and has probably improved beyond that run since. Having won her three other races (value for more than a dead-heat last time at Sandown) this could be her day to collect a big race.

3.50:

Not a race on which to dwell. From a stable with a proven record in this huge backend handicap, Seek Again has always appealed as a likely type to me.

Second to the very useful Van Der Neer as a juvenile, he created a favourable impression when opening his account for the season in August. Honourable efforts in defeat at Kempton since means a mark of 98 is feasible; but a return to turf and this extra furlong will need to be instrumental in the improvement required in order for him to win this.

He is a sporting wager from this quarter, if only because I have no wish to watch him win a race unbacked which I always thought was on his radar screen. However, I am not sure that is sufficient cause to recommend his claims to others!

At Haydock, Ehtifaal took the eye when fourth to God Willing at Newbury. He faces several types with a similar profile here but that Newbury maiden represented strong form and he is the one to beat.

Bets on the day:

Integral is worth a shot in the Sun Chariot at 3.10. Obviously she is no good thing, but she looks temptingly overpriced.

Ehtifaal ought to repay support at Haydock.


 

NEWMARKET RACES

FRIDAY SEPT 27TH

(Posted Thursday afternoon)

1.40:

Perm any one from three fillies with varied profiles for this:

Firstly, the visually impressive Radiator, a winner by fifteen lengths at Lingfield last time when she beat little of substance but did so in taking style. She is a very attractive daughter of Dubawi that came to Goodwood on debut with a big reputation and could be poised to take major honours next year.

At this stage, arguably the filly with the best form is Lightning Thunder who, in a tight finish, beat the colts last time at Newbury, edging out Justice Day and Expert in a tight finish.

The claims of Stealth Missile should not be under-estimated after she also beat colts at Ascot last time, including easy Wednesday Goodwood winner Fracking. Radiator makes no appeal at the price but her rivals may not be quite in her league.

2.40:

After a lack-lustre effort at Haydock in very soft ground last time, a revitalised Montiridge would present a serious challenge to Soft Falling Rain, whose debut in this country when second in the Hungerford from a penalty, served notice he is likely to prove hard to beat in events such as this.

Penitent is reliant on soft ground to make an impact at this level, whilst Premio Loco is likely to struggle as is Boom And Bust.

But Guest Of Honour and Glory Awaits (held by Montiridge but ran the race of his life in the Guineas over this track in May), cannot be safely dismissed.

3.15:

Ihtimal was a ready winner of the May Hill at Doncaster and looks a filly at the top of her game at present. Not over big but very powerful, her Doncaster form received a major boost when Lady Lara won last Saturday at Newbury. Her presence will ensure Rizeena does not get things all her own way; whatever happens next year, she has a serious shot at Group 1 success now.

Rizeena has won four of her seven races, losing no caste in defeat in France when third to No Nay Never in the Prix Morny; however, her other two defeats did come over the undulations of Newmarket – one of those on the July course. That may be a coincidence, but her defeat from a penalty in the Cherry Hinton represented a dip in her overall form and it is just possible this type of track does not show her to best advantage. At present it is tempting to nominate Ihtimal as not only a serious danger, but possibly the most likely winner.

3.50:

Yuften sets a high standard in the maiden after a run bursting with promise at Newbury when second to the useful Barley Mow. Noticeably tenderly handled, with that run behind him, it will take a smart newcomer to lower his colours.

4.25:

Gatewood probably just needed his reappearance run at Doncaster when narrowly failing to overhaul Out Of Bounds. He has every chance of making amends here but is priced accordingly and will presumably not have his favoured easy surface.

Yuften appears the safest option on the day.

Ihtimal is seen as a tempting alternative to Rizeena in the Cheveley Park.


 

BACK IN BUSINESS AT

NEWMARKET

(Posted Wednesday evening for Thursday racing)

For many, Newmarket starts the Flat season proper with their Craven meeting in the spring and at this, the other end of the season, they are instrumental in its winding down. With the big juvenile events including the Dewhurst to come, headquarters does not succumb with a whimper.

The Somerville Tattersall Stakes (Group 3) at 3.40 on Thursday is the first of many such races due to be staged over the coming six weeks.

It also appears to present us with a real chance as God Willing appeals as an attractive betting proposition. This son of Arch created a big impression when winning at Newbury on debut in a race that has consistently proved its worth, supplying three individual winners of four races.

To get any negative aspect out of the way, runner-up, Raise Your Gaze disappointed next time at Leicester; however, fancied by connections, that run was almost certainly too bad to be true.

Getting back to Newbury, third horse What About Carlo was certainly not disgraced in the Haynes, Hanson and Clark last week and literal translation of that run puts God Willing at a similar level to Racing Post contender Pinzolo.

There is every reason to assume highly regarded God Willing will improve beyond simple weight and measures. He gets his chance in better company now in what appears to be an ideal race for a potential top class colt starting his ascension of the ranks. He is likely to be overpriced in the morning betting.

On the subject of juveniles, before its running, what we have in the opening event is an assembly of unraced horseflesh collectively capable of greatly reducing the national debt.

Colts by top stallions New Approach, Mastercraftsman, Dansili, Azamour and Duke Of Marmalade will be under scrutiny as they step into the parade ring for the first time.

None will be more eagerly awaited than Touch The Sky, trained by Mrs Cecil and by Sea The Stars out of Oaks winner Love Divine. This is surely an event that should fall to a newcomer and one from which much can be gleaned.

WEDNESDAY 24 September

(Posted Tuesday)

Advance NOTES)

Goodwood Racing

2.00:

Travis Bickle shaped well enough on turf at Lingfield last time when closing through the pack to finish second to Outback Traveller over six furlongs. That run suggests he should pick up a maiden.

Unfortunately, this may not be it. The inclusion of several high profile newcomers threaten to make this a hot event.

In particular, Sir Michael Stoute’s representatives look potential threats. Chief of these is possibly Derby entrant Arbaab, whilst stablemates Matravers and Idea have attractive pedigrees.

High Master, apparently by-passed by Richard Hughes in favour of Travis Bickle, may improve for the run.

Film buffs will recognise the name of Travis Bickle. If you are “looking at him; you, looking at me!” best you keep a similar watch on the market.

2.30:

On a day when selections carry a fair degree of complication, Double Bluff may present the best option. After a highly promising debut when second to Pupil at Doncaster, this stoutly-bred relative to Double Trigger and Double Eclipse should relish this extended trip and lays the best credentials on the line.

3.40:

The inclusion of Goodwood Cup winner Brown Panther in this event run over just short of 1m2f is something of a surprise. Although a winner over a 1m 4f in lesser company, his penalty, allied to the opposition he faces, make him a very unlikely winner.

On the face of it, this appears to present Grandeur – now stripped of his penalty – with a cast-iron opportunity. A course winner, he is unquestionably best on a firm surface. He would not want this surface to be any worse than good.

Now with the capable Marco Botti, a fit and well Sugar Boy would be feared on early season form – although fast ground would possibly count against him…

4.15:

With the ground drying out by the hour, despite an eye-catching return over this track in August, Sweet Deal’s preference for soft ground may preclude his chance in this handicap. Chances are his trainer – who wants firm ground for Grandeur – has only entered Sweet Deal as a precaution against the start of the next forty-days and forty-nights. He is highly likely to save Sweet Deal for a more realistic opportunity.

Kempton Racing

5.55:

Jazz reverts to maiden company but runs slap bang into two serious dangers in Middle Park entrant Mushir (said to be useful) and Almargo who is open to improvement for the dreaded Boys In Blue.

Anyone for golf?


 

SATURDAY SEPTEMBER 21st

With so much racing, it is easy to go overboard – just what they want you to do!

At the moment three take the eye:

Let us start at Newbury, where Meteoroid looks potentially well-treated from a mark of 79 in the nursery at 4.05.

At Newmarket, Criteria is taken to progress from a highly promising debut at Goodwood in a warm maiden at 1.55. She looks a decent filly in the making.

William Hill et al are obviously excited beyond belief by the card at Ayr. Soft ground that is drying out and big field handicaps are what their management team dream of in the depths of night.

However, in the 2.40 Yeeoow does present us with an angle of advantage. Third behind Sir Reginald last week at Doncaster in a strong event, allowing for his capable rider’s 5lb allowance, he meets the winner on 7lbs better terms today and has the all-important advantage of a plum draw. Worth a shot in the dark…


 

Friday 20th Sept.

A Tongue in cheek Preview of Newbury and Ayr Racing Tomorrow

 LEAVE IT OUT JOHN…

Anyone can go through cards and talk the talk, hiding behind a hundred selections. The question we all really need answering is: Can I pull up my money?

This in an attempt to find out:

Newbury: 1.30: By this track’s standards, this is a poor maiden. It is hard to be enthusiastic about those that have run and the unraced look potentially ordinary.

Only the representatives from the Cox and Perrett yards – Strategic Force and Excedo Praecedo – make any appeal on paper. As neither yard is particularly synonymous with debutant winners, this race remains something of a mystery at present.

2.00: The second division looks equally uninspiring. Those that have run look moderate at best. It could pay to concentrate on Dark Leopard and Cape Wrath, both of whom have attractive pedigrees and come from powerful yards.

The question remains which way one should lean and, of course, backing a horse you have never seen – and in the flesh turns out to be brown-and-white and suitable to pull a milk float or tow a barge – is never the best of ideas.

2.30: Goodwood Mirage looks likely to handle this step up in trip to 1m 4f (although that has to be confirmed on the racecourse) and is proven on the easy ground. His saddle slipped last time at Ascot so that run can be ignored. A likely winner but hardly well in off 94.

3.05: The next puzzle masquerades as the Class 3 Conditions that is the Dubai Duty Free run over the odd trip of nine furlongs. This is not the only oddity surrounding an event that contains a compliment returning from the dead.

First in the spotlight is last year’s Dante winner Bonfire, now gelded and looking more like a possible for Cheltenham in March than a likely winner on the Flat at Newbury in September.

Questioning looks well named, as does the so-far under-achiever known as Tales Of Grimm (at least if pronounced phonetically), who returns to the track with a new trainer after having finished fifth in the Diomed at Epsom when last seen.

Highest-rated French Navy is probably the safest selection if those two words apply to a Godolphin inmate that comes  and goes with the rising and waning of a full-moon.

Add Mujazif to this Macbeth brew constructed for the perverse and you have a race so full of questions, Jeremy Paxman should present it.

3.40: Pupil looked useful and progressive at Doncaster last week, although he took his time to find stride. Supporters will be hoping that was greenness rather than a worrying trait. That win was a step up on his debut here when he disappointed connections in a high-class maiden won by God Willing in which What About Carlo was third.

Pinzolo is hard to assess, but on the face of it has it to do after winning a nondescript Newmarket maiden.

After two promising runs, the unpenalised and Racing Post entry Red Galileo looks ready for this extra yardage.

Having won his maiden at Goodwood, What About Carlo is another that escapes a 3lbs penalty.

A word here to Eve Johnson Houghton: when you have a horse as well treated as What About Carlo appears to be (rated 79) it is advisable to exploit that rating in a nursery before sabotaging it in a race of this nature. Finish last here and unless you are tailed-off, the assessor will take note, leaving you with a horse in no man’s land.

Okay, anyone can shoot off their mouth! I will put myself where mine is: If What About Carlo wins this, then Eve knows so much more about this game than I do that I ought to retire and become her butler free of charge. As a precursor to this new position, I am prepared to offer my services as her naked butler for a day. I am not sure who will benefit most from this offer, or laugh the loudest, but in the belief I shall not need to find out, I make it in good faith!

The well-bred Observational will need to be ultra-smart to take this first time up.

4.15: Lady Lara has earned a high rating after runs in defeat that possibly read better that they were. Ihtimal easily dismissed her last week in the Park Hill and Lady Lara is unlikely to open her account in this.

Fashion Fund’s third to Summer Lightning here is hard to evaluate as the race is sending out mixed messages.

Water Queen is an interesting debutant that, like Observational in the preceding event, will need to be above average to open her account in such company. Despite the penalty, Rosehill Artist may be the one to beat.

4.50: Magic City is on a roll at present. He faces a hike in class against some fragile opponents, namely serial-loser Tawhid, and may be the safest option. The fact remains; this represents his stiffest task to date.

Ayr: 1.20: Well-fancied on his debut in York’s Convivial Stakes, although unable to get to grips with Golden Town there, Derbyshire looked the part. In less testing company, it is tempting to think this well-entered son of the American stallion Green Tune is worth another chance to show his true ability. However, most American-breds excel on fast ground – something he is unlikely to encounter here unless a squadron of helicopters form a nightly fly-past.

1.50: Long on numbers, this nursery may be short on quality. Makin The Rules runs here off the same mark as when second in a competitive event at York. From a handicapping perspective, he must have every chance against ragtag and bobtail opponents. However, the decision to run a Lawman colt over six furlongs when he was running-on over seven last time takes some fathoming.

Newcastle: 2.10: Volume looks the sort to capitalise on a highly promising debut at Newmarket against what appears lesser opposition. Her third to Enraptured was endorsed on Wednesday night when runner-up Psychometry and close up sixth Dancing Sands fought out the finish of a maiden at Kempton. She ought to be good enough, but, and I hate to mention this folks, she is ridden by a girl. Report me for sexism, but it’s my money – so I’m out!

3.50: Moral Issue looks well-treated running off a 6lb penalty for an easy win at Beverley ten days ago. There is a question mark hanging over that form and about this son of Ishiguru handling ground with the word ‘Soft’ in its description.

So, what about bets on the day?

My response is to wonder whether this is an initiative test to enter MI6.

My shortlist is Goodwood Mirage, Pupil or Red Galileo and Derbyshire.

Bets? At this stage: Leave it out John…


 

BORIS GRIGORIEV TO PAINT AYR RED…

AYR Racing Tips

THURSDAY SEPTEMBER 19TH

Today we are in a Las Vegas casino. The bad news is they no longer supply Budweiser on tap, nor food on request. Therefore it is a case of either gawping at fellow gamblers or getting involved in the action. We either play or pass.

As you have reached this far, I assume it is your intention to play. Therefore I suggest spinning the wheel in the 2.40 Ayr where Boris Grigoriev runs from a 20lbs lower mark than when last effective.

There seems little point in documenting previous achievements he almost certainly is no longer capable of matching: suffice to say that a mark of 67 puts him ‘down among the dead men’, especially considering last year he ran to a mark in the high 80s when five lengths behind The Cheka at Doncaster.

Closely weighted with Go Go Green on their running here in August – Boris Grigoriev’s first of the year – it seems reasonable to expect a modicum of improvement on that now.

Disregard his attempts at seven furlongs and a mile, as this horse is a sprinter and returns to his best trip here. His trainer is adept at getting animals such as he well handicapped, which could be the case in this instance.

Boris Grigoriev may be a risky proposition – in truth, his claim is about as watertight as the Costa Concordia – but that remark applies across the cards today and he is seen as worthy of a small wager at a price whilst waiting for the jackpot to fall.


 

DONCASTER RACING TIPS

SATURDAY SEPTEMBER 14th:

2.05:

Doncaster’s big day kicks off with the Group 2 Champagne Stakes, where The Grey Gatsby is taken to come out on top in a tight contest. He is confidently expected to overturn Acomb form with Treaty Of Paris and should account for penalised Anjaal.

A bigger danger is provided by Outstrip, who is arguably the form pick after narrow defeat in the Vintage Stakes at Goodwood.

However, The Grey Gatsby looked inconvenienced by rattling fast ground at York and still nearly overhauled Treaty Of Paris there despite losing his action two out. Today’s conditions will suit.

3.15:

Given conditions appear ideal, Gregorian is a tempting proposition here. Although there is little between him and Aljamaaheer on form, that rival is unquestionably a better horse on fast ground – something denied to him here. After a decent win at Newbury last time, Gregorian can follow up.

3.50:

Excess Knowledge has been a selection for this for some time and carries a fair degree of stable confidence. His unlucky passage in the Gordon Stakes has been well documented – although, to be frank, the form could have worked out better. His run at Sandown over an inadequate 1m 2f against the useful Mandour, Afsare and David Livingston remains the best piece of overall form on offer, giving him every chance now.

Derby form looks decidedly wobbly and those representing it – Galileo Rock and Libertarian – are overlooked for that reason.

Similarly, Talent’s Oaks win leaves her something to find.

Proven stayer Leading Light is greatly feared. The fact he is given stable precedence over Foundry – who ran so well in the Voltigeur behind Telescope – speaks volumes.

5.00:

Showpiece is raised a very reasonable 6lbs for his Salisbury win over Captain Bob last time. He will be even more effective on this flat galloping track and his overall form reads well, giving him every chance from a handicapping prospective. The step up to a mile for a sprint-bred son of Kyllachy could be a worry.

There are no such worries for What About Carlo who like Showpiece could have sneaked in under the razor wire from a mark of 79. Proven over this trip and on this ground -What About Carlo was an excellent third to God Willing in a maiden at Newbury that looked good at the time and has worked out accordingly.

These are the two runners that make most appeal in the race and we suggest backing What About Carlo and saving on Showpiece.

In Ireland, at the Curragh, mention ought to be made of Alive Alive Oh who runs in the 3.35 Group 2 Blandford Stakes.

Said to be the best filly in Ireland by those purporting to know, they have waited for this ground and she is taken to get the better of Hot Snap.

The day’s bets:

This is not cut and dried. Notebook horses Excess Knowledge and Showpiece have every chance in their respective races, but with a clear line of vision, both face stiff tasks.

As stated, Leading Light and What About Carlo are much feared and, being honest, preferred as they seem more likely to run excuse-free races. At this point in time we suggest the following:

4 each-way doubles:

3.50: Excess Knowledge – Leading Light

                xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx

5.00: What About Carlo – Showpiece. 

The place part of the bet should pay for the wager.

What About Carlo could be potentially overpriced in the morning and is worth a single bet at morning odds.

The Grey Gatsby, Gregorian and Alive Alive Oh are seen as solid candidates in their events.


 

DONCASTER RACES

FRIDAY SEPTEMBER 13TH

Punters might like to take note of the date before reaching for their wallets today.

However, whilst advising caution, there are three races that might benefit from closer inspection.

1.40: Ambiance lines up here with arguably the best form to his credit.

His latest run in the Group 1 Phoenix Stakes at the Curragh was over six – which may not be his best trip. Even so, a four length fourth of five behind Sudirman is on a par with earlier runs behind Brown Sugar at Goodwood, Vorda in the Robert Papin and No Nay Never in the Norfolk. He warrants serious consideration back to five.

It would be remiss of me not to mention the negative side of any argument for him: namely that this will be his eighth attempt of the season and that, let’s face it, he comes from a stable that is hardly renowned for consistency.

Nevertheless, with Windfire’s third in the Lowther looking decidedly dubious, Ambiance is a tentative value alternative. If he is to win something of this nature, this is his chance to do so.

2.40: Last year’s winner and an autumn campaigner, Times Up, shaped well enough in the Yorkshire Cup last month but at the age of seven is surely vulnerable.

High Jinx has been absent since May and was twice beaten by Times Up last year (including in this race).

On the assumption Biographer needed the run when easy to back and behind Royal Empire at Newbury last month, it may pay to give him the benefit of any doubt here. He has a bit to find but should be effective on the ground and over the trip and has always shaped like a possible Cup horse.

3.50: This Listed contest should rest between Be Ready and Barley Mow, both of whom come here after promising efforts at Newbury. There may not be much between them now.

Whereas Barley Mow opened his account with a spirited victory, Be Ready, out of his depth on debut, lined up for the Washington Singer with a lofty reputation and performed with credit.

What we know about these two is that Barley Mow can put his head down and race, whilst Be Ready looks more of a galloper.

With both racing over the same course and distance (different days though) the clock suggests Barley Mow may be the quicker of the two.

Highly regarded at home, he represents a touch of value against the Godolphin talking horse – said to be their best two-year-old.

This is not a day for fearless betting. There are no stand-outs, but it may pay to back the three horses mentioned in a small multiple bet of some sort.


 

DONCASTER ST LEGER MEETING

Wednesday 11 Sept

2.00: On a day when there are no easy solutions, JAZZ represents our best chance in this nursery. Twice noted achieving his best work in the closing stages of six-furlong handicaps, this step up to seven should suit and he seems feasibly rated from an unchanged mark of 83.

3.00: With comparative youth on his side, Justineo may be good enough here, especially as his stable has hit such a rich vein of form in recent weeks.

4.10: Thank you so much! This tough and tight little event poses plenty of questions.

Returning to the John Gosden stable after a period in Australia, – a fit and ready to run Gatewood would be the form selection back over his optimum trip. In great form, his yard is unlikely to waste such an opportunity so late in the season by leaving a horse short.

Another returning to his best trip is Elkaayed, whose run in the Gordon Stakes can be overlooked as he failed to stay. His form does leave him with something to find, but the Varian yard are in flying form so he is dangerous to dismiss.

No race of this nature would be complete without a Godolphin presence – this time the equation is complicated by the unwilling Ocean War and Out Of Bounds, who was last seen in Dubai early in March. One for the boys at Bletchley Park to solve!

We should know our fate early – JAZZ is the sole selection on the day.


SATURDAY SEPTEMBER 7th

(Racing Preview posted at 3pm Friday)

Haydock Racing

2.40:

A 4lbs penalty looks unlikely to prevent the progressive Montiridge (who is proven on the ground, although it may not be ideal) from taking another stride towards a higher level in this Group 3. His price tempers enthusiasm.

3.50: By Dark Angel, Lethal Force is effective in the soft but such a surface is likely to blunt his speed. If he runs, he is sure to be a market drifter. Current conditions look sure to suit Garswood better. He does need to improve but is a selection in view of likely conditions.

Kempton Racing

2.55:

This is a tight handicap but on juvenile form and despite a defeat over course and distance at the end of August when tackling older company for the first time, Seek Again will be hard to beat. Well drawn, he should reverse places with Ehtedaam and confirm with Maverick. He remains a bright prospect.

Of the rest, at a price and back to a winning mark, the tricky Emilio Largo may attract morning support and go well.

Ascot Racing

Ascot looks tough.

At present we appear dependent on the intervention of the Racing Fairy to change its complexity.

Leopardstown Races

A glossy card where, in the 5.15, Free Eagle steps up to Group 3 company – a test, which, judged on his impressive debut and lofty home reputation, he should pass.

6.50:

Red Mills Irish Champion Stakes: A re-run of the Juddmonte International with the first three from York, Declaration Of War, Al Kazeem and Trading Leather joined by The Fugue.

Declaration Of War may be peaking now and therefore is likely to come out on top again, although the inclusion of one-time Derby favourite Kingsbarns adds another ingredient.

Racing Summary

With the ground threatening to play too big a part in proceedings at Haydock and the card at Ascot looking too difficult, in the 2.55 Kempton: Seek Again – with a small morning saver on Emilio Largo – is the day’s suggestion.


GOODWOOD RACES : SEPTEMBER 3rd

It is Goodwood in the sunshine tomorrow with some good racing to match the last of the Pimm’s and those elderflower gins the course is becoming famous for.

Tea In Transvaal will be popular to get off the mark in the 2.55.

However, her Newbury second to Lightning Thunder took something of a knock on Saturday when the fourth from that event – Sound Of Summer – failed to win at Beverley.

Tinga lines up with the best form but this will be run number five, giving rise to the possibility she may not be progressive.

The unraced John Gosden representative – the expensive and well-bred Criteria – could be dangerous.

4.05: Expert has a big chance against this opposition having faced stiffer rivals recently. Crucially he has form on the track – when not disgraced in the Vintage Stakes – and, although not overly generous, a mark of 91 in a run-of-the-mill nursery, means he should be the one to beat.

4.40: This two-mile handicap looks difficult, but then Broxbourne makes any handicap look tricky. Up 5lbs since that win at York, she is an expert at confounding weights and measures and it would seem silly to jump ship now. She is a course winner (counts for a lot here) and should confirm her indolent York placing with Mawaqeet on a 1lbs worse terms. Her big strength is the ability to stay further and whatever her fate here, she remains of interest in the Cesarewitch.

Argent Knight, Waterclock and the unreliable but well-handicapped Martin Chuzzlewit enter calculations, but the biggest threat is likely to come from Mutual Regard, who has a real chance at the weights with Broxbourne on what may be a deceptive line through Homeric.

Wahaab in the 3.30 and Clear Praise in the 5.10 are other possibilities on the day.

Expert is nominated as our best chance.


 

SATURDAY AUGUST 31st

We arrive at the last day of the month; many claim it to be the last official day of summer. It has been a quiet racing week – a week where most of the action has centred on Westminster.

Here, Messrs Cameron and Hague (Officer Dibble and Dangermouse) managed to achieve what should have been unachievable. In racing parlance, they got Frankel beat.

Despite overwhelming odds in their favour, between them they upset the political applecart when trying to convince a sceptical public it was a good idea to chuck a few missiles at Syria. That just leaves the French and the Americans to believe in such a strategy.

However, as I write, one gets the feeling the French are wavering and the Americans beginning to wonder. Far from being the shrinking violet in all this, although the Italians and the Germans amongst others have quietly dismissed this policy, it is possible the UK will lead the world in perceived logic. It is a shame from the PM’s and Foreign Secretary’s perspective that such thinking originated from the silent majority rather than the so-called clever men at the seat of power, which, incredible though it may be, in their ignorance they seemed to believe they were.

So it is back to the drawing board. Since being in office, Mr Cameron has experienced more u-turns than the contents of a Harpic container. Perhaps he should concentrate on actually running this country. If he is hungry for a skirmish, he could always try squaring up to the Spanish over Gibraltar.

There is no Frankel to beat this Saturday. Possibly the promising Kingman comes closest in betting terms in the Solario Stakes at 2.40 at Sandown. His opponents look below standard for this Group 3 and he created a favourable impression on debut at Newmarket. Already trading short, he should win, but perhaps it is wise to see him again before rushing to take cramped odds.

Lilyfire looks a serious contender in the nursery at 4.25. An attractive, strongly made American-bred daughter of First Defence that is well related, she won her maiden at Ascot in good style. She may have been a tad fortunate to hold Psychometry (who had to overcome a troubled passage), but the form is solid and it seems likely Lilyfire has more to offer. As a filly conceding weight all round, her supporters will be relying on her finding it. She promises to be better than her current mark of 80 suggests.

Sound Of Summer showed enough at Newbury on debut when a promising fourth to Lightning Thunder to attract interest at Beverley in 4.50. Her draw gives her every chance; she should know more now and can take advantage of a drop in class.

Elsewhere on the Yorkshire card, after tackling the Group 1 Nunthorpe last week, Wokingham winner York Glory returns to a more realistic level in the listed event at 2.30. His best form is at six furlongs, but he has every chance over this stiff five and from a favourable draw. That said, backing up so quickly after York, he does not add up to betting material.

At Chester, after two perfectly satisfactory efforts on this tricky track, New Fforest returns with a desirable draw and the benefit of her excellent rider’s claim to help her. No good thing, she is the one to beat in the 2.20.

Later on the card, My Painter may be a short price to win the maiden at 4.40. However, there is a doubt about the strength of the Newmarket event she finished fourth in and it may pay to let her run.

SOUND OF SUMMER and LILYFIRE represent the best opportunities at this stage. More later if the landscape changes.


 

YORK RACING PREVIEW – DAY FOUR

We come to one of those days when I shall be waking in the morning with added vigour. You know how it can be: some cards just haemorrhage winners. You don’t have to look – they just jump off the page.

Whether the day works out or not, at least I go into it with the right frame of mind. And there is always a cold beer and Jesse Stone at its end. Days like this get the blood pumping. That is good news for bookmakers who like days like this for different reasons.

To an extent, optimism drives this game. Deep down we all believe there will be one day that turns out to be a life-changer. That may be somewhat dramatic; and you could argue it will come when your back is turned. But it won’t come if you don’t play; today, I am a player.

2.05:

Cristoforo Colombo is the class act in this. He has his first run since finishing eight lengths fifth to Dawn Approach in the 2,000 Guineas. All signs point to him not having progressed from two to three, but his overall form should be good enough to see him take this.

At around 7/4 or possibly shorter, I am inclined to feel we can let him win.

2.40:

This is a tight handicap.

There is little between several of these, notably Havana Cooler, Van Percy, Debdebdeb and Great Hall.

However, getting weight pulls with the last two and with Ambleside, from a form perspective, Hawk High comes out best of the bunch. Versatile as regards ground and a consistent sort who will appreciate this return to 1m 6f, at around 16/1, he looks a value selection from his shrewd stable and in first time cheekpieces.

3.15:

Back to six furlongs after a muddling run at Goodwood where he appeared to falter on the track, Parbold narrowly gets the vote. Although it will not be straightforward, his excellent trainer has found the ideal event.

There is a good word for Cable Bay here. Apparently he has improved since Goodwood when beaten by Saayerr, who is now penalised and will struggle to confirm that form.

3.50:

The Ebor may not be the ideal race in which to strap on the betting boots, but within the constraints of this event I am particularly keen on Tiger Cliff.

He looks like the best bet of the day. He produced a big effort in the Ascot Stakes over a trip that almost certainly tested the upper limits of his stamina. Given plenty of time to recover from those exertions, this has always been his mid-summer target. This return to 1m 6f looks sure to suit and he remains unexposed at this level. A classy sort, despite a high draw he should go very well.

Allow me to say I have not gone looking for these bets, but the beauty about them is at these prices, there is no need to throw money at them.

My suggestion is to back Tiger Cliff in the Ebor and maybe roll the dice to an extent with a multiple bet on a couple of the other selections. Personally, I shall not let Hawk High or Parbold run unbacked.

For those of you preferring to stick to message horses, then Cable Bay and possibly Sheikhzayedroad (runs all the way to Abu Dhabi from Dubai) or Caravan Rolls On (again a desert connotation) would be your preferences.

Elsewhere, a couple of snippets that make the other cards interesting.

At Goodwood in the 2.55,Glen Moss has to have every chance of following up after a facile win last week at Newbury. The twelve draw may not be the best but it is not terminal and against that, he runs from a penalty of only 6lbs.

After an easy win over this trip at Salisbury where he proved he is not short of pace, Afsare looks primed to win the Celebration Mile.

However, last time he came here he refused to race and that is not ‘Tom Jones’ for him. He may be a reformed character at present, but on past evidence is not always the best of betting propositions.

At Newmarket, facing a host of expensive unraced juveniles,War Spirit might be worth another chance to show his true ability in the 2.10.

On debut at Goodwood it was muted he was in the premier division at team Hannon. Apparently he threw away his race in the paddock and it could be a different story now.


 

Morning update

OVERNIGHT RAIN SAVES DAY:

Overnight rain has changed the ground at York to good to soft.  Therefore a host of non-runners is avoided due to very quick conditions.

This ground has swung in the favour of Pavlosk – who can now be backed with some confidence in the 3.05 Strensall Stakes.  The worry that the ground may have scuppered her chances has now passed and the filly has every chance in this Group 3 contest.

She is not running unfancied …
Elsewhere at York, the ground should improve Simenon’s chances in the 2.30, where his main danger still appears to be Ahzeemah.

It should also ensure the Nunthorpe is a more competitive event with the obvious advantage of fast ground for Shea Shea now removed. He remains the one to beat.

In the Convivial at 4.20, there are positive messages for Red Galileo and for the debutant, Derbyshire.

This greatly tempers confidence for Golden Town who, slightly worryingly, wears a tongue tie today on only his second run. After such a promising debut, he may still win, but the sole bet from this quarter today is for the filly Pavlosk. She is likely to be the subject of support this morning.


Evening Preview …

YORK – DAY THREE

Lonsdale Cup (Group 2):

7/4         SIMENON

4            AHZEEMAH

9/2         CAUCUS

6            TIMES UP

12          COLOUR VISION

40          GLEN’S DIAMOND

50          ASKAR TAU

              100%

This may look easy enough on the face of it; however, as is so often the case when assessing staying races, not all may be as it appears.

Hugely consistent Simenon is the obvious selection without looking a good thing. Juice in the ground would aid his cause but he looks poised to run well.

Consistency seems to be Ahzeemah’s strong suit and his overall form suggests he presents the biggest threat.

Forget the run of Caucus in the Goodwood Cup – where he failed to act on the track – and on his Sandown win and his second to Estimate at Ascot, he is once again in the firing line.

Times Up peaked at this time last year (winning this, following up in the Doncaster Cup) but has offered little encouragement so far this term and will be tested in this field in any case;

Colour Vision has yet to recover the form he showed last year – notably when winning the Ascot Gold Cup – and is hard to fancy.


 Strensall Stakes (Group 3):

5/2         PAVLOSK

3            ARCHBISHOP

5            CITY STYLE

8            GABRIAL

12          DANADANA

16          ROBIN HOODS BAY

20          RED AVENGER

              100%

With a drop of overnight rain, Pavlosk would be a 2/1 chance and worth backing. She took the eye at Goodwood over an inadequate seven furlongs last time and will relish this step up in trip. A winner at Newbury in April on good to soft, then here in May in the soft, she was outclassed but not disgraced by Sky Lantern in the Coronation at Ascot and served notice last time that a return to winning ways was imminent. She is at her best with juice in the ground, so it is a case of keeping an eye skyward before deciding whether to bet. If conditions fail to favour her here, she is worth bearing in mind for an autumn campaign.

Archbishop looks the biggest danger on his excellent Goodwood form when dead-heating with Trumpet Major and finishing marginally in front of high class Aljamaaheer last year. Not seen since running in Istanbul last September, a question mark hangs over him. For reasons expressed, it is entirely possible there will be weakness in the front two in the market. Therefore, a move for anything else should not come as a surprise.

Nunthorpe Stakes (Group 1):

Plenty of contenders here have tried their luck at this grade without actually getting their heads in front.

With scant Group 1 form to call upon, back to the minimum trip on their preferred fast surface and on prevailing conditions, it is hard to steer away from Shea Shea and Sole Power.

These globetrotters are highly capable in this grade, Shea Shea having a narrow advantage on form.

Moviesta attempts to step up from a Group 2 victory at Goodwood and needs to pull out more in this company. However, with the other two drawn on the far side, taking the flimsy evidence of the draw that is available at this meeting so far, he may find himself best berthed to attack under the stand rail. Unless there is a marked change in the ground, the winner should come from these three with Shea Shea holding the call.

Convivial Stakes (Class 2):

The key race to this appears to be the maiden at Goodwood won by Snow Trouble, with the second, third and fourth all in opposition once again. The Goodwood event looked a strong one at the time, with plenty of fancied horses lining up.

Master The World was second, but in contrast to Golden Town,had the run of the race. He may struggle to confirm placings.

Tahadee was another to shape well in third, but it was the slow-starting Golden Town, finishing best of all in fourth that took the eye.

He looked a ready-made winner, but, slightly worryingly, connections reach for the tongue-tie now. Is it me – or is it hard to be confident about Godolphin representatives these days? They might look all right in Kempton maidens but not many make an impact at this level.

Add to that the fact Saturday’s Washington Singer runner-up, Be Ready was touted as far and away their best juvenile, and confidence is tempered here. We have to add Red Galileo into the mix after a promising debut at Newmarket.

As it stands, I wish I could impart more confidence about a card I feel we should be capable of cracking.

Notebook horse Pavlosk will surely pay for herself before the end of the season but is ground-dependent.

I am reluctant to recommend the other notebook horse, Golden Town, after the appalling run of stable mate First Flight on Wednesday.

I incline towards Shea Shea in the Nunthorpe but remain undecided in the Lonsdale Cup.

Perhaps it is wisest to see what the weather does between now and race time and we can look again when we know the state of the ground. Keep in touch with us here on this website and should the cloudy become clearer, we will post a message to that effect.


 

YORK – DAY TWO

By any standards this is a tricky card, made all the more so by the fact that four of the six events are confined to fillies.

The first and last races bookending the card look too difficult at this stage, so it may pay to concentrate on those in-between.

Lowther Stakes Group 2

10/3 J WONDER

7/2 WIND FIRE

4 LUCKY KRISTALE

8 QUEEN CATRINE

12 MERLETTA

12 REROUTE

20 KAIULANI

50 ALUTIQ

66 AZAGAL

100%

J Wonder takes a step up in class here after landing a nursery at Newmarket from a mark of 79. That suggests she has something to find but she has always been considered a Group filly so this is her chance to prove it.

Wind Fire ran tamely over this trip at Ascot following her good effort at the Royal meeting behind No Nay Never – the best form on offer. Last week’s win at Newbury once again suggests six should suit, but she is turned out quickly.

Lucky Kristale has to defy a penalty (never easy in this company). There is the suspicion she may have met Rizeena on an off day when beating her in the Cherry Hinton.

The rest look as if they will struggle; although if there is to be a market mover from outside the obvious it could be Merletta, who is held in high regard at home and thought to be better than so far shown. Clearly, she will need to be.

3.05: Class 2 Handicap:

For once, Wentworth has been handed a good draw. At Goodwood he looked a Group horse in the making – winning with plenty in hand – and he should confirm placings with Sandagiyr.

It is hard to nominate an alternative to Wentworth, who looks solid.

Validus may be capable of better back to this trip.

Yorkshire Oaks (Group 1)

3 THE FUGUE

7/2 VENUS DE MILO

9/2 WILD COCO

9 SECRET GESTURE

12 EMIRATES QUEEN

12 SCINTILLULA

14 RIPOSTE

40 MOMENT IN TIME

100%

There are plenty of questions to answer here.

Firstly, all of The Fugue’s best form is at ten furlongs. She has been beaten on all three occasions she has attempted this trip, including in this event last year. The ground is in her favour and her stable in great heart, but she has to put a bad run in the Eclipse behind her.

Wild Coco will probably struggle on ground this quick; otherwise she would have been the call.

Venus De Milo is progressing and does not need to improve much to snatch this.

The rest all have a smattering of form that give them a chance in a race that makes little betting appeal. The market could be a major guide.

Galtres Stakes (Listed)

4 SAY

9/2 STAR LAHIB

5 SONGBIRD

7 OUR OBSESSION

12 CUSHION

12 LADY NOUF

20 COQUET

20 JATHABAH

33 BITE OF THE CHERRY

50 BOHEMIAN DANCE

66 EASTERN DESTINY

66 RIO’S ROSANNA

100%

Once again, this is a tricky event.

Say has only a moderate Cork maiden to her name. Although that was over today’s trip, her best form (2nd to Dank) was over nine furlongs and is there is a suggestion this trip may stretch her stamina.

Songbird may have reached the limit of her capabilities last time but is still an interesting prospect. That also applies to Our Obsession.

However, the solid candidate appears to be Star Lahib who may lack the high profile of some of these, but seems less complicated. She could be the call.

This looks a tricky day. At this stage I am tempted by Star Lahiband nominate Wentworth as the other possible. I suggest stakes be kept to a minimum as it is a long week and better opportunities will surely present themselves.


YORK DAY ONE …

York’s opening day has all the hallmarks of being busy – at least as far as we are concerned. With two Notebook runners reappearing along with a couple of betting opportunities rearing their (hopefully not ugly) heads, the stage is set to do some serious damage one way or another!

Following on from 100% tissue prices issued at the weekend for the Juddmonte International, I thought I would apply them to three of the supporting events on today’s card.

Let us start with the Acomb Stakes at 2.30:

  • 7/4 THE GREY GATSBY
  • 2 FIRST FLIGHT
  • 11/2 BRAZOS
  • 8 IL PAPARAZZI
  • 40 TREATY OF PARIS
  • 66 LADY LARA
  • 100%

The Grey Gatsby lines up with the best form credentials having beaten Goodwood winner Brazos impressively on debut. He looks a decent sort.

First Flight went into the Notebook after a visually impressive win at Newbury when he recovered from a sluggish start to quicken past his field. The problem is the form has taken two knocks.

Decimus Maximus (beaten over 10 lengths at Newbury) was beaten even further last week when behind Showpiece at Salisbury. Newbury third Sandy Cove was only third on Monday at Windsor, so visually appealing though he was on debut, First Flight’s has to improve again. At around the 2/1 mark he makes limited appeal.

Brazos looked as if he had done exceptionally well since York last time when winning at Goodwood. Although he has work to do to beat The Great Gatsby and is unlikely to do so, it would be unwise to rule him out entirely.

Il Paparazzi is another unlikely winner but the fact remains he did beat two subsequent winners over this track last time.

The other two cannot win.

Essentially, this should rest between The Grey Gatsby and First Flight; but as it is not possible to discard the next two in, neither makes any betting appeal.

3.05 The Great Voltigeur Stakes:

6/5 TELESCOPE

9/2 CAP O’ RUSHES

8 FOUNDRY

10 WILLIE THE WHIPPER

10 SECRET NUMBER

16 NICHOLS CANYON

50 SPILLWAY

100%

Although beaten last time, there was nothing wrong with Telescope’s run behind the useful David Livingstone. Now back against his own age and upped in trip, he can win this.

A strict interpretation of the Goodwood win of Cap O’ Rushes (on a line through Excess Knowledge and David Livingstone) means he is entitled to beat the selection. However, we all know he was a fortunate winner of the Gordon Stakes and clearly David Livingstone improved for the Sandown outing on which this dubious premise is based. Cap O’ Rushes has his work cut out against the classy Telescope.

Foundry has not been seen since winning a maiden in Leopardstown in November. There is nothing especially eye-catching about that run and vibes suggest that remark reflects his chance here.

Nothing else makes any appeal. Secret Number was unlucky to an extent at Goodwood although in any event would not have won. That also goes for Spillway. The overall form of Nichols Canyon gives him something to find. Willie The Whipper, who appears to stay well and handle soft, has bits of half-decent form in France. He could be the surprise package, but it takes a leap of faith to back him. TELESCOPE is a confident selection.

3.40 Juddmonte International Stakes:

6/4 AL KAZEEM

6/4 TORONADO

12 TRADING LEATHER

16 DECLARATION OF WAR

16 HILLSTAR

1000 REWARDED

100%

I am sticking to my Sunday prices for this event and nominate TORONADO as the winner. A line through Declaration Of War gives him the beating of Al Kazeem.

The only negative is the trip – you do have to take his ability to stay on trust. I believe he will and that he will also stamp himself as one of the best of this year’s Classic generation by taking this.

4.20 Class 2 Handicap – 2m:

6 BROXBOURNE

7 HOMERIC

10 SURAJ

14 EAGLE ROCK

14 FLASHMAN

14 MARTIN CHUZZLEWIT

14 PARTY LINE

16 MAWAQEET

16 WILLIE WAGTAIL

16 WYBORNE

20 ALL THE ACES

25 JONNY DELTA

25 NOBLE SILK

33 BLUE BAJAN

33 CRACKENTORP

33 HIGH OFFICE

33 VIKING STORM

106%

(It is impractical to bet to 100% on a seventeen runner handicap, but I have come close and the remaining percentage could still be achieved with a little tweaking. However, in that case, it is unlikely to identify a possible bet.)

Seemingly progressive Broxbourne turns out again after winning at Goodwood and having her chances sabotaged by her New Zealand lady rider at Ascot.

Reunited with Joe Fanning, who was superb on her at Goodwood, she looks guaranteed to run well. She is a Notebook horse mainly because now she has proved she stays beyond two miles, she would be a major player in an event such as the Cesarewitch where lack of stamina is the downfall of many a contender.

She remains closely weighted with Homeric. Inclined to doss in the middle part of her races, her regular jockey can be relied upon to ride her with that in mind. Expect her to be a late closer.

Of her opponents, most are exposed. However, if reproducing his Goodwood run of last time from the same mark of 93, Suraj would go close. He is not one of the most reliable of characters but has always harboured ability. He may have turned a corner or two since disappointing last season when at one time considered as a possible St Leger candidate.

Similarly, the under-achieving Martin Chuzzlewit is another attractively weighted but his ability to stay this trip cannot be taken for granted.

BROXBOURNE has every chance and is worth a small bet, although an interest in SURAJ at morning prices is also recommended.

It is my intention to back Telescope, Toronado and to play for small money in the above handicap. Therefore, I will be hitting the ground running early in the week. I only hope to be standing by its end!

Free Tips July 2014

GLORIOUS GOODWOOD
– THURSDAY JULY 31st:

2.05: Having valuable experience here when second over this trip in June, on a firm surface that should suit, it could be worth chancing Astronereus, who appears to be on the upgrade. His profile suggests he is improving with each run; although the maiden he won at Newmarket last time was not up to much, he did draw clear and, faced with rivals that are by and large exposed, may reward conservative support at decent odds.

2.35: Despite a penalty, Ivawood is expected to beat a strong field for the Group 2 Richmond. Easily mistaken for a three-year-old, this powerful son of Zebedee can confirm Newmarket form with Jungle Cat and beat several unexposed and apparently useful opponents.

3.10: All signs point to Estimate, who, contaminated feed or not, surely ran the race of her career when only just touched-off by Leading Light in this year’s Ascot Gold Cup – a race that looked of better quality than the renewal she won in 2013. Cavalryman is probably her biggest danger, whilst last year’s winner Brown Panther is another likely to provide plenty of threat.

3.45: Talent has been winner-less since her Oaks victory, but her second to Leading Light over this trip in the St Leger at least matched her Epsom triumph. Lightly-raced this season, she had no hope of winning the Coronation Cup first time out but gave cause for optimism last time in the Lancashire Oaks. Now against her own sex, and over this trip, if she is going to justify the decision to be kept in training as a four-year-old, this is her opportunity to do so. Missunited represents her biggest danger after a cracking effort in the Ascot Gold Cup. Versatile as regards trip, she presents a serious threat, but achieved her third at Ascot by maintaining a strong gallop throughout. This is a different type of test and Talent should have too much of a sting in her tail.

4.20: Often a maiden that features fillies likely to play a part in decent future events, this year looks no exception. Those with form appear promising as do several debutants who look the part on paper.

4.50: Championship faced a stiff task last time when attempting to concede 4lbs to Moohaarib at Doncaster. Only beaten three-quarters of a length, this suggested he was back to the sort of form that saw him win his opening maiden at Newbury last May and then saw him go off as one of the market leaders in the Coventry. It is entirely possible the handicapper has underestimated Secret Hint who, despite being 4lbs out of the weights, is expected to beat more than beat her.

5.25: Looking as if it could be staged at Lingfield, this is hardly an appropriate closer on such a day. Those of us misfortune enough to be behind at such a time in the proceedings are unlikely to readdress that situation in this.

GLORIOUS GOODWOOD – WEDNESDAY JULY 29TH:

1.55: The participation of Made In Rio threatens to polarise opinion here as, after such an emphatic win at Ascot on Friday, she could easily be thrown in. However, she has to prove she can stay such an extreme trip, but if she does, she is 10lbs well-in on official figures and only 3lbs higher than on Friday. In her current form she looks a tempting proposition. Those in opposition are no more than average, so Maid In Rio has an excellent chance of following up.

2.30: Lightly-raced Observational is potentially the best horse here, but after a two month absence he may be marginally short of his best. A course winner when taking the Cocked Hat in May on only his third start, a minor injury ensured he was unable to fulfil a Derby engagement. In the long-term that may prove to be a blessing in disguise, although today’s opposition looks testing. Taken at face value, after finishing third in the Eclipse, Somewhat places the best credentials on the line and is preferred to Snow Sky, who was well beaten at the Royal Meeting when behind a staying-on Scotland when both found Eagle Top too good.

3.05: With a finishing kick of speed that proved electric at Ascot, it is hard to see Kingman getting beaten in the Sussex Stakes. Toronado will provide stern opposition but last year’s winner does not look quite up to the standard required to beat the three-year-old.

3.40: With two decent subsequent winners struggling in his wake, a twelve-length rout in a Gowran Park maiden makes Highland Reel hard to oppose in the Group 2 Vintage Stakes. Ahlan Emerati looks best of the home team.

4.15: After a promising debut at Doncaster, Shahah looks best here and should be hard to beat.

4.50: Handicaps for fillies are not the best of betting mediums; with several unexposed sorts that could be better than their handicap marks amongst the field here – notably Patterned, Principle Equation and Water Hole, this is no exception.

5.25: Matters do not get any easier as the day progresses – culminating in a last race that looks next to unsolvable.

GLORIOUS GOODWOOD – TUESDAY JULY 29TH:

1.55: Despite the ground turning against him at the eleventh hour, Magic Hurricane still coped with softer conditions than considered ideal when third in the Old Newton Cup at Haydock earlier in the month. Assuming no unexpected rainstorms strike Goodwood, he should have every chance in this opening handicap. Favourably drawn, and unlikely to be inconvenienced by this drop in trip; a pound rise for his last run is hardly prohibitive. With Sea Shanty’s form having taken a dive of late and Stomachion looking fully exposed, Salutation, who enters the reckoning after his latest run at Ascot and is partnered by a capable apprentice who has won on in him, could represent the biggest danger.

2.30: With Beacon looking better and better with each run, it would seem little, if any, improvement will be required for him to add the Group 3 Molecomb to his expanding portfolio. His main danger would appear to be Cotai Glory, but he is unlikely to trouble the son of Paco Boy who so far has shown all the attributes conducive to a horse capable of even better.

3.05: This reduction to seven furlongs may spark rejuvenation in course and distance winner Toormore, but on this year’s evidence his place in the market cannot be fully justified. He did not run badly in the 2000 Guineas, but there was very little encouragement to be gained from his performance in the St James’s Palace. Admittedly, against a couple that look out of their depth and a couple that have two ways of running, he still looks the best horse in the race, but Gregorian and Professor are capable of exposing any weakness in a favourite that comes here with an unconvincing profile.

3.40: Havana Cooler and Van Percy could be the two to take against the field, although the draw threatens to complicate their claims. Both need to recover earlier form. Havana Cooler was not disgraced last time when close up in the Old Newton Cup, but makes more appeal on his excellent third at Ascot in the Duke Of Edinburgh. This step up in trip should play to his strengths. Van Percy was never able to negate a dreadful draw in the Northumberland Plate but had hitherto looked like a horse about to come into his own over a distance of ground. Any support for half-decent Australian import and 2012 Melbourne Cup fourth Kelinni would be significant. Despite a non-staying pedigree, his run behind Green Moon over two miles at Flemington casts aside any stamina doubts and his shrewd trainer is more than capable of laying one out for a race such as this.

4.15: Those that have run look ordinary, making it odds-on that a newcomer will pinch this. Acaster Malbis and the well-bred and well-entered Misleading take the eye on paper, but the market is likely to be a more reliable guide.

4.50: There was a time when Showpiece would have demanded a second look from a mark of 81 in such a contest as this. However, this track is unlikely to play to his strengths (best on flat courses) and his overall record suggests he is regressing. In what is not a strong race in terms of quality, it could pay to side with Lesha.

5.20: Barnet Fair has been kept busy after a promising run at Epsom in the Dash on Derby Day. Second at Ascot on Sunday, he has the assistance of an excellent apprentice and is 2lbs lower than when sixth to Caspain Prince on a similar track. Brighton winner Daylight is another proven on a downhill plunge, whilst last year’s winner, Tidal’s Baby, looks as if he has been groomed with this in mind again, although he may not have the best of the draw. In any event, we all know how hard these races are to call correctly.

SATURDAY JULY 26TH:

Ascot: 1.30: Kodi Bear, Muhaarar and Peacock line up in this competitive and informative listed event with the best form. Having finished third to the impressive Ivawood in the July Stakes, Muhaarar presents us with current form and may come out best of the trio. But the inclusion of promising types Disengo and Diaz means this is not an easy event to call.

2.05: Goldcrest and Muraaqaba are accorded preference over Albany fifth Osaila in what looks a sub-standard Group 3, particularly in comparison with the opening event.

3.15: Royal Ascot casualties Horsted Keynes, Belgian Bill and Ayaar get their chances to atone in an ultra-tough handicap. Fast ground seems essential for Horsted Keynes, Ayaar is less ground dependent, whilst Belgian Bill – who finished full of running in the Hunt Cup – seems the most likely to cope if the rain that hammered down on Friday persists and has an impact.

3.50: And so to one of the great events of mid-summer – the King George VI and Queen Elizabeth Stakes. Providing Ascot is not subject to a furtherance of the monsoon conditions it withstood on Friday, the ground should be just about perfect for a race of this magnitude. The first four in the betting all have something to prove at this level. As a big horse, although not wanting soft ground, Telescope will probably appreciate a forgiving surface. A notoriously indifferent worker at home (behind Arab Spring prior to his demolition job in a below-par Hardwicke), albeit twelve months later than the Derby many thought he might lift, Telescope, a horse that has benefitted from his trainer’s legendary patience, gets his big chance. As a strong, bullish four-year-old, he will be hard to beat but faces his toughest test. After only three runs, Eagle Top comes here as the dark horse. By Pivotal out of Gull Wing, he will appreciate some cut in the ground and looks extremely progressive. His stable has always liked him and the manner of his victory in the King Edward VII Stakes only bolsters that opinion. Despite the presence of the Oaks winner, he is seen as the flag-bearer for the Classic generation. Taghrooda has to overcome a real hoodoo if she is to win. Only two three-year-old fillies have succeeded in this race since its inception in 1951 – both coincidentally trained in France: Dahlia, who went on to win back-to-back events as a four-year-old, and Pawneese. Despite an emphatic win at Epsom that cemented her claims to be a much better than average winner of the Oaks, Taghrooda (the understandable pick of her rider over Eclipse winner Mukhadram) faces a monumental task. Magician completes the short-list. He is likely to improve on his Prince Of Wales second now he returns to a mile-and-a-half. Telescope and Magician are seen as the main two in that order.

FRIDAY JULY 25TH:

Ascot: 2.10: Despite an ever-present unease about her stable, Malabar has sufficient in her favour to punch through any such reservations. By Raven’s Pass – so fast ground will be fine – she lines up on the back of two runs that read well. Second to subsequent nursery winner Savoy Showgirl on debut and then a staying-on fourth in the Albany, she looks like a winner in waiting. This step up to seven furlongs should be ideal and however you dice her chance, with Group form already in the bag, she is hard to oppose.

4.30: There was plenty to like about the run of Elhamme at the Royal Meeting in the Duke of Edinburgh when sixth to Arab Spring and he looks a very interesting participant here, particularly now he reverts to 1m 2f. Having been dropped by 2lbs this looks to present an ideal vehicle for this son of Acclamation, who is fancied to overturn form with Salutation on 5lbs better terms and in a less deep contest. In contrast, Zain Eagle has been raised by 2lbs for what on the face of it looks an excellent run in the John Smith’s Magnet Cup. However, it is worth bearing in mind that not many got into that race. Although indelibly stamped into the form book, it may not be a wholly accurate reflection. Presburg and Double Discount represent credible opposition without looking like horses one should be unduly wary of.

WEDNESDAY JULY 23rd:

After an excellent debut over this course and distance when second to Mustadeem earlier in the month, on looking yesterday I assumed Darshini would be odds-on in the maiden run at Sandown tonight at 7.10. Mustadeem had finished second to the subsequent Superlative winner at Newbury so not only did Darshini take the eye, but he has form claims also. In what should be a two-horse race (it will take a smart newcomer to get a look in), Darshini will line up with better form claims than Azmaam who, although looking promising at Newmarket, has a little to find with the selection.

SATURDAY JULY 19th:

With the Beach Boys surfing the high waves after racing at Newbury, there should be plenty of Good Vibrations once the action is over, although it could be more a case of God Only Knows before the Californian Sound kicks in.
Actually, racegoers often grumble about having to pay extra for entry to the Premier and Grandstand enclosures on days when bands or likewise are due to perform after racing. They claim they are paying for something they have no wish to avail themselves of. It would appear, the likes of Madness, Wet Wet Wet, Tom Jones and Rick Astley fail to stimulate regulars, who argue it should be possible to operate a two-tier system of entry whereby those only interested in the racing can pay as normal and then depart to the usual cubby holes reserved for those in need of a good sulk.
A special purple badge with the word “Curmudgeon” emblazoned on its background should do the trick; although I am not so sure those advocating such a distinction will need the badge. In Victor Meldrew style, I suspect they will stand out in one form or another.
The problem with having two entrance fees is that quite clearly those wishing to see the act on offer and not view the racing will also claim they need special dispensation. They will argue they are paying for an afternoon of racing they have little interest in. This will result in the racecourse becoming the loser. Ultimately the hit to revenue would be too much for them to absorb, resulting in it either being too expensive to stage acts after racing without a major price hike, or for the facility to be phased out altogether. At a time when racing is attempting to reach out beyond its usual parameters, neither scenario can be regarded as desirable.
But, back to the Newbury card for Saturday…
The opening maiden at features a couple with claims. However, they appear to have been flattered in better events. In finishing sixth in the Dante, Saab Almanal was not exactly disgraced next time at Newmarket but was never seen with a realistic chance. He may be better returned to this trip but those banking on that could be clutching at a slender straw. After two promising efforts, Smiling Stranger lines up with a similar profile, having flopped when long odds-on last time at Pontefract. Again, the trip may have been his undoing and if recovering the sort of form that saw him finish behind Criteria at Kempton and Connecticut at this track, he would enter the mix. Both mentioned are by sires that have patchy records with their offspring and look risky betting propositions. Automated, Deuce Again, Skilled and the unraced Long Cross complicate the race further.

The fillies’ handicap at 2.05 threatens to stretch the patience and credulity of punters. On the face of it, after promise at Sandown when not knocked about from this mark, Provenance looks interesting. The appliance of a first-time hood tempers enthusiasm though, whilst Gown may require more give than she can currently expect. The disappointing Jordan Princess needs to bounce back from two lack-lustre runs to enter the reckoning.

2.40: The return of three-time Group 1winner Al Kazeem, who escapes unpenalised in this listed event after an unsuccessful spell at stud, means he is presented with an outstanding theoretical chance. If lining up in good order he threatens to be too classy for his opponents, but he hardly comes here after an ideal preparation. Although he seems to have two ways of running, Triple Threat is decent on his day and is another facing a drop in class. The lightly raced Ballydoyle cast-off Sir Walter Scott is another wild card punters need to pick up or put down at their discretion.

3.15: Having finished fourth in last month’s Group 1 Diamond Jubilee Stakes at Royal Ascot, Music Master lines up with the best single piece of form. Although held by Rocky Ground on Windsor running, it is possible he is improving at a rate of knots. If so, and if capable of replicating that Ascot form, he is clearly the one to beat. Intibaah, Rocky Ground and Naadirr are sprinters with similarly unexposed profiles that cannot be easily overlooked as they could be up to this hike in class.

3.50: Tiggy Wiggy is the class act here but has the weight to go with such a label. Even so the conditions of entrance favour her and she should go well. Haxby is one of only a handful that has a chance on official ratings. As a colt against a filly he is entitled to serious consideration and, in the belief Tiggy Wiggy represents a reliable benchmark, looks value against the Queen Mary runner-up. Pillar Box and Fast Act are two that could easily be better than we have seen so far, whilst at the bottom of the weights, Realtra could be well-treated on the strength of her run in Ireland last time.

Unraced Time Test will not have to be anything other than smart to make a winning debut in the conditions event – another example of trainers failing to support the kind of race they cry out for at every opportunity – and Number One London (an unlikely stayer given his pedigree but proven over marathon trips) combine to become lazy tips in the concluding events. That said they may face harder assignments than it seems at face value.

Newmarket: 1.50: Even with the excellent Cam Hardie claiming a valuable 5lbs, Llanarmon Lad faces a tough ask in the opening handicap. Most of his opponents are unlikely to deliver any rabbits from the hat, but it is possible that a 2lbs rise after all but winning a Sandown handicap last time means Tanseeb has been let in lightly. Beaten a whisker by Sea Shanty (fourth in the Hunt Cup next time) and looking as if this trip has improved him last time, Tanseeb gets his chance here. He certainly makes more appeal than fellow three-year-old Music Theory, who has to concede him seventeen pounds and hardly looks well handicapped.

Inches behind Tarfasha in the Oaks at Epsom when having to negate a high draw, Volume looks overpriced in the Irish equivalent at the Curragh at 5.45. That form threatens to be crucial.

The unpredictable notwithstanding, HAXBY and TANSEEB look potential value bets at Newbury and Newmarket respectively.

SATURDAY July 12th:

Newmarket: 2.40: Promising Gleneagles and Estidhkaar look the two concentrate on in the Group 2 Superlative Stakes. Both have taken two runs to get off the mark and both have won over today’s distance. The deciding factor could be which of the two handle the forecast soft ground the better. On pedigree and given their respective actions, Estidhkaar looks the more likely of the pair to do so. With his Newbury form having been franked by the recent win of the runner-up, he represents a value alternative to the likely Ballydoyle favourite.

3.15: After going close in the Victoria Cup and the Hunt Cup at Ascot, Ayaar is knocking on the door of a big handicap. Lightly-raced and a decent three-year-old last year, although he has only a length in hand of Abseil on Hunt Cup running, the latter pulled too hard at Ascot and could be expected to finish closer over this sharper trip. However, soft ground is not in Abseil’s favour meaning Ayaar should come out on top once again. Unlucky Buckingham Palace runner-up Horsted Keynes looks interesting and if reproducing that run would have to be a serious contender. Once again, there is a doubt about his ability to handle the ground and for that reason, Ayaar is the selection.

3.50: Although respecting the claims of Diamond Jubilee winner Slade Power, as they field a strong contingent, three-year-olds may have the call in the Group 1 July Cup. The drop back in trip looks sure to suit Noozhoh Canarias, who has form on soft and appeared to find the trip beyond him in the 2000 Guineas. He is a very classy recruit to the sprinting ranks and looks poised to go well. He could be the bet for sensible money; but I cannot help but feel there is real value to be had elsewhere. Were it not for tearing off at a nonsense pace in the Diamond Jubilee, Astaire would be nowhere his current price and reunited with a jockey that knows him well, last year’s Middle Park winner (when he beat Hot Streak) can show the sort of form that we know he is capable of. His run in the Duke Of York on the soft from a penalty surely signified he was likely to play a major part in top class sprint events later in the year. Due Diligence’s chance would probably be improved if the ground dried out considerably.

York: 3.30: The highly promising G Force gets a chance to atone for his latest and somewhat unfortunate defeat at Sandown in this listed event. Unpenalised, he should be too good for erstwhile but somewhat exposed opponents

NEWMARKET JULY MEETING – July 11th: Day Two

2.40: Falmouth Stakes: Now 5lbs better off with Integral and Purr Along from the Group 2 Duke Of Cambridge at Royal Ascot, with the benefit of that run under her belt – a run that was much needed according to her stable and the evidence of the way she raced – there is every chance Sky Lantern, last year’s runner-up in this, will be in peak condition for a second crack. As befits a Group 1, she faces testing opposition: Integral is in great heart and Rizeena defied the vibes to win the Coronation last time. It is worth recording that Rizeena is nought from four at Newmarket (three of those runs at the Rowley track). It seems for whatever reason her best form up to now has been on flat tracks. She will need to record a personal best and some to win this. On easy ground – getting easier by the hour as we speak – ground she has won on, Sky Lantern is taken to exact revenge on the tough and improving Integral.

NEWMARKET JULY CUP MEETING – Thursday July 9th:

1.40: Bahrain Trophy (Group 3): There is a crossover of form here as those with established form are represented by Queen’s Vase winner Hartnell and King George V Handicap runner-up Windshear, whilst Forever Now spearheads a challenge from those that have posted promise but now take a step up in class. Hartnell was involved in a gladiatorial struggle at Royal Ascot and it is just possible the race may have left its mark. It is also worth bearing in mind he finished distressed when disappointing at Epsom. If on song he sets the standard. Windshear has improved all season in handicaps, putting up a classy effort last time when second from a wide draw to Elite Army.
Forever Now’s second to Wonderstruck over this track makes him interesting. He followed that run with a facile Doncaster win and looks like another progressive type from his powerful stable. He could prove a serious threat to the front two, particularly if they fail to show their best and could be the safest option. As it stands The Corsican and Vent De Force need to improve drastically on anything so far shown, their participation looking to carry a degree of optimism on the part of connections.

2.10: July Stakes (Group 2): As always this is a race jam-packed with potentially useful types. Norfolk flop, The Great War scoped dirty on return to his stable so that run is best dismissed. Having carried a big home reputation that was swept aside in a stride, this is his chance to atone and we are likely to see a different horse now. Edgy in the pre-parade ring at Royal Ascot, his demeanour beforehand will give us a big clue. After beating a hotpot at Goodwood and finishing third in the Coventry, Jungle Cat sets the standard. After promising debuts, Belardo, Ivawood and Ustinov line up looking like decent prospects.

2.40: Princess Of Wales’s Stakes (Group 2): As promised Arab Spring dips his toe in deeper waters after rattling up four wins in progressively better company this season. With no standouts in the opposition, this has the look of a winnable Group 2. Recent work at home means he continues to impress. Apparently impervious to ground, he should be hard to beat.

3.15: This Class 2 handicap seems to have attracted a collection of poorly treated contenders. Providing the expected rain does not alter the ground considerably, Mount Logan has an obvious chance but his hike in the handicap means he has to find plenty. It is the same story with the equally promising Mange All, who should benefit from easy conditions but whose rating of 86 leaves little margin for error.

3.50: Having finished fifth in the Albany to Cursory Glance, Osaila looks to have the best credentials for this maiden. Exceedingly looks the biggest threat.

4.25: Once again Royal Ascot form rises to the fore with Windfast and Zarwaan respectively representing the Jersey and Britannia form. It is also possible Table Rock (behind Zarwaan at Ascot but a winner since) will enter calculations whilst Pretzel is open to further improvement.

5.30: A competitive sprint handicap rings down the curtain on what promises to be an interesting but tricky day from a betting point of view.

SATURDAY JULY 5TH:

Haydock: 3.30: After what was an excellent effort at Royal Ascot last time behind Arab Spring, it is hard to get away from Havana Cooler in the Old Newton Cup. Raised a pound for finishing third to a Group horse in the making on his first appearance of the season, representing a top class yard and handed a plum draw, his chance is inescapable. He looks the sort to poach a major handicap from this present mark, possibly before progressing to better things. By and large this is a competitive enough race but most of the participants are known to the handicapper and few can claim to have been let in by the back door. It is possible Mighty Yar may step up on his latest Newmarket run, in which case, if consolidating his form on the Rowley course, he could pose a threat.

Sandown: 2.05: The arrival of promised rain to freshen the track will boost the prospects of Steps in this Group 3. He has been in the form of his life this year, finishing an unlucky fourth in the Dash at Epsom and then a creditable sixth last time in the Group 1 Kings Stand at Royal Ascot where, with a clearer passage, he would have been placed. To an extent, although genuine enough, he is his own worst enemy, meaning it could be claimed he is not the safest of betting propositions. Not an easy ride (often starts slowly and can become detached before finishing strongly), he has the advantage of Keiren Fallon (who suits him well) and the one draw (an advantage he will probably negate to a degree, but his jockey is a past master at threading his way through fields). A bet for the brave, he will probably need a dollop of fortune but Steps has the ability to win this. A reproduction of his Ascot run would see Stepper Point in the mix and a return to the minimum should suit Shamshon. He has a bit to find, but even so may outrun his price.

2.40: Headed by Baltic Knight, this is a tough handicap. After an unlucky passage at Epsom last time behind Abseil (almost certainly would have been placed at worse) Velox will benefit from overnight or morning rain. If it arrives he could figure and, in advance of Havana Cooler, could initiate a big handicap double for his trainer.

3.15: There is a suspicion we have yet to see the best of Radiator, who ran better than her finishing position suggests in the Coronation Cup last time when only beaten just over three lengths by Rizeena. Ten furlongs might bring out her optimum; but she could easily take this en route to better things.
Narrowly defied at Royal Ascot in the Sandringham when a victim of an injudicious ride, Queen Catrine will be fancied by many to make amends here in the steady hands of Ryan Moore. Good run though that was it has to be said it does not quite equal that put up by Radiator, who looks primed to launch her season in style. Any rain will not inconvenience her.

3.50: In the first real clash of the generations the Coral Eclipse would be simple enough to evaluate if we knew for sure how the ground is likely to ride. As it stands, The Fugue is the obvious choice with Verrazano appealing as the biggest danger. A winner of two Grade One events in America over 1m 1f, this trip should suit the imposing Verrazano who is the interesting contender but his best form is on a fast surface. A ground-changing downpour could alter everything and would obviously bring Kingston Hill into the reckoning. With the addition of Guineas winner Night Of Thunder, this promises to be an intriguing contest but one that is difficult to call at present.

4.25: Assuming the ground eases, Whiplash Willie – whom connections have been patient with – gets his chance to add to a Salisbury success this term and an excellent third in the Henry II Stakes over this course in May. Serial monkey Repeater took an oft-rare interest in proceedings last Saturday in the Northumberland Plate when making up a great deal of ground from the rear and has the right man on top to generate further enthusiasm. Striking while the iron is hot, he is not ground-dependent and can put up a bold show.

SANDOWN FRIDAY JULY 4TH

2.00: This may turn out to be one of the harder races on what otherwise appeals as a punter-friendly card. The short-list from this quarter consists of Normal Equilibrium, last year’s winner Doctor Parkes and New Fforest. Of this trio New Fforest is best drawn and after two runs this season should be approaching her peak. She is given narrow preference on fast ground she has shown she can handle. Course specialist Tagula Night looks better with some juice.

2.30: Although the Norfolk at Royal Ascot turned into a nonsense of a contest as a result of the blistering early pace set by Mukhmal, Snap Shots, who was three lengths in front of the tiring trailblazer, is taken to confirm placings. Beacon’s two wins to date suggest he has more to find against stiffer opposition.

3.00: After promise in two maidens at Newbury and a narrow defeat over this trip last time, it should be third time lucky for Mustadeem now. Tom Hark shaped well at Kempton but, despite finishing fourth to a useful sort, was beaten a fair way and this looks a tougher assignment. New Brunswick could be best of the newcomers but the experience gained by Mustadeem should be crucial.

3.35: Having been denied the rub of the green since winning at Meydan in January (desperately unlucky in the Winter Derby), Windhoek gets the perfect chance to recover the thread now returned to his best trip. A tough and durable sort, his main danger, Educate, has a bit to find with the selection on a line through Robin Hood’s Bay and in any event will need to be at his best after an absence of three months.

4.10: After a major effort at Epsom when raised in class, connections have been patient with the progressive Air Pilot and that attitude can pay off in this Class 3 handicap. Although he may not want rattling fast ground, it can be inferred this is a hand-picked target. Vital Evidence should overturn form with Chain Of Events from last time and is seen as the chief danger.

4.45: A step up in trip looks ideal for the stoutly-bred Economy who has shaped with plenty of promise so far. By Dalakhini out of a Sadler’s Wells mare, it is possible this ground may ride on the fast side; therefore delaying betting tactics are advised until it can be assessed how he goes to post. If the surface looks okay, he threatens to prove too good for these rivals.

Free Tips June 2014

SATURDAY JUNE 27th:

Despite the frantic urgings of those with vested interests in the gambling side of the racing game, not every Saturday appeals as a betting day. Doubts over the ground, some events that have attracted the dodgy brigade and an Irish Derby with a long odds-on favourite are among the components that comprise a lukewarm day for the players.

NEWCASTLE: Northumberland Plate: This may not be so hard to solve as the numbers suggest, but to a degree the Lord giveth with one hand and taketh away with the other.

Chester Cup form is represented by the winner Suegioo and the runner-up Angel Gabrial. Whilst they have chances, there is the suspicion that they may be vulnerable to a couple of contenders that have yet to play their aces this year. Chief of these could easily be a maturing Van Percy, who in winning at Newmarket last time demonstrated this trip may bring out further improvement. By Sir Percy, there is every chance he will progress further and he is taken to confirm form with Tropical Beat, who, taking his excellent rider’s valuable claim into account, Van Percy meets on only 3lbs worse terms. His stable’s chosen representative here over four-day accepter Whiplash Willie, a big run is envisaged; the only downside being his wide draw (Tropical Beat is similarly disadvantaged), which could be his undoing if the race does not unfold in his favour.

Several line up with the look of horses that have been laid out for this – notably the two Irish challengers, Willie Mullins’s hard-to-evaluate Lucky Bridle, and Dark Crusader from the always dangerous Tony Martin yard. She ended last season in a listed race at Ascot after winning the Melrose Handicap at York when Van Percy was behind. Not seriously campaigned since (been running over inadequate trips), Dark Crusader returns with conditions more to her liking, providing she is not inconvenienced by the likely firm ground.

In the belief the ground will ride quick and that Oisin Murphy has demonstrated on numerous occasions this year what a good tactical brain he possesses, a chance is taken with Van Percy – who, although far from a good thing, is regarded as the best opportunity on the day. Dark Crusader could emerge as the biggest threat.
NEWMARKET: 3.30: As things stand, fast ground is against most of the field in this Group 3. Unless overnight rain or morning showers alter the complexion of the Newmarket track, Penitent, Top Notch Tonto, Garswood, Gregorian, and to a lesser extent Eton Forever would all be better served by ease in the ground. This leaves us with the unreliable Tawhid, Highland Colori – who has flashes of firm ground form – and Indignant, who will be suited by a fast surface, but, progressive though she appears, has something to find. One for Confused Dot Com!

WINDSOR: 3.40: On the assumptions that the penalty is likely to beat Ocean Tempest, that speedily-bred Free Wheeling looks more a seven furlong horse and Custom Cut – who has not won since April of last year and seems better on an easy surface – are opposable, this may concern Short Squeeze, who had the worst of the draw in the Hunt Cup, and Baltic Knight, who returns to his optimum trip.

The Irish Derby presents an obvious opportunity for Australia to double-up on his Epsom success. Only the advent of rain would detract from his chance, in which case, now we know he stays the trip, Kingston Hill could emerge as a serious threat.

Royal Ascot – Saturday

2.30: Chesham Stakes: One way or another the boys from Ballydoyle have a grasp on this. Dick Whittington clearly holds a solid form chance on the strength of his running with Coventry runner-up Capella Sansevero and looks a decent prospect. The added fact that they have bought into the American colt Cordero further underlines their possible hold here and the market should be a reliable guide. In a race likely to be dominated by Irish interests, Toscanini is seen as the third runner.
3.05: Duke Of Edinburgh Stakes: Although very likeable and still on the upgrade, Arab Spring may struggle from this revised mark (8lbs higher than his latest win at York) which means he is set to carry 9st 10lbs. Actually, in a compressed handicap it is not quite as bad as it appears at first glance, but this is still a stiff task. Confidence in Hamelin emanates from Lady Cecil’s yard and having shaped well here last month, as another improving contender that receives 8lbs from Arab Spring, he is taken to come out on top.

3.45: Hardwicke Stakes: Back on decent ground and up to a more suitable trip, Telescope gets his chance to shine in what is a sub-standard Group 2. The main danger is probably his stable companion Hillstar, but this is Telescope’s race to lose.

4.25: Diamond Jubliee Stakes: Switched to sprinting, Aljamaaheer was unfortunate at Newmarket but still showed plenty of acceleration to shut down Hamza in the Abernant Stakes. Ridden more prominently now he will be hard to beat and carries a good deal of stable confidence. Dangers abound – most of them, like Aljamaaheer and likely favourite Slade Power, appear to have been unlucky with the draw (based on results seen so far), meaning the majority of the action could be down the centre of the track. Astaire was superb in defeat against older horses at York and crucially is stripped of his Group 1 penalty for this race. After his excellent second to Maarek that day, he served notice he would be a major force at sprint level this season. As his namesake did all those years ago in grainy black-and-white, he can raise the Top Hats.
5.00: Wokingham Stakes: This is a fiercely competitive handicap and maybe it would be the ideal time to take a punting break.

5.35: Queen Alexandra Stakes: Over the extreme trip of 2m 6f (less a few yards), this is no walk in the park and obviously the ability to stay this far is of paramount importance. On the premise that Whiplash Willie has a better chance of lasting than Tiger Cliff – whom he has already beaten this season when third to Brown Panther at Sandown – he is given a tentative vote. A progressive three-year-old in 2011, injury meant he was absent until May of this year when he returned in style with a win at Salisbury. He seems to have escaped the bounce factor as he followed that win up with his excellent third in the Henry II Stakes later in the month. Really quick ground could be a worry though for a horse that has encountered problems in the past.

Tiger Cliff had the turn of foot to win an Ebor and there has always been a slight doubt about him seeing out farther than two miles. Others that may play a part in this last-man-standing contest include Royal Irish Hussar and Pique Sous.

Royal Ascot – Friday

2.30: Albany Stakes:
Following no more than an average start at Newmarket, Bazzana was a convincing winner at Windsor, suggesting she had improved considerably and the booking of Ryan Moore – who could have ridden several others in preference here – looks significant. She may come out best of a bunch of unexposed fillies.

Bitter Lake took the eye on debut but, although a visually appealing winner, the form from that race has taken a couple of knocks. Her stable companion, Elite Gardens was another to make a pleasing debut when beating colts at Newmarket in May; again that form has yet to be endorsed.

There are no doubts about the merits of Patience Alexander’s York form – in beating Queen Mary runner-up Tiggy Wiggy, she lines up here with top class credentials. However, a sixth furlong could alter today’s outcome.

Appleberry was noted staying on stoutly that day and it is not impossible this trip may enable her to overturn that form. She could surprise at a price.

American raider Sunset Glow has to be respected in what looks a hard opening event.

An adventurous and small each-way bet on Appleberry could be the answer.

3.05: Wolferton Handicap:
As you would expect this is a hot handicap; the likelihood being that quality will rise to the fore. With top weight, Just The Judge has plenty on her plate against some tough opponents. Contributer does not look particularly well-treated but his class means he could still be a contender despite an indifferent draw. Soft ground was against him last time at Sandown and that run should not be taken literally.

Dick Doughtywylie has been given a chance at the weights. A tricky customer on occasion that seems to reserve his best for the Polytrack these days, he could still be in the mix.

After an eye-catching run at Newmarket, Bold Sniper has the look of a horse laid out for this and is another with a definite chance.

Baltic Knight completes the short list and is another that looks to have been groomed with this in mind. If he lasts out a truly run ten furlongs there is every reason to suppose, following a decent run last time at Goodwood last time he will go close.

In a tight race, Contributer and Baltic Knight are suggested as the two to be with against the field.

3.45: King Edward VII Stakes:
Saddled with a 3lbs penalty, Italian Derby winner, the unbeaten Dylan Mouth demands respect. The same applies to lightly-raced Adelaide – who will be out to maintain the Antipodean theme for his stable. With one-time Derby fancy Snow Sky and Derby sixth Western Hymn (runners from Epsom have a poor record in this) also in the field, this is a hard race to evaluate.

4.25: Coronation Stakes:
My Titania makes her belated appearance now following a bad scope prior to the 1000 Guineas at Newmarket and unsuitably soft ground before the Irish equivalent.
A top class two-year-old (she beat Oaks runner-up Tarfasha at the Curragh in September) that her stable has always hailed from the rooftops, she now gets her chance to prove her worth in Group 1 company.

1000 Guineas form from both sides of the Irish Sea is represented by Lightning Thunder, whilst Lesstalk In Paris – a disappointment in the French Guineas but a good second in the Marcel Boussac on Arc Day – flies the Tricolore.

It is hard to be enthusiastic over either Rizeena or Lucky Kristale on what we have seen this term. Tapestry checked out very quickly at Newmarket and although she looks capable of progressing to better things, Radiator does not convince that she is as yet up to Group 1 standard.

The word for My Titania makes her the selection.
5.00: Queen’s Vase: On this ground, Marzocco and Century appeal as the two most likely to emerge on top. Marzocco narrowly missed out on two Classic trials (Epsom and Goodwood), whilst Century has not had his favoured surface since winning first time as a juvenile at the Curragh. There were definite signs of better to come at Chester however in the Dee Stakes when a staying on fourth to Kingfisher and this looks like an ideal target race for this son of Montjeu.

Hartnell looks like an old-fashioned stayer but, being by Authorized, this faster surface threatens to count against him.
5.35: Buckingham Palace Stakes: We conclude with a fiercely competitive handicap. Watchable has a good form chance but as a son of Pivotal with all his best form on soft, his chance seems compromised by the likely surface. Russian Realm looks a safer option but confidence is tempered by the complexity of the race.

Royal Ascot – Thursday
2.30: Norfolk Stakes: It has all been a bit of a game so far for The Great War who trotted up over this trip in his two outings to date. The form is not top level but the manner of his wins suggests he can go on to better things. He gets his chance here. By the American stallion War Front – bestowed with considerable faith by the Ballydoyle team – The Great War looks ready to enter the battle zone.
Mukhmal is a likeable and willing sort whose Chester form looks solid. He and Woodcote winner Baitha Alga line up with similar credentials but the O’Brien representative is expected to confirm considerable promise so far shown.
3.05: Tercentenary Stakes: Cloudscape’s win at Newmarket from Windshear and Oak’s third Volume makes good reading – the problem is he has failed to build on it on two subsequent runs. He may also be better with give underfoot.
Postponed is another that ran with a great deal of promise at Newmarket first time, but failed to step forward next time.
The decision to step Barley Mow up in trip appears to have paid dividends and he is another that at present dangles on the edge of Group class. Again, he may appreciate a drop of rain.
The progressive Cannock Chase looks the least complicated selection. A line through Windshear puts him in the mix here and as he appears to be steaming forward at a rate of knots he may provide the answer to a cracking contest.
3.45: Ribblesdale Stakes: Inchila and Vazira split the betting here having both performed creditably in Group 1 company last time. However those coming here from the Oaks do not have the best of records in this; it is often won by a filly waiting to step out of the shadows.

The two most likely to fit that category are Wonderstruck and Bright Approach. Wonderstruck created a favourable impression at Newmarket last time in a maiden but takes a major hike in class here. Almost certainly we have not seen the best of Bright Approach who won first time at Newbury when only having done one piece of work and was found to be in season after finishing third in the Cheshire Oaks. With her pedigree there are no stamina doubts and she gets her chance to hog the spotlight.
4.25: Gold Cup: Aidan O’Brien has a great knack of getting horses to relax, something that is essential when it comes to stepping into the unknown which is the two-and-a-half miles in a Gold Cup. St Leger winner Leading Light has been earmarked for this race for some time and a winner of the Queen’s Vase here last year, his class threatens to prove crucial.

Fellow irish challengers Royal Diamond and Pale Mimosa are entitled to improve on their debut runs of the season behind Leading Light, but still have it to do to beat him.
The ground is against Tac De Boistron and Brown Panther, both of whom may struggle in any case against a rival that was thought good enough to run in last year’s Arc.
It is asking a lot for Estimate to win this on her first run of the season and against stronger opposition than she encountered last year.

500: Britannia Stakes: Idea could be the answer to this tricky handicap, although the handicapper reacted sharply to his latest win (achieved after showing definite promise at York) when slapping on an extra 10lbs. Even so he appeals as another from this powerful stable that is likely to continue progressing.

5.25: King George V Stakes: Time may show the improving Windshear was set a mammoth task last time against Cannock Chase, who is given every chance in the Group 3 earlier on the card. From a handicapping point of view he is not out of this but his wide draw is a worry. Elite Army is closely weighted with Windshear and a latest win at Newmarket, when he won despite taking a fierce hold early, confirms he is moving in the right direction. However, by Authorized this ground may be on the fast side for this heavy-topped colt. Wrangler is another that may benefit from rain.

Although a maiden (this is not the best place for horses to open their accounts), after four runs in good company and accorded a chance by the handicapper (well treated with Windshear on two-year-old form for example), with a good draw and on ground that should not pose a problem, a chance is taken with Venezia.

ROYAL ASCOT – WEDNESDAY

With the running of the Hunt Cup and three races confined to fillies, traditionally this can be the hardest day of the meeting. This year is no exception…
2.30: Jersey Stakes: This can often be one of the betting races of the meeting – this year confidence is tempered. After finishing fourth to Karakontie in the French Guineas, Muwaary is the sort this race is tailor made for; however, although there is no doubting his latent ability, he has a tendency to pull hard in the early stages, which threatens to cost him dear. Even though he took a tug early at Longchamp, he was only beaten less than two lengths. If his energy can be harnessed, he ought to be too good.

Progressive types are spearheaded by That Is The Spirit, Musical Comedy and Redbrook. Aeolus and possibly Big Time are others with claims in a race that a settled Muwaary ought to win, but that he may throw away if he gets lit up beforehand.

3.05: Queen Mary Stakes: Again, with the main protagonists spanning America, England and Ireland, this is a hard puzzle to decipher. What we do know is that Spanish Pipedream [USA] has speed to burn judged on her debut at Keeneland. Tiggy Wiggy [England] lost her unbeaten record in a listed event at York but recovered the winning thread last time when beating colts in the National Stakes at Sandown. Anthem Alexander [Ireland] impressively gobbled up a Tipperary maiden without seemingly turning a hair and could be anything. These look the main contenders, but it would not be the biggest surprise if the pack contained a joker or two.

3.45: Prince Of Wales’s Stakes: Probable firm ground would not inconvenience Breeders’ Cup Turf winner Magician. He can make Treve pull out all the stops. In contrast to Magician, the Arc winner’s best form has all been on easy ground. Looking at her pedigree [Motivator out of an Anabaa mare] this is understandable and the likely surface may bring these two close together.

Second to Al Kazeem in this last year, it may be a similar story for Mukhadram again, whilst fillies Dank and The Fugue face stiff but not impossible tasks.
Magician has a solid chance of overturning Treve, who may struggle this season to live up to what on the face of it, was a blistering performance in last year’s Arc de Triomphe.

4.25: Duke Of Cambridge Stakes: The presence of Sky Lantern and Integral – who fought out the finish of last year’s Sun Chariot at Newmarket – means the standard is set firmly at Group 1 level. Esoterique’s Dahlia win at Newmarket this year [beating Integral] means she is entitled to enter the equation. Outside of the obvious, Purr Along is an improving sort who looked impressive in victory at the Curragh last time. No stranger to Group 1 company, she could be in the peak of condition now and poised to run a major race.

5.00: Royal Hunt Cup: Abseil won at Epsom last time like a horse ready for a step up in class. Time may show he is up to listed or even Group standard; even so, he is still immature. Clearly he has a favourite’s chance, but red hot handicaps such as this – chock-full of dangers – often prove to be graveyards for such candidates.
5.35: Sandringham Handicap: An ultra tough handicap for fillies rounds off the second day. Only the informed or the optimistic will be looking to play here.

Royal Ascot – Tuesday

2.30: Queen Anne Stakes: As always we are presented with a hot renewal of a curtain-raiser to this historic and prestigious meeting. And once again the ground may play its part in the outcome. Whereas Toronado and Anodin seem at their best with a little give underfoot, Verrazano thrives when it is lightning fast. These are seen as the three dominant runners; as it stands – on an easy surface – the supplemented Anodin looks the value on the strength of his second to Cirrus des Aigles in the Prix d’Ispahan at the end of May, when Lockinge winner Olympic Glory was back in fourth. However, that represented a step up on anything hitherto achieved and may flatter Goldikova’s full brother to an extent.
Toronado – a winner first time out as a juvenile and again at three – is reportedly in great shape and carries maximum confidence from his powerful stable. His price does reflect that and although a serious player on his best form, he seems plenty short enough considering he put in two poor performances out of five last season. His run when fourth in the Guineas was never explained away and his appearance in the Juddmonte was no more than that. A hard puller in the early stages, he was beaten after a furlong. Clearly his defeat of Bright Approach and Declaration Of War in the Sussex represented the other side of the form coin. He may roar back to his best and beyond, in which case those availing themselves of tight odds will surely be crowing.

A dual Grade 1 winner in America before being sold to the Ballydoyle boys, Verrazano shaped with a great deal of promise on his first run in this country when a never-nearer third to Olympic Glory in the Lockinge. Not asked a serious question that day, he has the look of a quality performer capable of making his mark at this level. Apparently he has thrived since Newbury and promises to line up a different proposition now. In fairness he will need to be to repel the strong challenges that Toronado and Anodin threaten to provide and it could be prudent to wait until he is guaranteed to encounter his favoured surface later in the season.
Whilst prepared to see Toronado bolt up, Anodin is seen as real value at his current double-figure price.
3.05: Coventry Stakes: Irish form could be the key here. Many will turn to the listed race at Naas won by Kool Kompany, where a less vigorously-ridden War Envoy was a length away in third. It is entirely possible the placings will be reversed now; it is also possible that visually impressive Curragh listed winner Capella Sansevero will beat them both, as a line through Toscanini [split Kool Kompany and War Envoy at Naas] suggests he can. He is the selection in a race that can be a rough-and-tumble affair and is often claimed by those with experience.

Dual winner Adaay represents the best of the home team.
3.45: King’s Stand Stakes: Last year’s one-two Sole Power and Shea Shea re-oppose but this is far from a two-horse affair. With the ground and trip ideal for Shea Shea it is likely he will avenge what many saw as an unlucky defeat, but his newly acquired habit of starting slowly and getting adrift early threatens to make matters tough in such company.

Likely favourite Hot Streak and Guerre – representing the younger generation – are not without chances; but the much improved Steps, who was desperately unlucky at Epsom in the Dash, has to enter calculations. In the form of his life and with the trip and a breakneck pace in his favour, he looks poised to run well and can spring a surprise at big odds.

4.25: St James’s Palace Stakes: This looks like a two-horse war between Kingman and Guineas winner Night Of Thunder. After such an imperious performance in the Greenham, it was a surprise to most onlookers that Night Of Thunder was able to reverse places at Newmarket. Kingman – impressive since at the Curragh in the Irish equivalent – is taken to avenge that defeat in what we all know by now was a strong renewal of the Newmarket Classic.
5.00: Ascot Stakes: This is summed up by one word: Hard. Okay, Perfect Heart, Lieutenant Miller and Ballinderry Boy have leading chances but carry no secrets. It is not difficult to construct cases for many in opposition, chiefly for Villa Royale who is thriving at present and seems well suited by a step up in trip and should handle this sort of distance.

5.35: Windsor Castle Stakes: All speed and equipped with first-time blinkers, Hootenanny, a winner in Keenland, if able to flash out and run straight and true up the stands’ rail, can take this for our American friends. A decent showing from Adaay in the Coventry would obviously bolster the chances of Mind Of Madness, who looks as if this return to five furlongs will suit.

SATURDAY JUNE 14th:
A strong summer of sport awaits – obviously events in Brazil dominate Saturday and next week is Royal Ascot. The hand of apathy hovers over Saturday’s meetings; York’s card is tricky and serious bets look thin on the ground elsewhere. Even so …
SANDOWN:

1.50: After a luckless run at Goodwood on his latest outing, now on better ground, although no good thing, Gothic holds a favourite’s chance in the opening handicap.
2.55: After an impressive win in a handicap last time at York the handicapper has raised G Force by a whopping 16lbs – effectively stating the son of Tamayuz was worthy of a five-length victory that day. Allowing for the fact he did win by half that distance, a rise that on the face of it may seem unreasonable is justified. Providing the draw can be overcome (G Force pounced late last time which would be in his favour here), he looks poised to make the transition into deeper company. An equally poorly drawn Perfect Blessings is seen as the main danger. For future purposes, it may pay to keep a close eye on Merletta, who could be capable of winning something akin to this when sharpened up and when her stable are in better form.

4.40: Obsidian looked a sure fire future winner on his Newbury debut behind Connecticut in what could be the pivotal race from a form perspective. This could be his day; however, less than two lengths behind him in seventh place and denied a clear run, New Story is open to equal improvement and is worth a saver at least.
MUSSELBURGH: 3.35: Body And Soul must have every chance of plundering Scotland’s big prize after a narrow defeat last time at York. The ground should be ideal, but the jury is out about a fast five.

FRIDAY JUNE 13TH:
There is plenty of racing scheduled for Friday, with Sandown, Goodwood and York supplying the major meetings.
York’s three-year-old handicap at 2.30 is the most interesting from a betting perspective as CONNECTICUT looks reasonably treated from a mark of 84 in this his first venture in a handicap. Admittedly the form from the maiden he won at Newbury looks shaky, but his debut run at Newmarket looks solid, meaning the handicapper had to make a decision as to which run to home in on. Possibly he has been uncommonly lenient. It could also be significant Connecticut’s shrewd handler has decided to take up this engagement in a handicap rather than try his luck at Royal Ascot in the King Edward.

A line through Venzia means there should be little to choose between Connecticut and Tabreek but, in the belief that improvement should be forthcoming from Connecticut, he is expected to exploit his mark.

SATURDAY JUNE 7TH – EPSOM – DERBY DAY
All the signs are that this year we are presented with a vintage renewal of the Derby. It is not always so. Often Derby Day can be just another glittering occasion on a Saturday afternoon. The race itself is not always the defining factor. The accolades, the big money and the keys to the kingdom are gained at the breeding barns long after the roar of the crowds has subsided.

Since the turn of the century there have been fourteen renewals. Of these six have resulted in winners of the highest quality – five of them incidentally were trained in Ireland. Sindaar was a good winner in 2000. Galileo was outstanding in 2001; his presence is still felt in the shape on his progeny today. High Chaparral was a better racehorse than he was stallion, a remark that applies to the only English-trained winner in this truncated roll call, Authorized in 2007. New Approach and Sea The Stars were on the verge of greatness in their respective years – 2008 and 2009.

So it has been five years since a winner truly fulfilled his destiny. Possibly Galileo’s son, Australia, will propel himself to further glory. Certainly his third in an outstanding – if somewhat perplexing Guineas in terms of its actual result – represents the best form on show. Since then his work has confirmed he stands on the brink; all he has to do now is prove it on the track. Only a trick of fate in the form of a rainstorm beforehand is seen as a negative. On good ground, Australia has just about everything in his favour. After a lack-lustre build-up Kingston Hill was only four lengths behind him at Newmarket and any rain will be seen as a bonus. Although looking as if he will benefit from a step up in trip, being by Mastercraftsman, twelve furlongs may test his stamina limitations to the full. Such a statement as regards the trip applies to Dante second Arod. Looking burly at the Curragh for his reappearance, having been impeded in running and now 3lbs better off with the two rivals that beat him, Geoffrey Chaucer is expected to overturn form with Fascinating Rock and Ebanoran. It is a measure of the strength of depth in the field that Chester Vase winner Orchestra is the third-string from Ballydoyle. In a normal year Western Hymn and True Story (particularly after The Grey Gatsby boosted the Dante form in the French Derby on Sunday) would be serious candidates, but this does not look a normal year. Unless the weather scuppers his chances, Australia should prevail.

The rest of the card:
1.35: As always this is a tricky handicap chock-full of potential improvers. Chief of these could be Black Shadow, who will need some juice in the ground to show his best. Despite defeat in the Lingfield Derby Trial, Double Bluff should not be written-off back in a handicap.

2.05: A spin round Chester should see Ballymore Castle in good stead for what is a corkscrew experience for a juvenile. He looked surly that day and Ryan Moore had to reach deep into the genie’s bottle of tricks to win. In what is a winnable event, this is Ballymore Castle’s race to lose.

2.40: There are reasons to oppose the monster that is Cirrus Des Aigles here as this is undoubtedly not his best trip. Last year’s Oaks winner Talent has to be a contender as is the improved mare Ambivalent. Add Empoli (if he consents to start) and last year’s Grand Prix du Paris winner Flintshire and there are enough contenders to make life difficult for the highest rated runner, who does not have his ideal conditions here.

3.15: The sudden death that is the Dash poses its usual knotty problems. Pace will be crucial from the outset and Tangerine Trees may just turn back the clock with conditions in his favour. New Fforest starts the year from a decent enough mark and should also go well.

4.00: The Derby.

4.50: Stomachion will be popular to follow-up on last week’s Newmarket success. However, it may pay to side with Miss Marjurie, who, taking his excellent rider’s claim into account, will run unpenalised for a good second to Mighty Yar at Newmarket last month.

5.25: A hard day culminates with another tricky handicap. It is entirely possible that one-time useful juvenile Lewisham is well-treated now, particularly after a good run at Thirsk three weeks ago. In good hands and from a decent draw, he may dig a few of us out of a deep pit.

EPSOM FRIDAY JUNE 6th – OAKS DAY:
1.35: Appropriately Ladies’ Day opens with a Group 3 for fillies. Won last year by Thistle Bird, she must have a good chance of following up after a satisfactory run at York three weeks ago on her return to action. To do so she will need to reverse form with Odeliz on the same terms and with Mango Diva with a 3lbs weight pull. The small penalty incurred by Mango Diva may prevent her from winning this; but we are dealing with fillies that can make inordinate improvement. The picture is further complicated by the inclusion of Just The Judge, who would have strong claims if able to reproduce the Group 1 form she displayed at this time last year.

2.10: What could be an unforgettable weekend for Andrea Atzeni – who rides Kingston Hill in the Derby – begins here with another plum ride in Farraaj. Handicap company represents a drop in grade for Farraaj, who shaped well from the same mark on his latest outing in a similarly competitive Newmarket race on his latest outing. He threatens to be on the premises once again. Course specialist Resurge will find this line-up much tougher than the one he faced when winning last year. Tres Coronas, Aussie Reigns and Soviet Rock are respected but not unduly feared, although Air Pilot could be well-treated and looks dangerous. Second to the vastly improving Clever Cookie at Doncaster before just lasting at Thirsk over 1m 4f (a trip that appeared to test his stamina), a mark of 83 offers him with a real chance and he is seen as the prime stumbling block to Faaraaj in a race where it may pay to take two against the field.

2.45: Only seven turn up for this Group 3. With the exception of the penalised duo Highland Knight and Penitent (who will need to buck trends to beat better rivals carrying 3lbs extra) and Edu Querido, the bottom four on the race card make this a tightly-knit contest. Last year’s winner Gregorian, who was subsequently highly-tried and not disgraced in Group 1s, will be hard to beat if back to his best. French Navy beat the likeable and improving Windhoek last time, but heavy ground may have been instrumental in that success and today’s surface threatens to overturn the form. Having successfully conceded 3lbs to French Navy at Ascot last time, the improving Graphic has the best of the argument at the weights but in the absence of any real clue in what is not a straightforward event, it may pay to sit this one out.

3.20: After such a good reappearance at Chester when second to Here Comes When – who went on to run with credit in a Group 3 next time – Abseil will be a popular selection in this handicap from only a 1lb higher mark. With the third horse (Pacific Heights) a winner next time, the Chester form looks solid. Taken out of a similar event last week at Sandown to avoid very soft ground, providing there are no unexpected cloudbursts the potentially smart Abseil looks the one to be with now. Velox and Spirit Of The Law (back to a winning mark) are seen as the biggest threats.

4.00: So often stamina is the final obstacle fillies face in their equivalent of the Derby. For that reason the classy Amazing Maria, who is subject to positive home reports but has to be a dubious stayer, and Irish 1000 Guineas winner Marvellous (by Galileo but suspect stamina on dam side) are overlooked. Taghrooda has a pedigree to die for in this and has looked useful at worst on her two outings to date. This trip should suit but further improvement is needed after the devalued form of her Pretty Polly win at Newmarket, which did look flaky at the time. Musidora winner Madame Chiang will certainly stay the trip and also races on her favoured surface. However she lacks the class of several rivals and a place may be the best she can hope to obtain. There was a lot to like about Volume’s latest win at Newbury and, a guaranteed stayer that will need to improve again, she is taken to spring a surprise and provide Richard Hughes with back-to-back Oaks winners.

4.45: Winner of only one race (his debut maiden) Parbold, second in the last year’s Coventry, has made a meal of getting his head in front since despite some realistic targets. He is accumulating a worrying list of excuses. Judging by the way he appeared to be taken off his feet over six at Haydock last weekend, this trip will be in his favour. Even so, the less complicated That Is The Spirit, who was a comfortable and emphatic winner of a York handicap three weeks ago, is seen as a much safer proposition.

5.20: Not all has gone according to plan with Kafeel but he looks temptingly weighted in this concluding handicap and may be worth taking a chance with for those that find themselves in a hole.

GOODWOOD: 6.35: Aledaid created a favourable impression on debut at Newbury and it will take a smart debutant to lower his colours now.

False Racing Systems

ENGLISH RACING FAILS TO COMPETE

SUNDAY MAY 11TH

On the day of the French 1000 and 2000 Guineas at Longchamp, and when Leopardstown were responsible for the Derrinstown Stud Derby Trial as well as two other Group 3 events, the best we could come up with on these shores was Plumpton and Ludlow.

Of course some of you may have been rejoicing that the jumpers (who never actually go away these days) were back.

In essence, the French were at it again – stealing our thunder, something Paris was not devoid of on a damp Sunday. To an extent the weather did its best to dampen proceedings. It rained; more accurately it pelted down.

As was widely anticipated, Jean Claude Rouget won the French 1000 – or the Poule Essai Pouliches as it is known locally – but not with most people’s idea, Lesstalk In Paris, but with Avenir Certain.

Known to enjoy a topic of conversation over or during lunch, officials called the almost obligatory stewards’ inquiry not long after the winner passed the post. To be fair, when pulled out to make her run in the straight, the winner’s actions could be likened to a night club bouncer on a day off. Several rivals were given ‘some of that’ as, in search of daylight, she barged them out of the way.

Once in the clear she was easily the best filly in the race, sloshing home in a rainstorm. Veda was second ahead of Xcellence, who had beaten Miss France in a messy Impudence. Bawina took the eye in fourth. By Dubawi, she was staying on and could be a major player in the Prix de Diane.

Five minutes after the French 1000 Guineas, Mandy’s Boy broke his maiden over hurdles at Ludlow. Not to be outdone by events in Longchamp, the bing-bong followed although no further action was taken.

Half an hour on Ludlow grabbed some unwelcome headlines with what could only be described as a gross piece of incompetence. What we had was a complete farce initiated by the starter.

To vary the drama, he let the runners go for the three mile chase then frantically decided to wave his yellow flag which the recall man failed to see. This was not entirely surprising given the start looked bona fide to just about every witness.

Two miles later the runners were brought to a halt by another flag-waver. All this after what appeared to be a perfect dispatch from the gates, and in front of a packed Sunday house of casual race-goers, many of whom will presumably assume racing’s administrators are a bunch of monkeys in various jackets, coats and suits.

Back at Longchamp the sun came out for the colts. Last year’s Jean-Luc Lagardere winner Karakontie dug deep to wriggle through on the inner rail and hold off the persistent challenge of Prestige Vendome in the 2000 Guineas. Despite pulling early as if he had a train to catch, Newbury handicap winner Muwaary justified inclusion in the field when finishing fourth.

At Leopardstown, clues for the Irish 1000 Guineas were thin on the ground as a result of the Group 3 trial. Afternoon Sunlight lasted home in a bunch finish from Palace, with Ballbacka Queen and Waltzing Matilda looking as if they will be better over further close up in third and fourth.

The Derrinstown Stud Derby Trial was seen as the big classic clue race by many. Ballsax winner Fascinating Rock and last year’s Beresford winner Geoffrey Chaucer dominated the betting.

On a day littered with the speculation of inquiries, we had yet another one here. As every sixth former will recall, amongst other outpourings, Geoffrey Chaucer was responsible for the oft-ribald Canterbury Tales. This was the kind of day he may have preferred not have had to have penned. A classic run in a monsoon in France; unless something unforeseen comes to light – and even if it does (sometimes you let sleeping dogs lie) – a starter with ideas above his station at Ludlow, followed by added drama in Ireland.

Ebanoran was first past the post in the Derrinstown ahead of Fascinating Rock with a showboating Geoffrey Chaucer in third. But on what was meant to be a routine Sunday peppered with Group action, the tension continued.

The trouble with this was that Geoffrey Chaucer was impeded twice by the two that finished in front of him. Ebanoran was first to deal a race-denying blow as he made a winning move two out, rolled across Mr Chaucer’s path and then held on.

Fascinating Rock finished with a flourish, also leaning in on the giant Geoffrey Chaucer, meaning Joseph O’Brien had to snatch up and cruise home, looking unlucky. To an extent he was, but he wouldn’t have won today on a horse that, although a strong traveller, may have been rusty and was not on this occasion quick enough to take his chance when he had it.

However, remembering this was his first run of the year and that he was conceding 3lbs to the other two, he is the one to draw the eye. However, without disqualifying the first two, it was hard to know what other action the stewards could take.

But this was Ireland and they found an alternative. Someone had a brainstorm and decided to disqualify Ebanoran in favour of Fascinating Rock, but to allow Ebanoran to keep second ahead of the one horse that was most inconvenienced by the shenanigans, namely Geoffrey Chaucer.

That as I write is the full story. It may not be the complete story. There may be a reversal of some sort later behind closed doors and when the Bushmills has been diluted.

The Ludlow starter may find gainful employment in the public sector. Oh, and Catcall – the villain of many a piece – won at Longchamp.

Quite a day!

Perhaps the last person to leave will turn out the lights…

GOOD FRIDAY RACING…

The heading would have been unthinkable two years ago; now that the precedent has been set it seems safe to assume this time next year we will be seeing a normal program of racing on a day that was once regarded as sacred.

So does it matter? Probably not; after all those that wish to observe Easter as a religious occasion are free to do so. And if the big high street stores, the supermarkets and the DIY chains can open their doors, why should there not be racing?

That is a compelling argument. It is unfortunate for stable staff, even for jockeys that they can no longer rely on at least one blank day after the generous three days granted to them over the Christmas period. But in pursuit of the greater ideal, it seems the show must go on.

There is just one point I should like to make. Before we reach the situation where there is a card from Catterick, jumping from Cartmel and eight races run under the floodlights at Wolverhampton on Good Friday, the authorities have seen fit to provide a bumper card at Lingfield with prize-money to match. Even Musselburgh stages a financially healthy card.

Effectively, and continuing the Roman theme prevalent to the story that comprised events that spawned the celebration known as Easter two-thousand years ago, frantic to stage racing under any circumstances, bookmakers have made racing an offer it can’t refuse.

Any visitors from Mars could be forgiven for thinking that horse racing is blessed with riches aplenty, and that owning a racehorse might be a good move. Of course if they stick around long enough they will see the folly of this supposition.

So just where has this money suddenly come from? Those that have tirelessly bemoaned the state of British racing – claiming there is too much of it, particularly at the lower end – are left scratching their heads. In order to fulfil an unspecified brief – it was generally accepted that for racing to go ahead on Good Friday it would have to be of a decent standard – bookmakers have raided the petty cash tin. It will be interesting to see if this standard can be sustained next year and beyond.

Lingfield kick off inauspiciously enough with an apprentice handicap; but it is not just any old apprentice handicap – here Corals provide a Class 2 apprentice handicap. From a betting point of view it does not make it any easier than one of those fictitious events from Happy Downs, but the winner gets an unprecedented thirty grand.

32Red are the next generous sponsor when thirty-five minutes later we are faced with a conditions affair restricted to fillies and mares – which of course is the sting in the tail.

As if a field of fourteen racing over seven furlongs does not sufficiently complicate the issue for punters, they have to deal with what is often the wildest card of all: that of the uncertainty of the fairer equine sex. Deep joy! At least it will be for winning connections that will receive the thick end of ninety grand.

Similar money is available in the next – the 32Red All-Weather 3 Year Old Championships Conditions Stakes.

This is not an unreasonable title for a race that includes Ertijaal, already a winner over course and distance and that was once touted as a live Guineas prospect. Stranger things have happened, although on the scant evidence to hand, he may struggle to stay further than today’s trip of seven furlongs.

American Hope, Major Crispies and Sir Robert Cheval were not far behind Ertijaal last time, although they will be lucky to get as close now unless Ertijaal is against the idea of putting his best hoof forward on such an occasion. Add the unbeaten and potentially poorly-drawn Passing Star to the mix along with the progressive duo that is Complicit and Captain Secret and the race stacks up.

There is no sign of the money drying up in the marathon conditions stakes – again ninety grand seems to have been found from an offshore account. Apparently connections of Litigant have had their eyes on this pot for some time, the six-year-old having been laid out for money he would otherwise struggle to win.

A class 2 over six furlongs follows at just after four o’clock. In their generosity, those bookmakers that have thrown up prices choose to offer 5’s the field.

A late defector from the Lincoln on account of ground worries, Captain Cat will chase his share of ninety grand in the race sponsored by our old friend and benefactor to racing – Ladbrokes.

In another life they once courted my services at a meeting in Central London, where their representative saw fit to buy me an orange juice and a beef sandwich. There was no ticket to Bermuda tucked inside a napkin – no offer from a waitress in fishnets to provide anything I might want. It was hardly Don Corleone stuff.

Sensing their actual contribution told me all I needed to know about them as a firm, I declined Ladbrokes’ offer to provide me with gainful employment. The jury is out as to which one of us is the poorer or richer for this decision. I might be tempted to poach a little more than a beef sandwich from them if they offer the general 5/1 that seems likely to be available about Captain Cat tomorrow. You see, I have fallen for the trap!

The jaws lock at 5.20 with the Coral Easter Classic All-Weather Middle Distance Championship. Here, 8lbs clear of his nearest rivals on official ratings, Grandeur is the projected favourite.

However, he has already displayed one or two tendencies to make punters hesitate. Good though his overall record might be, he often finds little in his races and his best runs – often achieved on the world racing stage – are arguably in defeat.

There is a suspicion he does not relish a scrap. With over a hundred grand on offer it is very likely that Solar Diety, Dick Doughtywylie, Robins Hoods Bay (not sure to confirm his latest victory with several of these) and Marshgate Lane will do their utmost to ensure Grandeur does not get things his own way.

Perhaps he ought to join the queue.

EXPLODING THE SYSTEM MYTH

I know a man with a clever mathematical brain. Unfortunately he is a one-trick pony as his cleverness starts and ends with the subject of mathematics.

Actually, that is not strictly true. The product of a classical education, he knows a host of grammatical rules that many may have forgotten, such as that the verb To Be cannot have an object, also the difference between relative and conditional clauses. I’ll save you from some of the other differentials he is able to define – such as possessive and personal pronouns, the likes of which some of us can implement without resorting to a parrot-fashion recital.

My clever friend illustrates the contrast between those that have a natural ability to tackle a subject and those that bury their heads in a book on theory but never progress beyond first base. I am not decrying education by any means here.

Those that were lucky enough to benefit from the system will always shine. The Ann Widdecombes of this world sound very clever in speech (never confusing It is I with It is Me for example), but one wonders how far such theory takes them in the real world.

After all, you can always recruit someone as your ghost-writer, but first you have to produce something that is worthy of such a process. Enter many with lesser educations who can write wonderful prose that may be rough round the edges but carries a real essence often lacking by those tackling the written word without passion.

Real talent cannot be manufactured but it can be nurtured and improved. The likes of Paul Simon and Bruce Springsteen had to be Paul Simon and Bruce Springsteen in the first place to become the people we know today.

You may be wondering what all this has to do with horse racing. To tell the truth I am beginning to wonder myself, but actually there is a connection.

Mathematics is only the diffusion of fact after all. Impeccable grammar is achieved by similar means: the ability to break down and analyse a sentence, so once it is constructed it makes perfect sense without ambiguity.

Wake up at the back!

What I am leading to is the contention that there is a big difference from saying you are something and actually being it.

These days most people are long on theory and short on practice. Every mother’s son is a manager of some sort; every person on a quiz show has a long title associated with their job.

As a refreshing change, don’t you just love Chris Hughes from Eggheads, who makes no bones about his roots as a ‘retired train driver and railway worker’ but can lay claim to being one of the most knowledgeable people in the country?

Success in Life

There is no short cut to success in any sphere, whether as a train driver or a boffin. For those wishing to excel, two components are necessary: talent and hard work. You can get by on one, but without both you will always fall short of excellence.

For those of you still with me, we are approaching the point.

Successful Gambling

Gambling is the last refuge of the lazy man. Gambling offers the lure of easy money without too much hard work; or so some theorists would have us believe.

I have lost track of the number of times my mathematical friend has presented a system before me that he claimed was his next ticket to the Caribbean.

The last one – a year or so ago if memory serves me; I have told him to stop wasting my time with them – was as simple and devoid of any logic as this: back any two-year-old up to June with the form figures of 112 that is between 4/1 and 7/1 in the betting forecast.

Note the amount of provisos built into this so-called system. It falls flat from the outset – the form figures mean nothing on their own. Why does the system cease in June and why is the price of the horse limited; and from where is this price supposed to be taken – the Morning Star perhaps?

The bad news is that, like everything else, gambling demands hard labour from those desirous of success (or avoiding failure, which in this business often amounts to the same thing).

There is no short cut to success in this game, where, to quote Bruce Forsyth, points do not make prizes. True, you might scoop the jackpot in one form or another, but the odds against that are too huge to contemplate and any such luck is unsustainable.

For those living on this planet – the only way to succeed is to have a natural flair for the subject combined with the drive to keep working.

For that reason I become aggrieved when I read of so-called mathematicians and system analysts that claim to have cracked the system.

They are wasting their time, more importantly ours. Even if figures suggest these systems work, they only do so in retrospect. Wittingly or unwittingly, they have been tailored to fit existing results. And as we all know, we can only bet on eventualities yet to occur. In short, there is no all-encompassing system that leads to a path of gold.

Not only that, there is no path of gold.

Any system can appear to work given a set of results. It can be tweaked and adjusted to suit those results, but it has as much relevance as someone suggesting it is possible to predict the next sequence of numbers on a roulette wheel. Such a sequence is totally random, so whilst adding the sum of the last fifty paying numbers and dividing by the sum total of those that were unsuccessful may have been relevant in one undetermined sequence, it will never work in another.

Nor will the claim that after a prolonged series of one or other colour (red or black) an overdue change is imminent and that is the time to bet against the current flow. The flaw in that argument is two-fold. Firstly, in order to provide a profit, the backer will need (at odds of even-money) to double-up on stakes if the first bet struck loses.

Secondly, and possibly more importantly, for those espousing the benefits of the Laws of Probability, the spin of the roulette wheel, like the sequence in horse racing, is infinite; therefore there is never a cut-off point at which one can claim the sequence ends.

Any set of results is open to alteration, although certain constants exist (50% red and black will roughly prevail – but over an indefinite number of spins).

Like the turn of a card on the green baize or the roll of a ball-bearing in a roulette wheel, every horse race is a unique event. Its components are always different, that applies to its players, both human and equine.

Therefore no set of situations will ever be replicated. There will be an approximation of elements, but they will never be identical. This means results cannot be predicted on a regular basis by a computer or when the moon is in the third quarter and Mars on the assent.

Yes, computers can correctly pinpoint horses that are well-in according to official figures, but such horses still have to face optimum conditions in order to win.

There is no point in backing a horse that is technically well-treated if it faces ground it hates.

Computers, or more precisely their programs, can identify other factors in a horse’s favour but those drawn badly or those that have not run for a length of time (unless we know why and that they are fighting fit) are unlikely winners.

Those racing in handicaps for the first time and facing seasoned handicappers are at a disadvantage, as are so-called unlucky losers that have been raised by the assessor on an assumption rather than proven fact.

Punters have more information at their disposal than ever these days. All this information can be built into a finalised solution but it is not the answer per se.

In the final analysis, stripping away all the peripheral information to hand, punters have to be able to use their own judgement and that judgement has to be accurate and reliable. And that is the only criterion by which those that eke out a living in this business survive.

As for those claiming to have a successful system, before climbing aboard this money train might I suggest you ask them one question for starters.

Winners get banned. Losers get diaries

Ask them if they were given a racing diary by their bookmaker this year. If they have one, bear in mind that bookmakers don’t give diaries to punters that are successful.

No, their present to successful punters is to suspend their

Racing and bad weather

COPING WITH A LACK OF RACING

You might have noticed there has been a lack of racing recently – at least racing to warrant betting interest. No wonder Sprinter Sacre’s heartbeat is normal. Apart from his welfare – of course we all wish him well – there hasn’t been much to occupy the mind on the racing front lately. That is unless you include weather forecasts and Blissful Park, where the going is always good, all the races are handicaps (I heard a Ladbroke commentator refer to the top weight in one such event the other day), and there is never a non-runner or a slow-starter. Sound blissful? Not exactly…

I happened to be in a betting shop this week, just to catch up on the Racing Post and see if anything was happening behind my back so to speak. The place seemed full of the same old faces looking for inspiration and clues. For all I know they are still pacing the floor looking.

It’s not that the results (those that I can recall) have been that bad since horses have turned into aqua-planers, it’s just that – in a game already renowned for chucking up excuses left, right and centre – it is difficult to bet with any confidence just now.

In desperation, last Saturday I had a small pop on the all-weather. With the majority of the handicaps looking only marginally easier than events at Blissful Park, I thought a couple of admittedly uninspired selections in Anglo Irish and Joyous looked the best on the day. That is I and just about everyone else! Anglo Irish got himself beaten at 1/3; whilst Joyous was backed down to the near suicidal price of 6/4 in her handicap and, despite not getting the best of runs and possibly looking unlucky, failed to win. At those sorts of prices, excuses are superfluous. To be brutal, the only excuse you need is the one that you should provide to yourself for being sucked in to betting on such a day in the first place.

But, here’s the thing: a gambler/player can’t afford to waste time sitting on his hands. A gambler plays the percentages game, keeping them on his side by playing as often as possible. If he is good at what he does – if his judgement is sound – then the more he can exercise that judgement, the more likely the odds are to tilt in his favour. That sounds simple and logical. The flaw in that argument is that, because we are dealing with dumb animals (and in some cases equally dumb people), horse racing is neither simple nor logical. There are times when I feel it ought to be less random and make more sense than it does, but early in January in the middle of a monsoon is not one of them.

This is the time of year when I used to book a holiday and fly out to the sun for anything approaching a month depending on the sort of year it had been. But, look, we are in the middle of a recession; just like everyone else I am feeling the pinch, so this year the Caribbean or the Indian Ocean is right out. They are so far out; as far as I am concerned I wouldn’t see them with a telescope. Oh, they are out there somewhere but, even if I could be sure of a plane taking off to time from one of the London airports and not having to spend part of my holiday squinting at a departures board, or on a bench in a terminal – doing a Tom Hanks impression – the next time I shall see the sun this year is when it rises over my lawn. I am calculating that will be sometime in April, just before or just after I have had my first reversal at Newmarket during the Craven meeting.

Right now I have no appetite for betting; but to get back to my earlier point, I have had a change of heart about how to approach this business in the long term. I used to think it was advisable to wait until I thought I had uncovered a good thing at an inflated price and then unload. Lately, I am having an alarming change of mind. Because, to use the argument I have documented, that way you can wait forever and still not get paid. Bad luck is the ever-present gate-crasher in this business.

This is the only business I know where you can be right and it can still cost you money. The only result that matters is whether your bet wins or loses, not whether you were technically correct to pull up your money. Jockey foul-ups, last-minute ground changes and sheer bad luck in running is all very well for a topic over a pint of Fuller’s in the pub, but it won’t alter the result or your bank balance at the end of the month.

By restricting bets to those occasions when you think you have the edge of all edges, you will only bet rarely and, in a business where the profit margin is low before you start, you are arguably making it lower by only betting when the wind is in the right direction.

Like it or not, if you are a player in this game, then that’s what you have to do – play. And you need to play on a regular basis. Because if you don’t you get a dose of the freezes. You start to find reasons not to bet and, frankly there are enough of them to sink a battleship as it is. You become stale, out of practice and, to an extent, chicken with your money.

Anyone that makes a living has to constantly practise their art. I mean, footballers don’t just put on their boots on Saturdays. And how would you feel if the surgeon conducting an operation on you only handled a scalpel when the Moon was in Capricorn, or the pilot in the 747 on which you were a passenger only climbed into the cockpit when flying down to Rio?

One way or another, as a player, you have to keep your hand in. The possible answer is to bet with small change rather than not bet at all. You can bet on the exchanges with as little as £2 a shot. It’s okay to do that – no-one need know – at least it is another way of keeping track of the form you are in. And when you think about it, betting in small money is a win-win situation. If you win, you can reassure yourself you are still the big man; that you haven’t lost it. If you lose a few quid, then you can claim you were so right to throttle back and that again, it is only further proof of your latent genius.

Of course, betting in peanuts might be all very well to tide you over, but you still have to face facts – if you are to make any money betting, you will have to press-up at some stage. You simply have to bet to proper stakes and do it regularly. Maybe that is a problem for another time. Say the Cheltenham run-up for those of you with a hatful of opinions about the jump game – or the Dubai carnival for those of us of the other persuasion.

Failing that you could always apply for a job at your local supermarket. Trouble is, I hear even they aren’t’ hiring right now.

Horses to Follow

RACING NOTEBOOK

Based on races viewed, Spy’s list of horses worthy of serious consideration next time:


December 20th:

Ascot Results

It didn’t take Nicky Henderson long to get on the score sheet.

Back in action after a pottery round of chasing at Kempton, Royal Boy, third in the Tolworth in January, cruised to victory in the Class 3 over 2m 6f from stable mate Big Hands Harry and Pleasant Company.

Responsible for the first two and the fourth, the Henderson stable is currently flying.

Irving is gradually working his way up the novice ladder. Useful in Germany, he took the Grade 2 but it would have been tight had not Prince Siegfried crashed out at the last when holding every chance.

Volnay de Thaix suffered a rare reversal at present for the Henderson yard when only second (would have finished third). This assignment was much harder than the two he has so far faced (particularly the egg-and-spoon contest he was gifted at Newbury last time).With easy Aintree winner, Splash Of Ginge a close third, this has to be regarded as strong form.

Coming back in trip (2m 3f), Fox Appeal, who was second in November to the smart Wonderful Charm at Wincanton, came clear of a couple of useful opponents in Raya Star and Mr Mole in the Grade 2 chase.


December 18th

Newbury Racing

Apparently unfancied by his stable when only fourth on debut behind Calipto, Actival and Chocala at this track on Hennessy Friday, Dawalan was very much the market order in the Class 4 hurdle this time round.

Very well-bred – related to several high class members of the Aga Khan’s dynasty – Dawalan only had to be shaken up to win in the manner of a stayer rather than a quickener. His jumping was sketchy early but he did warm to the task, although he gave the second-last plenty of air. This was probably not a strong novice event.

In second, Rayak came into this with only routine form. In third,Certification looks a useful recruit (J P Ferguson has several rejects from Mark Johnston, all of whom have acquitted themselves with promise over hurdles). They finished at long intervals, which, on soft ground that became softer as more rain fell, was to become a feature of the day.

Josses Hill became another winner for the Henderson yard when pulling away on the run-in in the Class 4 for older horses. This was his first effort over timber and it augers well for the future.

Communicator was another to please on his hurdling debut. Proven on soft ground on the Flat, he jumped well enough and saw his race out. He should open his account before too long.

In third, having occupied the same position to Wilde Blue Yonder last month, Tiqris lends credence to the worth of the race. A Hare Breath was fourth – it was then twenty-five lengths back to the next finisher.

Hadrian’s Approach, an early causality in the Hennessy, was nursed round by Barry Geraghty to beat three rivals in the Class 2 graduation chase. Jumping may not be the horse’s strong suit, but on a day when the Henderson stable shone, the jockey ought to take his fair share of the credit.

The Henderson/Geraghty combination was narrowly denied a four-timer when Tistory was run out of the Class 4 novice on the run-in by Brother Brian.


December 13th:

Cheltenham Results

Oscar Whisky may have won the Class 2 novice chase but the plaudits have to go to Wonderful Charm, who was conceding 8lbs.

They dominated from the start, pulling well clear of their three rivals although Close House was in touch in third before taking a heavy fall at the top of the hill. With little between the two main protagonists at the last, they jumped it well but the weight sealed it in Oscar Whisky’s favour.

They are two smart chasers in the making, although, both Jewson-bound, Wonderful Charm appeals as the better prospect.

The Skyfarmer racked up his fourth straight win in the Class 3 handicap hurdle – his first venture outside novice company. His present rating of 123 will be adjusted but he looks a decent prospect.

Lyvius tested him in second, the pair well clear of their rivals. Obviously their fates rest with the assessor but they were certainly much better than today’s rivals.

Hennessy third, Theatre Guide looked to have his rivals stone cold for most of the way in the Grade 3 handicap – a lesser contest than Newbury’s showpiece two weeks ago. Only raised 2lbs, he jumped well throughout but the writing was on the wall at the last when he was joined by strong-travelling Monbeg Dude.

Unable to quicken, possibly Theatre Guide needs even further than today’s extended three miles to be seen at his best. Monbeg Dude is no slouch and in receipt of 9lbs, it was no disgrace for him to beat the runner-up.

The winner’s target is the Grand National. Sixteen lengths away in third, Pigeon Island is now racing from a reasonable mark although needs his sights to be lowered

Sunnyhillboy rolled back the years when benefitting from a vintage McCoy drive in the Class 2 handicap hurdle.

The runs of the Philip Hobbs trained duo, Return Spring and So Fine in second and third, further underlines the cracking current form of the stable.

Garde La Victoire certainly looks the part and his first defeat over hurdles in the Class 3 should not be taken too literally. A steady early gallop was not ideal and although he powered to the front at the turn, Ballyalton ran him down on the sprint to the line.

The runner-up – who still has something to learn – will get two-and-half on his head. We saw two nice novices here, both of whom are likely to return for the Festival.

The run of Cocktails At Dawn, who finished third after a year’s absence, suggests he is a winner in waiting.


 December 14th:

Cheltenham Results

Winner of a Ludlow claimer, Ballyglasheen created a shock in the Triumph Hurdle Trial, achieving form that so far did not seem on his radar.

After a searching pace, he joined issue at the last and toughed it out. Despite winning an egg and spoon event at Sandown which told us little, Kentucky Hyden had the best credentials based on three spins on soft ground in France. He tried hard to peg the winner back, but in what became an uphill walk to the line was narrowly thwarted.

Hurdling debutant Commissioned shaped well in third. Lightly raced on the Flat, he hurdled proficiently in the main and should open his account soon. Vicenzo Mio travelled like the winner for a long way but failed to quicken from the last.

It was a case of perm any one of three in the four-horse novice chase. The three principals had met last time with

Shutthefrontdoor seemingly handed the best chance today at revised weights. Sloppy jumping on the last circuit when the pace upped meant he was the first beaten.

That left Sam Winner and penalised Le Bec to scrap it out – Sam Winner emerging the better, opening his fencing account under attritional circumstances.

Eastlake is developing into a reliable and consistent handicapper. Rated 140, he jumped well and stuck on gamely from the last to win the Grade 2 handicap from French Opera and Astracad. Not many in the field appeal as well-handicapped and it could be life will be tough for Eastlake from here on. However, he does have the right attitude and looks ready for a step up in class.

Only a five-year-old, Kings Palace is beginning to look like a horse brimming with promise after an all-the-way beating of his rivals in the Grade 2 over three miles.

Being picky, it is easy to poke holes in the form of his win. With his nearest market rivals, Saint Roque (looked as if this run came too quickly after last week’s Sandown effort and suffered a tired fall at the last), and Milan Bound never able to land a blow, in beating the rank outsider, Masters Hill, the bare reading does the winner no favours.

However, it does not tell the full story. Kings Palace is an accomplished jumper that makes it all look effortless. He could be top class one day either over hurdles or fences – if not both.

Double Ross took the Grade 3 handicap chase on his sixth start over fences. Despite a mistake, he came back to clear away and then appeared to falter on the run-in. Cantlow closed in second (another to recover from a jolting error and arguably unlucky), ahead of Colour Squadron, who was undone by a 7lbs rise since finishing second in the Paddy Power. He is yet to win over fences.

The cream rose to the top in the Grade 2 hurdle, The New Oneproducing the finishing kick when it mattered to defy a gallant Zarkandar, who rallied on the run-in.

The New One only did what the form book suggested he should have done (certainly over two miles) and Zarkandar (better over two-and-a-half) has run to form in second. The winner is now a fair enough favourite for the Champion Hurdle.

Not for the first time, More Of That impressed – this time in the Grade 2 Relkeel Hurdle. With only three rivals, including French Champion Hurdle winner Gemix (hopelessly at sea over these hurdles), once again, his class was obvious. Slipstreaming Salubrious, he picked him up with something to spare. He continues to progress and, like Kings Palace, is another on the day we have yet to see the best of.

Royal Irish Hussar emptied very quickly at Doncaster in the Grade 2 novice hurdle, not looking the same horse we saw last time at Cheltenham. Making the running as usual, the writing was on the wall some way out. Rather than find his second wind, this time he faded away tamely.

Fox Norton, a neck behind Royal Irish Hussar at Market Rasen before the winner of that day began his upward climb to potential stardom, held on narrowly from hurdling debutant Broughton – another ex-Mark Johnston inmate from the Flat that has joined the Ferguson stable and looks to have a future at this game.


 Saturday December 7th:

Sandown Results

Vaniteux’ s win over Vibrato Valtat in the novice hurdle represented smart form.

The runner-up, looking all set to collect when popping the last and apparently in command, had previously finished eleven lengths behind Quick Jack in a competitive Cheltenham handicap. However, under a confident ride Vaniteux quickened in the style of a smart recruit on the run-in, winning with plenty in hand. He looks like another powerful addition to the Henderson yard.

Saphir Du Rheu, the only four-year-old in the line-up, routed the opposition in the Class 2 Pertemps qualifier over 2m 6f. With Home Run and Whisper filling the places (although tagged by the handicapper they are useful sorts), this had the makings of a solid event.

The way the winner cruised to the front and then dispensed with his rivals indicates this step up in trip has brought about plenty of improvement. Currently rated 130 – a mark about to become history – he could be a cut above this level and will likely stay three miles.

The Henry VIII Chase, the first of the Grade 1’s, went to experienced novice Hinterland. Second to Captain Conan in this event last year, he maintained his jumping whilst several fiddled away their chances. Ultimately the best hurdler in the field, Grandouet, provided the biggest challenge. A faller on debut, he handled these fences well. Taquin Du Seuil never looked that happy. On this evidence he found the trip too sharp and probably the ground too lively. A mistake on the far-side did not help, but he did not look an Arkle winner today.

After the run of Vibrato Valtat in the opener, Deep Troublefurther franked the Quick Jack form with an extraordinary win in the Listed handicap.

Scything through the field in smooth fashion, he apparently had events under control approaching the last until running down the hurdle, drifting right across the track and leaving his rider without irons.

In gathering him together and keeping him going, this was a great effort from Leighton Aspell. Urbain De Sivola posted a promising first run of the season in second ahead of harshly weighted River Maigue, who needs the handicapper to relent somewhat.

Sire De Grugy had his day in the sun when grabbing the Tingle Creek. A slight fluff five out failed to stop him bearing down on his rivals at the Pond fence, after which he was soon in control.

This was probably him at his best at a track that suits. His record at Cheltenham ( where so far he has failed to shine) means, Sprinter Sacre or not, the Champion Chase may not be his race. Somersby ran on after a mistake five out to grab second from Captain Conan.

The last race – a class 2 handicap ambitiously called the London National – provided brutal viewing in one way or another. Won by There’s No Panic, it will go down as the last leg of a five-timer for the Paul Nicholls yard after two important wins at Aintree and three high-profile successes here.

Aintree Results

Dropped in trip to two miles, Splash Of Ginge made all, drawing clear down the straight in the maiden hurdle.

The opposition may not have been that strong (hurdling debutant Gabrial The Great finished very tired in second), but he was an emphatic winner.

The fairly exposed by now Gitane Du Berlais – behind Guitar Pete in Ireland – made the most of a soft opportunity to beat Mystery Drama in the Listed juvenile. Like the first winner, she made all without being seriously challenged. A clever piece of placing, her win pays credit to Royal Irish Hussar (who beat Guitar Pete with some ease at Cheltenham).

Course winner, Unioniste dished it out to more experienced rivals in the Listed chase. Only five, he made one slight error but in the end outstayed Wishfull Thinking.

Being honest, with The Giant Bolster unseating and Katenko, Our Mick and Wayward Prince all misfiring, it is tempting to wonder what the winner actually achieved. However, Unioniste obviously likes it here, stays and jumps pretty well and should be noted if back here fresh in April.


Friday December 6th:

Sandown Results

Lightly-raced on the Flat and easy winner of his only race over timber at Plumpton, Violet Dancer supplemented that success in the Class 3 novice hurdle.

He should not be dismissed in better company as despite a speedy pedigree, he seems to have taken to this game. His trainer – not normally one to claim his geese are swans – speaks highly of him.

Sweet Deal jumped well on his debut until a couple of novicey errors on the back. Always pushed along to get on terms, he finished a tired fourth.

Second to easy Newbury winner Valdez at Exeter, The Italian Yobdefied top weight and a mark of 125 in the Class 3 novice handicap. Feature of his win was an accomplished round of jumping – he never put a foot wrong. This asset will stand him in good stead in this sphere.

There may be another day for Royal Guardsman who, although no star, would have finished closer but for a couple of errors (one at the second-last that was bad enough to put him on the floor. He did well to recover and finish fourth). This was only his second attempt over the big obstacles and three miles round a lesser track should suit.

The Grade 2 novice hurdle looked a match between recent Cheltenham winner Saint Roque and impressive Ascot scorer Beat That.

Both were run down by Killala Quay, who was beaten in a tough handicap at Cheltenham last time and took advantage of a last flight blunder by Beat That. He may have won in any case.

Beat That is a lovely looking big son of Milan but he remains weak. It could be we will have to wait until next season for him to show his best. Without the luxury of being able to dictate in this better company, he was not slick or athletic enough when it mattered. He led approaching the last but landed on all fours, dropping back to third but rallying on the run-in.

Saint Roque made the running until headed before the last and on this occasion could only plug on. He looks more of a three mile chaser.

Only three turned out for the Class 1 chase, won by the outsider of the pack, Vino Griego. Despite a mistake two out, he had the pace to dismiss long time leader Rolling Aces, who jumps well enough but lacks a turn of foot.

Any chance Harry Topper had was sacrificed by a sequence of jumping errors.


Saturday November 30th:

Newbury Racing

The win of Valdez in the novice handicap was not without incident. With main market rival Black River exiting after a silly mistake on the far-side, and Flaming Charmer never managing a rhythm, despite running about, Valdez eventually drew clear for an easy win.

Obviously his mark of 135 is now shot on this his second win from as many outings over fences; but he still needs to prove he can mix it in a more competitive field. A quote of 20/1 for the Arkle is unlikely to tempt many.

The Grade 2 handicap hurdle was a typically competitive event.Vendor was hard to nominate, having shown little over hurdles or fences since finishing third in the 2012 Fred Winter behind Une Artiste.

However, apparently second-string behind Batonnier, he sprinted clear on the run-in to thwart long-time leader Shotavodka.

Don’t Be Late took the raise in class in stride to produce a spirited challenge from the last and Saphir Du Rheu was another to run above form so far shown in fourth.

Gassin Golf finished fifth after looking a danger to all early in straight. This extended two miles probably stretched his stamina.

Celestial Halo, something of a revelation over three miles in the twilight of his career, made all, drawing the sting from his three rivals in the Grade 2 Long Distance Hurdle.

At Fishers Cross (unbeaten in six hurdles last season) was closing him down on the run to the second-last when a mistake put him out of contention. Unfortunately, having lost his undercarriage, it was the worst kind of error. He appeared to finish sore and having jumped tentatively throughout in any case, can only be watched next time.

Medinas, off the bridle for much of the last mile, plugged on for a distant second; Reve De Sivola was a never-travelling third.

Established form lines rose to the top in the Hennessy. Having finished third in the Grade 3 United House Gold Cup at Ascot and a winner of the Topham last season, aged only six, Triolo D’Alene – rated 147 – gained another big race for the powerful Nicky Henderson stable.

The two big jumping yards dominated the finish as Rocky Creek, representing Paul Nicholls – a stable that has been in fine form this week – roared back to his best in second.

The 4lbs he had to concede to the winner made the difference. Jumping well and perfectly positioned throughout, Rocky Creek was given every chance by the excellent Daryll Jacob. It remains to be seen where he can go next.

Theatre Guide ran the race of his life in third. Soft ground will probably bring out even more from him.

Highland Lodge (second to Standing Ovation at Wincanton) was fourth ahead of feasibly weighted Merry King – who stays well and could be the sort for something like the Welsh National.

Houblon Des Obeaux and Lord Windermere need to be cut slack from the assessor. After a year and nine months on the sidelines (last seen when winning the Reynoldstown in February 2012), Invictus travelled dangerously well for a long way, only fading in the last half mile. Well weighted at present, providing he comes out of this intact, he may be a different prospect next time.

Having derived benefit from his comeback attempt at Ascot earlier this month, Filbert rang down the curtain on the meeting with success in the Class 2 handicap chase.

Newcastle Racing

It was a case of back to business for My Tent Or Yours in the Grade 1 Fighting Fifth at Newcastle. Although it is unlikely he was facing any serious Champion Hurdle rivals, he pinged his hurdles, winning with something in hand.

Much improved Cockney Sparrow was a game second ahead of Grumeti. The form of the Elite Hurdle is already looking shaky so it was no surprise that the winner of that, Melodic Rendezvous, was unable to break the trend – finishing a beaten-off fifth.


Friday November 29th:

Newbury Racing

The day started with a Class 3 hurdle that has a record of throwing up live Triumph Hurdle candidates.

Calipto, one of two to dominate the betting, had finished second in France on his hurdling debut and travelled with a ease throughout here, pouncing at the last to win comfortably.

This performance left his trainer enthusing, suggesting Calipto is still inexperienced and that there will be no rushed campaign – the Triumph not being the all-important target. Apparently Calipto may reappear at Cheltenham in January.

Actival, another French import that had won on his solitary outing, plugged on for second.

Chocala, for whom there was a strong word on-course, made most of the running, jumping well in the main, but he was unable to resist the winner’s thrust.

The well-bred Dawalan looked a touch one-paced back in fourth; the rest were well beaten.

For much of the Pertemps Hurdle qualifier, first Western Warhorse then Twelve Roses looked likely winners.

Bowling along in front, Western Warhorse looked comfortable in control on the turn but was soon treading water. On this first attempt at three miles, the inescapable conclusion is he failed to stay.

Strong-travelling Twelve Roses lasted longer but looked very tired from two out and eventually struggled home for fourth. His run, from a mark of 130, pays some tribute to More Of That who beat him last time.

Mickie quickened from the last to pick up the pieces ahead of Pateese and Red Not Blue. Sketchy hurdling form Chiberta King, an improved campaigner on the Flat last season, scuppered his chances.

Beforehand, it appeared the key horse in the Grade 2 novice chase was The Romford Pele, who was third last time at Cheltenham to Taquin Du Souil and Oscar Whisky.

Sponsored by Fuller’s (the brewers), one could be forgiven for thinking The Romford Pele had partaken some of their product. He was an accident waiting to happen over his fences, although despite blundering his way round, he did complete.

Up To Something made a bold attempt to make all, but once again it was a Paul Nicholls-trained contender (ably assisted by Daryll Jacob who has risen to the challenge as No 1 jockey for this high-profile yard), Wonderful Charm that proved too good. His jumping was not without the odd fault, but he travelled strongly enough and came up when it mattered.

It was a rough-and-tumble day for punters. They plunged on Sign Of A Victory in the closing novice hurdle. Stepping beyond bumpers for the first time, Sign Of A Victory looked the possible winner approaching the second-last but a novice mistake slammed the door in his face.

Allowed to coast home in fourth, with this run behind him he should go close next time. Wilde Blue Yonder survived a similar hurdling incident to the favourite when holding off Seedling and Tiqris.


Thursday November 28th:

Newbury Racing

Winner of two hurdles in France and at Kempton on debut here,Volnay De Thaix only had to jump round to win a very poorly contested novice, in which ultimately, third and fourth failed to stay.

This left The Master Remover to chase home the winner, but basically, with the winner in a different league, this was two races in one.

Backed to win, Top Dancer jumped very well in the Class 3 amateur riders’ chase. Connections may be tempted to bring him out swiftly next week at Sandown for a similar contest and where the booking of today’s rider, Mr J J Codd, would be an added bonus. A current mark of 114 seems to underestimate Top Dancer’s ability.

Bohemian Rhapsody travelled like the winner throughout in the Class 4 novice handicap.

Moving ominously closer he struck the front approaching two out, but an error at the last probably cost him success. Fourth in the November Handicap at Doncaster, this was an accomplished bid from a four-year-old who should win a decent handicap over hurdles this season. His current mark of 110 will rise, but even so he should remain competitive.

Beforehand the Grade 2 novice chase looked a match between Just A Par and Third Intention.

On his second outing over the big obstacles, Just A Par, who was bought from Ireland for the price of two Ferraris, made just about all. Despite his racing experience, Just A Par looked green, but he never made a semblance of a mistake and eventually drew right away.

Very likeable, Just A Par is classy and although he may take time to peak (he is only six), he looks a potential top-notcher.

In second, the more experienced Third Intention (conceding 7lbs) was quickly put in his place down the straight. Rated 151, a literal (and doubtless misleading) interpretation of this form gives the winner a mark in the region of 160.

More success for the Nicholls yard in the next as Easter Day put his Chepstow chasing debut on fast ground into perspective with a proper win from a mark of 135.

Jumping like a veteran, he cruised into the lead approaching the second-last and is another useful recruit to the chasing ranks. The more experienced Whats Happening (winner of two chases in Ireland) was outpointed but should make his mark in less exacting company.

Benefitting from different riding tactics, in the listed handicap registered as the Gerry Feilden, Ifandbutwhynot made all the running from what was, on his best form at least, a slightly lenient mark of 133.

Chatterbox loomed large but apparently an abscess meant he had missed work so probably blew up. This was only his fourth run over hurdles and there should be more to come from him.

Looking in fine trim, Puffin Billy ran a tame race. Although weighted to his best, he was entitled to do better. It is not the first time he has disappointed.


Saturday November 23rd:

Haydock Results

In the Class 2 Intermediate Hurdle, Far West did not exactly endorse the Elite Hurdle form when he had chased home Melodic Rendezvous.

Handed every chance as his rivals made fiddly mistakes, Far West turned for home travelling as well as any. His effort soon fizzled out though and it was disappointing he only beat outsider Morning Royalty.

Although well behind Far West in the Triumph, Rolling Starreappeared looking a totally different prospect. Much stronger now, despite a couple of careless errors (nothing serious) he knuckled down over the last two to win with authority.

More brilliance from McCoy saw a cosy win in the end for More Of That, who was never travelling better than on the run-in in the Class 2 handicap.

Galvanised from an impossible position, he quickened away to confirm the impression gained last time at Wetherby that he is well above average and ahead of the handicapper.

Blue Fashion and Special Catch were left floundering once the winner began his run.

A week before the Hennessy, we had the best staying chase of the season in the Grade 1 Betfair Chase and time for many of us to eat our words.

Cue Card ran the opposition ragged to win his first event over an extended three miles. Always jumping quickly and fluently, Cue Card put his rivals to the sword one by one. Down the straight, just when those of us that expected him to fold, Cue Card found more.

First Silviniaco Conti then Dynaste were shrugged off. When a horse with Cue Card’s natural ability can nurture his speed over a trip, he will always be dangerous and this was the story now. So next stop the King George at Kempton.

In only his second season over fences, Dynaste ran a great race in such elevated company and there will be another day. Silviniaco Conti ran as well as ever. His best form is on flat tracks and on this evidence it is hard to make a case out for him winning a Gold Cup.

After such a poor showing last time, Long Run was an uncomplicated fourth. The rest were not good enough; only Bobs Worth ran below expectations. With hindsight, this track was against him. Even so, he faded tamely. He needs a stiffer test of stamina and should not be written off just yet.

Ascot Results

Al Ferof beat solitary rival French Opera in a farcical turn-out for the Grade 2 chase. In a virtual school-round, he jumped the better, but he does have an alarming habit of guessing on occasion, something he will not get away with against better company.

The weight concession greatly aided Annie Power to retain an unbeaten hurdle record in the Grade 2.

Zarkandar stuck on gamely in front and it was only after the last that the mare asserted. But for the 11lbs she received from the runner-up, it would have been much closer.


Sunday November 17th:

Cheltenham Results

The Grade 2 Supreme Novices’ trial attracted only a field of four. Sea Lord, on a six-timer beforehand, faced his stiffest task, especially giving 3lbs to The Liquidator – his nearest rival in the betting.

The story of Sea Lord is simply told. Once again, as we saw with Standing Ovation on the first day, it is no good expecting horses to act like machines. Sea Lord is willing but conditions – not necessarily against him – were not ideal. In this company you do not get away with nearly-but-not-quite. As a horse that wants better ground, this was always a risky assignment.

The Liquidator set off in front, soon putting his rivals to the sword. Apart from landing too steeply at the second-last, he jumped cleanly and had too much pace.

Sea Lord was nursed along by the excellent Denis O’Regan, who accepted his fate some way out – only chasing his mount along for second place on the run-in.

Sea Lord wants a flatter track and faster ground. Aintree may be his gig in the spring; although, with the excuses mounting up, the jockey asserts he wants further.

Being brutally frank, today’s conditions were not ideal, but he may not be that good. As for the winner, he looks versatile. He will stay two-and-a-half should connections favour a tilt at the Neptune.

Next up was the Arkle trial. Again, with Raya Star and Dodging Bullets vying for favouritism in a five-runner field, the inescapable conclusion was that better candidates for the big day wait in the wings.

Uttoxeter winner Raya Star was first to commit, but Dodging Bullets – winner of his only start over fences at Kempton and a classy if somewhat enigmatic hurdler – shadowed him and soon put the issue beyond doubt.

A big robust type, Dodging Bullets is an ideal chaser that jumps and travels but does not always find what is expected off the bridle. Nevertheless, he did all that was required here, looking as if there was plenty in reserve.

Apparently he is likely to go to Sandown next. His trainer is not in a hurry to over-race him on the approach to the Festival in March.

On what we have seen this weekend, at this stage, Friday’s winner Taquin Du Seuil looks a better Arkle prospect for his owner than Dodging Bullets. Both will stay further.

Saddled with a 10lbs penalty in the Listed Shloer Chase, Sire De Grugy brought a touch of class to the contest in a bid to win his sixth chase. In contrast to some questionable placing over the course of this three-day meeting, the option to take up this engagement seemed sound.

Early in the race, Sire De Grugy guessed at his fences and never looked comfortable, finishing off with two dicey heart-in-mouth leaps at the last two. Maybe his early mistakes unnerved him; maybe this is not his track (although he was a good second to Captain Conan in this race last season). Either way, this was not a convincing performance in a weak race.

The fact that Kid Cassidy was able to overhaul him on the run-in surely dispels any Queen Mother aspirations. McCoy was at his best on the winner – a horse that has limitations and is somewhat fragile.

Four-year-olds dominated the feature race of the day, the Grade 3 Greatwood Hurdle.

An expensive purchase from France, lightly-raced Dell’ Arca edged out Triumph Hurdle third, Sametegal, who was conceding 16lbs.

Flaxen Flare, another four-year-old that maintains his form, was a laudable fourth having travelled strongly for much of the way. Weight beat him.

Sandwiched between the principals, an enterprisingly-ridden Rawnaq was third.


Saturday November 16th:

Cheltenham Results

Having cut their teeth round lesser tracks against easier opposition, it was time for several Triumph Hurdle aspirants to face the music and each other in the Grade 2 – the first serious novice test of the season.

Never out of the first two, Royal Irish Hussar has come a long way since fiddling his way round Market Rasen on debut. One by one his rivals dropped away until it was left to dual Irish winner Guitar Pete to provide the only danger at the last. Here, Royal Irish Hussar made his only mistake but soon gathered himself together to stride clear on the run-in.

A classy recruit to this game, he has a lovely Flat racing pedigree and looks to match. Although he is not over-big, he appears to have peaked physically and clearly has an engine. He is the best juvenile novice seen so far.

Guitar Pete’s runs to date suggest he is a decent benchmark. Not much else made an impact. Carlisle winner, Azza made an attempt but was brushed aside from two out. Biggest disappointment was ex-French three-time winner Art Mauresque, who must be better than shown here.

Novice chasers got their turn in the Grade 2 over an extended three miles. It turned into a battle between two that had only raced once over fences, but they do look like good novices.

Le Bec justified market confidence, producing a good round of jumping and lasting from Shutthefrontdoor. Like the winner, the runner-up took the fences in stride. If anything, on the uphill slog, he was coming back.

Both have enviable attitudes and they look assured to stake major claims in the long distance events to come.

Sam Winner was not beaten far in third, but African Gold was a disappointment. He jumped well enough for most of the race but a mistake at the third-last put paid to his chance when warning signs were already flashing. To be frank, normally a real trier, he threw in the towel a little too quickly for comfort and it could be fencing is not his game.

The long-distance chasers treated the crowd to a stirring battle over the last two fences in the Grade 3 handicap chase over an extended 3m 3f.

Alvarado quickened on the run-in to beat Knockara Beau, Bradley and last year’s winner Monbeg Dude. The story of the race was pretty much one of last man standing.

Spring Heeled looks something of a monkey. He came there cruising after a mistake woke him up; plainly he failed to stay, but he also gave the impression he was only looking for an excuse to back off.

Despite the assessor’s best efforts to stop him, Johns Spirit defied a 10lbs rise for his latest and endorsed handicap win over course and distance in the Paddy Power.

Although his chance was there for all to see, the rise did seem harsh. Left in front over the last after the fall of Easter Meteor, he just lasted in the face of a late thrust from the for now well-handicapped (at least over fences) Colour Squadron.

The runner-up moved stylishly throughout and may have been a tad unfortunate as he was hampered by the last fence fall of Easter Meteor.

In third, Hidden Cyclone did best of those at the head of the weights. He has decent form in Ireland and obviously ran to his best.

Despite the numbers, this may not have been the best quality Grade 3 handicap. From 6lbs out of the weights, Attaglance was fourth ahead of poorly-treated Rajdhani Express. With the exception of Colour Squadron, those in the money may struggle in similar company off revised marks.

Return Spring gave trainer Philip Hobbs immediate compensation for the narrow defeat of Colour Squadron in the listed handicap. In an incredible finish, he denied top weight Salubrious in the dying strides with Southfield Theatre third.

As you would expect, several nice novices turned out for the Grade 2. Fourth in the race last year, unpenalised Creepy took advantage of some rivals probably booked for fences.

Persian War winner, Timesrembered, made a valiant attempt to concede 7lbs to the winner.

In third, old-fashioned chasing type, Port Melon, created a big impression. He jumped well only to be found wanted for foot from the last. A winner of two points in the spring, he should win over timber without too much problem, but anything this work in progress achieves in this sphere is surely a bonus. He could be back here in two years time for a Gold Cup.

Lingfield Results

Thewandaofu may have been flattered by her fifth in a sub-standard Rockfel, but was good enough to beat three rivals in the Class 5 novice.

Her cause was helped by the antics of serious market rival, Epic Voyage, who lugged in toward the rails, giving his jockey little chance of riding him out properly.

A great slab of thing, if they can sort Epic Battle out he should leave this run behind. The winner is rated 90, which will make life tough from here on.

Prince Alzain enjoyed the run of the race to snatch the listed event. It was a case of right place at the right time, although he probably would have won in any case, but it was messy.

Uramazin (66/1 chance), Tales Of Grimm and Tinshu were all hostages to fortune that finished strongly after the winner had sailed for home.

Valbchek finally got his head in front in the Listed event. To be honest he was hard to fancy today but the ability has always been there. He had to thread a path through a tightly packed field on the rail which suited, as he had no time to consider his situation. He had some decent rivals in behind in Take Cover, Lancelot Du Lac, Hawkeyethenoo and Hitchens.


November 15th:

Cheltenham Results

Standing Ovation never looked remotely comfortable in the class 3 for amateur riders.

With his rider giving up the outside to no one, he was swung ride at all the bends and either gave his fences too much air or, as was the case at the ditch on the far side twice, got underneath them.

He also raced keenly, possibly indicating this was one run in quick succession too many. It is also worth pointing out his wins have all come right-handed.

All in all, what looked like an easy opportunity beforehand from a penalty, proved to be a bridge too far.

Handy Andy was the one to cash in, ahead of Charingworth – a ten-year-old whom his trainer asserts is better over two-and-a-half.

Anay Turge, closely weighted with Eastlake on their Aintree running last time, proved that was the form to concentrate on here, pulling clear on the run-in after a strongly run class 2 chase.

In second, from the in-form Tizzard stable, Sew On Target will not have deflated followers of Johns Spirit in tomorrow’s Paddy Power Gold Cup.

The favourite, Renard, gradually closed in the final stages without landing a blow. He is considered by his connections to be a better prospect over further – possibly three miles. That does beg the question: why run over two?

Oscar Whisky jumped well enough on his chase debut without giving the impression he is a natural.

Left in front early by the erratic exploits of one-time leader The Cockney Mackem (almost stopped dead at the first), Oscar Whisky jumped right at most fences but did knuckle down when the pace quickened into a virtual sprint from two out.

Two-and-half is probably short of his best so he might develop into an RSA candidate; but now aged eight approaching nine, fences are something of an afterthought.

Considering he gave the runner-up 5lbs, the win of Taquin Du Seuil should not be underestimated. Claiming speed to be his forte, connections consider him a possible for the Arkle.

The success of Thomas Crapper in the intermediate class 3 hurdle lends the opportunity to plenty of strap-lines, all of which will be resisted here.

Not obviously well-handicapped, he kicked on from the turn and then again when challenged over the last by Angles Hill.

By all accounts third horse Whisper ran pretty much to expectations from a mark of 137.

Free To Dream stayed on strongly in fifth. More should be heard of him, possibly over fences.

Warden Hill was impossibly placed throughout but did pick off a few late on and is worth another chance at this level on a less exacting track.

That clever Tony Martin produced another handicap good thing in the novice handicap when lightly-raced Quick Jack – short enough in the betting beforehand but proving the money was not misplaced in running – hosed up despite a wide berth. Produced like the assassin’s sword by Ruby Walsh, he made a mockery of a mark of 113.


November 11th:

Kempton Results Review

The first division of the maiden looked a competitive affair. After having shown promise over course and distance on debut, well-supported Warrior Of Light set the seal on victory over a furlong out.

In a race where it paid to race handy, Rapid Advance made eye-catching ground from some way back to snatch second. This represented a vast improvement on his debut when stuck in the mud at Leicester. This surface suited him much better and he should win next time.

Canova, another that had shown promise on his only outing – at Newbury behind Strait Run – gave this a solid look by finishing third.

The second division was dominated by Godolphin, their newcomer, the Authorized colt Elite Army, getting the better of Intermedium inside the last furlong. They were first and second throughout in a race that, despite a faster time, did not look as strong as its predecessor.


November 9th:

Doncaster Results

Jazz, not inconvenienced by soft ground, finally broke his duck in the Class 5 maiden over six furlongs where he made all to beat Resolute and Direct Times.

Division 2 supplied something of a shock when after such a good effort in a listed event at Newmarket last week, the smooth travelling Penny Drops failed to quicken in the ground as unraced Indy drew away.

Penny Drops did appear to be losing her coat last week and this run may have come too soon and when she was over the edge. She will start next year favourably handicapped.

Well-backed Penina further underlined the folly of backing fillies at this time of year when finishing stone last in the nursery from a lowly mark of 66.

Black Caesar ran well enough in fourth, behind Kenny The Captain and Torchlighter who were involved in a tight finish.

Lincoln winner Levitate ended the season as he started it with victory at this track in the Class 2 handicap. By now it was soft bordering on heavy.

Jack Dexter capped a successful second half of the season with a listed win from the much improved mud-lover that is Highland Colori.

Conduct, noted in running last time over 1m 2f at York, was always travelling extremely comfortably in the final big race handicap of the season, eventually winning with some authority from a couple of outsiders in Rio’s Rosanna and Open Eagle. He did cope well with conditions, making a mockery of his unchanged mark of 96. A fragile type that does not stand too much racing, he looked good today but will be raised the best part of 10lbs for this.

At Wincanton, not much went right in running for Melodic Rendezvous in the Grade 2 hurdle. Almost slipping on the turn and jumping the second-last poorly when third, he came back to pass Triumph Hurdle runner-up and well-backed Far West at the last.

Considering he was conceding 4lbs to the winner, this was a smart performance and suggests a lucrative season awaits. Word is the winner has improved plenty since last year and will do so again.

The manner of Standing Ovation’s victory in the listed handicap chase suggests that even with a substantial hike from his present mark of 120, he can make his presence felt in stronger handicaps. He could just creep into the Hennessy, where he would be of interest.

Breeders’ Cup Result

Santa Anita Racing Results Review

Suddenly, with the long shadows of winter looming, British two-year-old form was given a major shot in the arm by the victories of Outstrip and Chriselliam in their respective championship events on Friday.

Perfectly delivered by Mike Smith, Outstrip pounced on Giovanni Boldini late to claim the colt’s event, with Bobby’s Kitten for the USA back in third.

Outstrip’s win pays a handsome compliment to his Dewhurst conqueror, War Command and also to Toormore – who beat him at Goodwood.

In fact, as well as bolstering War Command, the run of the first two emphasises the strength of Toormore’s form as he has beaten both contenders this season. Add the highly promisingBe Ready (said to be Outstrip’s superior at home), Australia, even Free Eagle (worth another chance), Kingman (something to prove), along with possibly Berkshire and we have an encouraging list of colts for next year. On a windy afternoon in early November, next season’s classics promise to realise the high standard they are designed to meet.

Chriselliam proved to be a revelation in the fillies equivalent, flashing clear of American contenders Testa Rossi and Colonel Joan.

She displayed an impressive turn of foot (to an extent absent at Newmarket) and looks the real deal for next season. Connections have always claimed her to be their best filly, so it has now been proved. Clearly, she has bloomed late in the season but that does not mean she will not be fighting fit for Newmarket next May.

Vorda had a torrid time. Thrown wide at the first bend, she was always struggling thereafter. Her defeat cannot be put down solely to this (certainly did not help though) or, more importantly, the trip. If anything, she appeared to stay on well enough and should not be judged too harshly – better to claim this was a bad day at the office for her. It could be Vorda is considered a two-year-old in essence – in part explaining the decision to come here.

France probably have a better 1,000 Guineas candidate in Miss France, about whom no doubts regarding trip seem to exist.

Dank gained a gritty success over Romantica in the Fillies and Mares.

The aptly named Magician, conjured by the boy-genius that is Aidan O’ Brien, (like some policemen he looks younger than he is) gave Ryan Moore a momentous double on the card when scything through rivals in the Breeders’ Cup Turf.

Magician soon swept clear from The Fugue. It was a furious pace and Moore kept his customary cool at the rear before delivering a devastating challenge. Not seen since a poor run in the St James’s Palace in June, as the only three-year-old in the pack, Magician’s win was further testament to O’Brien’s golden touch.

Another success for the imperious Galileo, and a first attempt at twelve furlongs for Magician (ran on Lasix), excuses for failure were stacked up beforehand.

The Fugue possibly had a tougher task in running given her position in the race (much closer to an unforgiving pace than the winner, but no fault of Buick’s – you have to ride from your position rather than take a pull).

However, Magician’s finishing kick meant he was the likely winner in any case. The Fugue leaves here unbowed.

To succeed at racing, you need to check your ego in at the entrance gates. Those constantly looking for applause get nowhere – applause only pays the bills if you happen to be a thespian or a comedian.

We are all reduced to a bit of both in turn and ultimately to fools in this business, so it is not my intention to poke a silly accusative finger at anyone when I compile these reports. The aim is to improve our joint chances of making some sense of an often crazy pursuit.

So, no malice is intended when I say the decision to run Olympic Glory in the Mile on fast ground was a poor one. In mitigation, I stated as much before the race in the strongest possible terms, but no matter.

Predictably, Olympic Glory ran flat and was never seen with a chance. It could be that he dislikes racing round bends; almost certainly, with all his best form on ground no faster than good, firm ground is not ideal.

Let me say up front, I have a great deal of time for Team Hannon. Their horses run to merit, are well turned out and usually perfectly ridden. In general, if you fancy one of theirs and it doesn’t win – you only have yourself to blame.

The Hannons are always approachable and a credit to racing. However, if they have a fault (most of us have at least one), it is the tendency to sometimes stubbornly over face horses when so-called judges (Ladbrokes made Olympic Glory a lay) can see they are making a mistake.

They were guilty here of asking a horse to achieve what was, to all intents and purposes, the unachievable. In the race, home confidence proved well-placed when the monster that is Wise Dan proved too tough. Having won the race last year, the champ returned to grind out a hard-fought success over outsiders Za Approval and Silentio, with Silver Max in fourth.

In the Classic, they raced for a total of five million dollars. It was a brutal clash down the straight with the Gary Stevens-ridden Mucho Macho Man squeezing home ahead of Will Take Charge and Declaration Of War, who was perfectly delivered by Joseph O’ Brien.

Declaration Of War ran a mighty race although he may have tired in the last half furlong on the dirt surface. With last year’s winner and the strongly fancied Game On Dude both beaten, this looked a strong renewal.

Saturday November 2nd

Newmarket Racing Results Review

The first of the Class 4 maiden for fillies that has a good record for the future went to the a daughter of Selkirk, Queen Of Ice. Able to cope with the ground, she was doing her best work on the uphill climb to nab her two nearest opponents. The winner is another decent juvenile produced by William Haggas.

In second, on her third attempt, Makruma set only a reasonable standard.

Apparently struggling early, another debutant, Angelic Air,arrived inside the last furlong looking like the winner. Understandably, her exertions caught up with her and she faltered close home. Nevertheless, for a daughter of Oasis Dream on ground this soft, she turned in a satisfactory debut and looks a sure-fire future winner.

It was experience to the fore in the following division (lacked the substance of the first), where on her fifth attempt, Miss Lillie narrowly outpointed Eastern Belle, who had shown promise in a similarly uninspiring maiden here last time.

Loch Ma Naire (no obvious promise at Kempton on only start) was third ahead of Godolphin newcomer True Match. All the signs are this was only an ordinary event.

Hartnell justified cramped odds when winning the Class 3 Zetland Stakes over 1m 2f – which is a long way for two-year-olds. By Authorized, he clearly stays very well and should be effective in that sphere next season.

However, he blitzed his opponents here and is very much on the upgrade. It would be a mistake to look upon him as a one-trick pony. The only serious opponent, Montaly (beat yesterday’s maiden winner Idder by five lengths last time) was unable to land a blow in second, lending credence to Hartnell’s effortless win.

After finishing second to Fillies’ Mile third Ihtimal in the May Hill, in the light of Chriselliam’s success in Santa Anita last night, Majeyda’s chance of defying a 3lbs penalty in the listed event increased. At least that was many people’s reasoning and the way the crime fitted the punishment after the event. This was not the strongest field but Majeyda – out of her depth in the Marcel Boussac last time – was too good. A strongly-built daughter of Street Cry, she would seem a natural for Dubai in March.

Adhwaa and Island Remede were next to finish ahead of Rosehill Artist. They finished well-strung out in behind.

Newbury Spring Cup winner Half A Sixpence, who seems in his element on the soft, romped away with the Class 3 handicap. Runner-up, the lightly-raced Magistral, could be of interest next year in a similar early season handicap – particularly on less testing ground.

Full credit is due to Nabucco for getting up in the face of adversity (mostly of his own making) in the listed event. Fully effective on soft, he was nudged from some way out and kept on doggedly to wriggle through a gap and collar Proud Chieftain.

Once again soft ground came to the aid of Penitent in the listed event, which he just won at the expense of French Navy and Tulius.

Last year’s UAE Derby winner Daddy Long Legs, having his first run since this year’s Dubai carnival, was far from disgraced, keeping on once headed. Sure to return to Meydan next year, it seems he retains ability.

In last place, this is the third time Lanansaak has failed to back up a decent run. It would appear she is at her best after lengthy absences.

Newmarket concluded its season with an undistinguished handicap won by Piceno.

Wetherby Racing Results Review

Transferring a good level of bumper form to hurdles, Gone Too Farbeat a decent field in the class 3 novice hurdle, jumping economically and well. He should progress over timber.

In second and third, Varom and Gassin Golf failed to seriously test the winner but were not disgraced.

Now twelve approaching thirteen and with a mind of his own, making Tidal Bay a lay in the Grade 2 hurdle he won last year seemed a no-brainer. Looking as if he wants the comparative luxury of fences as opposed to the immediacy of hurdles, he fiddled his way over the obstacles, was last off the bridle and rallied after a careless jump at the last to catch Medinas on the run-in. This was a smart piece of placing by Paul Nicholls and a great piece of riding from Sam Twiston-Davies. This run will put Tidal Bay spot-on for the Hennessy, where he will surely meet many better treated rivals.

With Long Run drastically underperforming, Benefficient predictably failing to stay, and Cape Tribulation failing to fire, the Grade 2 Charlie Hall went to Harry Topper from last year’s runner-up Wayward Prince.

Unioniste was handed a clear chance but a flat last-fence leap put paid to that. He probably wants further. This was a good reappearance from the winner, who needs to improve again to replicate anything achieved by last year’s winner, Silviniaco Conti.

More kamikaze pilots returned to base than runners in the concluding handicap hurdle so it is hard to fully evaluate its worth. After winning a novice at Folkestone last season, also on the soft, from a mark of 130, More Of That once again handled conditions to respond to a typical McCoy drive from the last to deny a fit Twelve Roses. If this outing brings the winner on, he could well go in again.

Roi Du Mee exposed various weaknesses in his Grade 1 rivals at Down Royal.

First Lieutenant was quick to backpedal;

Sizing Europe (yet to win at this trip) gave the impression three miles is the very top end of his stamina in second.

If nothing else, we do know Roi Du Mee is particularly effective in the soft.


Friday November 1st:

Newmarket Racing Results Review

Sea Defence stepped up on a passable opening effort at Kempton to win the first division of the maiden over seven furlongs.

He beat the other with form Think Again – the pair coming clear. With Mizzen Mast in the pedigree, the winner is a powerful sort that recorded a good time considering the ground.

With three runners having rateable form, the second division looked stronger but was run in a slower time than the first.

Idder got up in determined fashion to withstand a late lunge from Zee Zeely. Both have improved from only promising first outings.

Having finished behind Pretzel on debut, form horse Stetchworth, although only narrowly beaten, was effectively last of three back in third. He looked the winner from some way out but lacks a change of gear.

Warbrook (not a fancy pedigree) was the only one from outside the obvious to take the eye in fourth. He should be winning in ordinary company soon. A Kempton maiden would be ideal.

Quickening at the right time meant Cape Factor, who loves soft ground, won the listed event over six furlongs. She stole first run – may have won in any case – but runner-up Penny Drops (angling for room) only got going when it was too late. When it is this soft, it is difficult to make up ground but Penny Drops did her best. On the back of only one outing this was a good effort and Penny Drops (not the most imposing filly) should soon shed the maiden tag.

For a daughter of Elusive Quality, Genuine Quality stayed on in atrocious conditions for third.

Despite disappointing in the soft at Salisbury last time, Expert handled conditions today to beat Mar Mar in the conditions stakes that history shows favours two-year-olds.

Wetherby Racing Results Review

Royal Irish Hussar took another step forward in his new career at Wetherby. Mentioned after a clumsy round of jumping at Market Rasen, he was slicker in the air though there is still room from improvement. Nevertheless, the margin of his victory suggests he continues to improve.

May Results 2014

May 30th: Newmarket: Summer is apparently here, with the first of the 2014 meetings scheduled to be run on the July course. Bitter Lake took the first race – a Class 4 for juvenile fillies over six furlongs. A good-sized daughter of Halling, despite having to be angled out to the centre of the course, once she hit her stride, even on holding ground, she showed an impressive turn of foot. Visually she was impressive, although it remains to be seen what she beat. She could be decent and has the scope to progress. Apparently her immediate target is the Albany. In second, Kinematic stepped up markedly on her debut at Ascot when she was only ninth of eleven. It was a similar story with the third, Looking Good, who had finished fifth of six in an ordinary event at Sandown last time. In fourth, if realistically campaigned, Hound Music – who was carried wide by the winner – finished nicely, making her perhaps the most interesting betting proposition next time if turning up at Kempton or Wolverhampton.

Paying two-and-half million for a yearling is asking for trouble. However, Qatar Racing took the chance with the Galileo colt Hydrogen who made his belated appearance in the Class 5 maiden over 1m 4f. Unfortunately his price tag will be a permanent millstone round his neck after what was only a moderate debut. Those of a charitable nature could point to the ground and to the fact he was not beaten far by the horse that finished sixth in the Dante. But clutching at straws is expensive. On the face of it, his failure to make an impact in this sort of maiden does not augur well. Wonderstruck, the only filly in the field, will probably improve plenty for this, only her second outing. By Sea The Stars, she is very well related and her debut at Ascot when behind Marsh Daisy has already been advertised by the winner’s success at Goodwood. The Ribblesdale is next on the agenda, where she will not be out of place. Forever Now and Karraar (third to Connecticut at Newbury) will surely win in turn. Saab Almanal may not have stayed this trip but was probably flattered by his proximity to The Grey Gatsby at York in any case.

So disappointing last time, Cloudscape ran better in the Class 3 handicap, but he does have an awkward action and pulled too hard early on. He looked all set to win when striking the front over a furlong out but was worn down by the giant Top Tug – who was behind Cloudscape at Newmarket and looks well-treated from a mark of 84. Even a rise in the weights should not prevent Top Tug from following up. His action suggests this ground, or at least easy ground, will always suit. The pair was clear.

May 29th:

Sandown Results:
The Listed National Stakes, so often a dress rehearsal for Royal Ascot and won last year by Rizeena, went to another filly this time round when Tiggy Wiggy pounced a furlong out. Beaten in a decent listed event at York last time that should throw up winners, she was patiently ridden and quickened strongly in soft ground. The Queen Mary is an obvious target. There was money for Brocklesby winner Cock Of The North who was fizzy at the start, reluctant to load and started slowly. He did stay on but without looking likely to trouble the winner. Chester runner-up Roudee made most of the running and finished third.

Brown Panther shrugged off his 2lbs penalty to clear away in the Henry II Stakes. He is a powerful galloper that stays well and was suited by these conditions. High Jinx ran up to his best in second, ahead of Whiplash Willie who, after his comeback win at Salisbury has now put two good runs back-to-back. Of the rest, Girolamo was fourth and Tiger Cliff a never-nearer fifth. Connections of Tac De Boistron will presumably be pleased with the showing of stable mate Seismos, who was beaten just over five lengths in sixth.

With only three runners the Brigadier Gerard was always going to be a tactical affair. Run in driving rain, Sharestan – a horse with a good record fresh – just lasted. Fallon was excellent on the winner, as was Martin Lane on the runner-up Sheikhzayedroad. In throwing down a last furlong challenge, Lane risked a whip ban on a mulish individual, all but pulling the prize out of the fire. The combination was in front a stride after the line. With a 3lbs penalty, Top Notch Tonto was not disgraced in last place and it could not be said he failed to stay, although the time on the soft ground was understandably slow. The withdrawals of Hillstar and Remote greatly devalued the event.

Not for the first time Ryan Moore excelled in the Listed Heron Stakes. Winning for the first time since twelve months ago, this success knocked off the brick dust Master Carpenter had accumulated on his head after banging it on a wall. Beaten by the likes of Kingman and Western Hymn this year, this ground, a return to a mile and a tactically aware ride from Moore all contrived to make it his night. Indy was beaten a respectable distance in second whilst End Of Line, who was only seven lengths adrift in the French Guineas, carried his head awkwardly and was a laboured third.

Proven soft ground performer Ishikawa won the concluding handicap with something to spare despite a late lunge from Dream Walker, who was third to Chil The Kite at Newbury last time.

May 22nd: Goodwood Results: Plenty of rain softened the track from good to soft. Stepped up to six from his debut Portamento made light of the Class 4 maiden. As the only one with experience it is hard to know what he actually achieved in drawing away from Estidhkaar – for whom there was market support. By Dark Angel, the runner-up took a while to grasp the message.

Solo Hunter caused an upset in the Class 4 handicap. By Sleeping Indian, this step up in trip was not guaranteed to suit as he was beaten twelve lengths only four days ago at Ripon over a mile. But in a slog on soft ground (they clocked ten seconds slow), it seemed to do the trick – at least on this occasion. Gothic did not get an opening when needed down the straight but Ryan Moore stuck to his guns on the inner and eventually found room. This ground was not ideal for Gothic who has still improved on his run at Sandown last time. Thrice-maiden Loving Home was close up in third and should be opening his account before long. Fast Delivery was once again intractable in that he pulled too hard. He looks a lost cause.

In a race that was sixteen seconds slow, Story Writer got off the mark on turf in the Class 4 handicap over two miles. He had a duel with Kashgar over the final two furlongs, the pair clear of Lion Beacon, who will improve on a faster surface. Where that puts him though is questionable.

Possible Hunt Cup contender Russian Realm won the Class 2 handicap, showing he has benefitted from his latest run at Ascot. He made short work of last year’s runner-up George Guru and So Beloved, who, with his awkward action is not one to bank on. For the money on offer this was not a strong handicap.

The Pretty Polly form, on which current Oaks favourite Tagrooda claims are largely based, is beginning to look shaky. Neither the second nor fourth (Jordan Princess and Uchenna) made any impression in the Height Of Fashion where the Pivotal filly Marsh Daisy who – like many of the progeny – relishes easy ground. To be fair she looks an improving filly. The ground probably scuppered the chances of Jordan Princess, who is probably better than this; however, it is likely – as suggested at the time – that this year’s Pretty Polly was only a moderate renewal. Taking a line through the runner-up Eastern Belle, last week’s Newbury winner Volume is a much better prospect than the well-beaten Jordan Princess. Psychometry was another inconvenienced by the easy surface but at least she put up a show of sorts in third.

Black Shadow lost his maiden tag in an ordinary class 5. However, although entitled to win, he did so with something in hand, suggesting a handicap from a reasonable mark may not be out of the question.

Sandown Results: Dame Liberty, a lengthy filly by Tamayuz, made all for a tidy success in the Class 5 maiden for fillies. Hemmed in on the rails at one point, Russian Heroine was always going to have to play her experience card to mow down the winner but, once extracted for a run she only kept on at one pace to nab second. A sixth furlong will help. The expensive Invincible Spirit debutant, Blue Aegean, looked green but showed ability in third.

The ground may have been responsible for the defeat of Provenance in the Class 4 handicap. The early gallop was slow causing her to fight for her head until she settled after a couple of furlongs. Her mark of 84 is not harsh, but she had to concede weight to Reedcutter and Cape Icon, who were both just too strong. Ryan Moore looked after Provenance who may repay his kindness.

Despite pulling hard early, Elite Army, representing the strong form of Windshear from the last meeting, found plenty when presented with a gap, eventually running out an easy winner. If his antics can be curbed he is capable of progressing further. By Authorized, he has plenty of substance. It was a Godolphin one-two with Gold Trail, who looked the winner early in the straight, running out of puff on this testing ground but hanging on for second.

Mutakayyef, second to Barley Mow in a listed Newmarket event last time when stepping up to ten furlongs, told us little when winning his maiden by a wide margin. As suggested by his pedigree, soft ground is no problem. There could be more to come over a mile-and-a-half.

May 17th: Newbury Results: On firming ground, the competitive Class 4 maiden went to Connecticut, for whom everything went right. Despite a wide draw, his rider got him out and across and, after promise at Newmarket when third to Munjaz, Connecticut showed a willing attitude down the straight. He eventually collared Smiling Stranger (third to Criteria at Kempton) with a hard-pulling Mange All third. This was a step in the right direction for the winner, who has a King Edward entry at Royal Ascot but may not be quite up to that standard. Obsidian ran on promisingly in a race that appeared to favour those that raced prominently.

Now seven and with plenty of gruelling miles on the clock, Mount Athos, ridden closer to the pace than usual, picked up the pieces to grab the Listed Aston Park. With Battalion curling up tamely and Sky Hunter (should have been suited by this step up in trip but wasn’t) not proving a threat, it was left to Forgotten Voice to chase him home.

The class 2 handicap featured several that were down to winning marks. Back to his Cambridgeshire-winning mark of 2012, Bronze Angel was the most popular. He hit the front over a furlong out but was eventually run out of a place. Chil The Kite, fourth in the Lockinge on this day last year, pounced inside the final furlong and cleared away. Only four but with his fourth trainer, Fort Knox flashed home late for second. This trip of seven may be a minimum. Dream Walker was third in what looked like a who’s-turn-is-it-today handicap.

Stepped up in grade, Cannock Chase, beautifully settled by Ryan Moore, won the Class 2 London Gold Cup from a mark of 89 like a horse going places. Like most Lemon Drop Kid’s he is a real looker. With a sparkling turn of foot, it may be this trip of ten furlongs is his optimum. Raised 11lbs for his Sandown success, Windshear chased him home valiantly but could not get on terms. This was a strong handicap. After the win of Volume yesterday and this effort from Windshear, the run of Cloudscape last time (beat them both) is all the more perplexing. Satellite went into premature orbit when pulling hard early but Frankie Dettori kept something in reserve. Not surprisingly, it was not enough. The son of Danehill Dancer needs to settle down if he is to take up some lofty engagements.

Despite doubts, Olympic Glory, settled to perfection by Frankie Dettori, rewarded a bold policy by the Hannon camp when winning the season’s first Group 1 – the Lockinge. The ground was not ideal but, although firming, there was still juice left. Travelling well throughout, he maintained a fine record of first-time out successes for three seasons. Tullius stepped up to the challenge in much better company to finish second, emphasising once again the strength of this year’s Lincoln. The eye was drawn to the monster that is Verrazano. On his first run for new connections and looking as if it would bring him on, he finished third, serving up a warning that he is likely to transfer Grade 1 American form to this country before long. A great mover that was nudged home once the winner had committed, he is all quality. In time he could turn out to be the best in show.

The Class 4 maiden over seven furlongs looked of questionable quality. Recent form rose to the top but it was moderate form at best. Skaters Waltz emerged best from debutant Telefono and Between Wickets. Bon Voyage – a serial maiden was fourth – next came the unraced gelding Polybius, who has an action more suited to a Lipizzaner than a racehorse. He hits the ground like a pneumatic drill and will surely be more effective in the soft; or, possibly on the all-weather. Be warned though; this race was poor by Newbury standards and anything stepping outside a modest parameter is being set up for a reversal.

Covered up, Aertex took the fillies’ handicap. It is a hard race to make too much of, but apprentice-ridden Cay Dancer (a stable mate of the winner) did finish strongly and a step up in trip may bring about improvement next time.

Newmarket Results:
Always travelling well, a step in trip to 1m 6f seemed to improve an already upward Van Percy who won the Class 2 handicap with ears pricked. They may not have been the best in behind.

Coulsty came out of nowhere to land the listed event, narrowly beating Toofi who had run so well in one of the sales races at the Craven meeting. It was a bunch finish. Windfast was a close third, ahead of Parbold who, after a rough passage, only got going when it was all over. Complicit was next, ahead of a disappointing Aeolus who, after looking unlucky in the Free Handicap – a race that is throwing out mixed messages at present – was never travelling. His best form is with cut in the ground and this surface may have been responsible. He is worth another chance. Gamesome has an action that needs to be seen to be believed (races on three legs); it was therefore no surprise he was well beaten.

Following some speculation by jockeys, it seemed after the running of the Class 2 sprint trophy that, on this occasion, racing on the stands’ side presented a definite advantage. At least those in the centre seemed disadvantaged. Why this sort of situation should exist at a course like Newmarket is something of a mystery. Be that as it may, Eastern Impact scooted up the nearside to grab this from Fear Or Favour and a closing Stomp. Roger Charlton, responsible for the latter, also fielded Stars Above Me, who, although coming with a challenge, was soon out with the washing from her position. Apparently the trainer’s justification in running two was that there were no other suitable races to be found. Really?

Hugging the rail, Pinzolo, although not looking entirely in love with his task, appeared to battle on once headed to win the Listed. As already stated he may have benefitted from the strip of ground he raced on. In second, out in the middle of the ocean, Master Carpenter did no harm to the form of Western Hymn.

Although apparently disappointing on his second run, that was put into perspective by the end of the season so Yuften was entitled to win an ordinary maiden without too much fuss. This he achieved in the Class 4, endorsing his debut second to Barley Mow at Newbury. Racing up the favoured strip of ground, he came right away. Fourth to Dante runner-up Arod at Windsor, Kinshasa ploughed a furrow on the unfavoured middle of the track and having lost his pitch, kept on again up the hill to finish fourth. He should be marked up for this. A step up in trip may suit. He will be qualified for handicaps after his next run.

Built to carry big weights if necessary, stepping up in trip to a mile-and-a-half, Miner’s Lamp settled better than when we last saw him to make all in the concluding Class 3 handicap. Alex My Boy staged a last furlong challenge that only narrowly failed.

May 16th: Newbury: The class 4 maiden over six furlongs for two-year-olds has a decent record. The market was on the money, centring on Adaay and Aledaid. Once he got the hang of it, Adaay quickened like a decent horse, showing a good turn of foot and winning with something to spare. The most expensive Kodiac to have gone through the ring, he looks as good a two-year-old as we have seen so far this year. Aledaid finished only fifth having travelled nicely. Out on the wing for most of the journey, the way the race was played out did not help. A good-looking son of Acclamation, he should win next time.

The Listed Swettenham Stud for fillies looked a quality event. Volume, third to Cloudscape and subsequent Sandown winner Windshear at Newmarket, made all under a confident ride from Richard Hughes, who saved plenty up his sleeve. Lahinch Classics for Ireland was her nearest pursuer. Newmarket maiden winner Hadaatha travelled into the race but lugged left when it mattered, forfeiting her chance. You could put it down to greenness, but, notably weak in the market, it could be she is not straightforward. Inchila was a close fourth. Only small, she lacks scope.

Clouds Rest flashed out of the gates to make all in the Class 3 conditions stakes. A Beverley winner, she was too sharp for her rivals. The Sir Percy debutant, Persun finished best of a tight bunch for second. Spirit Of Xian was inches away, ahead of Expensive Date who took an age to load but came back in promising style. This was not the strongest event of its type.

Arab Dawn took the eye at when winning at Goodwood last time and continued his progression in a strong Class 4 three-year-old handicap. Personal Opinion did not get the run of the race in second but the winner had a little left in the locker. Notarised and Raven Ridge added substance in third and fourth.

On a day that belonged to Richard Hughes, Musical Comedy made it four when nursed home in the listed. He was always in the right place and struck inside the last furlong to hold Naadirr. No excuses are forwarded for Mushir who was a strong second in the Free Handicap. He was always struggling from two lengths off the pace. It could be he wants to return to seven or maybe, considering he had a 3lbs penalty, this is pretty much as good as he is.

York: Speedy two-year-old fillies lined up for the listed race that opened the card. Patience Alexander, a nine-length winner at Wolverhampton, eventually wore down dual-winner Tiggy Wiggy. The winner is a natural for the Queen Mary. Kodiac was responsible for the first two. Eventual favourite Zuhoor Baynoona stepped up on her Yarmouth debut in third. In fourth and fifth, Appleberry and Don’t Tell Annie want noting. Both won their maidens on stiff tracks and, although not slow, were unable to go the early pace here. They stayed on strongly doing their best work in the closing stages and can be expected to recover the winning thread in the right event over six furlongs.

With a Hardwicke entry, the course whisper was that the Monsun colt Arab Spring was a Group horse in a handicap in the Class 2. Rated 96 after winning his maiden at Kempton and a handicap at Doncaster this year, he represented Sir Michael Stoute who won the event last year with Sir John Hawkwood. Although racing from a high enough mark (up eleven pounds from last time), Arab Spring was taking on decent but exposed opponents. To be fair beating handicappers of their nature is never easy for horses with limited experience (this was only his fourth racecourse experience). A fluent mover that travelled strongly throughout, Arab Spring found plenty once he hit the front. Athletic and neat, he is very likeable and can continue to progress, although life will get harder for him from here on. Reading between the lines it would appear his non-committal trainer favours one of the big Royal Ascot handicaps.

Gospel Choir emphasised what a versatile campaigner he is when winning the Group 2 Yorkshire Cup. Having shown speed over nine furlongs on debut before claiming a couple of notable scalps in the Jockey Club Stakes at Newmarket over twelve furlongs, he took a further step up in trip of two furlongs in his stride, although he was helped by a slow pace and drying ground. A mile-and-a-half may be his best trip. A splendid example of Galileo but out of a Pivotal mare, he is not bred to stay this far but, eased into the lead over a furlong out, he found plenty when challenged – and challenge him they did! Ryan Moore gave him the perfect ride. One of his many attributes is that he gives horses time to respond without immediate recourse to the whip. He had a very willing partner here. With a 4lbs penalty, Tac De Boistron has run a mighty race in second and his advance towards the Ascot Gold Cup continues. Tiger Cliff was close up in third. After a slow early gallop, in behind plenty took the eye. Ahzeemah, Camborne and Seal Of Approval were the chief protagonists to give connections encouragement for the future.

Lustrous made all to land the listed event although she may have been fortunate to an extent as the runner-up, Radiator, failed to advance her claims when tanking early. She has done well physically since last season and if this was a one-off should make amends.

The Class 3 handicap over five furlongs was all about Newcastle winner, G Force who won in impressive fashion. Well backed, they knew what they were doing as he found a change of gear from some way back to make up a lot of ground, not easy to do over the sudden death distance. A mark of 87 was fair enough beforehand but he made a mockery of it. He will stay six no problem (it might improve him judging by the way he was powering clear in the closing stages) and looks destined for better things.

Newmarket: Juventas put her experience to good use when winning the juvenile Class 4 maiden for fillies. By Sixties Icon, this sixth furlong was of benefit. Dutch Party was an always prominent second ahead of Rose Of Kiev. In fourth, Ski Slope made up a lot of ground in the last furlong on her debut and should know more next time.

Outlaw Country put up a fine debut against experienced rivals after missing the break in the novice stakes. Honours were shared between Dougal and Justice Good.

Groundbreaking might be all right although his win in the Class 3 handicap should not be taken too literally. He looks a sulky sort and did win first time last year before failing to progress. There was a ground excuse in October but he will need to defy a hefty hike in the handicap to win again.

May 15th:

Salisbury Results
There were no real stars on show in the opening Class 5 maiden for juveniles. That is to say with the exception of Richard Hughes, who timed his run to perfection on Beacon to claim Windsor runner-up Fine Prince close home. With 66/1 shot Amber Crystal (who had showed nothing at Kempton on only outing) in third, one has to question the worth of the race. Beacon did win cosily but will need to be significantly better than the bare form to make an impact at a better level.

The Class 4 handicap, confined to three-year-old fillies over ten furlongs, placed an emphasis on stamina as several participants were not stoutly bred. Richard Hughes struck once again when delivering the Rock Of Gibraltar filly Crystal Nymph late from a slow pace. The filly was breaking her maiden from a mark of 72, mugging Melrose Abbey close home. The runner-up will stay further but not in a hurry. She has a rounded action and will always need cut. Pace-setter Rosehill Artist kept on for third, although it is far from certain she will stay this trip in a truly run event. For those with a forgiving nature, Surcingle did race on three shoes so can possibly be accorded another chance.

There was a time when some in the Hannon camp would have nominated War Spirit as their possible Guineas candidate. Water and bridge have seen plenty of each other since; War Spirit has been gelded and, from a mark of 70 was unable to make the most of a perfect pitch in the Class 5 handicap. He travels well but did not give his rider a lot of help. Brighton winner Issemist and Suitsus were the two to beat him.

The well-bred Hidden Gold got off the mark at the first time of asking in her maiden. With another high-profile newcomer in Too The Stars unplaced, this average to moderate event looked better on paper than it did in real time.
The second division featured more of the same with debutants Sultanina and Desert Snow finishing first and second. They will be worth more at the paddocks than on the racecourse.

York Results
On a day when all eyes were on the three-year-old colts in the Dante, older fillies and mares got their chance in the Group 2 Middleton Stakes over the same trip.
Second to Dalkala in this last year, Ambivalent, third to Gentildonna in the Sheema Classic in March, made the running until headed by Secret Gesture over a furlong out. There was a time when that would have been her cue to withdraw, but she resolutely fought back to finish nicely on top. She has turned into a pretty good mare.

Odeliz upheld the Newmarket form of Esoterique (beaten six lengths in the Dahlia) in third. Mango Diva was always in rear until making some headway for fourth, ahead of the penalised The Lark, who appeared to blow up in the last furlong. Thistle Bird faded tamely under a tender ride.

The Grey Gatsby’s Dante win has boosted even further the claims of Australia for the Derby. Beaten six lengths in the Guineas, his win here says it all. It is hard to nominate anything that finished behind him as having any sort of chance in the Derby. Despite a tendency to drift right (there was an inquiry) The Grey Gatsby is an honest sort who always runs with credit in this company, having finished second in the Craven this year and the Champagne at two. This is as far as he wants to go. He may take up an engagement in the French Derby over this trip. Easy Windsor maiden winner Arod was second and is expected to improve considerably for this, only his third run. Like the winner (although it is not as cut and dried) there has to be a slight stamina doubt. Impressive at Newmarket, True Story was uneasy beforehand and never travelled that well. There was a point down the straight when it appeared as if he would take a hand, but essentially he lacks a turn of foot. Putting a brave face on this reversal, connections consider the Derby trip will bring out the best in him. Excuses at this level are expensive; a place is the best they can dream of.

Last year’s winner Navajo Chief, benefitting from a masterly Fallon ride, repeated the dose in the Listed Hambleton Handicap. Fort Bastion looked to have the race in the bag inside the last furlong but the winner and his jockey were determined. Prince Of Johanne scraped into third ahead of one of a clutch of monkeys in Tales Of Grimm, who wanted no part in proceedings until running on late. Biggest villain of the piece was Fury. Even from such a tempting mark, his backers knew what they were getting into. Handily placed and given every chance, when the going got tough he backed off pretty quickly.

Shamshon carried his penalty to a cosy success in the conditions stakes. It is tempting to consider five is his trip although Dettori seems to feel six is his optimum. Time will tell. Either way he joins a growing band of decent second-season sprinters. One Chance and Eccleston were next. Third in the Middle Park last year – form that Astaire flagged up as strong to such an extent yesterday – Justice Day should have done better than finishing a remote fourth.

The first juvenile six furlong event of the season was the Class 3 maiden – yes, it’s that time of year already; it will soon be the Coventry! The extra furlong made all the difference to the result – a result that may not play any part in Royal Ascot proceedings. Bossy Guest edged ahead near the finish from Mister Universe, who should be winning soon. Silver Ranger covers a lot of ground with his stride and stuck on in third. Again, he is a winner waiting to happen. Gaudy ran with promise in fourth. It is tempting to conclude this was a nice collection and that those remaining maidens should rectify that if not asked to fly too high too soon.

May 14th: York: On drying ground (the time was at variance with the official description of soft with good patches), bumper/hurdles and Flat maiden winner Clever Cookie won the competitive Class 2 handicap from a mark of 88. He came from a good way back to negate a wide draw. Last week’s Chester winner was second, ahead of Awake My Soul and Pasaka Boy. Being honest not many of these held secrets from the handicapper. That said Rye House may be capable of improvement. Looking ring-rusty he was angled for a run over a furlong out that shut in his face. A big unit, he picked up again without looking likely to recover. Silvery Moon and Lahaag are others that have run better than their places suggest.

Money for Aetna, from the ultra-sharp Mick Easterby stable, was not misplaced in the Class 2 handicap. She finished strongly, denying the in-form Baccarat who travelled well for most of the trip. Apparently easy ground brings out the best in her. According to her ebullient trainer she will always be hard to beat at this level when conditions are in her favour so there may be another handicap in her. After a tame second season, Blaine, now gelded and with a good record at York, was the last to challenge and was close up in third. Fast Shot was fourth. Despite the numbers this was a race that went pretty much as expected. Not for the first time Yeeoow checked out quickly. He does seem to find it difficult to get his head in front and rarely runs two races alike.

Once-raced Madame Chiang – a winner at Yarmouth in October last year – battled on under a determined ride to land the Group 3 Musidora. A big filly by Archipenko that handles ease in the ground, she has done well since last season but it is questionable whether this represents Oaks form. However, she is scopey enough to come on again but ground could be the key to her. Lily Rules chased her home in second, ahead of Regardez and maiden Nancy From Nairobi. A keen and reluctant-looking Queen Of Ice (ran as if in season) was fifth. Of the rest, Shama made the running but would not have been suited by the ground. Cambridge is not there yet. A fine big filly, she needs more time. The impression left was that as a field, these could all beat each other in turn.

Four came clear in the Group 2 Duke Of York, ultimately dominated by the penalised Group 1 winners, Maarek and Astaire. Time and again, the Prix l’abbaye winner Maarek will take advantage of any chinks in his opponents’ armour. On this sort of ground he is always a serious player. His strength was decisive in the closing stages as he mowed down the three-year-old Astaire who has run a stormer returned to sprinting. Statistically this was almost mission impossible for Astaire but, prominent throughout, he almost pulled it off. This augurs well for the remainder of the season. Unlike the winner, he is not ground dependent and he should grab a major prize. Es Que Love and Mass Rally were next of the bunch of four that broke away. There was a surprisingly long break back to Hawkeyethenoo in fifth. Nothing else deserves a mention, although, in particular, Jack Dexter was a major disappointment.

They have bided their time with That Is The Spirit who was an impressive winner at Doncaster in March. Once again, on ground with cut, he was prominent throughout in the Class 3 handicap and was soon in control, smashing a mark of 90 in the process. He travels nicely and is smart enough to keep himself out of trouble in these sorts of events. Shot In The Sun was a decent second. Idea took the eye in behind. Tenderly-ridden on only his second actual race in public (unseated rider on debut), he can do better and should not be pressed to win from his present mark of 79. Provident Spirit (second to the winner at Doncaster) was all over the place from his disadvantageous low draw.

Only five turned up for the Class 3 novice stakes, which did not look a strong event. Inexperienced on debut at Newcastle, Mignolino knew more today, getting the better of disappointing favourite Captain Colby a furlong out and then holding Abscent Friends. Outpaced early, Winstanley made good headway to take third. A step up to six furlongs should suit and help him get off the mark.

10th May: Lingfield: A big day for the track with the running of the Derby and Oaks trials. Fillies first, and Windsor winner Honor Bound beat many better fancied opponents to cause something of a surprise. By Authorized, she has handled easy ground well to nut an unfortunate Criteria virtually on the line. This was Criteria’s best effort. Clearly the trip was no problem – the ground was probably not ideal for her but she battled willingly. Momentus was third, ahead of Sandown winner and stable mate of the winner, Kallisha. Trying to land a Listed event with an established maiden filly is never that straightforward, and despite the figures, Casual Smile (in front of Criteria at Newmarket last season) was squeezed out down the straight but was already giving out negative signals. Queen’s Prize pulled much too hard early and predictably paid the penalty.

Snow Sky (second to Western Hymn at Newbury) won the colts’ trial, looking as if this step up to just short of a mile-and-a-half brought about improvement. It would be a surprise if Snow Sky is good enough to enter the Derby picture after this but the win clearly provides a boost for his Newbury conqueror. Distressed after Epsom when behind Our Channel last time, Hartnell returned to something like his best in second. He did not handle the track that well and was staying on at the finish. On a similar surface he could make his mark later in the season in distance events. In third, Sudden Wonder probably stayed this trip but may be better at shorter. Blue Hussar picked up ground from a long way back in fourth. On only his second start, this has to go down as a promising effort. Red Galileo is looking either slow or disinterested, or possibly both. Munjaz took an early tug and was well beaten. Mekong River also failed to fire.

Ascot: We got a master class from Frankie Dettori in the Listed Buckhounds Stakes. He squeezed and cajoled home Gatewood, who was winning for the first time since returning from Australia where he so often battled against unsuitably firm ground. There were no such worries here on a rain-softened surface. Gatewood has been labelled an under-achiever and a confident-inducing ride brought his best to the fore. The penalty beat Pether’s Moon, who had run so well at Newmarket last week behind Gospel Choir. Elidor ran above himself in third. Harris Tweed is not firing on all cylinders as yet.

Amulet, a filly with a proven record on soft ground, made all to win the fillies’ handicap from a mark of 84. Behind Be My Gal at Goodwood last time; although not to be taken literally, her win has paid the winner from that day a compliment. Ribbons stalked the winner but despite coming there strongly, only got going too late. By Manduro, it is stating the obvious to say ten furlongs should suit her better.

Despite finishing second, in what was probably only an ordinary contest, Mubtaghaa just about came out best in the two-year-old event won by Moonraker. The winner had the perfect run and was clear a furlong out, but his stride shortened in the final 100 yards allowing the runner-up and Winslow to cut back his lead.

Having travelled like the winner for a long way, Chatez was narrowly foiled at Haydock by the shock winner Red Stargazer in the Class 3 handicap. They should find something for Showpiece before long, although the jury is out as to his trip. Having looked a seven furlong horse, he did finish strongly over this mile. Newbury winner Matalleb can be forgiven this run. Not beaten that far, his pedigree and action suggests he will always be more effective on a better surface.

May 9th:

Chester Results
Two years ago as a two-year-old, Here Comes When was touted as a horse with classic pretensions. Plenty has happened since. Gelded after his last outing in the Jersey at Royal Ascot; a course winner here, he scooted away with the Class 2 handicap from a mark of 95. Visually attractive in success; although he carries his head at an angle and may not be straightforward, he emphasised the current form of his yard and now faces a hike in the weights. On only his third outing, and on ground probably too soft, Abseil kept on for second and of the two may be the better prospect next time.

Having already demonstrated an ability to handle soft ground, Kingfisher finished off strongly to grab the Dee Stakes. This is not his ideal surface but he does cope with it. He outstayed the penalised Bow Creek to finish nicely on top. Somewhat, also with a penalty, and Century, stable mate of the winner, both stayed on. Century will appreciate a faster surface and could pop up in something at Royal Ascot.

Only four turned up for the Group 3 Ormonde Stakes. Four became two from some way out, when it was a long way home for highest rated Hillstar on ground he doesn’t like. Hard though he and Ryan Moore tried, they could not get to the powerhouse that is Brown Panther. Hillstar probably stayed the trip but he will always be more effective on good (not firm) ground. The winner will now be aimed at the Ascot Gold Cup.

May 8th: Chester: The Group 3 went to Noble Mission, who put back-to-back wins on his score card, once again making all the running. As at Sandown, he kept galloping despite a challenge from Telescope, who was the only credible danger from some way out. All we can conclude is that soft ground and front-running tactics seem to suit Noble Mission, who kept on resolutely. As for Telescope, this tight track and trip was not guaranteed to suit. He has bettered his Sandown run, but not by much and those banking on him realising hopes once held will be hoping a step up in trip will bring about improvement. Last year’s winner Dandana was a distant third in this better field. Ektihaam, already a horse with a chequered career, pulled hard and was soon a spent force. The market told its story and he looks like one to be wary of.

Orchestra claimed the Chester Vase in similar fashion to Ruler Of The World last year. A real eye-catcher by Galileo, he won despite looking slightly awkward on the track. Although pressed to the line by Romsdal – who very nearly stole the race – Orchestra left the impression he was the best in show. He has done well since last year and there is more to come. Scotland ran slightly better than at Newbury but was a remote third. Seagull Star headed the rest in a fair renewal.

Ryan Moore was brilliant on a reluctant Ballymore Castle in the two-year-old event that was run in a rainstorm. Close proximity with a filly accounted for the horse becoming stirred up in the paddock. In the race it appeared he was outpaced and going nowhere until Moore plotted a course one off the outside and drove him up, eventually winning with something in hand. He was entitled to beat London Life and Hell Of A Lord on form so has hardly set the form book alight. The win was all about the jockey.

May 7th: Chester: Despite a 9lbs weight disadvantage with a disappointing Cheerio Sweetie and a wide draw, Mukhmal shrugged off such adversity to defy the market in the Lily Agnes. Fast away, he was too strong for Roudee and Charlie’s Star, who ran better than at Newbury and looks ready for six.

Rain got in pretty quickly and stamina was very much the order in the Cheshire Oaks. Anipa made just about all from Secret Pursuit. In third Bright Approach (whose form was franked on Saturday by Be My Gal), stayed on, leaving the impression she could be the best filly in the field. This was only her second race and she did well considering this represented a rise in class from her Newbury maiden and crucially was found to be coming into season after the event. The Ribblesdale is her next objective. Psychometry was a never nearer fourth, but hers was a satisfactory return. Terrific is probably better than her finishing position but it is stretching the imagination to perceive her as an Oaks contender. Brown Diamond probably failed to stay but her habit of starting slowly and then giving her jockey no assistance makes her an undesirable proposition.

Suegioo won a drama-filled Chester Cup at his first attempt over an extreme trip. Dashed to the front from right out the back, Angel Gabrial threatened to take out the winner when veering right a furlong out when clear. Communicator stayed on for third, ahead of Mubaraza, who, not for the first time, travelled strongly without finding too much.

The best we could have said for Sir Maximilian before the class 2 sprint handicap was that he runs well fresh and handles cut. He picked up the trailblazing duo of Caspian Prince and Ballista.

A babyish and staying-on fifth in the Wood Ditton, Prince Of Stars looked as if the penny is dropping when running out an easy winner of his maiden. His opponents were moderate but he is potentially much better.

Swan Song, Masamah and Trinityelitedotcom, the front three throughout, took the sprint condition event by the throat from the start and dominated. Swan Song picked up Masamah inside the last furlong. Lucky Beggar could never go the pace but was free on his way to the start in any case.

Storm Force Ten continued the good run of the Andrew Balding yard with a narrow win in the Class 3 handicap from a mark of 79. Captain Morley and Swivel filled the places in an ordinary handicap.

May 4th: Newmarket: A tough looking Class 2 handicap ended up being all about Mighty Yar, who had lost his unbeaten record in the listed Further Flight at Nottingham in the soft over 1m 6f last time. According to his jockey (the admirable Ryan Moore) he was struggling to an extent on the quickening ground today, but found his stride up the hill. Confidently handled he got up close home. A mark of 89 will be revised to something in the low-to-middle nineties, which should not preclude further success. By Teofilo, 1m 4f may be his trip for now, although something like the Ebor could be on the agenda. He also holds an engagement in the Hardwicke but plenty of improvement is required before he could be seriously considered for that. Miss Marjurie and Amrullah were next to finish ahead of Rosebery winner Salutation.

In a close scrap for the Group 3 Dahlia Stakes, Integral went down with all guns blazing to Esoterique. To an extent Integral compromised her chances by getting fretful and warm beforehand. Once launched, she finished very strongly. Fancied to open her account for the season, this was a fair enough reappearance and one that suggests she will make her mark in similar events later in the year.

Last year’s Oh So Sharp Stakes supplied all the answers to the 1000 Guineas. But for a dubious reappearance at Maisons-Lafitte in the Imprudence, Miss France, winter favourite for this, would have been a warmer order but her attitude that day did not please everyone when she pulled too hard and looked recalcitrant. She was a different filly today, roaring up a hill she is familiar with to withstand Lightning Thunder. A strong daughter of Dansili that was always prominent, her trainer is adamant she will stay further and the Prix Diane is likely to be her next assignment. Lightning Thunder had gone over the edge on her last run of the 2013 season but returned with renewed vigour here. Best fresh, a filly with plenty of depth, she almost stole the race and should be primed for a lucrative season; although, of course, she will be contesting all the best races. Dual Meydan winner, Ihtimal put up her best performance in third. Allowing for the fact she was match-fit it could be we should not expect any further improvement. Pace-setting Manderley (fifth in the Fred Darling) proved a revelation in holding on for fourth. Euro Charline reversed Nell Gwyn form with Sandiva in fifth ahead of Majeyda, another to figure prominently from the same event. Rizeena looked very well but could not confirm juvenile form with Ihtimal in seventh. Vorda proved she stayed but, although ahead of Miss France at Maisons-Lafitte, was unable to beat her today. Joyeuse was not ideally placed at the rear considering the early pace was not fierce, but she did finish to a degree, running out of puff in the last furlong. It could be she has not quite seen out the trip. Tapestry lost her action at halfway and appears to have sustained some sort of setback.

As the only filly, Elite Gardens deserves credit for holding the colts in the juvenile event. She became Godolphin’s first two-year-old winner of the season, responding to Fallon’s urgings as Aktabantay staged a late lunge. Symbolic Star was third in a race that should throw up the odd winner.

It’s been a tough weekend for the message men. Taghrooda redressed the precarious balance to a degree when winning the Pretty Polly. By Sea The Stars (who could be one of the stallions of the year) out of Ezima, on ground considered by her trainer to be firming up to the tune it could be against her, Taghrooda eased clear of only fair opposition to win impressively. She is now favourite for the Oaks have skittled Jordan Princess and Sound Reflection.

Zee Zeely may have been fortunate to win the Class 2 handicap, although he is currently fairly treated from a mark of 79. The articulated truck that is Miner’s Lamp did particularly well to stage a last furlong challenge considering he pulled much too hard early and refused to settle. Despite a steadier of 95, he has plenty of scope if only he can learn to pull himself together.

May 3rd:

Newmarket Results
Niceofyoutotellme kicked off the Guineas meeting with victory in the Class 2 handicap. Best when fresh, a horse with dodgy feet but that likes Newmarket, he held on in the face of a late challenge from Ajmany. Always well thought of but lightly raced, Ajmany should win something decent before long if standing training. Bold Sniper was coming back in trip and made up a lot of ground to challenge inside the last furlong. Trumpet Major travelled like the winner from the dip; either his weight (rated 106) or the trip found him out as he failed to find what was expected in the last hundred yards. To give him the benefit of the doubt maybe nine furlongs was too far, but he has disappointed in the past and is not one to plan a holiday over. Farraaj was another to carry a big weight with distinction in a handicap worthy of its status.

On drying ground, after two spins at Meydan, tough warhorse Sole Power claimed the Group 3 Palace House – a race he won last year. Once hitting the rising ground his finishing kick was decisive. Kingsgate Native was a narrow second, ahead of pacesetting Hot Streak, who has performed well for a three-year-old against such experienced rivals. Pearl Secret never looked happy on this ground – he needs cut.

After a run that oozed promise over nine furlongs at the Craven meeting, returned to a more suitable trip in the Group 2 Jockey Club, we saw Gospel Choir at his best. This was a canny piece of training and his handler can conjure yet more from this highly likeable son of Galileo who may be Group 1 bound. In second, Pether’s Moon was another to produce a personal best. 10lbs clear in the ratings, Trading Leather was a warm order but failed to relax and consequently found little at the business end. Yet to win first time out, he may do better next time but his reputation is built on his three-year-old career. He now faces opposition that threatens to be much better than those he battled with last season. It could be a long year for him. In fifth, hindsight suggests they were plenty quick enough to contest such a level with Brass Ring. His was a decent enough run but unfortunately a mark of 98 will surely be sacrificed now, thus precluding high-profile handicaps.

Night Of Thunder, the horse that burnt fingers at Newbury when comprehensively beaten by Kingman, gained spectacular revenge in the 2000 Guineas. Despite swerving across the track he was too good for Kingman today, who may not have been quite so effective over a mile. Take out the winner and the right horses all filled the places in this first classic of the season. Night Of Thunder, unbeaten before Newbury, may be a very good horse; there seems no logical reason to crab his win – it was merely a surprise! Australia came out best of those on the stands’ side, producing a mighty effort in third considering his relative inexperience. Obviously the Derby looks a credible target. Free Handicap winner Shifting Power ran a big race in fourth. Charm Spirit, Toormore (jockey claims the horse ran flat but that remains to be seen – he was only beaten four lengths), War Command and The Grey Gatsby all appear to have run well enough from this viewpoint. Those that are in a rush to extract Australia from the race for Epsom might like to have a look at the run of Kingston Hill. Outpaced early he was staying on strongly over the last furlong. The fact he has yet to find his feet at home has been well documented and there is every chance this run will pull him together.

The handicap won by Nova Champ did not look that strong. He made all in first time cheek pieces, but will not be allowed so much rope next time and off a revised mark.

A very good looking field lined up for the Listed event, ultimately dominated by one-time classic prospect Barley Mow. Making all, this son of Zamindar seemed to thrive over this trip of ten furlongs. After a couple of indifferent efforts this season, perhaps this trip is the making of him. He is a fine-looking specimen. Beaten in a decent maiden at Newbury, Mutakayyef almost snatched victory and was not helped by receiving two bumps at the business end. Again, this trip has brought out the best in this son of Sea The Stars. Although he looks a handful, Pinzolo held on to third ahead of Postponed. After such a promising run in the Craven it was disappointing Postponed could only manage fourth. This trip was in his favour but, to be frank, he looked a trifle one-paced. On the back of a strong handicap here last time, Cloudscape was put in his place in this better company. It would appear after an early season rampage the Gosden yard is now finding a more realistic level.

Hors De Combat was a ready winner of the concluding handicap. Tackling a mile for the first time seemed to suit. He travelled strongly and produced a decent turn of foot. This looked a decent race. Born In Bombay, who has fancy entries, looks like a well handicapped horse that can win something decent before too long. Not for the first time Golden Town proved to be his own worst enemy. He again failed to keep a straight course and needs to sort out his attitude if he is to realise his potential.

May 2014

Thursday May 22nd

Goodwood: 2.40: As a son of Danehill Dancer, GOTHIC was never going to be suited by conditions at Sandown last time when fourth to Windshear. Facing an easier assignment now and on a more suitable surface he is taken to recover the winning thread. Fast Delivery was too free at Nottingham when runner-up in a contest that did not look particularly good at the time and that has so far failed to work out. A facile win at Wolverhampton has done nothing to advance his claims in this much more complex event.

3.15: They appear to have found a good opportunity for LION BEACON who, despite a non-staying pedigree, looks ready for a step up in trip after narrowly going under over 1m 7f last time.

Sandown: 5.55: Experience is taken to count here as after a decent debut at Windsor, RUSSIAN HEROINE gets her chance against a couple of attractively-bred first timers.

SATURDAY MAY 17th:

Newmarket: 2.55: Whether Aeolus would have won the Free Handicap with a clear run is debatable; what is beyond dispute is that the form of that event is strong and as a horse on the upgrade, he gets the clear scent of black type now in this listed event. He is taken to overpower Toofi and the consistent but somewhat exposed Parbold.
3.30: Roger Charlton currently fields the front two in the market here. Stomp attempts a hat-trick but faces his stiffest task and may find his stable companion Stars Above Me presenting the biggest threat.
Newbury: 1.30: After a run brimming with promise at Newmarket, despite this looking a competitive maiden, Connecticut is the one to aim at and should be hard to beat.
3.15: Cannock Chase is the one to catch the eye here in this his first venture in a handicap from a mark of 89. Having easily won a Windsor maiden that has worked out embarrassingly well, he could be well-treated. Winshear has been hiked up 11lb since winning at Sandown and will do well to confirm that form with runner-up Collaboration, let alone carry off the prize. As always this threatens to be a tough handicap to win.
3.50: The JLT Lockinge sees the start of the Group 1 season. The form book states that Olympic Glory is at his best on soft ground and with it drying out by the hour, it seems conditions will swing away from him. Add to that a checkered history and he looks like a horse to oppose. This is not the strongest of fields but Verrazano has won approaching a million-and-half dollars in the States where he is a proven Grade 1 performer. This is his first venture on turf but if he is to justify the move to Aidan O’Brien, considering the money that must have changed hands, this represents a soft target and one he will need to make an impact in. Tullius seems best on an easy surface, a remark that clearly applies to Top Notch Tonto. Expect Montiridge to go close on this better ground, but Verrazano looks the horse to run down.
Aeolus and Verrazano appeal as the day’s best bets and worthy of investment.

FRIDAY MAY 16th:

Newbury: 2.00: Hadaatha justified a lofty home reputation when opening her account at the first time of asking at Newmarket in April. A filly with plenty of substance and with a stout pedigree, she should be even better now she steps up to ten furlongs. From a yard whose females can appear revved-up second time and even end up in a stew, it might pay potential backers to check her well-being at the start before making a financial decision.
4.45: After a narrow defeat by Shifting Power in the Free Handicap, if all goes well with Hadaatha, Mushir looks poised to complete a double for connections in this listed event. Shifting Power boosted already strong form when subsequently finishing fourth in the 2000 Guineas and Mushir, a smart unbeaten juvenile who looked as if the run would bring him on last time, is taken to play the speed card against some useful rivals now.
York: 2.45: Tac De Biostron and Gospel Choir threaten to dominate what is nevertheless a strong field for the Group 2 Yorkshire Cup. After two positive efforts this season, including when impressively disposing of better fancied rivals last time at Newmarket, in receipt of 4lbs the progressive Gospel Choir is preferred. Although not short of finishing speed, the son of Galileo should have no trouble with the extra yardage. He is a classy addition to the staying ranks.

YORK SPRING MEETING
MAY 15th:

2.45:
The majority of the Derby money, informed and otherwise, has been for Australia since the 2000 Guineas. By all accounts he has been tearing down the place at Ballydoyle and will line-up at Epsom carrying the confidence of his strong team.
For once Godolphin appears to have a credible alternative in True Story, who takes another step towards a possible showdown with Australia when contesting the Dante.
Based on the performance we saw in the Feilden at Newmarket, he should pass what is potentially a stiffer task now. Particularly impressive at Newmarket, aided by the Fallon touch at home and on the course, he could be Godolphin’s biggest chance of Epsom glory yet.
First things first as the son of Manduro will need to win impressively to warrant serious Derby consideration. No betting proposition at odds-on, True Story, returning to action last month after a nine month absence, should nevertheless make up for lost time in one of the week’s most intriguing trials.

3.15:
With conditions sure to suit and his yard in such good form, Fury is so well in at present he is hard to ignore here.
This listed handicap is competitive but a mark of 95 means Fury is thrown in at the shallow end. The booking of Ryan Moore is an added bonus.
Last year’s winner Navajo Chief has almost certainly been primed for another crack at this, whilst Ingleby Angel and Alfred Hutchinson (needs to transfer all-weather form to turf) are other possibilities, but a double-figure price about Fury is too tempting to resist.

3.50:
This conditions stakes represents a soft target for Middle Park third Justice Day, who ought to be too good for this opposition.

4.25:
In this six furlong contest where we have little to go on, representing stables that tend to send out their debutants firing on all cylinders, on paper the race looks to be between Gaudy and Silver Ranger. Both look certain to appreciate ease in the ground based on breeding.

YORK SPRING MEETING
MAY 14th:

It looks like the long lunches are out this week. York begins its three-day spring meeting on Wednesday and is joined by Newbury and Newmarket on Friday.
Soft ground is predicted for the opening day at York, and when it gets soft on the Knavesmire it can get very cloying. The first two events are tricky handicaps.
After a blank second-season and a run of some promise first time this year, Blaine could be well-treated in the 2.15. However, his pedigree and overall record does not give rise to encouragement on this sort of ground. Representing an in-form yard and with a run under his belt, Baccarat will handle conditions (draw to be okayed) so is probably a safer call, but there are numerous dangers – not all of them equine.

On a day likely to be dominated by those coping with conditions, impressive Kempton winner Queen Of Ice looks guaranteed to thrive on the ground in the Musidora at 2.45. An entry in the Ribblesdale indicates connections feel confident she will stay this trip at least. The way she made all last time (admittedly against three rivals where she was allowed to dominate) indicates stamina should not be a problem here. Cambridge is another that should have no ground excuses and, comparatively unexposed, she should confirm last year’s form with Regardez so long as returning match fit. Madame Chiang is another proven on the ground but Shama has a pedigree that suggests she may struggle. Although not a confident selection, Queen Of Ice is taken to come out on top.

3.15: As the winner of the Group 2 Gimcrack and Group 1 Middle Park last year, Astaire is the interesting contender in this Group 2 now that he reverts to sprinting. Although worth a shot, plainly the attempt at seven in the Greenham was beyond him and he will be more at home over this trip. Versatile as regards ground, he threatens to be too classy for these rivals, although according to my arithmetic, as a dual Group winner he is saddled with an 8lbs penalty. It is tough enough for three-year-olds to beat their elders at this time of year without the inclusion of such a steadier. Should his class prevail he will surely be tough to beat at the highest level later in the season. The durable Jack Dexter represents substance over style and will be hard to kick out of the frame on ground that suits. Maarek is another that will slosh through the ground and after a run over an inadequate five furlongs at Naas last time, despite his penalty, last year’s Abbaye winner looks sure to make his presence felt. Astaire may be the class act and the one to bag the most prize-money by the end of the season, but faces a tall order today.

3.50: Despite the presence of several lurkers at the foot of the handicap (Idea and Tea Leaf being the most obvious), it is conceivable that we may not have seen the best of Provident Spirit as yet. Closely matched with That Is The Spirit on Doncaster running, Provident Spirit was slow to stride that day and showed he had improved with an easy win at Newmarket next time. The race he won was not strong (runner-up beaten in ordinary company since) but the manner of victory was eye-catching. A big son of Invincible Spirit with plenty of scope, who won on ground that looked on the firm side at Newmarket, he has not been unduly assessed with a mark of 87. He could be too good for most of these.

The card ends with a hard-to evaluate two-year-old event and a tough-looking handicap that should have bookmakers rubbing their hands in anticipation.
In all, a day for caution…

TOTESCOOP SATURDAY
– MAY 10th:

HAYDOCK: 2.25: As always this is a trappy three-year-old handicap complicated by the inclusion of several unexposed types. Having won in style last time at Epsom, it appears we have not seen the best of Chatez as yet. Unless taking on a real tartar, a mark of 86 still gives him every chance in handicap company.

LINGFIELD: 2.20: Criteria has always appealed as a long-term project after what was a promising debut at Goodwood back in September last year. Although held by Casual Smile on a subsequent run at Newmarket later that month when both were behind the new Oaks favourite Tagrhooda on the same course, she has plenty of scope and this trip – over which she won at Kempton at the end of April – brings out the best in her. It could also be significant that stable jockey William Buick elects to come here to partner her rather than ride at Ascot.

2.55: The inclusion of two Aidan O’Brien runners [Mekong River and Blue Hussar] further complicates the colts’ Epsom trial. Munjaz duly won his maiden at Newmarket at the Craven meeting but as yet does not appeal as a horse with classic pretensions. Apparently Hartnell finished distressed at Epsom last time so should possibly be assessed on his other runs, in which case he should go close. This trip will pose no problems for him, whereas Sudden Wonder may find this stretching his stamina to the limit.

4.00: With a proven record on easy ground, the mere presence of progressive Dalayna from a powerful French stable is enough to strike fear in the hearts of her opponents. She looks a major player, particularly with a run already under her belt this year.

ASCOT: 2.40: After such a good run last week at Newmarket when runner-up to Gospel Choir, Pether’s Moon will be a popular proposition to many in the Listed Buckhounds Stakes. On the face of it there was nothing wrong with that reappearance, particularly as he had Trading Leather behind him. However, last year’s Irish Derby winner did pull himself out of serious contention early and, although only penalised by 3lbs, such an added burden threatens to stiffen this task. An on song Harris Tweed would pose a serious threat and Gatewood, although held by Area Fifty One on Doncaster running, has always left the impression he is better than we often see and that one day he will put it all together.

3.15: This stiff mile should suit Ribbons, whose comeback effort at Kempton in April suggested she would be hard to beat next time. This return to handicap company should suit her.

3.50: It may not be very original but after two excellent runs this season Brownsea Brink gets the call in a fiercely competitive Victoria Cup. A seven furlong winner that was third to Gabrial’s Kaka in the Newbury Spring Cup last time from this same mark, he has to be a leading player at least. Versatile as regards ground and, even with the aid of the valuable Oisin Murphy on board, he still has the beating of Purcell on Lingfield form. He is even drawn ideally in the middle so has plenty in his favour. Finding dangers is not difficult but a short-list of ten is no use to anyone. Granted a trouble-free passage, Brownsea Brink should go well.

CHESTER MAY MEETING – FRIDAY 9TH

Heavy rain has further complicated an already difficult meeting, so it is a case of being ultra-careful on the final day.
2.15: Century has a low and fast-ground action that found him out at Doncaster in the Racing Post and conditions will surely be equally unsuitable today. Stable mate Kingfisher has bits of form and is more likely to handle conditions after a half-decent effort in the Ballysax last time.
2.45: Before the advent of rain this looked a suitable target for Hillstar. As it is Mount Athos is probably a safer option.
3.50: Postscript, Gabrial’s Bounty and Gatepost all represent Dr Marwan Koukash and all have similar profiles in that they look to have been prepared for a crack at this. As they handle the ground, the market will be the best guide.

CHESTER MAY MEETING – THURSDAY 8TH

1.45: Squire Osbaldeston always appealed as the type to do better as a four-year-old. A typical Mr Greeley colt with plenty of substance, that impression was confirmed to an extent with what so far this year looks like an improved record. Although non-handicap form can be deceiving, his latest third to Contributer puts him in here with a solid chance. The handicapper’s reaction in raising him to a mark of 99 threatens to make life tough, but this is not a quality handicap. If he is to defy a revised mark he has a chance to do so in this company.
2.15: After running the opposition ragged at Sandown over this trip, Noble Mission has nothing to fear from Telescope on 3lbs worse terms. Or so you would think. Noble Mission’s past record does not exactly instil confidence that he will reproduce that and Telescope is entitled to improve for his first run of the season. Whether this trip of ten furlongs is the optimum for Telescope has yet to be determined and, as a big unit, the son of Galileo may also struggle with the constant turns of this track. The race is further complicated by the inclusion of Ektihaam, who just about brings the best form to the table. If fully tuned, he would be a serious contender.

2.45: Of course this was the race used to launch Ruler Of The World’s Epsom challenge and if they all stand their ground we once again should see a strong renewal of the Chester Vase. Having finished third in the Ballysax on only his second start, Carlo Bugatti lines up with the sort of profile we are used to seeing from a Ballydoyle representative. He could obviously turn out to be anything and it looks significant that jockey bookings suggest he carries the main hopes of the stable in preference to the promising Orchestra. Seagull Star looks the best of the home team.

3.50: Ballymore Castle took the eye on debut at Newbury and with an ideal draw gets his chance here.

CHESTER MAY MEETING – WEDNESDAY 7TH:

Here we are, the first two classics are behind us and now we start the countdown to Epsom. Although providing clues for the Derby and Oaks, the three-day Chester meeting is a great event in its own right and promises to supply a fine spectacle. Usual rules of engagement apply here; ideally you want a low draw and you do need plenty of luck in running.

As always the meeting starts with the Lily Agnes for juveniles at 1.45. Accorded 9lbs for one-and-a-half lengths with Mukhmal on their running at Musselburgh, the well-drawn Cheerio Sweetie will be popular to gain amends. Ease in the ground should also be of benefit to this daughter of Captain Rio. Several opponents are difficult to assess though. Roudee could be useful in this grade and better was expected of Magical Memory at Newbury in an event that usually throws up a winner or two. It would be nice to hit the ground running, but at this stage a section looks elusive.

The heavy battalions are present in the Cheshire Oaks, Aidan O’Brien looking likely to supply the favourite in Terrific, who is bred to appreciate this step up in trip. Thus far her form is average at best but we all know how fillies can bloom at this time of year so her presence alone is sufficient to instil caution. Although less likely to improve markedly for the trip, Psychometry is a filly with plenty of potential in her second season. Bright Approach’s Newbury form has been franked and as she was not fully tuned that day and will appreciate this trip, is another live danger. Brown Diamond is interesting. Fourth to Oaks favourite Taghrooda in September and then an eye-catching finisher at Newbury in April behind Matalleb and Mutakayyef (who almost denied Barley Mow and several high-profile rivals in a listed event at Newmarket last week), a step up in trip looks likely to suit. If coping with this distance of eleven furlongs, this Oaks and Ribblesdale entry looks classy enough to make her presence felt. Again this is not cut and dried but Brown Diamond could represent value.

The Chester Cup is never easy – this year being no exception. Favourite Mubaraza has a record of running well without winning and looks a weak finisher. That was certainly the case last time at Ripon when he failed to find much after looking the likely winner for most of the way. In any case that form with Angel Gabrial may need improving upon. There is a word for Glenard and course winner Communicator – who is fit after four runs from the turn of the year and represents a yard in sparkling form – ought to go well. Although poorly drawn, the fit Shwaiman, always liked by his yard, and who may be capable of better than we have so far seen, is another to respect.

The Class 2 handicap over five furlongs is another tricky contest. The two to take the eye are Ballesteros –whose last win came here two years ago and ran with some promise last time – and another course and distance winner in Ballista, wearing first time cheek pieces. The draw may scupper Ballesteros – who in any case will want soft ground – whereas Ballista has the look of a horse trained with this in mind.
3.50: Presently we are in the dark as to the worth of the run of Prince Of Stars in the Wood Ditton. The winner looked okay but several in behind raise questions. In any event, there is little to choose between him and Computer. Ghosting’s third at Kempton reads well, but he has been gelded since, wears a hood and a tongue-tie so something of a leap of faith is required for would-be backers.

4.25: Well drawn Lucky Beggar has a favourite’s chance of winning this without looking like a good thing. Trinityelitedotcom looks a worthy alternative in a sprint that could go one of several ways.

5.00: Although he managed to get himself beaten at 1/3 at Lingfield, Anglo Irish has not looked back since, winning two races, including a handicap of only moderate merit last time. A mark of 82 is not prohibitive in what looks like a moderate affair that nevertheless still includes a couple with pretensions to better than we have so far seen.

NEWMARKET – SATURDAY MAY 3RD:

It’s four in the afternoon, the beginning of May.
I’m writing you now just to see if you’re better.
Newmarket is chilly but I like the view cross the Heath.
They serve Adnams and Banks beer through the evening…
In a missive that is primed to break all known rules associated with racing reports, I have started strongly. Some might complain I have already lost their attention along with my marbles. Experts will tell you such posts as the one that follows should only contain three hundred words at most. Admit it; with the allocation of almost a third of my so-called permitted content you are already perplexed. Join the club, most of us wander around permanently perplexed. Do it for long enough and they consign you to a home and feed you clear soup that dribbles down your chin.

Let me therefore explain to the handful of you that are left. It is the Newmarket Guineas meeting on Saturday – but then, being a racing feature, I am guessing you knew that. The opening four lines I chose to use to illustrate that fact are made in homage to Leonard Cohen, who, as far as I know, has nothing whatsoever to do with Newmarket or betting on horses in general. Although, to digress even further, the lyrics of Dress Rehearsal Rag do include the line: Ah, but I thought you were a racing man!

That aside, the lines that introduce this piece are a loose transcript of his excellent and darkly bewitching song: Famous Blue Raincoat. For those in low spirits after events on Saturday, both works of brilliance mentioned feature on Leonard’s CD, Songs Of Love And Hate. Listen to those, Avalanche and Love Calls You By Your Name and your lives may never be the same again!

In an article when I am breaking as many rules as it is possible to break and remain in gainful employment, not having mentioned a horse after, what, at least four-hundred words – it is my intention to go the whole hog. Normally race evaluators sit on the fence as much as possible. Let’s face it, no one wants to look a fool and horses are no respecters of reputations. Most of them fashion a career out of making fools of everyone they come into contact with. Say something won’t win and it will just to spite the one making the prediction. Say it is a certainty and it might begrudgingly oblige, but only after the would-be soothsayer has shed half a stone in liquid weight from his brow.

So for those of us doing the predicting, circumspection (no, circumspection does not involve the use of a scalpel) is the order of the day. Not on this occasion! What follows is X-rated stuff. Move over Leonard, pass the razor blade, I am alongside you.

In another time, if wrong I would risk the stocks or an ordeal by fire – only escaping with my life if right. In itself that is not a good bet. Heads you don’t win, tails you lose. Mercifully, times have changed!

Herewith the secrets of Newmarket’s card tomorrow: The skies are darkening ominously as I write but it is too late now. The die is cast. The pyres are being built; the axe man is sharpening his utensil. Tickets are changing hands for the ceremony at exorbitant rates. Even for those that draw a betting blank, on Saturday, in the event of my failure there is something to look forward to…

3.10: The angle here is to oppose second-favourite Pengai Pavilion whose main claim to fame is his fifth in the Arc behind Treve. As fine an example of Monsun as you will find, he ran as if capable of better at Meydan on World Cup night when fifth in the City Of Gold behind Excellent Result, Songcraft and Mount Athos. That and his Arc effort are fair runs but don’t equate to anything so far achieved by last year’s Irish Derby winner Trading Leather, who, although on past performances needs a run or two before operating at full throttle, is likely to be fuelled-up for this Group 2. Tougher assignments loom later in the year. Trading Leather is not only the obstacle the Godolphin representative faces. Gospel Choir served notice he would be a force in these sorts of events after shaping with promise in the Earl Of Sefton over an inadequate nine furlongs. Although 10lbs behind Trading Leather on official figures, the best of him is yet to be seen. The same remark applies to the highly progressive Brass Ring who is plunged into the deep end after winning a Lingfield handicap from a mark 90 from subsequent winner Viewpoint. Obviously other options exist, yet connections feel confident Brass Ring can acquit himself with credit in exalted company, which is a distinct possibility. So his and the presence of Gospel Choir makes the apparently simple less so.
3.50: The 2,000 Guineas – and the ground appears to have come right for Kingman who, after the performance of his life at Newbury in the Greenham, lines up as the dragon to slay. Australia carries the sharpest lance. Actually, the word is that its point is sharper than one of Leonard’s razor blades. The rhetoric emanating from Ballydoyle – with its intense bloodstock interests it often publicly floats on castles of air – is that we are not dealing with a windbag here. If, as word has it, Australia has the speed to win one of the most competitive Guineas in recent years, we might as well gift him the Derby now and save everyone else the bother. Toormore, Charm Spirit, the notoriously lazy worker that is War Command (ten lengths behind Australia on his latest breeze-up), Outstrip, Noozhoh Canarias and even Ertijaal all have claims, are not slow and are not racehorses as a second career. But apparently they face a monster.

To complete the portfolio, word has it that, even allowing for the fact he is not prone to exert himself in the morning, Racing Post winner Kingston Hill is more inclined to read the paper in the mornings than contribute to its headlines. The current score at his stable is: Tiddles the cat six – Kingston Hill nil!

So it’s AUSTRALIA. Kingman is a fair favourite but the obvious is not always the answer.

A second and equally appealing betting opportunity presents itself an hour and ten minutes later in the Newmarket Stakes where we see the reappearance of Craven third Postponed. Having looked like a possible Group 1 contender after freewheeling home behind Guineas candidate Toormore over a trip patently short for him, the son of Dubawi gets his chance to confirm that impression over this trip of 1m 2f. Of course he takes on the highly likeable Cloudscape, whose form from the same meeting when beating subsequent Sandown winner Windshear reads well and makes him a serious adversary. However, if POSTPONED is to become the horse he has looked on more than one occasion, he should be up to beating the respected but, as yet, comparatively unproven (at least in this company) Cloudscape. On a day when I am wearing a hat emblazoned with the words DOGMATIC – I suggest, in a race that is hotter than a vindaloo on a Friday night, the rest, decent though they may be, can be disregarded.

So there it is: the man that is temporarily out of range acquires bravery beyond his mettle. Between now and that last pint of Adnams I have a couple of answers. I only hope I turn out to be a prophet of fortune rather than doom…
Threatening letters to the usual address in Switzerland please…

April Results 2014

April 25th:

Sandown Results

A cracking card was compromised to a degree by persistent rain. It opened with the Class 2 Esher Cup, for which impressive Nottingham winner Sacred Act – recently supplemented for the St James’s Palace Stakes – was the market pick. Holes could be picked in the race he won last time (both his main rivals having pulled too hard and failing to finish), but by all accounts the winning debutant had barely been asked a question at home beforehand. In this elevated company it has to be said he was never a factor.

What About Carlo, last seen when three lengths fourth of five in the Haynes, Hanson and Clark at Newbury and a winner in the soft at Goodwood, was always handy and stayed on strongly to contain opposition long on potential but short on form. Rated 85 today, these conditions suit well.

End Of Line stayed on best of the rest for second and on this evidence, despite a quick pedigree, saw out this mile.

First Flight arrived with what looked like a serious challenge two out but it petered away. By Invincible Spirit he has handled the ground but may not have stayed this far. Sacred Act reportedly hated the ground. He is worth another chance, although his mark assumes plenty.

In his time Noble Mission has been labelled a bigger monkey than King Kong. Ridden from the front on this occasion Frankel’s well-documented brother made all in the Group 3 Gordon Richards, never seeing another rival. It is tempting to think these tactics might be the making of him, but that has yet to be confirmed. Certainly they worked today.

Despite a negative message, over an inadequate trip, connections will take some heart from the run of Telescope, who plugged on for second without ever looking likely to bridge the gap.

Contributer ran well in third. Fit from an outing at Kempton, he looked likely to throw down a serious challenge halfway down the straight but to an extent floundered on the ground. He can do better still.

It was a familiar story with the Godolphin representative Sky Hunter. Third to Intello in the French Derby and out of action for ten months, despite attracting all the so-called clever money, he laboured like a miner at the end of a twelve-hour shift. Talk of the Prince Of Wales seems fanciful.

All the signs are that this year’s Lincoln was a class event. Runner-up Tullius became its biggest flagship bearer when beating some higher-profile rivals in the Group 2 Mile. He does handle soft and capitalised on the inability of several of his opponents to fire.

Montiridge came with a run of sorts but spluttered on ground he handles but that is not ideal. This was a satisfactory return to action.

Penitent ran his usual big race on ground he loves. Top Notch Tonto had his ground but was reported to be in need of the outing so early in the season. Once the summer weather kicks in, he will be hard to place.

Garswood looked well but, held up, ran poorly. A winner first time out last year and with a proven record on this sort of surface, this has to go down as a shocking effort.

Western Hymn brought a semblance of sanity back to a mucky day when winning the Classic Trial. Good news first: On a day when nothing finished from the rear, Western Hymn’s turn of foot allowed him to do just that; although his win did nothing to promote his Classic claims.

Once he hit the front, he did jink and it took a reminder to straighten him out. After that he lengthened away without looking impressive. It now seems safe to say he will stay twelve furlongs. With a round action, he should not have been inconvenienced by the ground, although his jockey was adamant he will be better on a faster surface. The Derby will probably come too soon but he remains a horse with plenty of potential who, all being well, takes in the Dante next after which we will know more.

Impulsive Moment left a Lingfield maiden well behind him in second, with a flattered Greenham third, Master Carpenter, next to finish. Red Galileo lacks a finishing kick.

Considering he was out of his depth, Automated (second at Newbury under an enterprising ride) was not disgraced. In finishing fifth he has played a back-handed compliment to Eagle Top, who runs in a handicap at Leicester on Saturday from a mark of 90.

Having finished sixth in the Super Sprint at Newbury when last seen, Eccleston was one of those winners that as there to be seen but got away in the Class 2 handicap over five furlongs. In a race where they were strung out like novice hurdlers, Eccleston defied the mark of 88 with something to spare.

As it turned out – and with the poorly handicapped Hey Chewed in second – the race may not have been that good. That said it would be unwise to write off the winner next time if turned out under a penalty and on a similar surface which brings out the best in him.

The maiden for fillies – often an informative event – looked only ordinary this year, although that could be a reflection on the ground. Kallisha – a Whipper filly – opened her account from Nancy For Nairobi (fourth to Inchila at Newbury) and What A Scorcher (only a semblance of ability last year in her maiden).

Grace And Favour weakened inside the last furlong; whereas Allegria made up a lot of ground from the rear to display some promise in fifth.

The last race on a dank day – a Class 3 handicap – featured several unexposed types and Windshear, who had finished second to the useful Cloudscape at the Craven meeting. Turned out relatively quickly from the same mark – that of 80, due to rise to 86 – he was a warm order.

Always handy he eventually cleared away under Richard Hughes to boost Newmarket form that already looks strong. This was only his third run and even a revised mark will not halt his obvious progress. He will stay further than ten furlongs and easy ground will always be of benefit. Collaboration stayed on to deprive Elite Army of second. In a decent handicap, Gothic posted promise in fourth.
April 23rd:

Epsom Results

Course-walkers pronounced the normally favoured stands’ side to be a disadvantage in the depleted field (fifteen became ten) in the Class 3 five furlong handicap. Consequently there were some hesitant riders from the start, resulting in a half-hearted event.

Drawn against the rail, Adam Kirby adopted a when-in-doubt-blast-out-and-kick policy aboard Caspian Prince on whom he made all. Elusivity and Face Value were next with Pearl Blue, who was last until two furlongs out, picking up strongly from an impossible position to take fourth. Not known for winning first time out, although she looked well, this run will doubtless tee her up for a pop at a similar event. She may appreciate a stiffer track.

There were four defectors in the Great Metropolitan (three were highest drawn – just a coincidence surely) leaving a field of eleven.

Beacon Lady – a five-time winner at Brighton and also once here – clearly likes undulating tracks. She bolted up from Da Do Run Run and Dark Ruler. You could argue Red Runaway had his chance scuppered when Jakey took his ground two out. However, the ease of the winner’s victory suggests Red Runaway – who did not look obviously full of running once in the clear – would not have found much in any case.

The smallest in the field, Our Channel (not unbacked at big prices) caused something of an upset in the Derby trial, handling the track, making most of the running and hanging on under a vigorous and positive Moore ride to withstand the late challenge of Marzocco.

The runner-up closed on cloying ground and could be adjudged unlucky. Stars Over The Sea, Signposted and a reluctant looking Hartnell were all close up. According to Deidre Johnston, Hartnell finished distressed so this could not be considered his true running. In the light of Munjaz’s win last week, the already gelded Moontime was entitled to do better but was quick to check out.

What developed into a tricky day just got trickier with the win of Sennockian Star from Clayton in the City and Surburban. These two had clashed at Pontefract two weeks earlier, neither looking particularly well-treated here. They were in the first four throughout in a race where those held up failed to land a blow. Soviet Rock was third.

Ravenous won a weak-looking maiden at the fifth time of asking. Moshe, who had finished sixth to Chatez (runner in the last) at Newbury, ran on encouragingly in second. There should be a race somewhere for him, be it on the all-weather or up the M1. After promise in two maidens at Kempton last year, D’avignon was hopelessly at sea and well beaten. Reluctant in the stalls, he was always off the bridle. Whatever excuse can be concocted, he is one to be wary of at present.

Chatez made some sense of the afternoon’s proceedings by taking the Class 4 handicap in handsome style. Having beaten Observational last season (admittedly flattered) a mark of 78 left plenty of margin for error.

19th April:

Kempton Results

There was a good word for Escalating in the Brocklesby; although disappointing at Doncaster, he made no mistake in the opening event. A good-sized son of Three Valleys, he was too good for Be Bold, who had shown promise at Newbury behind Kasb.

By Dubawi out of a Green Desert mare, five furlongs always threatened to find out Colour Catcher. Only small, he was outpaced until freewheeling into third under a considerate ride inside the last furlong. Given the first two were older and had experience, this was not a bad effort and one he should better over an extra furlong.

Zurigha won a slowly-run listed Snowdrop Stakes, greatly assisted by holding a prominent position throughout. In contrast, Ribbons had ground to recover and she allowed the winner first run. Hers was a satisfactory reappearance over a trip that is probably on the short side.

Ryan Moore is riding in top form at present. Brilliant on Grandeur yesterday, on Sea Shanty today, he again rode Queen Of Ice assuredly in the four-runner conditions event. By Selkirk, making all to beat Midnite Angel, she was presumably sent here in search of a forgiving surface.

Zampa Manos, narrowly beaten by Passing Star who ran so well against Ertijaal yesterday, made all to keep a persistent Snow Trouble at bay in the conditions stakes.

Wolverhampton winner Hagree held the favourite God Willing for third. Like many of Arch’s pedigree, God Willing looks better than he is. Impressive on debut at Newbury, although highly tried since, there is no sign he has gone on. He ran all right, but at present (last year he was unfurnished), he has to be considered an under-achiever.

18th April:

Lingfield Results

Abundant prize-money supplied by bookmakers desperate not to have a blank day made it a strong Good Friday card.

Possible Guineas hope Ertijaal won the class 2 conditions event over seven furlongs in fair style. Looking tighter than on his reappearance, he put up a similar performance, always looking too good for his opponents and winning with a little in hand.

With a mark of 100 before this, he is scaling the ratings, looking like a 107 horse at least. There remains the question as to whether he will be as effective over a mile but on balance that seems likely.

Passing Star lost his unbeaten record but was far from discredited in second. He was jabbing away at the winner inside the last furlong. In third, Pool House replicated his run of last time with the winner, beaten an identical distance.

Although running well, American Hope was only fourth this time and again looked to be running out of gas in the closing stages. When only beaten a head by Ertijaal last time he had the benefit of a run under his belt. He has ability but may not be that easy to place.

Captain Cat only had one horse behind him when starting his wide sweep of a run on the outside a furlong out. His turn of foot was decisive, putting those that were fighting it out in the shade. His trainer had been patient and such a policy was rewarded with this valuable prize. His form is already solid and this win from 99 further underlines his future claims. He could easily be good enough to contest pattern company, but apparently a more immediate target is the Hunt Cup.

Despite reservations about his resolution, Grandeur toughed it out to take the Class 2 Conditions race.

He had to dig deep to beat Dick Doughtywylie, whom he headed close home. Robins Hood Bay and Solar Deity ran solid races in third and fourth.

April 17th:

Newmarket Results

On looks, in the class 4 for juvenile fillies, victory went to one of the least likely in Spirit Of Xian who was all legs and went to post as if her tail was on fire.

It was a bunch finish with Al Ghuwariyah and El Che close up along with once-raced London Life. The race looked ordinary by this track’s standards. Favourite, Lacing, was undone by a tardy start and was soon out of contention. She did pick up and finish, giving the impression a small race awaits.

It took a while for Farhh’s full-brother Basem to get the message in the Wood Ditton – the race where horses that have thought up to now their sole purpose in life is to eat, sleep and do the odd bit of work, changes such perceptions.

As usual a number took the eye. The winner got going late under a decent De Sousa ride to collar Made With Love and Moonvoy.

A Derby quote about a horse with a dubious staying pedigree is taking the proverbial. On this evidence he might turn out to be decent. It is worth bearing in mind (and he does resemble his brother) that Farhh – a big horse with plenty of substance up top – did not realise his potential until he was four. Accordingly they might tread with care as they plot Basem’s future. From just off the pace, Prince Of Stars and Famous Kid were noted staying on in encouraging fashion.

There was plenty of depth in the Tattersalls Millions Trophy won by Sudden Wonder – another high profile three-year-old scorer for Godolphin. Below top class last year (no reason to suppose it will be a different story now), his three runs to date nevertheless demonstrated he was useful.

In second, Observational was the eye-catcher. A big flashy son of Galileo with just one run under his belt, he was still green and unbalanced on occasion. He came there with a powerful run inside the last furlong and made the winner pull out all the stops.

Always highly thought of, he can improve on this and looks a quality prospect. A galloping track will suit him best.

Seagull Star has obviously wintered well and stayed on in third. Johann Struass ran poorly in sixth; although form book students will point to the fact that, negative ride or not on the day in question, he was behind Seagull Star on debut and only ran to that form here. More pressing as a comment is the fact he is known to be highly strung. One assumes he will shake off the maiden tag eventually but he is becoming expensive to follow.

As a five-year-old the decision to switch Aljamaaheer to sprinting so late in the day seemed somewhat surprising.

Apparently he had been working the house down at home and the Abernant he contested looked to be one of the weaker renewals. Even so, Hamza has a proven record in this sort of company and, aware of the possible pitfalls with the favourite, Jamie Spencer sent him on in blitz-style from the start to stretch his main rival.

Unfortunately, Hanagan fell foul of the ruse, riding Aljamaaheer as if he was in a seven furlong event. Too far out of his ground, rapidly though he closed, it was mission impossible from a furlong and a half out. Not short of a turn of foot, there is every reason to suppose Aljamaaheer will make his mark at sprinting if connections persevere.

Woken up by Ryan Moore, Toormore maintained an unbeaten record in the Craven, regaining the lead when headed by The Grey Gatsby over a furlong out. Apparently he is yet to come to himself at home

(Greenham runner-up Night Of Thunder said to be working better on the lead-up to this), so the outing should freshen him up. Carrying a 3lbs penalty, as a performance this can’t be derided but it will need improving upon in what looks like a strong Guineas this year.

The Grey Gatsby has run as well as ever in second (chased Outstrip in the Champagne at Doncaster).

The one to take the eye with a view to the future was Postponed. Second to Oklahoma City last year after winning a Yarmouth maiden, he is bred to appreciate further. Slow to stride, he was doing all his best work in the closing stages. He will get ten furlongs and probably stay twelve. We will know more about him after he has contested a Derby trial, but it will be surprising if he fails to land a decent prize somewhere along the way this year.

Once-raced Patentar was not disgraced in fourth. Anjal was never seen with a chance.

Be Ready (said to have outworked yesterday’s winner True Story at home) was the first beaten. Saddled with the mantle of being Godolphin’s best Classic hope – a big flashy chestnut that can always get work in Hollywood as a second career – he lost his action and ran as if something was amiss.

Mull Of Kintyre came back to his best for to land the Group 3 he claimed last year. French Navy tried to close but was left with too much to do. Despite an awkward head carriage, Fencing was third, only weakening in the last furlong.

Over an inadequate trip, Gospel Choir finished best of all in fourth. Nine furlongs is plainly short of his best trip and significant improvement can be expected after this pipe opener when returning to twelve furlongs.

The market told its story with Just The Judge; even so, she checked out rather quickly.

Hadaatha repaid her trainer’s patience with a winning appearance in the seven furlong maiden. This Sea The Stars filly has always been considered decent – something she showed in abundance here. The run should bring her on and she has the size to progress.

Placed in two maiden last year and fancied, Eastern Belle came here with reasonable form. Her run in second adds credence to the race.

Several took the eye in behind. Notably Solar Magic and Ramshackle gave every indication they are capable of winning before long.

They knew what they were doing with Cloudscape in the Class 3 handicap. Well backed after winning his maiden at Kempton, he made light of a mark of 85.

Travelling powerfully throughout, although he did not clear away, he was always on top and won like a horse capable of winning a strong handicap.

Windshear was the one to test him most. The pair were clear of a decent field headed by Volume.

April 16th:

Newmarket Results

Provident Spirit extended the current run of the John Gosden yard with a cosy success in the Alex Scott Maiden.

The race did not tell us much. Entitled to improve after a promising debut at Doncaster, the winner has an action that suggests this ground was as fast as he can comfortably handle. A strong son of Invincible Spirit he was too good for the opposition, who look handicappers.

At halfway those with experience threatened to dominate the juvenile event but that quickly changed. Debutant Mind Of Madness – by Azamour but out of an Oasis Dream mare – swooped on Abscent Friends and Harry Hurricane. The third overturned Leicester form with Flyball (fractious in the stalls) on 3lbs better terms giving the form a solid look. The winner looks a little better than a typical early season two-year-old. Races like the National Stakes at Sandown or maybe even the Coventry at Royal Ascot will probably be on the agenda.

Magnus Maximus caused something of a surprise when grabbing the Tattersalls Millions. Securing first run, he held on as the well-backed Toofi launched the last challenge.

From a stable not fully firing as yet, the runner-up travelled strongly throughout, confirming the impression six is his best trip. Naadirr took the step up in class well after winning a Kempton maiden.

Taking on the colts for the first time and fit from Meydan, Wedding Ring was a never nearer fifth. Scrutiny, a soft ground winner last backend, was noticeably inconvenienced by this drying surface.

After two easy wins in lesser company, Shifting Power passed his first major test in the Free Handicap from a mark of 105. A fine looking colt by Compton Place, he benefitted from a determined ride from Ryan Moore but also left the impression there was something left to work on. No Guineas horse, something like the Jersey could be an ideal target.

Receiving five pounds, Mushir narrowly lost his unbeaten record. Representing Night Of Thunder’s form (therefore indirectly that of Kingman) from a mark of 101, Aeolus was a close third having been denied a clear passage. Saayerr and Parbold were on the heels of these in a proper event.

Sandiva added another notch to her pistol when taking the Nell Gwyn. Already exposed as no more than a decent filly, she emerged best from a rough race to win from a mark of 109, which is pretty much as good as she is. Although likeable, she does not look up to Group 1 standard.

Pound for pound, Saturday’s Fred Darling looked a better event. Euro Charline progressed from winning a Wolverhampton handicap from a mark of 78 to chase her home. Next came Majeyda who was close up.

Considered inferior to her stablemate Ihtimaal, her run puts this race into Classic perspective. Queen Catrine suffered in a barging match late on, as did Dorothy B whose run here can be ignored.

The listed Feilden Stakes has a decent record at throwing up horses to follow for the season. Won last season by French Derby winner Intello, this year it was the turn of True Story.

Last seen in July, a reluctant loader that cruised into contention and then pinged away up the hill, this son of Manduro has done well over the winter. This performance puts him into any Group 1 shake-up as yet.

The runner-up, Obliterator, came here after winning a Curragh maiden in September. He has slight knee-action and was unsuited by the ground. Only determination saw him mount a challenge from the rear meeting the rising ground. Although unlikely to subsequently beat the winner, he will always be better on an easier surface.

Truth Or Dare (pulled hard early) was six lengths away in fourth, ahead of Barley Mow, who has to be filed under D for disappointing.

Munjaz, a winner in the wings after two promising runs at HQ last year, opened his account in a strong maiden to hold Venzia, another with form over this track last year. In third, Connecticut got the hang of things late to finish eye-catchingly strongly. He should know more next time and his able handler can be relied upon to find the right opportunity.

The message for Danzeno – only a winner at lowly Redcar last year – proved accurate in the sprint handicap. He won from a mark of 90. Already gelded but a horse with plenty of substance, he took the measure of Expert inside the last furlong to clear away.

April 12th:

Newbury Results

Despite carrying the second colours, Matalleb maintained the current form of the Gosden yard when overcoming a sluggish start to pick up the better fancied Mutakayyef in the Class 4 maiden. The runner-up was second in a moderate Newmarket maiden last year and is clearly only average. However, he should get off the mark. He looks the part; being by Sea The Stars and judging by the way he was coming back to the winner, he can do better over further.

The filly Brown Diamond, who had posted promise as a juvenile, recovered a good deal of forfeited ground to freewheel into third. This was not a hot maiden but she is entitled to open her account before long.

Not for the first time, Cubanita upset the apple cart in the Group 3 John Porter. When it came to a battle, she was too determined for Noble Mission.

Rawaki put up a personal best in third, with Astonishing putting in a satisfactory reappearance in fourth. There was an encouraging word for Mutashaded. A big son of Raven’s Pass he looks the part but even allowing for his stable’s current form (most representatives are needing it), he ran poorly.

J Wonder returned to the sort of form that saw her go off a well-backed contender for the Lowther back in August when she bombed. There was no mistake this time as she took the Fred Darling in a tight finish with Al Thakira.

Probably this is not 1,000 Guineas winning form, but the first two are entitled to take their chances at Newmarket. Joyeuse was another to recover form in a major way in third and, a well-grown daughter of Oasis Dream, she looks likely to come on considerably for the run.

It was the colts turn in the next – a hot Greenham. Several refused to settle. Berkshire was all over the place; Golden Town was another that was too fresh.

Kingman settled perfectly and stormed into the lead over a furlong out to consolidate his position in the Guineas market. A nice two-year-old last year, he is the finished article as a three-year-old.

The fancied and hitherto unbeaten Night Of Thunder was a decent second, but the winner outclassed him.

Lat Hawill did well on only his second start to take fourth. There are races to be won with him, although the Guineas will surely arrive too soon.

Golden Town was not disgraced, especially considering he took such a hold early. Astaire failed to stay and needs to return to six furlongs. Berkshire wants further; even so, this was a desperate effort and it is a case of returning to the drawing board.

Eagle Top had to be everything they said he was to reel back Automated, who had established a clear lead and was not stopping in the class 4 maiden over 1m 3f.

With only a couple behind him on entrance to the straight, Eagle Top – who has a pedigree to die for – was given a very confident ride, quickening with a furlong to race. He ran out a cosy winner. The opposition was not great, but he could only win and this experience will not be lost. He can go on to better things.
11th April:

Newbury Results

Kasb took one of the significant early season juvenile events of the season and in so doing maintained the current successful spell of the John Gosden camp.

Skittish at the stalls and slow to exit, this well-grown son of Arcano (one of the most attractive in the field) picked up strongly from an uncompromising position at halfway to pull clear. A comparatively late foal, there is more to come, particularly over six.

Charlie’s Star (a distant second to the speedy Tiggy Wiggy at Kempton) came next, her proximity to the winner sounding a cautionary note.

Ballymore Castle (another April foal) was third, looking as if he might improve for this run. The Paco Kid was a shaken-up fourth; but in fifth, Be Bold was quietly doing his best work at the finish and can put the experience to good use in lesser company next time.

The Class 3 conditions stakes attracted a promising field of seven.

Market activity concerned the Derby entrant Western Hymn – an impressive Kempton winner in December – and the penalised recently Derby-supplemented Scotland.

Both were subject to positive reports. Despite this hike in class, Western Hymn was once again able to utilise a devastating turn of foot. Arguably not racing on the best part of the course (jockeys favoured the centre where the grass was apparently shorter), Western Hymn cut down his rivals in strides.

A robust and raw individual who can be made fitter, he has an ideal Derby profile thus far (slight stamina doubt on the distaff side but races as if stamina is not an issue) and can continue to improve.

He deserves utmost respect when taking the leap to Group company and could easily win a recognised Epsom trial (Sandown is the most likely next target).

Snow Sky (a rare half-decent son of Nayef) ran on for second, narrowly nabbing that position from Double Bluff. Failing to quicken, Scotland was back in fourth with no obvious excuse. The 2lbs he had to concede made little difference and on this evidence his Derby entry looks a piece of expensive optimism.

The Class 2 three-year-old handicap over seven furlongs that followed has a habit of throwing up clues for higher honours later in the season.

Course and distance winner Muwaary was again the order of the day for the Gosden yard, bidding for their third winner on the day. Not seen since July last year, despite pulling hard early, he worked his way to the front a furlong out to skittle some potentially well-handicapped rivals, recording a fast time. His mark of 82 obviously underrates him. He is another splendid example of Oasis Dream and will continue to progress.

Not as fortunate as the winner in that he is already rated 92, Zarwaan was an honourable second ahead of another at the top of the weights – Brazos – who ran no race last time at Lingfield but returned to form here.

Showpiece – rated only 84 – picked up ground from the rear to take fourth. Bits of his juvenile form read well. He can win a decent handicap on a flat track over this trip of seven furlongs. York springs to mind.

Extremity failed to perform to expectations in seventh. From the same mark as the winner, Exchequer ran poorly, finishing last. Maybe this run came too soon; more likely is a combination of that and a handsome win against poor opponents last time that flatters.

Not unbacked, Luck Beggar yclaimed the scalps of stalwart and fit Jimmy Styles and Steps (minus headgear today) in the Class 2 handicap.

The angle with Steps was that he had the valuable 3lbs claim of Oisin Murphy that put him in off a winning mark. He may have just needed this, but set to return to his mark of 105 next time, today provided his best opportunity of a return to success.

Dutch Masterpiece trailed in last. He is better than this (drying ground was not ideal) but it is not the first time he has turned in a poor performance.

It was maiden three-year-old events for fillies up to the end of the card. The first of them – restricted to first-timers over seven furlongs – went to the Pivotal filly Evita Peron, who finished nicely on top once the penny dropped.

Not fully tuned, apparently like many Pivotals she needs juice and came here before the ground changes.

Another Pivotal, Ski Lift, can be marked up on her run. Toward the rear early, she made up plenty of ground under tender handling. Several took the eye (Wohja, Zaawia and Enliven to name three) but we are presently in the dark as to the worth of this event.

Second to Western Hymn at Kempton on debut, Be My Gal was all the rage in the first division of the split Class 4 over 1m 2f.

Whereas the winner that day made up oodles of ground to engulf the field, Be My Gal was always on the pace and essentially dismissed when it mattered, making that form potentially misleading.

Her defeat should not distract from the earlier win of Western Hymn. As the race developed it only concerned three. The Gosden filly, the New Approach daughter, Bright Approach, came from last to first to win readily, completing a four-timer for her yard in the process. Her next target is the Cheshire Oaks.

In second, Be My Gal should have her day in ordinary company.

Talmada stepped up on her Kempton debut in third. Marsh Daisy, who is bred to stay further, was the only other to threaten, making steady headway over the last two furlongs to finish fourth. A moderate event over twelve furlongs should see her open her account.

Inchila, who made a promising debut at Goodwood last season only to disappoint next time, stormed through in the second and possibly better division. The places were occupied by three fillies with form: Cascading, holding on for the runner-up spot ahead of Criteria. As last year, Criteria looks as if she can achieve better. Not fully wound up here, she would be interesting in a handicap; although given her connections it is likely she will pursue a more conventional route.

9th April

Nottingham Results

The manner of Sacred Act’s victory (swept past the field with a taking turn of foot) in the first division of the Class 5 maiden suggests this son of Oasis Dream might be useful.

However, there is a need for caution. His defeat of Fast Delivery and Art of War reads well enough, but neither the second or third look as if they will live up to promise earlier shown.

Fast Delivery pulled too hard before making what looked like a winning move approaching the last furlong. His effort soon fizzled. As a son of Authorized racing over a mile, he falls between two stools at present.

It is easy to see why Art Of War has been gelded. After a highly encouraging second to Stealth Missile at Ascot last year, he has failed to progress. Tugging early and racing with his head in the air, he found disappointingly little when asked and on this evidence will struggle to break his duck.

GM Hopkins supplied a ready double for his stable in the second division. A promising debut at Newbury was followed by a poor follow-on at Newmarket as a juvenile but he made no mistake here. Derby entrant, Lacan was prominent throughout, showing some promise in second. Roseburg finished off well enough and might do better in handicaps and over further.

Rated only 69 going into this, Signore Piccolo won like a horse that is well ahead of that rating in the class 4 handicap over five furlongs. Only lightly raced – he looks to have flourished over the winter – there was plenty left in the locker. The handicapper will probably make a 10lbs adjustment, but it may not be enough.

Apparently Signore Piccolo will head to Chester next – where he finished third as a juvenile. Three-time Southwell winner Scarborough found the competition much more demanding than he has been used to, but the placed horses (Piazon and One Boy) were not disgraced.

Last seen when third in the Kings Stand at Royal Ascot, ten months ago, Pearl Secret returned to action with a comfortable success in the conditions race.

A taking son of Compton Place, the aim now is to start where he left off before a minor injury. A lovely stamp of a sprinter, further runs will be restricted to a forgiving surface.

Flying Officer completed a red letter day for The John Gosden team with a win in the Listed. On only his fourth start, this son of Dynaformer stayed on willingly to beat last year’s runner-up Earth Amber.

Having been headed three out, High Jinx ran on to snatch third. Connections will be satisfied with his reappearance effort. Biographer looked unwilling and pottery on the ground in the closing stages. It appears he is out of love with the game at present.

Lincoln third running of the same mark, Robert The Painter, gained compensation with a hard fought success in the Class 3 handicap. Obviously he will be hiked up now, which threatens to make life difficult.

Roserrow’s seasonal debut in second suggests he should win a similar contest before long.

Secret Pursuit was another to make light of a lowly mark in the Class 5 handicap. Last seen in January, she was nudged to a clear success from a mark of 68.

Not many inmates from Sir Michael Stoute’s race from marks of 65. Sahara Desert broke the trend in the Class 5 handicap for three-year-olds but it made little difference. He was well beaten in a moderate event and a new home will presumably be found.
April 5th:

Aintree Results

Top class handicap form rose to the top in the two-and-a-half mile Grade 1 novice hurdle.

County Hurdle winner (form already underlined this week with the run of Diakali) Lac Fontana inched to the front over the last to defeat Betfair Hurdle winner Splash Of Ginge and the Greatwood winner Dell’Arca. All three are tough and consistent. The winner will probably stay further.

Supreme Fifth Wilde Blue Yonder – who because of silly jumping errors has not achieved the heights he should have this season – looked to run out of petrol over the last two flights, finishing ahead of Volnay De Thaix, who lacked the necessary turn of foot and looks as if he will stay three miles.

Saved for this, Baldur Succes, a nimble and athletic chaser, pounced at the second-last to jump into the lead in the Grade1. On this showing he would have gone very close in the Arkle and is a contender for top novice honours.

Simply Ned worried Trifolium out of it over the last. The Arkle third did not jump fluently enough to win at this level, making a couple of indifferent jumps on the far side and again at the cross fence. This is not his track.

With a blistering pace shared by Zarkandar and At Fishers Cross in the Grade 1 over three miles, it was left to Barry Geraghty and Whisper to pick up the pieces.

A much improved performer this season (pays a tribute to Saphir Du Rheu), despite dripping with sweat, Whisper took it up approaching the last and hung on, all out as At Fishers Cross lunged one last time on the run-in.

Possibly the runner-up was slightly unfortunate as he had to run with a loose shoe. Even so, Whisper is an admirable type. He is another from the Henderson squad this is likely to be chasing next season, in which sphere a willing attitude allied to his ability could make him formidable.

The story of the Grand National this year surrounded connections of Pineau De Re – none more so than his likeable trainer and the jockey for whom this has been a crowning year – Leighton Aspell.

On a five-timer, Balthazar King was a gallant second, ahead of Double Seven. Rocky Creek did best of the trio of class horses, vying for the lead approaching the straight but ultimately was beaten by the weight in fifth.

Tidal Bay was brought down; Long Run succumbed to Valentine’s. There was plenty of incident.

This report from Aintree concludes National Hunt coverage for the 2013/14 season. Any further reference to jumping will be in the tips section. From here on, it is Flat all the way. We hope our comments have been of help this winter…

Lingfield Results

After three promising runs last year, Exchequer easily snapped up his maiden over seven furlongs from Twin Point. Currently rated 76, presumably he will be hiked to 82 after this, which does not preclude him from following up in better company.

Another Exceed And Excel, Mutawathea, also trained by Richard Hannon, won the six furlong maiden. A big lug of a thing, he swung wide in the straight but was still good enough to recover and mow down Dark Leopard. This form needs improving upon back on turf, but the winner looked as if he can be made fitter and he should be capable of better.

This time last season, after winning his maiden at Haydock and a handicap at Newmarket, Brass Ring looked all set to scale the heights.

For whatever reason he has been absent since, returning here to snatch a Class 2 handicap from a mark of 90. Getting up in the shadow of the post he has only just won from Viewpoint and Glorious Protector so should not be raised by more than 5lbs at the outside.

He is probably worth more than that as he won up the rail (not always achieved here) looking somewhat stuffy. Entered in a couple of Cup events, he may not be good enough to win at that level but another handicap should not be ruled out. By Rail Link, he will stay further.

The £20,000 Listed International Stakes was marred by a ludicrous start – Sloane Avenue and Zampa Manos bursting from the stalls and having to be withdrawn. Reduced to a field of three, outsider Bow Creek made all.

Barley Mow had every chance. He swung wide in the straight but this should have been his race for the taking. The fact he failed to peg back the leader was disappointing, particularly in the light of Charm Spirit’s run in the Djebel earlier in the week.

American Hope was a little too keen early and failed to finish having staked a claim a furlong out. It had looked as if he would benefit from this step up in trip last time but on this evidence he may have failed to stay.

April 4th:

Aintree Results

Josses Hill gained well-deserved compensation for two reversals in honourable style in Grade 1 company coming into this – the Grade 2.

A thoroughly likeable type that is a real trier and has an ideal constitution, despite finding the track and ground a bit quick, he knuckled down with a massive jump at the last to shake off what looked like a major danger in Sgt Reckless.

Described by connections as their Arkle horse for next year, the sky is the limit. Sgt Reckless, the eye-catcher from the Supreme in that he made up acres of ground in the straight, came there swinging two out and actually headed Josses Hill, apparently going the better. However, he had no answer to the winner’s renewed surge. The pair (who give a boost to Supreme winner Vautour and indirectly The Tullow Tank) finished clear of toiling rivals headed by King Of The Picts and Imperial Cup winner Baltimore Rock.

Handsome is as handsome does. Far from the best-looker in the Mildmay Chase, despite stuttering in to some of his fences on the far side on the last circuit, Holywell came up when it mattered in the straight to slam the door in the face of his pursuers.

Made for a jockey like McCoy, this win eclipses RSA form and he looks a possible Gold Cup horse. The fine-looking Don Cossack, who tipped up at Cheltenham in the RSA, was backed to atone, but, well though he ran, could not get to the winner. Wonderful Charm was a fair third, bettering his Cheltenham run.

O’Faolains Boy – a moody customer – was unable to get to grips with his rivals on this tight circuit and backed off quickly in the straight. Never looking happy, Many Clouds was disappointing. He probably wants a softer surface and a more galloping course. A smart operator when conditions are right, he is not in this league but may do better in handicaps next season.

No one would pretend the Grade 1 Melling Chase deserved that status this year, but something had to win and it was the turn of Ryanair sixth Boston Bob.

A sprint from the last sealed victory at the expense of Rolling Aces and Ballynagour who looked the winner down the straight but did not find what he threatened off the bridle.

It was back to thrills and spills in the Topham Chase. After the win of Holywell, Ma Filleule was popular with many and rewarded them. Always travelling strongly, Barry Geraghty made it look easy, steadying his mount at the obstacles, picking her nose up at the fifth-last – he is as good a rider as there is. Only six, the mare shrugged off her mark of 150 with some ease.

And then there were three. Gradually, as the Grade 1 Sefton over three miles unfolded, the pacemaking Cole Harden, Beat That and Seeyouatmidnight pulled clear.

Beat That is another example of the Henderson juggernaut. On only his third experience over timber, he repaid his trainer’s patience, powering clear on the run to the last and setting the seal on a great day for the stable.

Beat That – a big unit that is a work in progress, but some work – is likely to be chasing next season and has the size and scope to become a star. Cole Harden kept on dourly, whilst Seeyouatmidnight emptied over the last two hurdles. A never-nearer Capote ran on for fourth.

Clondaw Kaempfer won the Grade 3 handicap hurdle. Four had chances at the last in a race that told us little. Pulled up in the County Hurdle, Cheltenian returned to something approaching his best when a close fourth. Had he jumped the last fluently he might have got up.

3rd April:

Aintree Results

With no Tiger Roll in the Grade 1 field, Triumph Hurdle form was upheld by the consistent Guitar Pete who was perfectly delivered to pick up fellow countryman Clarcam. The runner-up crashed out two from home in the Fred Winter when still in with every chance.

The unlucky horse from the Triumph, Calipto, was always prominent here in a race that with its slow early pace probably failed to suit. Having looked the winner turning in he kept on but was unable to quicken from the last.

Commissioned, well beaten by Actival at Kempton, was fourth. Considering he was earmarked for this and missed Cheltenham, Actival – a spent force from three out – ran poorly. However, connections expect to see the best of him next year on easier ground.

The beast that is the Bowl did not exactly bite punters this year but favourite Dynaste could not get to Silviniaco Conti from the second-last. The winner once again ran about from the last.

As last time, Dynaste did not look that athletic over his fences. It could be the muscle that has plagued him continues to niggle away in the background. However slight, there are question marks hovering over these two. Argocat outran his rating in third.

Punters of The New One heaved a sigh of relief after the Doom Bar Aintree Hurdle. Those that took short prices must have feared the worst between the last two as the odds-on shot looked in trouble. As Rock On Ruby and Diakali snapped at his heels from the final flight and forced a three-way photo, it was a relieved Sam Twiston-Davies that steered his way into the winner’s enclosure.

Narrowly thwarted in this contest last year when a novice, The New One does travel better than he finishes – that is to say he appears to have just one incisive run. Perhaps it would be best to give him an ice-cool ride, delivering him at the last moment. Back to hurdles and at a time of year when he flourishes, Rock On Ruby ran as well as ever he has done.

Diakali was given a perfect run through by Tony McCoy. Slow to settle, had Diakali worked in tandem with his jockey in the early stages, he might have won. Perhaps they need to remove the blinkers. He did pull out all the stops at the finish. Only five, and already with Grade 1 form to his credit (when only beaten over three lengths in the Hatton’s Grace by Jezki), he is likely to be back in top company next season.

On quick ground and in race run at breakneck speed, Parsnip Pete broke away halfway down the straight to secure the Red Rum Chase. Turn Over Sivola added another place to his CV in second with unlucky Cheltenham loser, Claret Cloak (would surely have appreciated a softer surface) in third.

The extra half mile of the Grade 1 Manifesto Chase put paid to the Arkle winner Western Warhorse. Doing too much early, as is his wont, he emptied quickly down the straight. A flamboyant character, two miles would seem his trip for now.

Uxizandre gained compensation for his narrow Cheltenham defeat, staving off a somewhat disorganised challenge from Oscar Whisky, who only got his act together when it was too late. The pair was clear.

Third in a Grade 3 at Sandown last time, despite walking through the last flight, Doctor Harper, a fine example of Presenting with plenty of substance, claimed the Grade 3 handicap hurdle. He has stayed three miles well.

Maisons-Laffitte Results

The first of the season’s recognised Classic trails got underway in France. The Prix Djebel was a tight affair, won in the last gasp by French Guineas-bound Charm Spirit, for whom this trip of virtually seven furlongs is a minimum.

Kiram, who has not grown too much doing the winter, was touched off having mounted a final furlong challenge.

With Miss France and Vorda in the field, the second Group 3 – the Impudence for fillies – looked stronger. In a messy contest Xcellence defied her odds to outspeed Vorda in the last half furlong.

Vorda remains a mystery. Although a disappointment at Santa Anita, she did not actually fail for lack of stamina there and so we will still have to see. Always handily placed today, it would be unwise to advance an excuse.

Miss France was always posted wide and pulled hard off a slow pace, making some headway in the last furlong without ever looking likely to get to the leaders. Both have work to do if they are to make an impact at Newmarket.

April 2014

GRAND NATIONAL DAY

SATURDAY APRIL 5th

It might be the Grand National but to the professional gambler it is just another horserace. As such it is treated accordingly.

Professionals dissect races they are interested in, reducing the field to those that in their opinions can win and eliminating those that can’t. Once they have stripped the field bare, they take a look to see if they can narrow it down further until they might be left with a handful of serious runners and hopefully the winner.

To do this the professional assessor has to take an opinion and not to be frightened to be wrong. Remember, the man who is worried about being wrong is very often never right. Fence-sitting is for politicians and civil servants.

So herewith my own version of Saturday’s big race: The Crabbie’s Grand National.

Forty are scheduled to line-up, which may include one or more of the four reserves. With the chances of many of the runners looking remote at best, let’s see if we can turn forty into ten. To do this we have to adopt a ruthless approach, but it can be done and result in a pot of gold. After all, a ten-runner horse race where bookmakers are offering 8/1 the field drastically shifts the odds in favour of the punter.

These are the runners from my viewpoint, and you may be surprised by some of the exclusions.

TIDAL BAY:

Has to buck age and weight trends to win. Carrying top weight of 11st 10lbs and at the age of thirteen, he faces a Herculean task – but since joining the excellent Paul Nicholls he has seemed better than ever.

Gone are the moods, the tantrums and the quirky traits that for so long made him a dubious betting proposition. A colossal effort under top weight in the Welsh Grand National in December was followed up by an honourable second in Ireland in a Grade 1 early in February. Rested since, he cannot be disregarded. The most likely scenario is that he will finish in the first six but that his weight will anchor him. Even so, he will expose weaknesses in many of his rivals.

LONG RUN:

Is the one horse in the line-up that will have us muttering in our beards – and beers – how obvious it was when he wins.

As a dual King George and Cheltenham Gold Cup winner that is only nine and runs from a lower mark than when he rattled up the first of those Kempton wins in 2011, the handicapper has opened the door for him now.

Representing the all-powerful Nicky Henderson stable, he can be relied upon to have been well prepared for this task. Although his jumping is not always bombproof, he will have been schooled over replica Aintree fences at home and is the sort to rise to the occasion.

His excellent rider emphasised his worth over these fences when winning the Fox Hunter Chase on Thursday and, granted a smidgen of luck and on this drying ground, he could be too classy despite his burden.

ROCKY CREEK:

Completes the trio of classy horses not normally associated with this event. Second in the Hennessy at Newbury in November on only the first of two runs this season, he should line up as a fresh contender that has been prepared with this in mind.

The ground will be ideal and, having never fallen in twelve chases, his jumping has already withstood the test of time. He may have a few pounds too many in the handicap but his class is undeniable and if he is one of three or four at the last, he is the one lesser rivals will have to pass.

QUITO DE LA ROQUE:

Holds more of a technical chance than a realistic one. But efforts here (in the Betfred Bowl and when winning as a novice) and in Ireland in top company suggest at his best he could go well. This is his time of year.

DOUBLE SEVEN:

Something of a dark horse that has progressed through the ranks in Ireland and is catapulted into the big time now. On what he has achieved his mark seems fair and he could easily surpass it. Two doubts remain. He has yet to prove he stays this far – a remark that applies to many – and his jumping can still be a little dicey at times. However, don’t let that put you off too much. This course has a habit of focusing the sloppy but talented horse and as the choice of Tony McCoy he could not be in better hands. Even so he is a bit of a guess.

BURTON PORT:

And talking of guesses, enter this one-time RSA second and Cheltenham Gold Cup runner-up, whose last win was in the Mildmay Chase here in 2010 when rated 152. Having slipped to a mark of 145, clearly a return to anything approaching that form would make him a blot at the weights.

The problem is, since then he has suffered a leg injury and, at the age of ten, he gives the impression the best is behind him. However a reasonable effort in a veterans’ event last time gives some cause for optimism for his supporters although he will need to find more now. Given his connections that is not impossible and success is not a total pipe dream.

PRINCE DE BEAUCHENE:

Another with a chance on his best form but that seems to be over the horizon and far away these days. However, he does have a dash of class if he can recover it (latest run suggests he is no back number) and would be dangerous if crossing the last alongside a bunch of camels.

LION NA BEARNAI:

Is another that will need to wind the clock back to win. However this former Irish Grand National has already shown he can grind it out when others are crying enough. Weighted to the hilt but ridden by a jockey at the top of his form, if it turns into an old-fashioned National going to the last man standing, one of the more likely ones.

THE PACKAGE:

Creeps in to this with an attractive weight and is another that could test his rivals if it turned into a slog from the last. Fell at the nineteenth here on his previous visit in 2010 and has a patchy record since. Lines up on the back of a decent comeback run at Cheltenham last month. Possibly a place is the best he could obtain, but on his best form does have a chance.

ROSE OF THE MOON:

Risky but credible outsider that could outrun his odds. He completed the course when running in the Becher Chase in December so may be capable of making some sort of impact at these weights.

That is my shortlist, which excludes several currently fancied runners. Why?

Let’s take Teaforthree. He was third off a 3lbs higher mark last year, but has not won in his three runs since – admittedly including a run in the Cheltenham Gold Cup when out of his league. However, this year’s race is potentially a much better renewal than last year so he is unlikely to better his position now and could easily struggle to even maintain it.

Monbeg Dude is an old-fashioned staying chaser that peaked in December at Cheltenham in a Grade 3 handicap from an 8lbs lower mark. Life is tougher now and he has plenty to do with Teaforthree on old form. Balthazar King would be a popular winner for Richard Johnson but on his last visit here he burned himself out by tearing off too quickly. Again, his qualities seem confined to staying or cross-country events where the vast majority of his opponents are geriatric or slow.

I have attempted to include outsiders, but essentially I see the race concerning the class acts, who may dominate. Not all will cross the last in a line, but one of them at least is likely to slip the tangled net of misfortune and drama that could foil their bids.

Assuming I have highlighted the right ten runners, this is how bookmakers might price up the race should the other thirty not be taking part:

3/1 LONG RUN
4/1 TIDAL BAY
9/2 ROCKY CREEK
7/1 DOUBLE SEVEN
10/1 BURTON PORT
16/1 QUITO DE LA ROQUE
16/1 PRINCE DE BEAUCHENE
16/1 LION NA BEARNAI
20/1 THE PACKAGE
33/1 ROSE OF THE MOON

These odds are based on a 110% book. Okay, allow a few points on the prices for error and add or subtract at your discretion. But the value plainly appears to lie with the three market leaders: Long Run, Tidal Bay and Rocky Creek. Currently available at 14/1 or even a shade bigger for looking, Long Run is the selection.

Tomorrow is not solely about the Grand National, although, of course, for many it is the only race in town.

AINTREE: 1.30:

A cracking Grade 1 novice event kicks off the card. Over this trip of 2m 4f, Volnay De Thaix looks sure to improve. A tenuous form line through Splash Of Ginge suggests he may have something to find with Dell’ Arca; however, he has been brought along steadily for this event whereas it could be argued Dell’ Arca comes here after a busy campaign.

2.05:

Trifolium gets a chance for consolation for what was a big effort in the Arkle. His class shines through here and only an off day would prevent him beating lesser rivals.

2.50:

Racing gets distinctly harder after this, the last of the Grade 1 events at the meeting. Whilst At Fishers Cross lines up with solid credentials after a shaky start to the season, Whisper is the horse improving through the ranks. He has only a little to find on these rivals and can throw his hat into the ring with a massive performance now.

LINGFIELD

Exchequer should open his account in the 1.15. After three promising runs as a juvenile, including when second to Kingston Hill, this should be an ideal stepping stone on the way to better things.

3.40:

Barley Mow should win this but American Hope shaped well two weeks ago when a staying on second to the highly-regarded Ertijaal. This trip will suit and he has an improving profile and the right pedigree to test the favourite, who may be sharper on another occasion.

GRAND NATIONAL MEETING

– DAY TWO (Friday)

(posted Thursday 4.15pm)

2.00: International Festival For Business 2014 Top Novices’ Hurdle:

Although never heralded as being at the top of the novice tree within the powerful Nicky Henderson camp, Josses Hill has quickly scaled the heights after his novice win, competing in Grade 1 company on his remaining two runs and finishing runner-up on each occasion. His second to Vautor in the Supreme Novices’ at Cheltenham is the best form on offer here and his habit of finding for pressure makes him the one to beat now.

Sergeant Reckless was only one-and-a-half lengths away in fourth at Cheltenham having made up a great deal of ground from an unpromising position. However, his habit of running in snatches may find him out round here. Art Of Payroll and Baltimore Rock are seen as bigger dangers.

2.30: Betfred Mobile Mildmay Novices’ Chase:

Despite a small field, all six in the line-up have claims of sorts. RSA winner O’Faolains Boy takes a long time to warm up. As a hard ride that is invariably on and off the bridle, he may find this quick track far from ideal.

The progressive Holywell and Wonderful Charm (who can probably be forgiven an on the face of it below par run last time when hampered at Cheltenham) look less complicated rivals.

Many Clouds was never in a comfortable rhythm last time at Cheltenham in the RSA and that run is best overlooked. On the strength of his effort at Ascot when a two-and-half length runner-up to O’Faolains Boy conceding 4lbs he enters the reckoning once again.
A bold front runner, he will be suited by this track and a big run is expected. Holywell is taken to complete the four-timer. Although not without chances, Don Cossack and Just A Par look less likely winners than the remaining four.

3.05: Betfred Melling Chase:

Module and Rajdhani Express come here on the back of two excellent efforts at Cheltenham and both will have their supporters.

The question those looking to play here will have to ask is which run was the better: Module’s third to Sire De Grugy in the Queen Mother Chase over what looked like an inadequate trip, or Rajdhani Express’s third to Dynaste in the Ryanair?

Both will have to operate at maximum strength to win, but taken as an overall package Module has a more tempting profile and is the selection.

Although as a Grade 1 the composition of the field leaves something to be desired, the opposition makes up more than numbers and is not that far adrift from the standard set by the two principals. Once again, this is not a cut-and-dried event to solve.

3.40: Crabbie’s Topham Chase:

As always, run over the Grand National fences, we are presented with a knotty problem here. Currently bookmakers are betting 10/1 the field, which seems an accurate enough assessment.

Ma Filleule recovered with real spirit to come back from an error last time at Cheltenham when only going down narrowly to Holywell. Raised 7lbs since, she may still be able to propel herself into the firing line once more but this race is fiercely competitive.

4.15: Doom Bar Sefton Novices’ Hurdle:

This trip of three miles will expose any stamina limitations. For that reason, having looked to find 2m 6f too far at Thurles last time, Giantofaman is bypassed. Beat That shapes as if likely to stay, whereas Capote and Seeyouatmidnight – both of whom have been saved for this meeting – have already won over today’s trip. Others enter the reckoning, making this a hard race to call.

The middle day of this three-day festival always threatened to be the hardest to crack and that is how it looks. Josses Hill and Module are nominated as the best chances on the day from this quarter but are not necessarily advanced as bets.

It is tempting to oppose O’Faolains Boy in the Mildmay. Holywell may provide the biggest danger but Many Clouds should not be dismissed lightly. And that is the metre of the day, which is constructed of races that are hard to solve in one hit. After a near miss with Diakali on Thursday, it looks like it is all to play for on Saturday…
Good luck with your selections.

GRAND NATIONAL MEETING

– DAY ONE (Thursday)

Here we go once again for the rollercoaster that is Aintree. With four Grade 1s on the first day card, backed up by two competitive handicaps and the hunter chase that is the Foxhunters, there is something for everyone…

2.00:

Injured Jockeys Fund 50th Anniversary 4-Y-O Juvenile Hurdle: All eyes will be on Calipto here after a catalogue of disasters in the Triumph Hurdle. Beaten eight lengths at Cheltenham, his misfortune started at the second when he was impeded and was then compounded when a stirrup leather snapped at the top of the hill.

After the race most observers claimed he looked unlucky and would have arguably beaten Tiger Roll and Guitar Pete but for the intervention of bad luck.

Such thinking can be dangerous: time and again the form book has the last word; although, there is a suspicion that Calipto may re-write a part of it now. We shall see… Guitar Pete has run to a similar level all season and looks guaranteed to be in the mix once again.

A little over three lengths behind Calipto at Newbury on his hurdling debut, Actival has been saved for this. After his authoritative win in the Adonis at Kempton he is not far short of the best of his age and could be the biggest danger to Calipto. On the face of it the three mentioned appear to be the runners, although the improving Fox Norton could enter calculations. Whilst respecting Calipto, Actival looks the logical each-way alternative.

2.30: Betfred Bowl:

So often this event can throw up a surprise. Such a scenario looks unlikely this year as Dynaste and Silviniaco Conti stand out – the inference being one or the other must come out on top. Narrow preference is for Dynaste.

To a degree Argocat is the dark horse that is open to improvement. Even so he has plenty to find if he is to figure. The remaining three will need to pull the proverbial rabbit out of the hat. Last year’s winner First Lieutenant is the scavenger waiting to steal the scraps. He invariably runs his race but can only be considered if the front two underperform; whereas neither Menorah nor Houblon Des Obeaux have shown form approaching this level.

3.05: Doom Bar Aintree Hurdle:

After Calipto in the opener, The New One is the second so-called unlucky Cheltenham loser to line up here. With a trip likely to play to his strengths, after the setback on Boxing Day at Kempton and the broadside he received in the Champion Hurdle, this is his chance.

Fearful of an avalanche of bets in his favour, bookmakers have priced him up as if he is a near certainty. As a result they have overlooked the wild card that is Diakali, who is available at a tempting 12/1 with Coral as I write and 9/1 elsewhere.

Surely these odds are out of kilter with the horse’s chance. The Willie Mullins representative ran a massive race at Cheltenham in the County Hurdle under top weight and his two-and-a-quarter length third to Jezki – over this trip – in the Grade 1 Hatton’s Grace Hurdle at Fairyhouse gives him a strict chance with the favourite, who was almost three lengths behind Jezki at Cheltenham after his much publicised troublesome passage. Those making a case for anything else (including Rock On Ruby) are liable to be barking up the wrong tree. In what is seen as a two-horse contest, even allowing for the fact that any attempt to bet each-way is likely to be thwarted (excludes each-way multiple bets though) Diakali has to be the call at the prices.

3.40: Crabbie’s Fox Hunter’s Chase:

No doubt those acquainted with hunter chaser form can nominate each-way alternatives to the favourite here; but, granted a clear round, the decision to re-route Mossey Joe for this instead of targeting the Grand National is likely to pay its own dividend. He is not perceived as a betting prospect for those of us that don’t don red coats and breeches on bank holidays, but looks a solid favourite.

4.15: Silver Cross Red Rum Handicap Chase:

History shows a shock is more than possible in this. Cutting through the opposition, Sound Investment has a progressive profile and could be the one to concentrate on for those bold enough to play. Claret Cloak blundered away his chance in the Grand Annual at the second-last but has been raised 4lbs for the privilege and faces a similarly stiff task today.

4.50: Pinsent Masons Manifesto Novices’ Chase:

Temperament and a sketchy past record means Arkle winner Western Warhorse will not be short of detractors here. Stepping up in trip to 2m 4f (might be a problem if he decides to take a tug), those intent on backing him will do well to do so at SP – which will surely outstrip current cramped odds. With two serious contenders in the shadows, many will nominate him as the lay of the day.
Uxizandre performed well at the Festival when second to Taquin Du Seuill in the JLT where Oscar Whisky tipped up at the first. Effective in small fields, Oscar Whisky claimed the scalp of Taquin Du Seuill at Cheltenham in January and it is entirely possible he will regain the winning thread here. Along with Uxizandre his presence means there will be no hiding place for the Arkle winner.

5.25: Dominican Republic Handicap Hurdle:

This represents a precarious end to the day as far as punters are concerned. Principal contenders appear to be the Irish duo Jetson and Busty Brown.

Although hard to fancy, now returned to timber from a favourable mark, Riverside Theatre is the sort to represent Nicky Henderson with credit, whilst Doctor Harper is on the upgrade.

A case can be constructed for the appropriately named Spirit Of Shankly. In all, for those anxious to continue playing, the advice would be to lob a few quid on the last-named at a sporting price. The sensible advice from this befuddled corner would be to leave the race alone.

So from a betting perspective, although ideas may transmogrify once racing gets underway, at this stage I am nominating two value bets in Actival and Diakal.

Take it easy on what might be a trickier day than it looks…

AINTREE GRAND NATIONAL MEETING 2014

(posted Monday evening 7pm)

This historic meeting kicks off on Thursday – and it is straight into top quality action with the Grade 1 Juvenile Hurdle at 2.00. With Zarkandar, Walkon, Binocular, Katchit and Detroit City among winners in recent years, this is an event often claimed by an obvious contender.

Cheltenham Festival runners have a good record (seven out of the last ten have obliged). Many will be anxious to recover Cheltenham losses with Calipto, who was travelling strongly when his jockey became the victim of a slipping saddle in the Triumph.

He will doubtless be heavily supported to make amends but may have to face Tiger Roll and Guitar Pete for a second time.

Betfred Bowl Chase:

In contrast to the opening event, this is often won by the right horse on the right day. That is to say it can be a consolation prize.

This proved to be the case for the likes of First Lieutenant, Follow The Plan, Nacarat and Exotic Dancer – all of whom had been beaten at the highest level coming into the race. Even so they could be relied upon to produce their best form against higher profile rivals that came here after long seasons.

The Pipe stable has farmed four of the last ten runnings, and will field the favourite in Dynaste – who was a winner at this meeting last year.

Doom Bar Aintree Hurdle:

For anyone unaware of the name – Doom Bar is a particularly tasty bitter that is brewed in Cornwall. Those yet to acquaint themselves of this brew should redress such an oversight as soon as possible.

As for the race, it is the third of four Grade 1 events on the day. The key factor is the step up in trip for Champion Hurdle contenders that are now faced with 2m 4f.

For that reason it does not always pay to rely on Cheltenham form. Only two favourites have obliged over the last ten years (both of those joint favs) but that’s not to say the race favours outsiders.

Irish runners have a good record – they have won five of the last ten renewals. Assuming Annie Power will wait for Punchestown, many will consider this race to be tailor-made for The New One.

Crabbie’s Fox Hunters’ Chase:

Step forward the hero of the Aintree hour in Crabbies’, the alcoholic ginger beer manufacturer that has injected extra lashings of fizz into the meeting by their sponsorship.

This could be one of the races where spectators may want to avail themselves of their product as it invariably favours bookmakers over punters. Last year it was won by a 100/1 shot; in 2010 by a 50/1 chance. Otherwise three of the last ten runnings have resulted in a winning favourite, so the race can supply predictable results to a degree. It does help to have some knowledge of hunter chasing in general and, possibly more importantly, in a race where jockeyship can be paramount, of the riders involved.

Red Rum Handicap Chase:

One way or another, stand by for an unexpected result here. This handicap has thrown up three big price winners in the last ten years (two 20/1 chances and a 25/1 shot) as well as four winning favourites (including co-favs). It is invariably not an easy race to solve.

Pinsent Masons Manifesto Novices’ Chase:

With only five year’s results to go by, it is a little premature to pinpoint any real trends but so far this, the fourth of the Grade 1s on the day, has gone pretty much according to the script.

Captain Conan won it last year. Trainers Nicky Henderson and Philip Hobbs have won two races apiece. Tartak, in the inaugural running in 2009, was the biggest priced-winner to date for his trainer Tom George.

Plenty will be prepared to oppose Arkle winner Western Warhorse here. Oscar Whisky should be more suited to this track than Cheltenham, but the Irish challenge is potentially a strong one.

Dominican Republic Handicap Hurdle:

A tough three mile hurdle closes the day. This is one of the harder races to get right. Six of the last ten winners have returned at double-figure prices. To balance this out, the other four went to favourites. Unless you unearth a potential blot in the handicap – you know the risk you run when betting in events such as this.

Day Two:

The day starts with a Grade 2 novice hurdle over two miles sponsored by the International Festival for Business. Nicky Henderson has won the last two runnings, with My Tent Or Yours last year and Darlan before that.

With General Miller having supplied a win for Seven Barrows in 2010, Henderson, a top man at this track, will hope to be represented by Josses Hill this time. The opposition is potentially strong. If turning up, Arctic Fire and possibly Cheltenham flop Irving would count as two serious dangers.

It is back to a Grade 1 with the Betfred Mildmay Novices’ Chase. Five of the last ten favourites have obliged for punters, including Dynaste last year. He was preceded by Silvianco Conti in 2012. There have been no real shocks in this over the past ten years. Six of the last ten winners raced at the Cheltenham Festival. A small field seems likely this year.

The Grade 1 Betfred Melling Chase

appears on statistics to be one of the more punter-friendly races with five of the last ten events going to the favourite.

However, with a roll-call that includes top two-milers like Sprinter Sacre, Master Minded and Moscow Flyer, that figure could be misleading. There is nothing of that calibre in this year’s line-up, a race that could well suit Queen Mother third Module over this extended trip.

Topham Chase:

Fifty percent of the last ten winners have been double-figure big prices, which is hardly surprising considering they often bet 10/1 the field.

This is also something of an oddity of a race, being as it is run over the in-between trip of 2m 6f and over the Grand National fences. This can be one of the hardest races at the meeting to call, although that does not prevent punters from piling in.

Doom Bar Sefton Novices’ Chase:

At Fishers Cross last year and Black Jack Ketchum in 2006 were the only winning favourites in ten years. There have been four big price winners of this Grade 1 over three miles – often run on quick conditions.

Alder Hey Children’s Charity Handicap Hurdle:

Punters are often in need of medication after this has been run. There have been no winning favourites in the last ten years. Sunnyhill Boy at 8/1 was the lowest-priced winner in 2009. 2013 Grand National winner, Aurora’s Encore prevailed in 2008 at odds of 50/1. A race to be wary of.

Concerto Group Mares’ Standard NH Flat Race:

A Flat race for mares – what joy to bring down the curtain on the second day’s proceedings! Turbo Linn in 2007 is the only winning favourite to date. Bring on the Doom Bar!

Grand National Saturday:

Pertemps Network Novices’ Hurdle: Elevated this year to a Grade 1, again the trip of 2m 4f could be partly responsible for some big-priced past winners. Ubak surprised at 22/1 last year. Bouggler won at 16/1 in 2009 and Turpin Green was also something of a shock when winning in 2005 at odds of 14/1. Otherwise there have been three winning favourites and fancied winners in the shape of Simonsig in 2012, Spirit Son in 2011, Elusive Dream in 2008 and Tidal Bay in 2007. The overall impression is that this is a solvable contest if the field is right.

Doom Bar Maghull Novices’ Chase:

Another Grade 1, this time over two miles. Several likely candidates are doubly engaged throughout the meeting, so at this stage it is a question of seeing who turns up.

A small field is likely. There have been five winning favourites in the last ten years – last year’s winner Special Tiara being the only blot in a race that otherwise favours punters.

Silver Cross Stayer’s Hurdle Grade 1:

At 11/2 in 2005, Monet’s Garden was the biggest-priced winner. Four-time winner Big Buck’s and dual-winner Mighty Man give this a wobbly shape as far as betting figures are concerned. More Of That would be popular if turning up; in his absence, At Fishers Cross (same ownership) would probably line up as favourite.

Having improved with every run this year, Whisper would be the dark horse.

And a word of possible interest here. Whisper’s trainer, Nicky Henderson, has an enviable record at this meeting. For that reason it pays to scrutinise his representatives carefully over the week. Bear in mind he is often successful with those runners that are not obvious and at first glance appear to hold only average chances. He often does well in the handicaps.

Betfred TV Handicap Chase:

Only the racing authorities could plan or sanction this!

Here we have a handicap chase over the Mildmay fences run as a curtain-raiser for the Grand National, fifty minutes in advance of the big race of the meeting. Don’t be surprised if there is a shortage of jockeys wishing to take part in this, or a shortage for their scheduled mounts in the Grand National after it. And be prepared for a turn up!

Crabbie’s Grand National:

To a degree luck plays a big part, although the right horse often makes its own luck in this. The poser set for punters is to nominate the right horse for the occasion.

Often first-timers to the track have the edge, so class acts like Rocky Creek and Long Run could be of interest this year.

Aged thirteen and carrying 11st 10lbs, Tidal Bay will have to buck sensible statistics to win.

The favourite, Tea For Three had his chance last year when third and faces stiffer competition this time round.

With a couple of better handicapped contenders (Godsmejudge and Same Difference) now absentees, but worth bearing in mind for events like the Bet 365 Chase at Sandown or the Ayr National, it could be a case of the cream rising to the top in the form of either of the two mentioned.

Maxilead Metals Handicap Hurdle (Conditional Jockeys and Amateur Riders):

Cockney Sparrow was a winning favourite last year, Lifestyle the 28/1 winner in 2013. The kind of event that could throw up anything! If you are not already in a queue to collect winnings from the Grand National, it could be you shouldn’t be in one to place a bet in this.

Weatherbys Private Banking Champion NH Flat Race:

With winners at 33/1, 50/1, 28/1and 20/1, the past results speak for themselves.

This is not a race for punters tempted to punch their way out of trouble. That said, if there is any cash left, Modus is better than his running at Cheltenham might suggest and is likely to take more of a hand at the finish now if turning up. He does have the four-year-old hoodoo to defy.

These are some preliminary thoughts and ideas for the coming week. We hope you find them useful and that they may help focus you in the right direction.

We shall be posting Free Tips for each day. They should be online by most evenings, commencing on Wednesday.

Good luck…