Newmarket Trainers Inside Information Seminar

And Another Thing

September 2008

Newmarket Trainers Inside Information seminar

MID-MORNING and we are all still here. The Hadron Collider has not got us yet but there is time – two months by all accounts. It strikes me all this questing to re-create the Big Bang is a strange situation, sprung without any warning on those of us who live on this planet. Apparently, there is a remote chance of this contraption metaphormaphisising solid matter into something nasty enough to make us a gooey mass. Quite how remote a chance this is has not been revealed. Alternatively, it could produce a black hole that would suck us all into oblivion (already been done in some cases), or possibly into a parallel, and who knows better, universe. Stephen Hawkins claims this is not a possibility. Okay, but on the assumption that everything is possible, is it asking too much for him to put a figure on it? Are the odds a million, ten million, a trillion? I mention this because I do not recall anyone consulting those of us who live on this blue rock whether we actually wished to sanction such action. And of course Mr Hawkins is on a bet to nothing. Assuming he is right and we are here tomorrow trying to figure out the winner of the Park Hill or May Hill Stakes, or head scratching over the Cambridgeshire next month or the Hennessey the month after, his prediction has been borne out; if wrong he will not be culpable.

Someone similarly absolved from his actions appears to be our old friend Mr Paul Scotney who, having summoned Newmarket trainers to a seminar when he was going to teach them how to suck the proverbial egg, he failed to turn up, possibly demonstrating by proxy how to suck a lemon. Most of the trainers concerned seemed surprisingly restrained in their comments of the non-appearance by this self-appointed autocrat of the BHA. In typical policeman-speak, ex-cop Mr Scotney, who seems to have difficulty grasping the rudiments of the written or spoken word said: “The reason we wanted to go down this education route was that on a number of occasions jockeys and trainers found to have been involved in problems in this area would say they didn’t realise they were doing wrong.”

Cor blimey guv, so that’s what it’s all abat! Such gobbledegook may cut it in the interview room down at the nick but frankly, such a cobbled together, incoherent and grammatically incorrect statement makes no sense in the real world. What he presumably meant to say was something like, “We wanted to increase awareness on security issues so that jockeys and trainers would be able to identify when they were transgressing the rules.” I am sorry if it is sometimes necessary to use long words that are difficult to spell Mr Scotney. You can use little ones if you find it easier but the main thing is that what you say or write makes sense and that you do not require an interpreter. Scotney’s comment on his absence that “Today’s package was on inside information, not debating the subject,” is another example of his feeble grasp of the language known as English and his scant regard for the very people who keep the show on the road.

I wonder how Mr Scotney and his band of despots will handle any of the incoming horserace trainers that are on the list of immigrants most likely to be allowed into this country from outside the European Community. Who thought this one up – someone escaping from the black hole we are hoping to avoid?

One trainer allowed to set up an establishment here, Mr Kamil Mahdi, was warned off for ten years in 2003 and is now seeking to regain his licence. Mr Mahdi had several unique ways of training his horses. It appears one of them was to leave his charges in their boxes unattended for five days, forcing them to live in their own urine and faeces. Not sure if it will catch on Mr Mahdi… But apparently there is a shortage of fish filleters!

Newmarket Trainers Inside Information Seminar

And Another Thing

August 2008

A novel way to get a well handicapped race horse

SO IT IS OFFICIAL! After two episodes at the starting stalls, Bentong is to be issued with a warning by the authorities. He refused to race in the Stewards’ Cup at Goodwood and then repeated the formula at Ascot in the Shergar Cup – much to the chagrin of his inactive pilot, Jamie Spencer.

I cannot help but speculate what form this warning will take. Bentong is by Anaaba and trained by Paul Cole. Note it is not Mr Cole that is to be warned but the horse itself. So will a deputation from Portman Square arrive at Mr Cole’s stables and demand to see Bentong in his box? Whilst Bentong hangs his unconcerned head over his stable door, possibly contemplating other and more cunning ways of relinquishing his obligation to race, will the officials give the horse a stern talking to and then confiscate his supply of carrots?

The last time Bentong consented to race, he finished third to Damika on the 5th July from a mark of 102. Almost a month later, he presumably scanned the opposition at Goodwood, went into the stalls and decided it would be best not to exit. Strangely, after his appearance at Goodwood, the handicapper dropped him 2lbs – presumably for turning up. This seems particularly odd considering Damika has been raised 7lbs since beating Bentong by three lengths in July. Is it possible that Bentong is smarter than the BHA is giving him credit for? After all, he has achieved a ratings drop of 2lbs without any exertion on his part with the exception of hacking to the start twice. Perhaps he has hit on a way of getting himself well-handicapped without going through the process of racing.

Maybe the authorities should consider picking his brains. Maybe there could be a position for him at the BHA. Personally, I can think of one!

A novel way to get a well handicapped race horse

And Another Thing

August 2008

A novel way to get a well handicapped race horse

SO IT IS OFFICIAL! After two episodes at the starting stalls, Bentong is to be issued with a warning by the authorities. He refused to race in the Stewards’ Cup at Goodwood and then repeated the formula at Ascot in the Shergar Cup – much to the chagrin of his inactive pilot, Jamie Spencer.

I cannot help but speculate what form this warning will take. Bentong is by Anaaba and trained by Paul Cole. Note it is not Mr Cole that is to be warned but the horse itself. So will a deputation from Portman Square arrive at Mr Cole’s stables and demand to see Bentong in his box? Whilst Bentong hangs his unconcerned head over his stable door, possibly contemplating other and more cunning ways of relinquishing his obligation to race, will the officials give the horse a stern talking to and then confiscate his supply of carrots?

The last time Bentong consented to race, he finished third to Damika on the 5th July from a mark of 102. Almost a month later, he presumably scanned the opposition at Goodwood, went into the stalls and decided it would be best not to exit. Strangely, after his appearance at Goodwood, the handicapper dropped him 2lbs – presumably for turning up. This seems particularly odd considering Damika has been raised 7lbs since beating Bentong by three lengths in July. Is it possible that Bentong is smarter than the BHA is giving him credit for? After all, he has achieved a ratings drop of 2lbs without any exertion on his part with the exception of hacking to the start twice. Perhaps he has hit on a way of getting himself well-handicapped without going through the process of racing.

Maybe the authorities should consider picking his brains. Maybe there could be a position for him at the BHA. Personally, I can think of one!

Oddschecker using the wrong colour?

Is it me or is everything in racing designed to be misleading. Take for example the GoingStick reading. Surely anyone starting from scratch with this would decide that the softer the going the higher the rating. But no, we can rely on it to be the other way round: Heavy reads 1 and hard 15.

Now looking at it logically, the softer the ground, the further the stick will penetrate. So shouldn’t heavy be 15 and hard – barely scratching the surface – be 1? Or is that too simple?

And who decided on the Oddschecker site to make blue the colour of a market-mover inwards and pink the colour of a drifter? I suppose this was done to reflect the colour-coding on Betfair where blue is back and pink lay.

However, blue is a cold colour, synonymous with a horse that is friendless, so I would have thought rather than using it to denote a horse attracting interest the opposite would apply. Oddschecker go a stage further on the opening pages of their site where green means a horse being backed (yes, I can follow that – green for go) but red (surely the hottest colour found) is used to indicate a horse on the drift.

Maybe I need a darkened room…

And Another Thing – Apr Archive

AND ANOTHER THING…

April 2009

Self appraisals

FROM TIME TO TIME, if you work for yourself, it is advisable to review your performance. It has to be you because there is simply no one else to do it. If you are in traditional employment, you will receive an appraisal from the next person in the chain of command. When you work for yourself, you are the next person in the chain, and the next after that and so on right up to the managing director. You can buy a plaque and put it in on your door if you so wish declaring that you are the big cheese, the head honcho, the man with whom the buck rolls to a stop.

None of this will make the slightest difference of course because you are just a bloke that has an office attached to his house, who wears a hole in the carpet whilst he tries to figure out how he is going to pay his car tax. So you can call yourself what you like, the fact remains you are some sort of wheeler-dealer trying to beat the system. The only way you make money is to take a slice of someone else’s share; this applies when you work for yourself whatever your chosen vocation. When you work for someone else (unless for the government in its various guises), you are less exposed to such a reality, as you are the tool of the mastermind that buys for X and sells for Y. You are protected from the unpleasantness, rather as the man who tucks into a steak is spared the grizzly details of how it arrived upon his plate.

My unofficial title at present is part-time writer, race-reader and gambler. Put like that it does not sound so great. I like the writing because it is different. I know I make a few crashing errors with my grammar. In my defence, I have to self-edit and that is difficult. Self-criticism is one of the hardest things for anyone. You will find extreme cases on Britain Has Got Talent and the X Factor. On these shows, there are always would-be singers that cannot sing – and I mean really cannot sing. They would have trouble with Jack and Jill. There are crazies with spotty faces and ill-fitting trousers that look as if they have just escaped from somewhere – mad-eyed women that seem likely to produce an axe out of their jumpers at any moment. These people should be pitied I suppose, because in their delusional state they really think they have a gift. Unfortunately, the only gift they possess is the one to make people laugh at them rather than with them.

Most of us struggle to see ourselves for what we are. I believe I read somewhere that nine out of ten people are inclined to dislike you. Turned on its head, if that statistic is true, it means only one in ten people you meet are in the least bit inclined to find you tolerable. It strikes me we need some careful screening from time to time just to put us straight so that we know where we are going wrong.

I decided to conduct my appraisal yesterday after having made a couple of what could only be described as gaffes. I backed two horses that I should not have; therefore, I asked to see myself in my office and made myself stand in front of the desk whilst the boss had a quiet word.

He wanted to know why I had considered Coiled Spring and Tikka Masala bets. The first had shown an awkward streak at Newmarket that I had put down to bad luck. No, said the boss, it was not bad luck. The horse has a temperament issue, or at least there was enough of a suggestion that he had one to mean deletion from any list of horses to back. Tikka Masala was a more clear-cut case. She pulls too hard and is a One Cool Cat, many of whom develop attitude problems. So what made you think they would be on their best behaviour today? And if they were, at the prices what did it matter? Taking a chance is commensurate with the odds on offer and neither were exactly overpriced. You fancied Aypeeyes, correctly identified he was taking a drop in grade, thought he represented a 9/4 chance and yet could have backed him at 7/2. Why didn’t you? Not what you would call a good effort from someone that purports to be – let me check, what is it you call yourself – yes… a professional gambler. Not very professional for a gambler is it?

No. I ignore the obvious and not very professional reference to the Paul Merton line in that annoying advert he does with Stephen Fry.

Then we come to Stone Of Scone later in the day. You fancied the horse, had a good confirmed message for it, yet let it run at three times the price you expected. Just clarify the situation for me. Why did you do that?

I thought the price suggested he wouldn’t win. There are drifters and drifters; this was more like a raft in the Bay of Biscay.

I am having difficulty with your thought processes here. As I understand it, according to you, punters should not be influenced by the price of a horse. If anything, the bigger the price, the more they should have on. Correct me if I am wrong, you had nothing whatsoever on Stone Of Scone.

That is correct.

Not very convincing then are you?

He looked like he was carrying condition and needed the run. He was not aggressively ridden in the race, tending to reinforce he was there to win but such an eventuality was not the be all and end all.

That may be but win he did. As did Aypeeyes, the two horses you chose not to back in favour of two that did not. Let me put it this way: I shall be keeping a close eye on you from now on. This is not the first time such mistakes have been made and I cannot afford passengers. Close the door on your way out and check that your P45 is up to date.

Tough interview! Who do I think I am talking to? I don’t have to take this sort of thing lying down. I have a good mind to go back in there and give myself a piece of my mind. Who do I think I am?

Oh, hang on, I know. That is the trouble with this business – there is no hiding place.

Even so, I am miffed. They need people on the night shift at Tesco; so as a warning, I had better look out or else I might be looking for a replacement…


AND ANOTHER THING…

April 2009

TODAY BELONGS TO GEORGE. No, you are not awaking from some dreadful dream. It is not King George: Kauto Star is not about to make his seasonal reappearance at Kempton, neither is Ascot staging its midsummer showpiece. It is St George’s Day, hardly an appropriate occasion for some of the news that we have endured over the last twenty-four hours.

It seems impossible to pen a piece without at least some reference to the Budget and the Branston’s we seem to be in. No, it is worse than being in a pickle; we are sailing in the frozen quiet on the Titanic within striking distance of the iceberg. Some of the newspapers seem to have prematurely jumped ship. The Daily Express has assumed the possible temporary mantle of doom-monger with their headline of: They’ve Ruined Britain.

I am skating on thin ice when discussing politics and economics. However, it strikes me that success in both is largely dependent on common sense. One has to question the wisdom of borrowing our way out of financial difficulty. Surely, such a concept breaks all rules. If we cannot pay our credit cards, the answer is not to apply for another one to pay back the company we owe. Maybe global economy transcends such elementary rules.

My own political leanings are left of centre but I would support any government that is doing its best for its citizens. This present government has a lot they can take pride in. The health service is better, so I believe is education. Money invested in this nation’s infrastructure has resulted in many of our cities adopting a glistening 21st century look.

On the down side, we are living beyond our means by fighting two wars. We appear hamstrung by The Court of Human Rights. We give away too much in benefits to people that turn up at our borders, having travelled the length of Europe, claiming asylum in the one country that doles out money as if there is no tomorrow. It appears tomorrow has arrived – something it does every twenty-four hours.

Politicians are privileged. Their salaries do not compete with those that can be earned in the private sector, but the spin-off can be enormous. The salary is just the start. They are similarly positioned to the doorman at the Ritz, in that the job is almost worth doing for nothing. Like the racecourse commentators who then write columns in newspapers, run tipping lines and appear on chat shows, politicians receive considerable perks and an influx of cash from several quarters. They pay no tax, can be on the board of companies without actually doing anything, command large sums for after-diner speaking, etc. It is not a bad life with more holidays than a teacher – all  we ask in return is that they play the game. When greed creeps in and they even have to fiddle expenses to watch Sky, they are taking us for fools. It was Abraham Lincoln that stated, ‘You can fool some of the people all of the time and all of the people some of the time, but you can’t fool all of the people all of the time.’

Darling does not seem a bad bloke despite a name that conjures up past editions of Blackadder. I am not sure about Brown. But as we move towards the iceberg, possibly it would help if we all took an oar and tried to steer the ship around it. To an extent, we are all to blame for the current situation. It has been a great ride since Labour took office and for those who foresaw disaster, well their prophecies have been realised, which must be comforting for them. Predicting adversity is rather like those who said that Muhammad Ali and Ribot would both meet their matches one day. It the case of Ali, defeat visited him five times, but only twice in his golden heyday. On the other hand, Ribot retired undefeated, proving that the law of averages will not always make doomists seem correct.

Right now, most of us have benefitted to a degree from Tony Blair’s government and his legacy. Those of us that did not feel the constant urge to splash brick walls with urine had a chance to salvage wages and invest in property we may not have owned pre 1999. Maybe it is time to stop the bickering. It is tempting if you have a platform to be clever and kick the other team. It is the job of the Conservatives to strap on their boots and good luck to them. Maybe they will do a better job, maybe not. But am I the only one that is starting to tire of the tabloid sniping?

As another quote, Paul Simon in his wonderful song, American Tune, ponders the downfall of his country at the time. In that choirboy tone for which he is so well known he sings, ‘It’s all right for we lived so well so long.’ And as a finale, ‘Still tomorrow’s going to be another working day and I’m trying to get some rest, that’s all I’m trying to get some rest.’

So for now, Ribot is unbeaten, the iceberg looms but is yet to be struck.

I had thought about making a cheap-shot joke about being all right as I can manage the fifty percent tax; but that is what it is all about. Whatever our politics, whatever our calling, this is a time to pull together. It is something we have had little practice in, but Ali shrugged off his defeats and came back – until the end that is – maybe we can do the same…


AND ANOTHER THING…

April 2009

READING BETWEEN THE LINES

I LIKE Reading Between The Lines  – as a title I mean. I thought I would try it out as an alternative to And Another Thing to see if my words flowed differently with a change of emphasis. This is merely a trial you understand; it does not mean that I am dumping my former epithet. I might even alternate between the two alter egos to see if it brings me out of my shell a little, allows me to emerge from the closet for a while. Not that I am gay, in truth I am not even remotely happy at present. The Scots have a word for it which, not being fluent in Scottish, I cannot spell. So I will just say it phonetically. It is dreek. As it is Scottish National Day at Ayr, I thought a word from the same language that gives you neeps, tatties and haggis might be appropriate. Trying to master a semi-abbreviated tongue seems easier than solving the Scottish Grand National.

Yesterday I was at Newbury and it was more like the Hennessy meeting than the first Flat meeting of the year. The runners swirled out of the mist down the straight and many of them went up and down on the spot as if they had just clouted the last ditch. Although I lent the bookmakers some of my cash, which is always galling when you have suffered for your art as well, I came away with a few definite pointers for the future.

If you are prepared to get blobs of rain on your glasses and shuffle from one foot to another to stamp out the chill, paddock watching is rewarding. Spotting horses that are not fully fit and then seeing them run with a great deal of promise is a sure-fire way of recognising future winners. Of course, each of us that pursue such a path is convinced they have seen something missed by others. They may not have missed it but chosen to ignore it based on the fact they knew more than you did. That is the game – the game of reading between the lines. And reading between the lines is something of a British pastime, so it is something we are accustomed to. How many times do you have a conservation with an Englishman and then have to slip away quietly to decipher what was intended? Contrast that with the upfront approach of the Americans. They seem capable of bluntly expressing what they mean in two minutes whilst we bluster all round the houses to intimate at a point. We use such phrases as, just remind me, or, so to recap. Our American cousins seem to hit the nail on the head and move on.

So I read between the lines at Newbury yesterday and came to various conclusions which appear in Track Notes. There is a small race in Lofthouse, Sonny Red should win a big handicap, Brief Encounter is of interest next time, Candy Ride and Dhushan look nailed on for their maidens. What’s that? You thought the same but didn’t have to stand in the drizzle to arrive at such conclusions. Well, good for you!

There is more reading between the lines required today. Trainers make statements in the Racing Post as to the chances of their runners. They use a kind of code which is universal in racing circles and once cracked can be easily translated. They say they are looking forward to running their horse. That means they think it will be fun day out for all concerned until the bills arrive. We all look forward to plenty of things, most of which never materialise.

Then there is the trainer that gives with one hand and takes with another. He will love the trip but I am not sure about the ground means he probably won’t win.

I have him as fit as I can for his first run translates to he definitely won’t win.

He really is better of six than today’s five means he is being prepared for something else.

I couldn’t be more happy with him is not quite the dollop of encouragement it sounds. Being happy with a horse is distinct from thinking he will win.

No, give me the Mick Easterby approach. I laid this ‘oss out for two years. He is sixteen pounds lower than he should be, is in the form of his life and I am having my bollocks on him. How many bollocks do you get for the pound by the way? What with deflation and the crunch (no, not a good choice of word in the same sentence I know), I suspect they have dropped in value somewhat. However, it still equates to a serious wager.

No such luck with the clues today. The always-informative Saeed Bin Suroor (why does he call even hacks sir?) suggests Shaweel will improve for the run.

Brian Meehan tells us nothing about Neshri except that he has a Guineas entry.

Marcus Tregoning doesn’t really wish to run Finjaan on poor ground – which is what he will get. He as good as tells us it won’t win, but sums up by saying he likes the horse a lot. Does that mean they will be sharing a whisky tonight and having a game of backgammon?

Reading between the lines, there is a lot of it about at this stage of the season…


AND ANOTHER THING…

April 2009

WELL, IT IS ANOTHER WEEK, although strangely not many THINGS are occurring, save for the fact that the usual spray of messages from Newmarket seem to be costing punters money. Maybe the title of this should be MORE OF THE SAME, or for Motown fans, IT’S THE SAME OLD SONG.

Cynical? Not me; resigned more like. It happens every year. The Derby horse we have waited half the winter to see gets beaten; second strings from big yards beat the first strings. That is the Craven meeting, but we flock to it every year like migrating starlings. And every year we say: let’s wait and see how things develop – which yards are performing and have the ammunition before we get the wallet out; but every year a case that is so strong is constructed for the likes of Native Ruler and Invisible Man that we fall for them. We know we shouldn’t, we have heard it all before, but somehow this time it is different. Messages, whispers, talk, call them what you like, are only the opinions of others. Just as boxers do not spar with champions, good horses often work with those that will stretch them but are not in their league. Therefore, unless work-watchers are au fait with work patterns, what they see, or even take part in, can mislead. For example, Cover Up used to work with some of the best colts at Michael Stoute’s yard, but he was a two-mile handicapper. Messages can be a boon; equally, they can lead the punter down a rocky road and if they are not careful over a craggy cliff.

On the plus side, the Craven Meeting is a celebration of the proper return of Flat racing, but like uncorked vintage wine, a season needs to be savoured and not gulped down in one go. A long term looms. The first Newmarket meeting should be treated as a showcase rather than a licence to strap on those betting boots and start punting as if the end is nigh. Of course the end may well be nigh, but I suspect it will wait a little longer than next week or next month or at least until after the St Leger. Not so long ago people used to parade outside racecourses hoisting placards warning of the evils of gambling. Now such a pursuit as tame as placing money on a horse must rank in the bottom half of a list of sins to avoid. They seem to have invented plenty of new ones since then.

The trouble with messages at Newmarket is that they tend to be in the public domain. Information is most effective when only a limited number knows the content. So when the Gosdens, the Cecils and the Stoutes fancy a horse, particularly if it is running at Newmarket, it is safe to say most people who make it their business to seek out such information will know it. Therein lies the problem for the punter. Because only the privileged few know the best information, it is more likely to emanate from a small or unpopular yard. And unless that yard harbours a Group 1 winner camouflaged in a maiden, chances are it will not win. Therefore, we have a conundrum – because at the Craven Meeting everybody seems to know everything. It is a matter of pride. Flat racing aficionados have had all winter to prepare for this. Under no circumstances are they about to let it slip by without them being fully informed. As the season progresses, enthusiasm and betting banks dwindle, attention wanders to other matters, but right now, there is no value unless the process of original thought is invoked.

Therefore, we group on day one, regroup on day two, and if we are lucky break even, remember where we left our respective cars, find they have not been vandalised and return to our homes relatively unscathed.

This year the trials went according to the script. Fantasia won impressively despite reservations that she was not fully wound up. Delegator was fully wound up, it showed when the spring was uncoiled, and he ran away with the Craven. There were hiccups along the way. I fear Native Ruler will not be a player in the Epsom Derby and that Invisible Man is no Raven’s Pass. I liked Rockhampton and would back any Ballydoyle representative that is his superior.

The Wood Ditton continues to attract woolly mammoths. This year’s herd looked unlikely to cause a betting stampede. Certainly, Errol Flynn will not be assuming a starring role if his run was anything to go by.

The two-year-olds looked okay. I thought the maidens were a little disappointing.

The weather was nice, even if the wind was a bit keen. After a winter on the all-weather, it felt strange having to check if it had rained as the forecasters said it would. Of course it didn’t, meaning they were hopelessly inaccurate yet again.

Now the circus moves to Newbury for the Greenham and the Dubai Duty Free. In three weeks time they will run the Guineas. That means two Classics will be settled before we have had time to sort out our summer wardrobe and paint that fence.

I wonder if the government will consider bringing forward that five grand offer for anyone buying an electric car. I don’t want one of course. Who does? People with shares in electric companies, milkmen, burglars planning silent getaways in the middle of the night. Can you imagine all these overgrown milk floats abandoned, uncharged on the sides of roads like discarded fridges?

But the five grand. Now, there has to be an angle somewhere there. Buy the car, assume it does not depreciate that amount in a year and sell it on. Take the five grand, say you will buy a car and open another Betfair account instead.

Nice one Gordon, I think it could catch on…


AND ANOTHER THING…

April 2009

HERE WE ARE AGAIN, bank holidays loom, two of them in the space of four days. For racing folk, bank holidays – or public holidays as they are now I suppose – do not mean extra leisure time. They normally mean a bottleneck of race meetings, more work, more stress as all around everyone else winds down – the paper shop opens later – the papers may or may not turn up on time, but we have to work all the harder to keep pace.

I don’t expect anyone to organise a collection here. But I am sitting in my office flicking through the Racing Post on Thursday and thinking the authorities have made an effort to ensure that we have a little time between the end of racing on Thursday and the resumption on Saturday. Folkestone start early – at 1.40 – and finish at 4.10. Wincanton have a similar approach, starting at 1.50 and ending at 4.20. This is unprecedented. Racing is over at about the time schools finish. For once stable staff and punters alike can eat at a reasonable time, with no night racing enjoy a glass of wine or two, maybe even spend an uninterrupted evening with the wife and get to know her again. Perhaps she will dust off that old PVC nurse’s outfit and bring out those high-heels the way she used to in the old days when she wanted something…

But hang on, there is Ludlow lurking in the background. They start at 2.30 with a selling hurdle and end at 5.30 with a hunter chase. I have a choice and shall watch neither race. To be frank I would prefer to see a Columbo re-run. But for those working in betting offices or having to attend the Shropshire track for one reason or another, it strikes me this is a piece of Luddism by the Ludlow executive who seem determined to throw a spanner in the machinery. Perhaps they are concerned about a low sun or a high moon in Shropshire. Perhaps they are on a different time zone there. Maybe they forgot to put their clocks forward for spring.

Stable and betting office staff are worked to the edge. They treasure every hour they can spend away from their desks or on the road. This doesn’t mean they dislike their jobs, but in an industry in which they are overworked it makes sense to grant them free time where possible. A break, however small, will be welcome now and then. An early finish today at least gives them a chance to enjoy a flying start to a precious free day tomorrow. Then along comes Ludlow to ensure some racing employees will be engaged in the usual rush before a whole day of rest. Are we back in the Middle Ages here?

Possibly unaware that racing folk have little leisure time, www. DoubleDateFirst.com has decided to use the Racing Post’s classified section to advertise their services. The idea is that you muster up a friend and this company arranges a double date free of charge. How generous of them.

This is a quiet day. I am not placing any bets, so I access the website. It contains photographs of men and women that form the dual packages. I didn’t spend too much time looking at the men. But the women are all ridiculously attractive. I mean, where is the fat bird that no one dances with and last had a date when she was in primary school? Where is Ugly Betty? She is not there. Melanie, Stacey, Catwoman and Brandi are. They don’t look as if they would have any trouble arranging dates to me. I would imagine most of them would only have to walk down the street or sit on the Tube for some hapless male to make an approach of sorts. Perched on a stool in Starbucks, I would give it about five minutes before some city dealer is asking how they like their mocha. So what are they doing on a website looking for dates? And what is this agency doing offering such a bonanza of beauties for free? Could it be the Racing Post has been duped here?

I often flick through the classifieds even though I know I am unemployable on any number of counts. I am not looking for a job as I have one, or at least what passes as one. As I do not have a property to sell or lease, am not qualified to work for the Bloomsbury Stud or do not wish to apply for the position of Senior Trader in Leeds, my attention was drawn to this Doubledate stuff.

Just as I am not qualified to work for a company, it strikes me that, even if this ad is on the level, I would have a problem with its double date concept. Right now, what with my car languishing in a commercial garage racking up a bill, my one mate lounging around in Marbella for reasons best known to himself, I find myself as the original Billy No mates. Only my name is not Billy. But even if I could get in touch with Brandi or Catwoman, how could I meet them when I have no one to go with?


AND ANOTHER THING…

April 2009

WELL THAT’S IT THEN: next stop Newmarket for the Craven. The Grand National meeting, sponsored by the John Smith’s company, has to go down as a success – for the bookmakers that is.

John Smith’s have made an excellent job of sponsoring this meeting, although I suppose it is a sign of the times that they were showing re-runs of those rather amusing, ‘You’re Barred’ adverts rather than any newly shot ones. That is rather a shame as they have hit on a winning formula: ‘No bleepin’ gadgets, no women’s telly’…Pity someone did not bar me from picking up the phone.

We went into day three all square, punters having punched bookmakers to the ropes on the opening day. Day Two went to the layers, but Day Three was a knockout.

Bouggler (I could think of another name for him) was an unconsidered winner of the first race, foiling Copper Bleu. Kalahari King was a sensible winner of the Grade 1 Novice but was weak in the market as support developed for Tatenen, Made in Taipan and Song Of Songs. Solwit (again I could think of another name that would fit) was entitled to be thereabouts in the Aintree Hurdle but was not the choice of most punters. Don’t Push It was only one for those that kept the faith. Then the killer blows: 100/1 winner of the Grand National, followed by two 66/1 shots to round off the card.

Mon Mome is a strange name for a National winner. By a stallion known as Passing Sale out of Star Of Lion [English translation], a better title than one meaning My Blockhead or My Urchin could possibly have been found. Still, I don’t suppose he cares too much. He returned to the packed enclosures to race-goers thumbing wildly through their race cards to see if there had been a mistake in the colours. He was number 15 on the card. To the left of his name were his form figures, resembling hieroglyphics or maybe a New York telephone number- 872812. But hang on, with the benefit of hindsight there were a few clues hidden away in this particular urchin or blockhead’s history. He had won five races, one of them at Aintree. He had beaten Star de Mohaison at Cheltenham and twice bumped into Racing Post runner-up Possol, beating him once and finishing second to him on the other occasion. Maybe he wasn’t the total buffoon after all! But carrying eleven stone; no, he could not win. This makes me wonder whether we should have a panel of adjudicators that sit after every race. If they fail to make any sense of the result, they just alter it. In this case the National would be awarded to Comply Or Die from My Will and State Of Play with Mon Mome placed a homeless fourth. They seem to have this power in Formula One but I can’t see it catching on in the sport of horseracing. So Mon Mome it is then. Venetia Williams seemed to take it all in her immaculately crafted brocade jacket stride, and jockey Liam Treadwell looked as bemused as the rest of us.

Culcabock was the first of the 66/1 winners, beating Issaquah. Both were unconsidered by those in possession of a form book. Both are also places. Culcabock is located in Inverness where a group of four-and-twenty chaste women were reported to have come from – whereas Issaquah is a town in Washington that’s literal meaning in native Indian is “the sound of birds”. It sounds and seems like a nice place if you are a bird or a sightseer.

In keeping with the craziness of the day, Sitting Tennant – nothing to do with The Pet Shop Boys – but a concocted name incorporating one of the owners, A Mr or Mrs Tennant, rounded off things and provided another female trainer with a winner at this meeting. I mention this because as well as Venetia Williams’s National triumph, on Friday Mrs Wadham and Mrs Robeson were appropriately responsible for two winners on Ladies’ Day.

So its been a good meeting for the girls, the bookmakers and horses with Spanish names [Voy Por Ustedes, El Dancer], place names and horses with just plain unpronounceable titles like Comhla Ri Coig.

How was it for you?


And Another Thing – Mar Achive

AND ANOTHER THING…

THIS SHOULD BE AN EASY WEEK! Aintree is always easier than Cheltenham, which stands to reason when you consider it; we are in a better position to assess jumpers now as events at the Festival dispensed with some of the guesswork. To a degree, we know the pecking order; all we have to decide is which horses will adapt best to a faster track on quicker ground. Some Cheltenham runners had Aintree written all over them – the Triumph Hurdle third is one that springs to mind. To make it easier, Aintree is a word comprising of only seven letters, making it simpler to spot than Cheltenham, which does not always fit along a horse’s bridle.

For many, this is the last major jumping fixture of the year. I know Punchestown is to come but there are limits! Let’s just leave it here shall we? Whereas at Cheltenham we were looking for horses that could cope with an undulating track and races run from trap to wire, now, on the Mildmay course, we want animals with a bit of sense; horses that are not all brute force and bravado, but that can bunny-hop and produce acceleration from the last. There is no punishing hill, no downhill fences to survive when they are travelling at their fastest. Aintree places more of an emphasis on speed, even in the event of rain-softened ground – something that is looking increasingly unlikely at this stage.

As for the Grand National itself, that is a one-off. For this, a mixture of a hunter chaser with the turn of foot of a two-miler is ideal. Most hunter chasers are on the wane so that rules them out, but the ability for a horse to get into a lobbing rhythm and just hunt round for a circuit and a half as if riding out with the Thorn, or whatever those red-coated tally-ho boys call themselves, is an attribute. A horse that can shrug off the parade, laugh at the absurdity that is the Chair, hop over Becher’s Brook and skip over Valentines while still on the bridle has it made.

Those that tear across the Melling Road towards the first fence as if they were carrying a Lancer at Balaclava are doomed. They will use up too much energy and if surviving the first gradually wilt as the race unfolds.

The Grand National is very much a tale of tortoise and hare and in this case, for a race that can last in excess of ten minutes, the tortoise often has his day. Having identified the tortoise as being Comply or Die last year, it seems unlikely I shall repeat the feat this time round. I shall attempt to pull it off even so; it is tradition after all and nominating the Grand National to all your non-racing friends, who invariably think you only have to look at a racecard to identify winners, means you will dine out for a week or two. Frankly, I could do with that.

And I am cheap. I don’t need a Clement Freud-style dinner; it doesn’t have to be Marylebone either: a curry or Sunday lunch at the local golf club will do fine. I do not need turbot poached in pears, quails’ eggs in wine or Benedictine. Just a couple of square meals would do.

With that in mind, I have looked at the race. The first thing that strikes me is that it doesn’t look to be a quality field. Most years the race contains an apparently well-handicapped horse – something the handicapper would require to carry in the region of an extra ten pounds if he could based on updated figures. It does not make them win, but to anyone with a formbook such a presence is off-putting. I remember going for a punt on Garrison Savannah who was about a stone light and he could only finish second.

The formbook and official figures are all very well in conventional races, but winning the National requires a special type of horse. Very often, such an animal is not apparent until it has floated over a few Aintree fences as if born for the task. Although those that have run in the race have a record of returning to the scene of the crime successfully, it is my contention, you want a horse jumping the fences for the first time. Those that take to it can offset any weight differential with rivals. Those that have endured the marathon that is the race often remember and can fret beforehand. But there is one other vital component required because good fortune – the wings of luck – are crucial.

Backing the winner of the National is all about putting your money where The Archangel Gabriel has put his because divine intervention of some sort is essential. I have it on high authority he is the celestial body that bets. This is apparently his one weakness. Now, I do not know why the Archangel Gabriel should bet, after all he does not need the money. But bet he does. And whatever the Archangel Gabriel backs has a charmed run. His selection lobs along, taking the fences in its stride, avoiding stricken rivals and is always in exactly the right place. Consequently, it can often be named as the winner a long way out.

The angel did get it wrong a couple of times and had to cheat. You remember that incident that occurred to Devon Loch in 1956? The Archangel Gabriel had backed ESB. Rumour has it he engineered Devon Loch to do those infamous splits in order for ESB to gallop past his rival on that cruel run-in.

Eleven years later, there was that pile-up at the Canal Turn when Foinavon escaped all the trouble. Gabriel made a mistake that year. Apparently, he mixed up the colours and thought his selection, Honey End, had made a bad blunder at Becher’s. In his attempt to provide his selection with a second chance, he overdid his tactics, but that is another story. Suffice to say he bestowed the race upon Foinavon in error.

Finding out what Gabriel has backed is difficult and invariably only apparent in running. I suggest there are two horses likely to be on his shortlist this year. The first will only run if fortune decrees and that is Maljimar, currently unlikely to make the cut. The other is a definite runner unless a huge hand descends from a purple sky and strikes him down. That is State Of Play, who looks the sort to lob, hunt, and step over the fences. He tried his luck over the Mildmay track two years’ ago but, having been prominent for a long way, found the searching pace and his weight too much. It should be a different story over the Aintree fences where he can settle into a gazelle-type lope.

A fresh horse that has only run twice this season, State Of Play, a former Hennessy winner that handles firm ground, has the look of having been laid out for Saturday.

All that remains is to convince the Archangel Gabriel that he is worth an investment. After that, it is a foregone conclusion…


APRIL FOOLS’ DAY – WHAT IS NEW?

I HAD THOUGHT ABOUT writing something appropriately absurd for April 1st or as it is known April Fools’ Day. You know how it goes, the, I Was Abducted By Aliens type piece. In racing’s case, thestories could be, ‘Miniature Racecourse Scheduled for Hyde Park to Accommodate Thoroughbred Pony Racing: Trained Monkeys to Replace Jockeys: Frankie Dettori to Ride for Godolphin in Australia.

On reflection, based on the news stories in circulation at present there is no need – the old adages that truth is stranger than fiction, or that the lunatics are taking over the asylum, seem applicable.

On the racing front, they are building the sixty-first racecourse at a time when the sixtieth has gone bust. The BHA continue on a kamikaze course with the law courts. Dubai million-dollar earner, jockey Ahmed Ajtebi, was frogmarched out of this country by immigration officials on a technicality. Meanwhile people that have eaten or flushed their passports down aircraft toilets arrive at our borders claiming asylum. Presumably, they hold up pre-written cards as a great many do not speak English. Perhaps they should claim they have ideal qualifications to live IN an asylum. These people, impersonating Bluebeard in his various forms, some with manuals on how to construct a bomb and with editions entitled Death to Infidels in their luggage, are welcomed; some given four-bedroom houses and Toyota Land cruisers.

Jacqui Smith, as Home Secretary, is partly responsible for this, but has other problems right now. The downloading of a couple of porno films by her husband is a personal matter between him and Ms Smith. What is shocking is the fact that as a duo they thought it acceptable to download anything at the taxpayers’ expense. Clearly, the state is funding their service provider use. Why? Is she saying that if she were not a government minister she would not have a computer? I am self-employed and need a TV and a computer for my work but claim for neither. As I do not live in a cave and have access to electricity, I assume the taxman would expect me to have such items whatever my business. I am not a government minister and do not earn a government minister’s salary. Ms Smith’s argument that she was unaware of her claim or her possible assertion that, because she needs more than one home, she should have more than one computer is irrelevant. This expenditure comes with the job. She should pay out of her salary and the other benefits that go with her privileged position.

More craziness looms with the G20 Summit and these planned demonstrations. Why do we put up with them? At the last such march – mostly full of loonies – some nutcase dressed in green and apparently in a world of his own, gyrating or spacing out to music was questioned by a television interviewer. Interrupted in the middle of some weird St Vitas’ dance whilst whatever substance pinged around in what was left of his brain, he spouted expressions last aired in the sixties. Old Marxist/ Lenin phrases such as redistribution of wealth, proletariat and evil capitalists resurfaced. This Summit is actually rather important. We can do without a contribution by Swampy and his mates who take it as an excuse for a day out and the chance to be on television.

Another such group we tolerate is Plane Stupid. They managed to bring Stansted Airport to a standstill in January, sabotaging business and holiday travellers alike. I guess the airport security should be asked how, if they cannot protect the runway against spotty students drunk on their own self-importance, they can safeguard it against terrorists?

The list of foolishness grows. An ISA boasting it will return 3.5%. That is £3.50 in a £100 invested or £35 in a £1,000 or a massive £350 in £10,000. If that was the best I could offer someone in exchange for such a cash commitment, I would be too embarrassed to advertise it.

Recent surveys of schoolchildren reveals a good proportion of them have never heard of Sir Winston Churchill. It is a sad reminder of the mortality of generations. Same ‘yoof’ cannot add, cannot spell and cannot speak proper. They can operate I Players, mobile phones, WIIs and MPVGs or whatever they are; but does that equip them for life?

So April Fools’ day is upon us! I only wish I could be confident it would cease at midday. Somehow, I suggest one will not have to scour the newspapers too thoroughly to discover incredulous items. The problem is ongoing: sorting fact from fiction.


  AND ANOTHER THING…

SO IT’S NEW YEAR’S DAY THEN!

Actually, as you are aware, that is an exaggeration; but you know the feeling. It is the start of something new, the chance to atone for past misgivings and mistakes. In this case it is the start of the Flat – a new racing season instead of a new year. It is a great start: the usual Doncaster meeting, with the Lincoln kick-starting proceedings. Then there is Kempton with the Roseberry Stakes and the Listed Magnolia Stakes, and of course, three-thousand miles away in the Middle-East’s answer to Miami, it is the Dubai World Cup, supported by an excellent international card.

Whatever your persuasion, I suggest such a menu outstrips whatever jumping has to offer at Lingfield and Uttoxeter. Speaking as a Flat man, I only hope those cards do not get in the way of Doncaster on ATR. However, Channel 4 rides to the rescue with coverage from Kempton and Doncaster so it should be all right.

The start of the Flat is a definite article. Unlike National Hunt that trundles on all year round, a seam is broken with the commencement of the turf season. All-weather racing continues but for the most part it plays second fiddle, although that is not the case at Kempton on Saturday. But we know where we are now. This is the chance to make the year count – to rub out all those conveniently forgotten errors of seasons past. A dollop of fortune can make this the year that eclipses all others. Just like the resolutions made on January 1st that are usually broken one-by-one well before Easter, riding the wave of optimism can be a short-lived journey.

Start the season badly and to a degree there is no way back. Just like the ex-smoker breaking the seal on that packet of cigarettes, old habits will resurface and take command. Don’t let it; fight back! We all have failings, recognising them is our first step to cutting them out or at least keeping them under control. So herewith a few suggestions that might help:

We all fall victim to messages (there are more of them on the Flat as so much racing comprises of unknown quantities). Most message horses these days, especially those originating from the big training centres and certainly the big yards, are public property by the time the milkman is making his rounds. Chances are such messages have been embellished on route. That means you will not be the only person to know them. It also means invariably they will be short prices. Try to resist the various rumours this time of year that range from: will win the Craven/Guineas/ Derby to: is a Royal Ascot horse, unless such messages sit neatly with your own opinion.

There is an adage that goes as follows: when you select a horse, you bet a tenner. When the butcher that has been talking to the cousin of the feed man who knows the lad that has been riding work tells you it will win, you risk a hundred. Bad move!

Flat racing is obviously quicker than jump racing so races can unfold in an instant. As a result, it is easy to believe you have clocked an unlucky loser. Whatever misfortune appears to have befallen a racehorse in running, halve what you thought was its impact on the result and you will not be far adrift.

Don’t let morning market moves with the firms or on the exchanges put you off a horse you fancy if it appears weak in the betting. Most serious business is conducted late these days. Runners that had appeared friendless in the early morning market can suddenly assume the properties of hot potatoes when the right money surfaces. Even if it doesn’t, not every race is a foregone conclusion. It is possible to be right when the majority is wrong, particularly if you hold a view or have seen something that has gone relatively unnoticed.

Get all the help you can but remember yours is the opinion you have to live with. For that reason, rely on your intuition, remembering there may be those that know more than you do, but that your intuition has carried you this far in life, meaning it cannot be that bad!

You will make mistakes. Everyone in this business does! Don’t be too hard on yourself, allowing lapses of judgement to affect your confidence. Making a mistake does not make you a fool; failing to learn from it does that!

Take the ego out of betting if you can. In a weak maiden, 7/4 returns the same as 7/4 in a Classic. Although it is tempting to wish to back the winner of big races, you are often backing on the bookmakers’ terms. It is not football. We all have our favourite stables and jockeys; but they will forgive you if you don’t always support them. ‘Falling in love’ with horses can be similarly expensive – unless they are Zarkava!

If you are not in possession of an ante-post voucher at a fancy price for any of the Classics, resist the temptation to rush in when you see an impressive winner of one of the trials, or worse a winner of a maiden by clear daylight. It is too late for that now and the Classic jigsaw is full of pieces that fail to interlock in the next two or three months.

Don’t take the bull by the horns on Day One and punt as if the world is about to end. It is a long season and although we have a few clues as to the wellbeing of a couple of stables, there are plenty of other yards waiting in the wings to unleash useful types. Feel your way through the minefield that is the first few weeks unless you have reason to believe you are ready to hit the ground running.

Of course, in keeping with anyone dispensing advice, I am above it. It applies to everyone else, which is the paradox of counsel.

I am likely to be more active tomorrow than I have been since last October. As I write, I have the temerity to believe I have solved the day’s hardest handicaps. I consider Swop worth a punt in the Lincoln and that Slugger O’ Toole may be too good for Spectiat in the Spring Mile but that Fireside may beat them both. Then Whitcombe Minster can overcome a graveyard draw in the Roseberry. That is not all, as London Bridge will win the maiden at Doncaster.

I am not finished. Two Step Salsa looks banker material in the first at Nad Al Sheba. I am not convinced a return to six furlongs will be ideal for Indian Blessing in the Golden Shaheen and therefore nominate Big City Man as a solid alternative. On his best form and judging by the manner of his victory last time, Bankable is too big at 16’s in what I expect to be a tightly contested Dubai Duty Free. Youmzain is the form horse in the Sheema Classic and subject to a strong message but he is not entirely convincing. I cannot solve the World Cup at present, although there is no doubting the progressive nature of My Indy or the solidity of his form. He may not be good enough to beat Albertus Maximus and confirm earlier winning form with Asiatic Boy, but it may be worth paying to find out.

Easy this game isn’t it? If there is one thing I can impart with utmost confidence it is this: it is always easier the night before than on the day of the races. And as the race or races draw closer, so the harder it looks. Right now, buoyed by two cups of strong tea, I can see it all clearly.

That bodes badly! I hope you will be more circumspect.

Final thoughts will be posted on tomorrow’s Bush Telegraph.


AND ANOTHER THING

THIS IS A QUIET WEEK for those of us working in racing – at least the early part of it is. Monday offers Claiming and Selling day at Wolverhampton. For jump-racing fans I am told several short-price and apparent good things line up at Kempton in particular, and to a lesser extent at Plumpton. Tomorrow there is Flat racing at Lingfield, but the fields small, as are the chances of making any money. There is already the mention of the dreaded words – Gosden, maiden and fancied, although not necessarily in that order. Southwell dishes up a diet of jump racing that only warrants a second look from diehards, and there is another dollop of similar fare at Sludgefield [sic].

The week trundles along in similar but slightly better fashion until a jumping card at Ascot on Friday. It then explodes on Saturday with the start of the Flat turf season, condensed this year to a two-day weekend meeting from Doncaster. Kempton Park stages a premature part-Easter card, and from Dubai, it is World Cup night.

It would appear the early part of the week is a good time to paint the fence, cut the grass and tidy the garden. This is the time to make your peace with God or a pact with the Devil if you feel either is relevant.

If you are married or with partner, it is also a good idea to be nice to them now because they won’t be seeing much of you for eight months. It is Aintree next week, then another relatively quiet and, unusually, a five-day racing week – Good Friday interrupting the fixtures much to the annoyance of the major bookmakers.

After that, it is Craven week and there is no chance of much more than the odd day’s respite until November. You may never see your partner again. She could be packed and long gone by the time you next use the kitchen. You may notice one night, before you turn in with the sound of Nick Luck’s voice still ringing in your ears, you have a lot more room in your wardrobe and on the bathroom shelves and the bed appears wider.

It is a bit like being in jail and your sentence is about to start. If your partner is still with you by May, or even June, they might as well just leave your food – that is if they are still cooking on your behalf – outside your office door. From their point of view, your continued existence is apparent by the replacement of food for an empty tray left for collection. The occupant in that room akin to something from a Hammer Horror movie – ‘The master decried it never be opened,’ – presumably remains alive. You – that is the occupant – become the mysterious master only seen after dark. You lurk within an office equipped with a computer, a television, a desk, filing cabinets and some personal items such as bottled water, Hula Hoops, a can of corned beef, only for consumption in the case of siege or nuclear war. Maybe one of Dracula’s coffins would be handy after all.

Those knowing little of this room no one without an appointment ever enters can be confused. They believe some sort of half-man-half-beast resides within. He may be a tagged criminal, confined to this room as part of his communal punishment.

An occasional whoop of what appears to be delight emanates from this fortress of an office. This is odd as the man is alone, so such delight can only be self-induced. But more often it is the groan of frustration, or the clunking heavy sound associated with defeat. This room hosts a good deal of defeat. Perhaps, borrowing the title from the Bob Dylan song, it should be christened Desolation Row.

The man on the racing channel tells you the horse you backed was unlucky and presses knobs in his cubicle. He has an odd haircut. Like you he does not get out much, so perhaps when he visits the barbershop he has to make the cut last. He does not look over-concerned about your misfortune, so clearly has not backed the horse himself. He is earning a guaranteed wage so it would be a surprise if he backed anything for more than a fiver. He smiles as he checks one of his screens and infers bad luck is all part of racing; but there is a chance to recoup winnings in the following handicap that contains twenty runners. Before that, there is just time to take a quick break. Is there? Yes, the next race on the other channel is not due for twenty minutes.

The break consists of at least two advertisements for insurance. Sometimes the same insurance company advertises twice in one break. Every insurance company you can think of is advertising just now, so there must be more money in insurance than there is in trying to find winners of twenty-runner handicaps.

One of the insurance sites is, according to its geeky users, very friendly. That’s nice. It’s nice to have a friendly website to visit before you give them your credit card details don’t you think? One person strums a guitar, another looks as if finding this particular website has been her salvation. There is another who looks as if he is more accustomed to typing Hot Babes Dot Com into Google than Confused Dot Com. Perhaps he is confused after all, having expected Paris Hilton to pop up on his screen. All agree they have saved hundreds of pounds on their insurance. One says he has saved £200. £200! I only pay just over £200 for an annual car premium, let alone save it! Then I don’t get out much and have a restricted mileage clause.

Along comes Michael Parkinson reminding us that he has met lots of interesting people. He suggests if we are over-fifty we should consider financing our funerals. So we are back to coffins again. Perhaps this is appropriate for people watching a racing channel, but for a man that has met lots of interesting people, surely this is a bit of a comedown for Mr Parkinson. However, it is when you hear Stephen Fry and Paul Merton doing the voiceovers for Direct Line that you know there has to be more money in insurance than there is in gambling. These performers don’t come cheaply.

Why though do these insurance companies target people that watch racing? If they are watching racing, chances are they are gamblers. If they are gamblers, they do not give a fig for insurance. The only insurance they are concerned with is the type that keeps Mr Luigi from visiting them in the dead of night asking where his money is. There is no mention from Messrs Parkinson, Fry and Merton that their employers underwrite that. They cover our water pipes bursting, our cars getting crunched by articulated lorries; they want us to have a courtesy car if we crash because we lose our no-claims bonus and will have to pay even more for the next premium, but they don’t insure against concrete overcoats.

There used to be a popular saying that countries get the television programmes they deserve. Obviously, those that advertise on At The Races think we deserve insurance against stupid and elementary accidents – such as falling over on a shop floor or using the wrong ladder to climb a roof. Alternatively, they think we may be so uninsurable that we will snap up any policy thrown our way. They also think we need to stop smoking or are about to kick the bucket.

As I write, the first odds-on shot of the day, You’re The Top, has obliged at Kempton. Back on At The Races, two car insurance adverts have figured in between a squirrel trying to persuade us to invest in an ISA. Then there is an advert for cheese for those of us likely to be wasting away in our offices whilst we watch racing. Then it’s Accident Insurance, followed by another sort of insurance and ‘Everybody has an opinion, what’s yours worf?’

A 66/1 shot won the Claimer from the even-money favourite with a one-time Group-placed horse finishing last. Two dubious propositions in First Avenue and Dreamy Sweeney obliged as I was told they would; but I knew better and did not back them

Normal service is resumed: I know what my opinion is worf.


And Another Thing…

I CANNOT CLAIM TO KNOW VERY MUCH ABOUT THE IRISH. Unlike most of the residents of Chicago or New York, I do not have Irish blood in my veins, although my mother was from Liverpool so I can’t be sure. I do know U2 come from Ireland. That the country has won the European Song Contest more than once, which sends out a mixed musical message. By reputation, their potato chips are supposed to be the best in the world, and they are responsible for Guinness, Bailey’s and the resurgence of cider by the manufacture of Magners, something that has elevated the apple-based drink to a new level. I made the mistake of buying a cheaper case of cider recently; by contrast, the drink tasted sweet. You get what you pay for!

Ireland has great racing roots and friends regularly advise me to visit. Perhaps I shall combine a race meeting with just that this summer.

In the meantime, the Irish remain something of a mystery to me. This may be partly because I have difficulty in understanding what some of them say, especially the owners of Forpadydeplasterer, just as I do the Scots or people from diverse parts of the country. I know this sounds awfully toffee-nosed and typical of a southerner who rarely ventures further north than Oxford. I spent some time in Yorkshire back in the nineties, but fled, when at a market a man about to be served demanded, ‘Two pounds of tatties luv.’ This lack of common culture was the last in a long list of difficulties I as a southerner faced. It is no exaggeration to say that within a fortnight I had left my house, loaded a small saloon that became even smaller when crammed with too many cassettes, the odd item of furniture, and an adopted Doberman called Zulu. Together we made a dash south on the M1. Zulu spent most of the journey sleeping and listening to Pink Floyd. He liked our new home, which we bought without seeing and where we spent ten years before his sad demise.

A female eventually replaced Zulu – a woman I mean, not a bitch, officially that is – but it was not the same. I suppose I should have realised it would not be. Zulu was his own dog, better known, and I suggest better liked in the village than his owner. I am afraid he slept in the bed alongside me, rather like his substitute. Unlike her, we never went to bed after a bitter exchange of words. He made little in the way of demands and was not subject to mood swings. His replacement stayed for three weeks before she tired of doing what Zulu could not and the fun dissipated. Zulu was great fun for twelve years and only left when nature took over.

Most of our home planet is a mystery. There is little point in wrestling with its complexities. I would like to see serious changes in parts of the world but I daresay those places I could cite would like to see changes in our society. Some things remain inherently wrong: bear baiting in Pakistan, abject and unnecessary poverty along with big game hunting in Africa, Japanese whaling, Asian sweatshops; we all know the things we would wish to change. Yet a formula that could bring the world together so that we follow a common agenda has proved elusive.

So Ireland, although not an alien culture, is still one that criss-crosses our own. One thing we have in common though is a love of the horse. Put three people on top of a racehorse; an Englishman, a Scotsman and an Irishman, and I suggest the Irishman will quickly become identifiable. He is the one that sits still, with hands looking as if they regularly wield a shovel (like all jockeys’ mitts) holding the reins with a feather touch.

Watching Richard Hughes on Scintillo at Kempton on Wednesday night, I was reminded just how good Irish jockeys are. Had Hughes been the victim of misfortune on his way to the Sunbury track, getting caught in traffic or suffering a prang of some sort, Richard Hannon could always have contacted me. In which case, even allowing for overweight and inadvertently launching my run up the stands’ rails because I could not negotiate the turn tightly enough, I probably would have won on Scintillo. I dread to think what James Willoughby or our generous friends from Kentucky would have made of such an exhibition. Richard Hughes on the other hand was pure style, impressing some of the American visitors with his composed, unruffled ride. There was a point when his nonchalance suggested he was about to extract his Nokia from his breeches and ask the wife what was for dinner. Like most Irish jockeys, he is poetry on a horse. He is part of the animal he rides; it is difficult to see the join. He and his mount look as if Philip Blacker has sculpted them from one piece of bronze. This is not just a eulogy to Richard Hughes, although admittedly I am a fully paid up member of his fan club. The same applies to Messrs Ahern, Kelly, Murtagh, Spencer, Murphy, Walsh, McCoy, Geraghty and Carberry. Any exclusions in this list are not deliberate. There is something about Irish jockeys that places them apart from other horsemen. Admittedly they cannot stand up on a horse’s back and light a cigarette as Cossacks can, nor can they do a forward somersault in mid-race, but then there is not much call for that at Kempton Park.

Perhaps it is because Irish horsemen are born and not made. Most of them return from their birth at hospital on the back of a cob. They start riding in earnest before they can walk, often before they can talk; definitely before they learn to conjugate a verb. Rather than drift into racing, they do so because, like the Colonel’s son that attends Sandhurst, it seems the logical move.

Many British jockeys only follow such a career path because of their size and weight. That and the fact it seems preferable to the options. As a result, Irish jockeys have something of a head start on lads sitting on a horse for the first time when attending the excellent British School of Racing.

It is not my intention to draw a line between the riding standards of the two nations. There are many fine British riders, some of them from racing dynasties. There is the legend that is Lester Piggott; from the same era the Smith brothers, Willie Carson and the bobbing Australians that were Bill Williamson, Ron Hutchinson and Scobie Breasley. There was perhaps the most stylish of them all, Joe Mercer. Of the present crop, The Hills brothers are tidy; George Baker and Alan Munro canny. Ryan Moore and Seb Sanders are outstanding. Other countries are responsible for great riders. Frankie Dettori is one of the best of all time. Plenty of Brazilian, Mexican and American jockeys have brilliant records.

But there is something about watching the likes of Hughes or Spencer when they are at their best, that results in a sharp intake of breath. As with Frankie, they make the difficult look easy – everything they do looks natural. And watching Richard Hughes in action yesterday, merely reminded me that over the coming months, we will be witnessing similar Horse of the Year type displays from those who eat a Mars a day, a pick of chicken or fish, and drink a thimble of wine once a week in order to keep the show on the road.

Thanks lads…


AND ANOTHER THING…

RACING’S IMAGE HAS COME under scrutiny recently. What with Panorama claiming foul and the BHA dithering about whom they should persecute, or prosecute, I am not sure which, and then the BBC throttling back on its coverage; the Sport of Kings is in danger of becoming a Ship of Fools. Then along came last week’s meeting at Cheltenham, elevating the sport to the front pages of newspapers. Kauto Star and his team were responsible – that and the fact that the Queen had a runner in the Gold Cup, adding up to one of the best Festivals in recent years. I am not talking betting here as we all did our pieces apart from the Irish, and even they did not all latch on to the right horses.

Gambling aside, it has not been a bad week. I did think that the comment made by David Williams of Ladbrokes told its own story when he stated on television he didn’t care if Kasbah Bliss or Voy Por Ustedes got beaten, so long as one of them did. How sporting of him!

Of course, what we need more than anything in racing is continued sponsorship. All five Classics, plus the King George VI and Queen Elizabeth II Stakes and the Juddmonte International, are reliant on it. This is not necessarily a bad thing, but means we have to entice money into the game. The problem for racing with this concept is that, unlike other sports, outside bookmakers, there is no natural sponsor. Contrast that with motor racing that has a host of potential supporters. Apart from the teams of cars, there is the alliance forged between Seiko watches and Honda. No doubt, other such partnerships exist. Omega is synonymous with James Bond, Slazenger and Robinson’s Barley Water with Wimbledon, footballers endorse various products, the list goes on.

So do companies investing in racing get a good deal for their money? Clearly, sponsorship works best for big companies that can wheel all marketing tools at their disposal onto the racecourse. Quite apart from having their prize-giving ceremony televised, splashing the name of their company and latest product on television screens, there are hoardings strategically placed along the track. Then there are the girls with sashes – those strips of company-embossed ribbon that start at their shoulders and end at their thighs – for those that have looked at other attributes, and the various advertisements for the firm on the racecard. For a big company it is a fair deal, providing they are selling something that race-goers and watchers on TV like.

Therein lies part of racing’s problem. Just whom does the sport appeal to? Obviously, those that like a flutter or the fun of going racing, or those watching Tommo as they fill in the Saturday Lucky Fifteen. Whereas we all know that James Bond is suave, that some footballers are cool, and that Formula 1 symbolizes speed, what is the image conjured by horseracing?

To those not involved, owners and trainers in strange clothing, speaking as if they have plums in their mouths that have replaced the silver spoons they were born with, and jockeys who, if they ride jumpers, have teeth missing and scars on their faces. If they are Flat jockeys, with the exception of Frankie Dettori, they are not sex symbols. They are small, circumspect with what they say if they ride for a big yard, and use words not always understood by the listening public. Sayings like: ‘I had to call a cab at the ditch,’ ‘He put down on me,’ ‘I didn’t want to disappoint him,’ and ‘He dropped the lot’ sound as if they belong to another language. Unless you are a teenage member of a pony club, they are unlikely to be people you aspire to be. No free Omega for Michael Hills or Jimmy Fortune I am afraid.

Horseracing is a bit like boxing. The only people that are interested in what the players in both sports wear, both professionally and privately, are already converted. Amir Khan represents Reebok, but unless you are in the minority who follows boxing, or wears sporting gear, that fact is irrelevant. Yet we all see the connection between Seiko and Honda, we all know David Beckham wears a Police watch. We don’t have to hero-worship David Beckham to know that if he is prepared to give his name to the Police brand, it is an endorsement.

Horseracing can be difficult to sell. However, sponsorship does work because there will be constant reference to a race that turns out to be important or relevant enough. The Stan James 2,000 Guineas is something of a mouthful, but commentators know how the game is played and add the epithet whenever discussing the race. Sponsorship of the Derby for Vodafone worked, so did diamond merchants De Beers sponsorship of the King George at Ascot as at the time potential customers with a spare £100,000 existed.

Apart from advertising a desirable product, the best sponsorship as a title for a race is the one using a single name. There are still racegoers that refer to the Dante Stakes as The Mecca Dante, and the Tote Gold Trophy as The Schweppes; although they are a vanishing breed. The Coral Eclipse has stuck, probably because two short names work well together. The Ladbroke St Leger is something of a struggle, but The Ladbroke (the handicap hurdle) has now surpassed in the memory whatever it was it replaced.

Horseracing is primarily a male pursuit; as such, possibly Gillette, Wilkinson Sword, King of Shaves, Ben Sherman, Diesel and Citizen could consider the advantages. So could Toyota, although fellow Japanese car manufacturer Mitsubishi dabbled; but to be effective you need to have a race that can be called The Toyota, The Diesel, The Gillette etc. and to be of sufficient merit for it warrant a one word title. The John Smith’s Magnet Cup is a mouthful but one tends to put the two together without any difficulty. And of course the same firm has worked wonders with the Grand National meeting, backed up by their excellent, ‘You’re Barred!’ advertising campaign.

And there is always room for the Tommy Wirret Marries Sandra Sprocket Handicap (Class 6) at Southwell, which is good fun for all concerned and often cheaper than a stag do.

Perhaps we could have the Armitage Bog Standard Handicap. What about the Specsavers – See Where Your Money Goes Stakes? For smaller races, such titles are fine. They are infinitely better than the, Buy Your DIY with Homeworthy on WWW Dot Com Handicap. However, once you have a race merely referred to by the name of the sponsor, it is a case of mission well and truly accomplished.

Big companies are out there with a marketing budget. These are hard times to prise cash from them, but for racing, it is vital to provide every encouragement.


 AND ANOTHER THING…

ONE DAY TO GO and if the past three are anything to go by I am in trouble. Cheltenham is a wild town – a bit like Jackson in that old country and western song, you know the one where Lee Hazlewood, or is it Johnny Cash, says, ‘We got married in a fever, hotter than a pepper sprout; we been talking about Jackson ever since the fire went out. I am going to Jackson; teach them women what they don’t know how.’

‘Go ahead,’ says his wife, ‘They will laugh at you in Jackson.’

            Substitute Cheltenham for Jackson and you have it about right. They would be laughing if they knew what I had done.

Horses first. I knew it would be tricky but I did not think it would turn out to be quite so bad. One winner, the first of the meeting. I ask: what could be better – except I didn’t do it on its own and had nothing with it. But it demonstrated that I had not lost the touch, or so I thought. Wrong! Go Native was a fluke.

Wednesday was a disaster. Thursday not too bad if they awarded points for endeavour, but they don’t do that and I lost all the same. Nominating Powerstation as a value bet at 33/1, but backing it to win and not each-way does not make either sense or money. Backing Tidal Bay in an each-way double with Punchestowns was on the right lines but my cash stayed in the bookmaker’s hod.

The Cheltenham Festival is a race meeting devised by the Devil. His red airship even hovers over the course as he scans the place for lost souls. Business must be good. There are plenty of us about and the Devil knows where to look.

Deceptively, everywhere people are screaming with delight, chucking newspapers in the air as winning selections pass the post; cheering in the winner’s enclosure, drunkenly clapping their fellow conspirators on the back in the bars – that is everyone except you. You are sitting on the grandstand steps, thumbing through the Racing Post to see where you went wrong. The print comes off on your hands and you transfer it to your shirt. That expensive tie has a mustard stain on it, making it look like something from Primark. They ought to have a place where people that have backed losers can go and receive counselling. It could be a tent at the back of the Guinness Village, but well away from all the celebrations.

My name is Peter and I backed Pierrot Lunaire in the Coral Cup. Ruby Walsh rode three winners on the day. He rode Pierrot Lunaire and the combination beat three of the twenty-seven runners. The only positive thing I can say about my wager was that I took 20/1 and the horse started at 14’s.

My name is Peter and I backed Mad Max even though I was told he wouldn’t win from someone who knows these things. There was a point when I thought I was right and those that spend all their time in the Malt and Shovel or Luke Harvey’s pub at the top of Lambourn were wrong. Two out I knew differently.

My name is Peter and I backed What A Friend even though Ruby Walsh had shunned him to ride something else – the winner as it so happens.

My name is Peter and I backed Tidal Bay even though the trainer said he had not been able to get enough work into him and he would be pleased if he finished fourth. I backed Tidal Bay each way in a ten horse race, where even the most generous of bookmakers stop paying at third place. Tidal Bay finished fourth just as the trainer said he might. At one point, the horse was so detached I thought he was on the way to the station to make his own way back to Cumbria.

Cheltenham puts Jackson in the shade at night. To be honest, I suspect that on non-race days, Cheltenham is just an ordinary town with WI meetings and theatrical evenings and halls half-full of people listening to lectures about mating badgers. On race days, it is somewhat different. The circus is in town.

The bars are crowded. There are a lot of people wearing green and drinking Guinness. There are long-legged girls who seem to have lost their boyfriends. They are able to differentiate between those that have won a lot of money and those that have not. They have a sixth sense that allows them to tell winners from losers. It seems a pity they cannot do this before racing starts, but I suppose they don’t have to. None of them make a beeline for me. Suddenly bald men with paunches seem to be making a comeback as they attract these ladies into their raucous circles and before long are buying them champagne.

During a quiet five minutes by her standards, I have the chance to talk to a girl called Brooke. Her real name, or so she says, is Amanda. I try not to stare at her cleavage or at the way her skirt finishes where it starts. She comes from Birmingham and is not at Cheltenham for the racing. I tell her I am a journalist.

I figure if she can lie about her name, I can lie about my occupation. She is not impressed. I tell her I am thinking of becoming a gigolo. The hours seem reasonable and the perks attractive. I ask if she has any tips. She says she has heard that Kauto Star will win the Gold Cup. I ask her if she knew Denman was an Australian wine. Even before I finish the question, I sense as a chat-up line that it is the equivalent of Mad Max. I am losing her but persevere. I tell her I am wearing a Jaguar suit and that I have just bought a new Police watch. I ask if that will help in my new proposed profession. She doubts it and suggests I start up my Jaguar and head for another table. I tell her this is my table and she nods before tottering off in Prada shoes as she chews gum, leaving me to wonder how Wrigleys and Moet taste together.

Like the racetrack, it seems the bars are reserved for everyone except me. I wait half-an-hour for a beer. I must have LOSER etched on my forehead. Eventually a barman takes pity and serves me a pint poured in a glass just dipped in dishwater. I take a swig of the beer but need to go to the lavatory and I know once I have left my drink it will either be downed by someone, or have a Tote ticket floating in it when I return.

Cheltenham is not for me. I should never have come. I could have watched the racing at home and gone to see Slumdog Millionaire and saved a fortune. Instead, because I cannot drive home after having had a drink or five, I am marooned. That means in a few hours I shall be incarcerated in a top floor room, sharing a bathroom with four other people.

I have looked at Friday’s cards and fancy Walkon, Mamlook and, most of all, Tourist at Wolverhampton. I know neither Walkon nor Mamlook will win as they are too obvious and the obvious is reserved for everyone else. So, I might as well get an early night, drive home at first light and then back Tourist in the evening.

Or I could mingle in the bar and see if there are any, shall we say, more mature and unattached ladies looking for a good time and waiting for someone in a Jaguar suit, sporting a brand new Police watch to provide it. Trouble is, I haven’t a clue who to introduce them to.


AND ANOTHER THING…

JUST IN CASE it has escaped anyone’s notice, we are in the midst of Cheltenham 2009. We are one day down with three cherished days of racing left. Yet even now, we have the trickle of quotes for next year’s event. Go Native has been quoted for the 2010 Champion Hurdle, as if anyone would be mad enough to back anything for an event that is 364 days away as we speak, when we have yet to settle the 2009 championships.

To cap it all, Matt Williams advises in today’s Racing Post that Celestial Halo is a standout bet at 16/1 for next year’s Champion Hurdle. Is he bonkers? Perhaps he is psychic. Perhaps he is both – a mad psychic in fact. Would that make him a psycho? In that case, he is trying to send us a coded message for Tony Martin’s eight-year-old in today’s Coral Cup?

Does he have a pack of tarot cards and a crystal ball by his desk? Should we call him Matt The Mystic? Dare we ask how far he can see into the future? I wonder if his powers extend to beyond March 2010. Perhaps he can predict when the world will end. Is he a reincarnation of Nostradamus?

I am sorry Matt. I am taking unfair advantage. But when you write drivel, you must expect a reaction. I daresay I write plenty of it and anyone is welcome to tell me so without me seeking editorial refuge. When you stick your head above the parapet, you run the risk of it being chopped off. That goes with the territory in this business and I mean Matt no harm.

But, actually, what we would really like Matt, is a standout for today, or maybe for tomorrow or something in the Gold Cup. If necessary, you can take your time and come up with a standout for Uttoxeter on Saturday, or even something for next week. But leave the fortune-telling to those astrologers in the newspapers.

Some of us may not even make it to next year’s Festival, let alone be in a position to cash in chips held on Celestial Halo in the Champion Hurdle. Celestial Halo may not even make it to Cheltenham himself. No, there are no standout bets for next year’s Festival. Let us try one trick at a time and concentrate on what is on the table this year.

And if this piece somehow comes round to haunt me this time next year and I am still around, I shall be the first to write an apology and officially christen Mr Williams with the moniker of Matt The Magnificent, or Mystic, or Miracle-worker, which ever seems the most appropriate. If necessary, I shall even write it into my will so that in the event of my premature demise, a letter from my solicitors will reach him informing him of his new status, attained in that place that is supposed to exist high above the clouds.

 

AND ANOTHER THING…

SO THAT IS IT THEN: no days to go: Cheltenham is upon us. No more levity, no more jokes; this is serious. It is the meeting to end all meetings for jumping fans. It comes after the vagaries of winter (and there have been plenty of those this year), signals the onset of spring and the promise of better to come. But for the Die Hard, John McClane enthusiast, this is it what National Hunt racing is all about. And because it is the oasis in a four-month desert, it is all the more eagerly awaited.

That is its magnetism; however, Cheltenham places serious demands on horses and punters alike. I consider it the hardest meeting of the year as far as winner finding is concerned. I suspect bookmakers agree as they market the Festival furiously in a manner akin to a football World Cup.

They claim this is it! Let battle commence. It is a time to support your own would-be champion, to settle old scores, to prove who is the greatest of them all! No, it is not. It is a race meeting – a damned good one – but a race meeting nonetheless. It is not the Somme – Argentina V England, Italy V France or Rangers V Celtic. Forget all this guff about it being some sort of partisan competition. The only battle out there for punters is one of financial survival.

As a spectacle, Cheltenham has it all: beautiful scenery, great racing, and a pleasant enough town to entertain those staying over. As a punting medium, it is a proverbial minefield. The problem with this meeting above all others is that it places a premium on qualities many of the participants have not proved they possess. Therein lies a problem.

For a start, the track is undulating and extremely tricky, with fences strategically placed to present horses with maximum difficulty, particularly when approached at speed. To negotiate the circuit successfully, horses need to be athletic and agile. It is also essential they obtain a rhythm early, as there is invariably a frantic pace. Horses fluffing an early fence find before they know it the next one is upon them, then the next, and as they expend energy just to hold their position, all chance seeps away. Even if travelling well, there are the cunning downhill fences and hurdles to overcome. Here, the landing side runs away from horses swooping toward turf in full-flight, and struggling to organise an undercarriage not in the lock position. That is Cheltenham and to the sort of horse that has been lobbing along a park course on the bridle before quickening away over the last two obstacles, it can come as a major shock.

I do not mean to sound pessimistic but this place finds horses out.

Favourites are invariably too short and often the results fail to stack up. Much as I prefer Cheltenham as a venue, Aintree’s Mildmay track offers the punter a much better chance of winning.

My strong advice this week to punters is to make enjoyment of the racing a priority. Pick your bets carefully. Look for the sort of horse that has form at Prestbury Park or that you feel, for whatever reason, will cope with the demands it faces. Bookmakers, who have had long enough to consider such contenders as Binocular, Kauto Star, Cousin Vinny, et al are unlikely to have incorrectly assessed their chances. If anything, the prices are too short. You don’t know anything about these animals that they don’t. Although it is tempting to be swept away with the hysteria of the whole shebang, because backing a 7/4 winner of the Gold Cup or Champion Hurdle will give you a buzz and is something you will remember and crow about, think long and hard. This place takes no prisoners. Therefore, unless you have a strong opinion about one or more of this sort of horse, throttle back on the betting a little and enjoy the racing more.

To that end, I have devised an alternative way of betting that can be fun and at the same time cost a lot less. It also offers the chance of a handsome win. At meetings such as this, I often back multiple bets and use what I refer to as the two-by two method. Because the prices of fanciable horses are often attractive, and because only a few races can be named in one, this is my alternative suggestion. It is one not open to most punters simply because they do not understand how to work out the staking. It is possible to back more than one horse in a race in, for example, doubles and trebles, so long as you know how to work out the staking. The most obvious example is the straightforward accumulator – not recommended at Cheltenham – but it is a good starting point and serves the purpose of this argument.

Pick three horses in one race, two in another two, and three in the last and the total number of wagers is 3x2x2x3, equalling 36. In this instance, at least thirty-five of these bets will lose. But if one line wins at the sort of prices Cheltenham throws up, you will recoup your stake many times over. Even with a couple of 2/1 shots slung in, mix those up with a 10/1 and an 8/1 winner and you are looking at a return of £891 for an outlay of £36. Now, as I stated, the chances of pulling an accumulator out of the hat is remote. But in multiple bets, just one fat-priced winner boosts the winnings enormously. And it is not unlikely that a 25/1 or 33/1 shot could be on your short list. Most days contain a race that is eminently solvable – the favourite looks strong – the second or perhaps third favourite the only reasonable danger. Make that your starting point. Your two selections are 2/1 and 3/1.

Two selections in one race means two bets. Now look at the next race of interest. It may be tough but you feel you have a chance of naming it in three. Your fancies hover around the 8/1 mark. So you have three selections in race two. Race three is of a similar nature. You fancy one at 12/1 – not unreasonable as it could be third or fourth favourite if the field is large enough. You consider there are two other horses in the field with major chances. Of course, something unconsidered at 50/1 can punch a hole in the best thought out logic, but that is unavoidable. What we are attempting is feasible, and we only need to pull off a bet like this once during the four days.

In the example given we have two horses in the first of our races and three in the other two. Combining them in doubles and trebles, gives you a total of 21 doubles and 18 trebles, or 39 bets. Using a pound as our unit, your outlay is £39 but at the start of play, you have 39 chances to win.

Now let us look at what you can win. I have been somewhat conservative in the prices of the chosen selections. One double at the lowest prices – 2/1 and 8/1 returns £27. You have lost a round of drinks. One double at 12/1 and 8/1 returns £117. Not bad, a profit that exceeds three times your stake. Three winners, at 2/1, 8/1 and 12/1, not as far-fetched as it sounds at a meeting where they often bet 6/1 the field, nets £534 for £1 units. Multiply that by a stake of ten, you win £5,340! Substitute the 12/1 winner for one at 33/1 (as stated 33/1 shots here can be fancied, even if second, third or even fourth choices) and the total returns to a £1 stake rockets to £1,371. As stated, it is one way of regulating your stake throughout the week and you only need to pull off the jackpot once. Whilst waiting for it, hopefully, you will get a return or two.

There are various ways you can alternate this type of bet. A Binocular-type banker – if that is what you think he is – is handy as one selection in a race cuts the number of bets down to size.

A Lucky 15 with two selections in each race, requiring any selection to win and therefore to be permed with any other or others that are successful, requires a stake of eighty units, or £80 in our example. That may sound a lot, but if you fail to select even one winner in eight selections in four races, then it is not going to be a profitable day in any case. And remember, only one winner means it figures in four bets, with its price doubled in each instance.

A Yankee containing two lots of two horses in their respective races, a banker in the next, and three in last, means a stake of £63.

This sort of ‘wasteful’ staking works at places like Cheltenham and Royal Ascot simply because prices for horses with half-a-chance are so much bigger than they are at Wolverhampton on a wet Wednesday.

There is a formula for working out the staking but I don’t want to cloud the issue any further. If in doubt ask your bookmaker; but take my advice, insufficiently clued up staff in betting shops are unlikely to be able to assist. So bets of this nature are best placed over the phone where skilled operators are on hand.

Suffice to say this has worked for me on some occasions and kept me out of trouble on others. It is something to consider and maybe a way of betting that is distinct from the hard-hitting single approach that tends to flourish at places like Cheltenham. The two systems can be played side-by side if preferred.

To my mind, perm betting in multiple bets makes far more sense than attempting the Lottery-style practice of trying to win the infernal Scoop Six.

Okay, the returns from my proposed form of betting are not as big. No millions will be won my way, but then, be honest, unless you are going to shell out a fortune in perms in some of those impossible hand-picked handicaps, you didn’t really expect to win the Scoop Six did you?

However you play it this week, play it cool!

AND ANOTHER THING…

BOOKMAKERS AND BANKS are somewhat similar in that they get their hands on our money, if only for a while; but when you are a big conglomerate you can turn very short-term money transfers into big profits. As a bonus, when we die, or have so much, or so little, dormant accounts containing deposits are often overlooked. Therefore, bookmakers and banks find they get to keep our money, which is even better for them. All those little accounts that had twelve pounds and eleven shillings in them growing like fertile eggs by the day; all those Lucky Fifteens that almost but not quite recouped their stake. It is all about volume; little fish tasting sweet and all that, especially if you have a net full of them. Little wonder then that bookmakers in particular like to encourage us to avail ourselves of their services.

Ladbrokes reckon everybody has an opinion and they want to know what ours are worth. I suspect they know, but it is a good come-on – bit like the ‘Do ya feel lucky punk?’ adage so famously spoken by Clint Eastwood in Dirty Harry.

Judging by the websites, the micro sites, the circuses that are the Cheltenham preview nights, there are plenty of opinions in circulation just now. It remains to be seen quite what they are worth, or ‘worf’, as the Ladbrokes spokesman says on the advertisement.

Depending upon whom you listen to, Cheltenham seems easy this year. Simon Clare of Corals (nice man) gives the impression he is quaking with fear at the prospect of betting carnage for bookmakers. The prospect of JP McManus (very nice man) mopping up several of the major handicaps has allegedly caused bookmakers to hyperventilate with worry. I think not!

Winning races at the Festival is notoriously difficult. Plenty of people seem to think Voy Por Ustedes is a good thing in the Ryanair Chase, which seems appropriate enough, as the literal translation from the Spanish is I Go For You. We know he goes for Robert Thornton. Let us hope he goes for all his followers. We are told that in the Champion Chase, Master Minded is as unbeatable as is possible. Oh, and then either Binocular or Celestial Halo will win the Champion Hurdle. And we might as well just send the prize to Mr Doumen and save Kasbah Bliss the trouble of flying over; Diamond Harry will win the Ballymore Properties Hurdle and Cousin Vinny will kick-start the meeting by romping away with the Supreme Novices’.

Yeess, as Jeremy Paxman would say, but when are you going to tell me something that I don’t know.

Who cares? This is Big. No, it is Huge. It is so big they should rename it the Big, Big, Big Festival. Whatever it is called officially, it is The Big One; the one jumping fans have waited all year for. Why, after the final day, they were counting down to this year’s Festival – just 361 days to go they said. Now we are down to four days, coincidentally the same time it takes to run the Festival, unless the weather intervenes and they squeeze four days racing into two, in which case it saves on expenses but addles the brain. Then Cheltenham addles the brain anyway.

At a time when racing is desperate to market itself, it strikes me that there is something elitist about the presentation of the greatest jumping dates in the calendar. Presumably tomorrow there will be just three days to go, and on Sunday it will be two, and then on Monday it will be a case of – Don’t forget to pack an extra pair of brogues Jeeves, as there is only one day to go.

To go to what? you can hear non-racing people ask.

What is this big, big thing that is happening? I know we are having a new kitchen delivered on Tuesday, but surely that doesn’t warrant all this fuss.

Are we going to invade somebody again?

Is it the French?

Has Iran upset us by taking more service personnel hostage and dressing them in bespoke Iranian suits?

Is Beyonce about to take part in a concert in the nude?

No, there is a race meeting at a place called Cheltenham.

Really, I didn’t know we had a Formula One track at Cheltenham. Is Lewis Hamilton taking part?

No, it is horses.

They are pulling racing cars with horses?

No, the horses are racing.

Oh! Well they have plenty of race meetings every day don’t they; what is so special about this one. It’s not as if it is the Grand National or anything is it?

No, it is kind of the equine equivalent of the Olympic Games.

Horses don’t throw the javelin do they?

No, they race and jump over fences and hurdles, and the winners of the races in question get crowned the best in each discipline.

How many disciplines are there?

Two. Hurdles and fences. Oh, and they have one Flat race.

So they have three races then.

No. They run over different distances.

Well, how many races are there.

About twenty-six I think.

That’s twenty-six disciplines then. That’s a lot of discipline. Is Miss Whiplash going to be there?

Look, just piss off will you. Isn’t EastEnders about to start?

You see the problem for the uninitiated. Perhaps we have to work out a better way of marketing the meeting as an experience, incorporating four days in the country rather than copying NASA with a countdown and calling it incredibly big.

There is fine dining, along with the best of British and Irish culture. Everyone attends in fancy dress that has to include one article of tweed, or trousers of cavalry twill – hacking jackets for the gentlemen, along with shooting sticks – and a Hermes scarf for the ladies.

The reality is somewhat different. Unless you are in a private box, the only dining you will experience is likely to come out of a polystyrene container. That Hermes scarf will go unnoticed in the Centaur Bar, unless an inebriated racegoer adds a splash of colour to its pattern by one means or another. And it does help if you have a strong bladder, or preferably one attached to a catheter. There is also the small question of finances. This big event is likely to set you back as much as a week in the Maldives.

No one has asked for my opinion about the good things at the Cheltenham. I have received no invitation to sit behind a long table and nod sagely alongside John Francome and Mike Cattermole. This is probably just as well as my record at the meeting is questionable. But if you want to know, I can nominate Master Minded, Voy Por Ustedes, Cousin Vinny (although I had never heard of him before last week), Kauto Star and Binocular along with the best of them.

Yeess!

Actually, I have a nomination. I think Walkon will win the Triumph Hurdle. I, me, that is myself, believe that he will be even better on a slighter sounder surface and has the profile of an improver and looks a most willing competitor. Contrast that against Zaynar (nasty piece of work), described by those close to him as the biggest bastard at Seven Barrows. I know he is not putting himself up for election or entering the X Factor, but this is not the Heavyweight Boxing Championship of the World either. And Zaynar should know prizes are not dished out for storming up that hill snarling and asking the crowd if they want some! No, nice, eager to please Walkon fits the bill. He could be one of several winners for the Alan King stable, a yard that has managed to maintain its form throughout the season, which is no mean feat.

So bring it on!

How many days is it now?

Still four, but tomorrow it will be three.

Anyone know how many days it is to Royal Ascot?


AND ANOTHER THING…

THE PLAN AFTER LAST WEEK’S COLUMN was to make a couple of belated New Year’s resolutions and become a better person. I should have known it was asking too much. The signs were there in that very article when I had to take a swipe at Red Nose Day or whatever it is called. Decent people don’t do that, even if they think it is a stage-managed piece of self-indulgence. They keep such thoughts to themselves and say how nice it is that we are depleting the national economy further by giving chunks of it to Africa so that their military can buy more automatic-weapons.

Obviously, I am not cut out to be a nice guy. I try: I don’t deliberately run over cats, although privately I feel we are overrun with the damn things and that they are a bloody nuisance, whose sole purpose is to fool human beings into believing they are cuddly and nice. In reality, all they wish to do is to kill wildlife and urinate in our gardens. The only cats that count as far as I am concerned have spots, manes or stripes and live in the wild.

They say the written word doesn’t lie. You can put on a front in person, on camera even if you are adapt enough, but the written word is rather like your handwriting; to an expert there is no hiding place. Grant a person word space and their true personality will emerge between the lines. No matter; better you know whom you are dealing with.

This has been a quiet week. To alleviate the boredom, I ordered a watch on Amazon that I did not need. I posted a response on a blog that I suspect was none too kind. I also shouted abuse at my television set, directed at Richard Kingscote for his ride on Sir Liam. If he heard me, he has decided to delay his reaction – pretty much as he did on Sir Liam. Apparently, he is some sort of martial arts whizz. Maybe I would have been better picking on Cathy Gannon, but she has not cost me money.

On the plus side, I have to say that for a man that could barely handle Question Time in the House, Gordon Brown is showing promise. His speech in Washington, in front of the world’s cameras and political pundits, went down reasonably well. He is beginning to look like an accomplished politician. He is no Tony of course, but then who is? I saw somewhere that Mr Brown, the Prime Minister as opposed to the Scotsman that covers Hexham for ATR, has joined in the great BBC-should-cover-more-horseracing debate. If I read it in the Daily Mail, one of us is probably wrong. Apparently, a pile of signatures is growing on this subject and one day someone from the BHA, or Lesley Graham, will hire a van and dump a pile of paper, that represents a small forest, on the doorstep of No 10. Fair enough I suppose, except that if the signatures are from people with a vested interest in racing, then it strikes me they don’t amount to much in real terms, however many of them there are. How about a spokesperson for prisoners organising a petition to install 42 inch Panasonic Tvs in all cells? They could fill sheaf after sheaf of paper with lags supporting the cause, but unless those such as Paris Hilton, Boris Johnson or Bono joined in, it would lack some depth.

As a matter of interest, I did visit Number Ten’s website tonight but could find no mention of Gordon Brown endorsing the campaign for the BBC to do a racing U-turn. Maybe he is thinking it over, or has one or two other pressing matters on his mind. Possibly the BBC are similarly pre-occupied, particularly after the disqualification of the winning team on University Challenge. To make matters worse, the culprit – a man no longer a student – is a dead ringer for ex-jockey Jason Weaver, who was a damn good jockey, is a damn good tipster, and another very likeable character. As far as I know though, he is not conversant with Darwin’s Theory of Evolution.

Just as I am plummeting in my self-esteem, I have to shop John McCririck. Sorry about this John, but as anyone that has met you can attest, you are a nice man. Of course, this goes against the public perception built up over years of ranting and raving about this and that, but he doesn’t write a column of any description so has got away with presenting a false persona all his life. He gives money to the Greatwood Centre for the rehabilitation of racehorses. His wife, Jennie, is charming with a dry sense of humour and not the sort of woman to saddle herself with the oaf John pretends to be.

So never mind me. Gordon Brown is heading for statesmanship status. John McCririck is nothing but an old softie, and Britney Spears has brought out a new perfume. All is well with the world wouldn’t you say?


And Another Thing – Feb Archive

AND ANOTHER THING…

A GHOST IS WRITING THIS. A man that is out of form is as much use as an apparition. That’s me; for I am what is referred to as out of form. Except, at least privately, I contest this. No one is about to sit down and listen to my problems unless I am willing to pay £100 an hour; and if you can afford to pay people £100 an hour, then any problems may recede, if only fleetingly, depending on whom you pay and for what service.

Actually, I don’t think there is such a thing as being out of form. What happens is that from time to time we fail to obtain optimum results. No, this is not some sort of political spin; it is recognising that things cannot go our way all the time. This happens in every walk of life. It happens to jockeys who lose three photo-finishes in a row. To cricketers bowled out early in a couple of matches, to footballers who keep hitting the bar – the list goes on. What these little reversals tend to do is make us lose confidence in our abilities; it is as if some wicked witch has visited us in our sleep, removing what powers we possess so that we can no longer do what we used to take for granted. Except we can. Good jockeys will ride winners, batsmen will hit sixes; strikers will score goals. Lack of confidence is a killer blow; once confidence is lost it is a case of abandoning all hope ye who enter here!

In my case, what has gone awry is that I have not acted correctly on what turned out to be lucrative information. Horses I struggled to justify backing won at big prices. The trouble with news for outsiders is that by design, such beasts are hard to fancy. Why else would they be so attractively priced? So a certain amount of blind faith is required. Had I acted, even in a small way, I would have set myself up nicely for a serious crack at the forthcoming Flat season. Instead, I am in a vicious circle, wary of backing messages of a similar improbable nature, because missing crucial winners at prices varying from 16’s to 6’s means such a little spell is unlikely to be repeated. My inaction is a reminder of the complexity of this difficult business. To win you have to do everything just right. You not only have to nominate the correct horses, you have to back them, whilst filtering out those most likely to lose. I shall whinge no more about my personal circumstances; betting stories featuring what went wrong being second only in the boring stakes to rambling acceptance speeches at award ceremonies.

The important thing is to keep a perspective. Nobody has died. I am not in Afghanistan with bullets whizzing above my head. I have not really lost any hard cash. I have missed backing winners because I failed to like the look of them. End of story – move on! It does not indicate I have lost my touch for finding winners – I have tipped plenty of them recently on Bush Telegraph. What you tip, as in what you say, is not necessarily what you do! Tipping provides a safety net for the tipster. It is liable to make him look very clever or very stupid – as can anything consigned to print – but in this case, only the bank manager and the bookmaker know the true story.

Reversals are Nature’s way of bringing us down to earth. Without them we would all think we were clever, and as we are mostly foolish that would never do. Although in public, most of us are able to create an impression of being sane and in control; mostly we are stupid, particularly when in private. I would go so far as to say we are all inherently stupid and that the only thing that distinguishes a buffoon from a wise man is that the wise man is the less stupid of the two.

Reversals are meant to be humbling. They make us re-evaluate certain aspects of our lives. Me, I am thinking it is about time I behaved less like a hostage in a South American jail and more of a human being. My life is sifting away in my little office as I gawp at horseracing; so two months too late I am making a couple of resolutions. I am resolving to keep in regular contact with my true friends who tolerate my stupidity and think non-the-less of me for it. We meet few enough real friends in a lifetime after all. I am going to be more tolerant of my fellow planet-sharers. This may exclude those partaking in Red Nose Day – an event it seems to me designed to allow people a licence to pursue their darkest fantasies. These usually involve men attired in stockings, suspenders and copious amounts of make-up in return for persuading acquaintances to part with cash for obscure charities. And you are supposed put a red nose on your car, expose yourself in public, or indulge in something you always wanted to do but for which you could never find the time.

Now for something more uplifting: Cheltenham fever is gripping racing folk early this year. It may have something to do with this having been such a miserable winter. I fear that, and the fact so many dark horses will turn up for the Festival, will make it more challenging than usual. There is the bandying of names unfamiliar to me; but that can be excused, as I am primarily a Flat man. I am okay with the runners in the Champion Hurdle (is Ashkazar a big price?) and the Gold Cup, although there is the small matter of nominating the winners of these most prestigious of events.

I assume the Supreme Novices’ Hurdle is the first race on the opening day. This is the race where the crowd, mostly mistakenly believing they will leave Cheltenham richer in all things material and spiritual, cheer heartily as the runners are sent on their way by the starter. They do this on the opening race every day, but the volume gets turned down as the meeting progresses. Anyway, the favourite for the opening race on the opening day is Cousin Vinny. I have never heard of him. Is he a horse or one of Edward Gillespie’s long lost relatives?

I believe the Arkle comes next. I have heard of him (or Himself), but fail to recognise Golden Silver, Original, Follow The Plan and Made in Taipan. Have they despatched a contingent from the Far East this year?

Still on the first day, judging by the participants, the Cross-Country Chase looks like it is a satellite race due to be conducted on the Isle of Man, a place, rather like Wales, where letters are plucked from a Scrabble bag to make nonsensical names. Dix Villez, Drombeag, Freneys Well, Banister Lane and Tawnies figure prominently. Who are these people?

Before he rendered me nearly senseless, I once shared a few drinks with David Nicholson, so know a little about him. I knew never to match him drink for drink and that he was charming and engaging company and a man who had no side or prejudice.  I don’t know anything about the third-favourite for the race named in his honour. She is Quevaga. I suspect that is Spanish for something to do with bullfighting, but apparently Willie Mullins is the trainer, so maybe it has some other form of connotation.

In the William Hill Trophy Handicap Chase, Can’t Buy Me Time (song by the Beatles?) is favourite. I hope it will not be more of a case of Help! by this stage of the proceedings.

The list illustrating my ignorance continues. On Wednesday, there is Niche Market, Komati Kid, Mikai D’Haguenet and Alexander Severus all quoted in the lists. They are animals or otherwise of which I have no knowledge. Surely for those contemplating an ambitious wager in the Coral Cup, a reverse forecast Psycho and Mr Thriller would seem appropriate and topical, considering Paul Merton’s impending series on BBC concerning Alfred Hitchcock.

Whatever the results I suspect there is an element of dancing on the Titanic about those making the pilgrimage this year. Win or lose, they are determined to have a good time, as they never know when they might get another chance. They will wish to splash their shoes with Guinness or Magners, to squirt Moet on Viyella shirts built to withstand such misuse, and to laugh in the face of adversity as the losing tickets pile up. At night, I suspect racegoers will cock a snook at bad results as if they are trophies they have shot. They will be partying and whooping like it is 1999 to quote Prince, painting that little town cradled in the Cotswold Hills not purple, but a bright shade of red.

I am above such behaviour. Quaffing champagne and laughing at my betting misfortune is the equivalent of Sir Alan Sugar guffawing at the demise of Amstrad. In addition, there is of course, no point in me turning up. Being a ghost, my presence in the evenings is likely to turn the colour a whiter shade of pale.


AND ANOTHER THING…

YOU KNOW SPRING IS ROUND THE CORNER when the Racing Post carries a page and a half of adverts for accommodation in Cheltenham. Only the Irish could claim they have premises located in Birmingham City Centre with direct trains one hour away from the track. Actually, I have a three-bedroom bungalow south of Newbury that is an hour-and-a half’s drive away, and can whisk any would-be racegoers in style to Gloucester in my Japanese equivalent of an Aston Martin. It is something I could be persuaded to consider just so long as they do not puke Moet and Chandon in what passes as my back seat.

I have a decent wine cellar, am a good enough cook at five dishes to fool anyone for a short space of time, and it is likely such a venture would net more income than fiddling around trying to back winners at a place where my record is average to bad.

That is the thing with these big meetings. How many winners can you expect to back in four days? Two? One? More like none! Because the short-priced horses, however much you fancy them, are not value. So you try your hand at the bigger priced ones and they lose. It is a vicious circle!

Cheltenham is unique. Races are run at breakneck pace so it is vital horses can establish an early rhythm. Some can, some can’t; but throwing such a wild card at punters can upset the best thought-out plans. Form at Sandown and Haydock can become irrelevant. No, there are easier, if less spectacular pickings to be had mid-week at Southwell. But I shall get caught up in the hysteria no doubt, joining the throng in a search for a winner or two. Cheltenham is infectious. After that initial roar as the tapes flick up for the opening race – after that first glass of Magners or Guinness, and the endless quest for a lavatory that is useable – all reason flutters away to hover above the hills of the Cotswolds.

There is half a page promoting Cheltenham preview nights, where racing personalities all sit at a big table – rather like knights at an old Court – in front of a packed audience in a little room, becoming progressively more pissed as they drink glass after glass of red wine, all tipping the same horses.

But never mind all that, we have three clear weeks to go yet and three weeks is a long time in horseracing. The adverts are an encouraging sign. Ahead lies Super Thursday at Nad Al Sheba, The Winter Derby at Lingfield (unless they ran it while I was on holiday), the start of the Flat, and World Cup Night. The nights are drawing out, the spotlights in my office have survived another winter and are getting less use; we have two months grace from paying the bloody council tax – we have made it!

The Daily Mail has a lot to answer for. Their crusade to spread gloom and despondency throughout this land may have much to do with the surly and resigned nature of its people. Even if this country were run by a government requiring its citizens to work for two hours a day, three days a week, and ensured they were fed, housed and looked after appropriately, you can be sure the Daily Mail would find something to complain about. Now, in case some of us may actually be interested in what happens in Hollywood on Sunday night, they have run a piece that declares the winners of all the award categories at the Oscars. Apparently, this information has been leaked by a website. In my naivety, I always thought that the votes were sealed, that only the highest echelon in the Academy saw them as a final entity and that the counting was recorded on the afternoon prior to the ceremonies. However, I suppose that could have all changed. What the Mail purports to have revealed is hardly a revelation. They claim that the 1/100 shot Heath Ledger has won the Best Supporting Actor – well there’s a surprise – and that Kate Winslet has won Best Actress and Slumdog Millionaire Best Picture. Wow! Who would have thought it! What a scoop! Why, a treble on all three at current odds pays 8/11!

I once quoted a well-known bookmaker who refused to bet on anything that could talk. You can see what he meant. Whether the Mail turns out to be right or barking up another tree without roots, it is likely betting will be suspended and some of the anticipation of the award ceremony removed.

As well as the adverts for accommodation at Cheltenham, today’s Post seems to be moving into fresh pastures. They carry an advert on page sixty-seven for Sky channel 900. Personally, I rarely get above 432, but apparently Channel 900 promises fun from Playboy TV. Other channels included are Spice (I presume that is nothing to do with cooking), Climax (yes, I think I remember that) and Adult (some might question whether I qualify).  All for only a £1 for 12 days.

Now that sounds like a decent offer! And if I am to be entertaining ‘sporting and discerning gentleman’ for the duration of the Cheltenham Festival, it could be the sort of thing that will keep them quiet at night while I am attempting to sleep prior to the morning Cheltenham dash. I think that in the interests of business, I might just give it a try – purely to see if it will be suitable for my overall hospitality package!

       AND ANOTHER THING…

SO THEY ARE AT IT AGAIN! The BHA, with all the perseverance of Inspector Clouseau and one suspects an equal amount of bumbling, try once more to nail their men. Or so they say! To a degree, it is difficult to know the likely outcome as the BHA formbook of miscreants nicked is such a slender volume. This time they are again charging Miles Rodgers, jockeys Fergal Lynch and Darren Williams, along with a new face in the frame, trainer Karl Burke.

This is a tricky one! The BHA alleges they have a portfolio that traces back to 2004, when Tony Blair was still Prime Minister and we were all four-and-a-half years younger. Their case has taken five years to compile and resurfaces fourteen months after the Old Bailey acquittal of Lynch and Williams, along with Kieren Fallon in that West End hit, Pink Panther Goes To Court. Lynch and Williams (which is the lyricist and which the musician is unclear) are to be charged with instructing Rodgers to lay certain horses they rode. The races in question – only a small selection apparently and such records usually fail to provide an accurate picture – are divided in two. A list of twelve horses that were supposed to be lays include a 9/1 winner but exclude Notnowcato. Those that figure provide a level stake profit of two points for an outlay of twelve units. I make that the equivalent of betting at 1/6. I would suggest that is not a sterling endorsement for this as an operation. If these horses were lays – which has far more serious implications for the sport – as the biggest price was 4/1, it has to be said they do not have the look of anything more sinister than one person’s opinion. True lays need to be short prices. This list of twelve does not contain anything of that nature, meaning Mr Rodgers et al could have been taking advice from Harry down the chip shop. Once again, as occurred with the Kieren Fallon case, one gets the feeling that the BHA do not seem to understand the rudiments of betting; therefore any case they submit is liable to be seriously flawed.

What is apparent is that there is a pattern to their list. Either Lynch or Williams rode all of the horses supposedly on the lay sheet; and Bryan Smart and Karl Burke trained all bar three. This should not come as any great surprise as Lynch and Williams were presumably close to horses from the Burke and Smart stable. Fergal Lynch is now close to Philadelphia Park as he is riding in America after the Panorama programme insinuated he was a crook. So the musical has turned full circle, as Lynch finds himself a train ride away from New Jersey and Damon Runyon territory. Ironically, Runyon wrote that major film and Broadway hit Guys And Dolls, which was based on a short story called Pick the Winner.

There is a second list from the alleged mastermind, Fergal Lynch. This time there is no discernable pattern. They have the look of a random catalogue of bets, the sort most of us receive in the post every fortnight from our bookmakers. It purports to comprise of fifteen Lynch-inspired bets. Six won, nine lost. Now if these were win bets, Lynch is not a bad tipster as they netted a profit of over fourteen units. Possibly Lynch could consider launching a premium rate tipping service when he returns from the States, even if it is based in Pentonville.

It is tempting to assume that in Rodgers, Lynch and Williams found someone prepared to indulge their inclination to bet.

Jockeys are not supposed to bet for obvious reasons. These days they are not supposed to express an opinion but do so on a daily basis both on television and in the press. Trainers are permitted to bet but most of them are too busy chasing their bills to find the time. Karl Burke trains a hundred horses in Middleham. He dresses and speaks well and gives the impression of being the epitome of an ambitious young trainer whose life revolves round his horses. Like many a trainer in his position, from time to time, he may find himself in the company of potential owners he would rather avoid. But chasing such characters is the nature of the beast he rides. He is an in-between trainer, operating outside the money belt of Newmarket and Lambourn, attempting to carve a slice of new money. Without knowing the man personally, I would be surprised if he was anything other than a hard-working trainer with a limited knowledge of betting.

The sins of the double act that is Lynch and Williams are that they appear to have been caught infringing the rules. They are in difficult positions. Sometimes, to stop the whispering and accusations it is as well to admit the supposed crime or misdemeanour. Admit and some. Embellish it even. Nothing shuts newshounds up quicker than an admission. Yes, I am as gay as a theatre full of drunken actors. Yes, I had sex with my au pair and she hasn’t been able to stand up straight since. Yes, I made money out of the deal; now can someone send me literature on a second home in Monaco? However, sometimes a denial is the only option. If you are suspected of breaking the law or impinging the rules of your place of business, there is only one course of action – denial – Richard Nixon-style and hope David Frost fails to show up.

The case against Lynch and Williams is that they assisted Rodgers in a fraudulent practice, specifically the laying of horses on Betfair. Lynch is singled out as failing to ensure Bond City ran on its merits at Ripon in August 2004. These are serious charges and if unproven, could result in several members of the BHA needing to brush up their CVs. Clearly, by its reluctance to join the cast, the CPS and the City of London Police are either unconvinced or, still smarting from the Fallon debacle, not keen to repeat that exercise in court, leaving the BHA to reach its own conclusions.

Seek and you shall find. Racing is a pond with deep and murky waters. It always has been. Any pursuit that involves betting is shady. Similarly, most businesses are about money, meaning those in a position to handle it often have sticky fingers. Government – both local and national – is probably the worst example of misappropriation of cash. Only during the past seven days, Jacqui Smith, the Home Secretary, has faced charges she has, if not actively broken the law, misused parliamentary privileges over her expenses in respect of dossing in her sister’s house in the capital whilst claiming the maximum for a second home. It would seem there are plenty of privileges within Westminster. What is disappointing over the Smith affair is that we, the taxpayers, the people that provide the privileges, have a right to expect better from a member of cabinet and one holding high office. However, she has not, to the best our knowledge, laid horses on Betfair that she knew would not win. Now had she done that, forget the £100,000 plus she has taken from the public purse, she really would be in trouble.

Meanwhile, the BHA are intent on some form of re-run of the Old Bailey trial that saw them so discredited. They contend they have a packet of incriminating evidence against the persons named. They face a tough task on two counts. Firstly, they have to construct a case on a subject that is beyond most barristers’ comprehension and make it stick. Secondly, they will be relying on circumstantial evidence. They may have their way with Lynch and Williams. They are soft targets after all. Rodgers is impregnable it seems to me, unless he is to be charged with entrapment. Karl Burke is now subject to innuendo and worry. Unless the BHA is to drop a bombshell, they are likely to drag horseracing through more bad publicity.

Paddy Power often open a book on the most unlikely of events. I wonder what price they are offering about this case being thrown out of court, or of Burke being acquitted.

AND ANOTHER THING

Holidays

IT IS GOOD TO BE BACK! Really! It is my conclusion that a fortnight is too long to be away, especially if you are merely lazing in the sun. Such a confession is good news for me. I make my living from backing horses, and once it becomes a chore, my performance becomes affected. As it is, after a week of temperatures close to a hundred in Goa, India, I was aware of sinking into a rut. It was a case of pool, sun bed, sundowner, Singapore Slings and Gimlets under the stars, then curry for dinner. Fourteen nights – twelve curries. I think I may give it a week or two before I try another Rogan Josh!

And I think I will restrict future holidays to no more than a week. There are no plans although, like last year, the long-term strategy is for a few days in Los Angeles in November for the Breeders’ Cup, so long as it can be financially justified.

India is a favourite winter destination of mine, but is becoming increasingly popular and more expensive. As a country, it thrives on a confusion that does not always sit well with visitors. For example, the airport in Goa – no bigger than, say Southampton or Stansted – contrives to ensure that the three major international flights all arrive and depart within ten minutes of each other – resulting in bedlam. There is no air-conditioning. To heighten the anguish of passengers, the fans either don’t work or are not switched on. Pale-faced, surly Russians mix in a sweaty stew with Brits from the Manchester and Gatwick flights. We don’t like the Russians and they don’t seem to like anybody. They are very white and scowl a lot. Unless you speak the language, rather like the Japanese and Chinese, no utterance from them is comprehensible. The women wear perfume that smells like sweet chocolate, the men aftershave that does not smell of anything much, although it does sometimes seem as if a horse has piddled in their midst.

Leaving India developed into a mad scramble. Three plane-loads of holidaymakers were all trying to burst through one exit gate as the Tannoy-announcer panicked the disorganised tangle further by warning flights were about to depart. There was a time when I would have accepted such lunacy as part of India’s eccentricity, presumably inherited to a degree by the British Raj. Now, I imagined officials behind the glass looking down on us struggling travellers with wicked smiles on their faces. Sorry India, but this is no way to treat tourists whose money you court.

As it turned out, although we were late jetting-off due to contrived chaos, it transpired we arrived at Gatwick with about an hour to spare on Sunday night before the weather closed in. So returning produced a close shave of dissimilar but equally dramatic proportions of departure.

Hard luck betting stories are old news. I nearly left on a high. The Saturday of January 17th – my leaving date – featured a Lucky Fifteen on Group Captain, Titan Triumph, Turkish Surprise and Sunset Boulevard. Not being on hand to play each leg, there was little else I could do but try my luck in one attempt at a miracle bet. It nearly came off. Sunset Boulevard won at 9/1, with the other three running well and going close at big prices. On a different day, it could have been a case of a major victory. Although only returning a small win, the bet reinforced my belief that I am capable of making my own luck. This is not an attempt to talk myself up; however, self-belief is so important in this tumbledown business. When we lose, it is important to justify the bets struck, not to worry the house is about to be huffed and puffed away. My brush with triumph left me eagerly awaiting the next attempt. Although not able to participate, the win of Silver Mist in Dubai last Thursday was gratifying. Again, this is not a piece of self-advertising, but I did give him a positive word last time when he won despite a poor draw and racing over an inadequate trip. He proved marginally too strong for Third Set in a better contest. Whatever happens on the domestic front, Dubai remains a favourite hunting ground of mine for a raft of reasons, and I look forward to the remainder of the Carnival.

Walkon upheld what looks like strong juvenile form when winning at Cheltenham. He seems progressive and as if he could be even better on a less exacting surface. By all accounts, the powerful Henderson team introduced a very useful novice at Kempton. Tidal Bay, a horse I regularly fail to call correctly, probably failed to handle atrocious conditions over three miles at Cheltenham. His trainer, Howard Johnston, seems affable enough but makes some hard to justify decisions.

On the flight home, copies of Saturday’s Daily Mail were distributed. There was a nasty little article about the increase in slaughter of failed racehorses. We live in a world full of injustice and cruelty. Nevertheless, this sort revelation – predictable though it may be with the increase of racehorse ownership in such hard financial times – is like a telegram concerning a serving soldier in the Somme. It is personal and concerns all of us that make any kind of income from this industry. Far from being encouraged to participate in a sport that is beyond most people’s means, potential owners should reconsider. Owning a racehorse is close to madness unless you are Robbie Williams or David Frost. Chances are you will end up with a horse that will never come close to winning a race and even if it does, will never recover anything other than a small portion of its cost. Buying the beast will possibly prove the cheapest transaction made. Anyone who owns or part-owns a racehorse will find that barely a day will pass without some form of affiliated bill dropping through the letterbox. A bad horse costs as much to train as a good one. Costs for services you had hitherto only heard of will manifest. Farriers, vets, Wetherby’s and box-drivers all need to make a living and you will discover you are it. Even a horse that is not injury-prone (which most of them are) will cost at least £12,000 a year to train without all the add-ons. Potential owners are lucky to get away with twenty grand a year. Balance that against payments for a high-powered sports car, sending a child to private school, taking four luxury holidays a year with change and paying a Cheryl Cole look-alike to read you the Racing Post in stockings and suspenders each morning, and it is little surprise owning a racehorse is not at the top of any list of desirable acquisitions.

So I returned home, driving through a snowstorm that was already building up and slowing the M25, spotting a snow leopard somewhere through the swarm of flakes. Heading west, conditions improved but by Monday morning, a blizzard had left our Hampshire village dangerously white – quite a change from the oven that I had left on the sub-continent. But we are at the right end of the winter and let February do its worst: It is a short month, one that does not even require a council tax payment.

There was the mail. Usual stuff, mostly offers for a parting of the ways between my money and myself. There was nothing from the Inland Revenue, no accounts from bookmakers but the winter energy bills were waiting, disguised in white envelopes. The demand for money is set out in computer-speak. There is something sinister about the way the companies use words to whisper menace. We all know we have to pay the money, but the claim comes in a supercilious, almost menacing and leering way. You read the bottom line for a service you must have but that you have no control over. Suppliers are the equivalent of Micky The Fish at the door asking where his bosses’ repayments for that extortionate loan are. Mr Luigi don’t like to be kept waiting! Only in this case the approach is less direct but equally effective. Pay up or you may find future supplies expensively metered or threatened. Now you can imagine the soft-spoken – possibly female voice of a computer – speaking the slightly stunted spliced together impersonal words: This is your gas/electric bill. Please pay us £303.03. Thank you.

Not at all. My pleasure!

Why doesn’t such an approach work for the rest of us who have to fight tooth and nail for every dollar?


And Another Thing – Jan Archive

AND ANOTHER THING…

Succeeding

IT HAS BEEN A TOUGH couple of weeks for most people, racing folk not excepted: too many brown envelopes and not enough of the other kind. To compound any hardship for those of us in racing, the weather has wreaked havoc with the fixture list. Even allowing for the dearth in turf racing, the all-weather – so often a source of winter fortune – has been mostly dire. This is not an excuse for a moan. The end of December and the early part of January is traditionally a lean time for punters. It is a good idea to let the Kempton Boxing Day fixture take place and then book a winter break. We say the same every year, but somehow fail to get round to it at the right time. My blast of winter sun is set to start this Saturday [January 17th], meaning I will miss a couple of Dubai fixtures and some better class all-weather racing. Timing holidays in this business is difficult. We have to accept that if we want to get away we will probably miss something (not as much as we suspect when we return and see the results); it is the nature of the beast and returning fresh from a holiday is to our advantage.

But there is a chink of light in the distance. Whatever I miss or do not miss, it occurs to me that those of us making a living from racing are largely untouched by the current recession. As we are self-employed, we are at no greater risk of losing our jobs, or living than at any time. Racing continues and the challenges remain the same. The onus is on us to find and back winners, the odds of which are unchanged. I suppose for those of us that have a small earner from another racing-based activity (something I recommend for any professional backer: although it will fail to match losses, a regular income on which you can rely is priceless) there is always the chance that may be affected. However, in a way we are fortunate. Whilst trainers may be chasing owners for fees, bookmakers owed sums that debtors cannot pay; we punters run no such risks. Back the right horses and we collect. It seems to me little has changed. What this credit crunch has made me do though is to examine my expenses. Where possible I am throttling back. Once you question outgoings, it is surprising how much is paid without much thought. Savings can be made in newspapers, unnecessary phone calls (particularly on a mobile), and most of all on those bets that fail to fall within a proper remit. You know, the horse that is overpriced but is not going to win. The horse that can win in the unlikely event it recovers form from two years ago. At a time when opportunities are limited, it is tempting to fall for bets that we would not strike if we could choose from a proper menu. It is no good frittering away money just to keep your eye in, or because you are bored or think you could use a few bob.

If you bet every day, you are playing the bookmakers’ game; that is what he wishes you to do. Getting punters on the treadmill of picking horses out every day is the equivalent of a direct debit, which are easy to set up but difficult to terminate. The object is to relieve you of money, which trickles from your bank account without you keeping track.

Some direct debits make consummate sense: the mortgage, council tax and so on, but not every day expenses like the telephone or gas bills. As I said, they are remarkably easy to initiate but darned tricky to discontinue if you wish to change supplier or your payment method. I found this to my cost recently when switching to a free-call deal with AOL, only to find I am still paying B.T. and for the life of me cannot stop my direct debit with them. However, that is another story and something I must sort out when I have time.

Bookmakers rely on punters acquiring a betting habit. Get up, wash, shave, have breakfast, sort out a bet. It is not enough to say, this is the best I can come up with on a poor day; therefore, it is my bet. You need to make cold, calculated decisions. Operate the following criterion: if there were better racing elsewhere, is this a horse I would wish to back? If the answer is no, then it is not a bet just because it has been identified as the only possible opportunity on a bad day. Selectivity is vital if you are looking for serious and potentially profitable bets. You are not in a casino, taking a chance on this or that, playing hunches, betting on the twinkle of the Budweiser girl’s smile. She is dispensing free beer to distract you and because she has legs that reach the ceiling. That smile is reserved for everyone; the real smile – the secret one – for someone other than you.

To be successful in a pursuit as volatile as betting, it is essential you keep emotions in check. You need to expend all your energy on the business before you without becoming sidetracked. Focus on what you are doing, as ultimately you are a trader playing with your own money. You have no financial parachute when the day is done. When you lose, you have lost your own money. Presumably, you do not have the equivalent of Fort Knox staking you. Bad decisions or losing bets mean a reduction in your assets – in this case cash. Your personal bank, which you draw upon to finance bets, does not have never-ending reserves so at times reverses are hard to take. However, they are a fact of life for any betting professional.

If you are a trader rather than a backer you will be taking the scattergun approach, making a plethora of decisions, some good, some bad; all that matters in this case is how you end up at the close of business.

A cool, detached approach is doubly important for the reasons listed earlier. It is a funny thing but, try too hard in anything and chances are you will fail. Think back to all the good decisions you have made in life and chances are, you made them calmly and without feeling pressurized. It is therefore important not to put yourself under pressure to unearth winners. If they are not there, they are not there. Accept it and wait until the situation alters. Similarly, do not be afraid to back a horse at a decent price that others seem to have disregarded. There is no automatic safety net built in to backing short-priced horses. Many 2/1 favourites are no more likely to win than well-thought out 6/1 chances. Once you start to try too hard, although you may not notice it, your methods will alter, which will be detrimental as, assuming you are still standing in this business, you have proved yourself. Take a quick look at actors, sportsmen, performers in the arts, and they all have the same quality in common: that is they make the difficult appear easy. There are stories of various singers or actors vomiting before taking to the stage, but once they are out there, they switch into another mode, blanking out everything except their performances. To a degree, as a professional punter the same attribute is required. You may feel I am advocating that, for example, students should not study in earnest for exams. That is not what I am saying at all. Study and work experience are two separate issues, as graduates very quickly learn once they have left the cosy world of university. Once you have transcended the study stage, you are playing for real. Business is not an exam; marks count for nothing when money is haemorrhaging from your bank account.

If you follow the right course, you will succeed – that is providing you protect your stock – in this case your stake money. To this end, I refer to an earlier article focusing on deciding a bank. This is particularly important, as you need some form of financial independence to ride out a losing or dry run, something we all experience from time to time. Although it can be difficult, it is fatal to allow losing runs to influence decisions. Providing you have the necessary stock of money behind you and have staked within your bank, you have to ease your way out of a bad patch hesitantly as if negotiating a dark tunnel. If you try to blast your way out of trouble, your difficulties are likely to increase.

So, despite a slow start, I am entering 2009 with a degree of optimism. We have had one notable success this month and I see no reason why plenty of others should not follow. Of course, there will be dark days, eclipsed by the successes so long as we keep our heads. Many people are losing theirs at present, relying on credit to buy their way out of trouble. Throwing money at a problem never solved anything. Despite long faces in all industries associated with finances, ironically, considering we are in one of the most speculative businesses of all, I feel we, in this particular branch of the racing sector, will be okay.

This may be one of my last articles for a couple of weeks for reasons stated. I fly out on Saturday. I am bound for somewhere that is somewhat isolated and internet connection will not be possible, so I shall not know what is happening back home until my return. For me, that is a holiday. I want to switch off, forget about all aspects of gambling and return like a bull pawing the ground before being let loose into the ring. Only in my case, once that gate opens, I trust the outcome will be somewhat different to the fate of the unfortunate bull.


And Another Thing

MAKING IT UNSCATHED THROUGH 2009

This is the time of year when if we are not careful we make ourselves dejected by examining all that is wrong with us and trying, unsuccessfully, to make corrections. The temptation to think we can make a fresh start, write that novel, win the Tote Scoop Six, buy a second home in Miami, lingers in the ghostly background. To save such anguish, herewith an alternative and hopefully more realistic guide to surviving the next twelve months without the necessity to do anything other than tinker with the disarray we call our lives.

Resolutions first: Frankly, they can be a pain as most are destined to be broken. The most common New Year resolution is the desire and apparent need to stop smoking. If this applies to you, as an ex-smoker, you have my sympathy. If you wish to give up, it may help to be aware of how non-smokers perceive you. Smokers don clothes that smell as if they have been stored in an opium den in some Asian dock for a number of years. Their breath smells so stale it appears they have not cleaned their teeth for three months. Filmed over with nicotine, smokers’ dwelling places are like third-class carriages on an African train. Smoking shortens lives. Spare us the argument about Uncle Tommy who smoked fifty unfiltered Capstan Full Strength a day and lived until he was a hundred. He is the exception not the rule. Ask a million blind men to cross Oxford Street unaided continuously. One will survive; that does not mean it is a sensible pursuit for blind men to follow. If you want to give up smoking there are three things you can do.

Firstly, book a holiday to Australia. With a stop at Singapore, the journey takes over twenty-four hours. That means an enforced day without a cigarette, which gives you a head start. It also means you have blown your tobacco money for the year on a holiday. Smoking twenty a day sets you back £2,000 annually. When considered, that’s pricey to smell like an ashtray.

Secondly, stop buying cigarettes on the basis that every time you do, you are contributing to the Government’s exchequer and merely giving them more money to squander.

Thirdly, give up immediately – right now. Keep a full packet in the house and each time you get the craving, tell yourself you can have a cigarette in an hour’s time if you still feel desperate to light up. That way, psychologically, you have not really given up as such; you have postponed the moment. Once you start to feel better for not having smoked (it does not take long) you will see it as a contest between you and Benson & Hedges and one you can actually win.

If all else fails and you just cannot give up: stop reading about the effects of smoking.

Next, drinking. Unless you have a habit of waking up in a gutter with no recollection of how you got there with blood on your face and an empty wallet, give up drinking at your peril. Drinking makes you feel better and less stressed. Statistics show you are more likely to die of stress than alcoholism. If you drink wine or better still champagne, it gives you an interest, makes you appreciate the finer things in life, and instantly puts your worries into perspective. For advanced drunks there seems to be only one choice: to drink or not to drink. For those who can control it (not easy as alcohol is sly and only needs one shot to remove willpower), it can be a pleasant way of spending time with friends. I have heard it said you should never trust a person who does not drink. My other half does not drink – therefore cutting the supermarket budget in half – but I am beginning to watch her closely. That well-known drunk, philanderer, abuser of all he encountered including himself, and brilliant writer, Ernest Hemingway, once said: Always do sober what you said you would do when drunk. That will teach you to keep your mouth shut.

Exercise: Don’t join a health club or a gym, it’s a waste of time and money. Save the time it takes to get there by working out at home. Save the membership money by finding a gym that is a mile-and-a-half away from where you live. Run there, round its car park and then back home everyday.

Dieting: Take my advice – forget it. You will put yourself through a regime you cannot possibly maintain in order to lose six pounds at best. When you have a rich meal and a bottle of wine, that weight will return. In order to punish your body you collaborate with its desire to become podgy, ending up heavier than when you started. Avoid all package and junk food. Other than that eat what you like within reason, eat slowly and work the contents off. Either the thought of having to run three miles the following day will prevent you from stuffing your face, or the exercise will keep you trim.

Be aware that (for men) there are three components of the body that have to be kept in check and if possible outwitted. The brain is the cleverest. It will lie to you, delude you in all things in order to keep the rest of the body functioning. It is like a twenty-year-old blonde sweet-talking a forty-year-old man – it lies. In its own way, the beard is equally clever. Just when you think you have found the perfect razor that leaves your face as smooth as a pebble, the beard will adapt and grow in a different direction, rendering the wonder razor as ineffectual as the others you have in your bathroom. That is why makers of razors are constantly bringing out new ‘improved models.’  Given the chance, the penis will rule the entire body. It cannot be trusted as it has its own independent agenda. A number of devices increase sexual arousal in women. The penis does not figure at the top of the list. German manufacturers, Mercedes Benz, BMW and Audi mostly occupy that place.

Gambling. Never strike a bet that, because of its sheer stupidity, keeps you awake at night after it has lost. Most bets will lose but there is nothing worse than the bet that was poorly thought out, placed in the heat of the moment, or after a drink, that you knew when you made it was about as wise as a chicken walking into a fox’s lair. Do not bet on anything that you only think you understand. Do not play hunches, dabble in the stock market, or buy a restaurant unless you know more than the person doing the selling.

In the present economic climate, most of us will have to make sacrifices. It is probably prudent to wait for that new kitchen or bathroom and not to succumb to the ‘Have now, pay next year’ offers that have an amazing habit of making that year arrive at least four months early.

We are all idiots in our own way. Over the coming 365 days you will make mistakes, play the fool, let yourself down and make some diabolical decisions: You and everybody else!


And Another Thing – Dec Archive

AND ANOTHER THING…

 A UFO?

WELL THAT’S it, another Christmas gone, another year consigned to the wreckage that is history. Any hope that 2009 may surpass its predecessor is looking as shaky as a raft preparing to sink in a stormy sea. There is the economy, events in the Middle East, a pipeline that appears to be more hot air than gas leading from Russia, and Britain’s high streets threatening to become ghost towns. Nine days gone and it is not looking promising.

A propeller blade is mangled on one of those wind contraptions in Lincolnshire. Bright lights are spotted in the sky – it must be a UFO! Considering we know there is no life on the Moon, it is impossible for there to be any on bubbling hot Venus or Mercury, and the signs are there is none on Mars, the question has to be asked: Just where have these alien craft supposed to have come from: Alpha Centauri; somewhere from the constellation known as Seven Sisters? It is more likely to be a missile from Seven Sisters Road in East London. Any alien spacecraft that reaches Earth has transcended all known laws of physics within our grasp. It takes us three years to reach Mars; the journey to Alpha Centauri would take some 70,000 years. Any being arriving at this planet from somewhere deep in the void has intelligence beyond our comprehension. To suggest they would choose to visit Earth out of all the options available, then pick somewhere in remote Lincolnshire, only to become thwarted by a wind farm, having travelled so far, is surely a contradiction.

Some rugby player, engaged to Princess Zara, has earned a driving ban for climbing behind the wheel of his car the day after a binge at Cheltenham races when he downed the equivalent of twenty-four units of alcohol. I cannot condone or defend the indefensible. But whilst so much advice is dispensed, why are so many of us in the dark as to what these wretched units actually represent? Scrap the units and convert to a language we understand. One bottle of wine equals whatever it equals on a stupidity gauge. Let it range from over the edge, progress to too much, ending up at way too much. Two bottles, three, or four mean blackout and possible death. A single shot of liquor, a double, half a bottle, is a week’s, a month’s, a lifetime’s intake. Spell it out so that we know the damage we are doing to ourselves. And scrap any tolerance of drinking and driving. Prohibit driving after the participation of one drink. Let the same apply to those taking Prozac or Valium tablets. While we are about it, the ingestion of one Viagra tablet entitles the recipient to sit on his own on public transport.

No, it is not looking good; nine days in, 2009 threatens to be even worse than 2008. I am even starting to like Gordon Brown!

Further afield, pornographers in America claim they are entitled to financial aid on a par with banks. It could be argued there is little between the two professions, or that the intentions of both are distinguished only by one letter. Bankers, however, have an aura of respectability, possibly undeserved, although their collective activities influence global economies. Pornography, or its immoral bed-partners, have influenced political careers, but that seems a flimsy basis to bail out those making a living out of peddling smut. The description accorded to Larry Flynt is that of porn baron. He has the jowls to be a baron, the face to be a gargoyle. He publishes Hustler, a magazine I am assured has nothing to do with Paul Newman. Flynt and sidekick Joe Francis, publisher of Girls Gone Wild (not a rival band to Girls Aloud), have presented a plea to Congress to pump (their words – but everything in such an article is by design a double entendre) 5 billion dollars into their industry. It goes on…Mr Francis – tongue-in-cheek we presume (when he removes it from someone else’s mouth or other part of the body that is) – said a cash injection (you see they just keep coming – and again) was required, “to see the industry through hard times”. Now we know he is joking! Does anyone know how you become a porn baron?

Whilst on the subject, a newly married couple were sitting on the edge of their bed in the hotel after the ceremony. The groom asks his bride if she would allow him to try a new sexual position. She shrugs her agreement, aware this is not the first time she will hear such a request over the forthcoming years of marriage. The groom explains he would like to try the wheelbarrow position, which involves him grabbing her by the legs as she steadies herself on her hands. She nods in resigned fashion, adding, ‘Only if you promise not to pass my parents’ house’.

I know this is supposed to be a column with a racing slant. The thing is, there hasn’t been any to speak of. Recently the racing that has survived has taken place in a shroud of fog and mist, something a cynic could claim has always been the case. James Willoughby very sensibly advocates that racing has to revitalise itself in the coming year. I could not agree more. Neither he nor I know quite how we achieve that, although we both admit some sort of division within the sport – similar to that adopted by football – seems necessary. Although we may not know the remedy, we are not paid silly money not to know. That is the province of the BHA members. There are too many racecards for most newspapers to carry comfortably. There is too much racing full stop; but punters should take heart. If there is too much for us, there is too much for the odds-compilers. That means both parties are liable to make mistakes. Our mistakes don’t necessarily cost us money so long as we are careful, because we do not have to play in every race. Bookmakers on the other hand do… cue Spectiat on Wednesday!


 

AND ANOTHER THING…

And now the bookies can do their bit to help the credit crunch …

THESE ARE DARK DAYS: dark in more ways than one. We wake in darkness and drive home in gloom and there is worse to come. In a month’s time the last embers of light will streak the sky at 3.40pm, meaning the day is pretty much over before it has begun. Then of course, there is the credit crunch, about which the least said the better. We are told that sales normally held in January are poised to start this week in a frantic and desperate attempt to kick-start Christmas spending, and that the government is borrowing money so it can spend what it has not got and is preparing to shower the taxpayers with allowances it cannot afford.

The last part sounds like something out of a Whitehall farce, you know, for those unable to remember, they were the set pieces that contrived to allow Brian Rix to lose his trousers. These set pieces mean that Gordon Brown is likely to lose the country its crown jewels but he has narrowed the gap on the Conservative lead, so that is the main thing.

Through it all – wars we have no appetite for; the expenditure of money we cannot afford – racing goes on. And the racing community continues as if there is no world other than that taking place under its nose. Have you ever noticed that in those question and answer sessions so prevalent, featuring racing personalities – Robert Thornton being the latest to be grilled – there is always the question, Do you think there is too much racing? This gets asked so many times it is rather like an obligatory enquiry of a Zimbabwean: Is Robert Mugabe doing a good job?  Sadly, the answer is virtually always the same in both cases, but the mere posing of the question tells its own story.

No one asks me if I think there is too much racing but it is a strange question when you think about it. Forget the Zimbabwe example; it is more like, Are there too many reality shows on television? If you think the answer is yes, the remedy is in your hands. You reply with the remote control and switch the television off.

Today is Sunday and that is what I did. Racing came from Aintree, Plumpton, Towcester and Navan. I pretended there was no racing at all, opting to ignore the whole shebang. You know what? I feel liberated. I am the kid that played truant and got away with it. I could not care whether Officier De Reserve won the Irish race or what won at Aintree. I got on with my life. I probably should not be saying this on a racing website, and many of you may have had a financial interest in the day’s proceedings. You may have been able to make more sense of it than I and had an opinion. You may have wanted to back Officier De Reserve or Gold Reef, or whatever else you fancied. You may have been grateful there were three meetings in England and one in Ireland. But the time will come when I will want to back some hairy beast at Wolverhampton and you will want to bunk off somewhere else, so you will get your own back.

The point is, there is too much racing, of course there is. But unlike too much taxation or thuggery, or not enough money, there is something we can do. We can just pretend it is not taking place. That is to say, we ignore it. Now, I realise years of conditioning means this is not easy. We have been controlled to pace up and down in the mornings waiting for that reassuring clunk of the Racing Post making its way through the letterbox. We need it as a smoker needs a cigarette. We have to at least look at the runners in case something is lurking we have been waiting to back. However; fight back, it is the pantomime season so, Oh no we don’t! We think we do, believe we do, give it no thought and presume it is our duty, but actually, it isn’t. We do not have to indulge. We can say sod it! I am cancelling Towcester and Aintree in the pouring rain and I never liked bloody Plumpton anyway. And Navan? What do we know about Navan?

That is what I said today. There followed a couple of phone calls from contacts who asked what I knew, and when I said nothing and there was nothing I wanted to know, they replied they would see what they could find out. I repeated my case because clearly they failed to understand. I do not care, I said; whatever you find out you can keep to yourself, I am having the day off. I don’t want to know anything. I don’t want to be told some stupid story about a horse I have never heard of that is going to win a race I know nothing about. I don’t want to have a bet!

This was fighting talk and it took a while to sink in. But the joy of it was that after eleven o’ clock the phones were silent and no one told me a damn thing. For all I know the world and his wife had it off today whilst my back was turned; but, you know what, I don’t care! I have voted with my feet, or in this case, my fingers. And I feel so much better for it.

A cook once told me what I suspect is an old joke. He had worked in the Army and when asked what was for dinner by a soldier replied, ‘I have got good news and bad news. Which would you like first?’

‘Give me the bad news,’ said the soldier.

‘The bad news is there is shit for dinner.’

‘What is the good news?’

‘There is not enough to go round.’

That is how I feel about racing at the moment. There is enough to go round but most of it is shit!

So if Debenhams can start their January sales in November, how about the bookmakers, who after all are responsible for most of the slop we are being served, doing the same. Let’s make them work for their money. How about they try a BOGOF deal: Bet One Get One Free. Have one Lucky 15, get one on the house. Have £100 on some three-legged yak, get another £100 to put on another. Come on boys, try it. If we are stupid enough to bet on this nonsense, it stands to reason we have to lose in the long run.

For all my rebellion, I know a lapse is only a few days away. I am absurdly confident that if the weights do not rise Air Force One will win the Hennessy. Right now, I can’t get a 8/13 shot to oblige and I think I am going to crack the Hennessy! Like, right. So come on Lads and Hills, how about it? How about a bit of BOGOF? You know there will only be one winner!


Note from Bob…

Spy is so right! The bookies should give us some more money! I love that idea! … I’ve collected together all the bookies I can find who are offering free bets when you open an account and listed them under (not surprisingly!) the FREE BETS tab.

Some are excellent eg Bet365‘s £200 offer (very shortly to be chopped to £100! and may be £25 soon so get yoru skates on if you don’t have an account already!

Some are miserly, just £10 … maybe Spy could embarass them into opening the satchels a bit wider?


AND ANOTHER THING

Racing and The BBC

JOURNALISTS IN TODAY’S RACING POST are spluttering rather a lot. Spluttering and journalese go hand in hand. Journalists need to be incensed every now and then; it gets the juices and ink flowing. It awakes angst and results in them scurrying to PCs to bash their keyboards, rather like ‘Annoyed Beyond Belief From Tunbridge Wells’. In an industry such as racing that presents little in the way of controversy, especially since the sidelining of Kieren Fallon and Dean McKeown, anything provoking copy is a boon.

As one, the Racing Post has descended on the BBC, admonishing, advising, rebuking, reprimanding, castigating and criticising and finally in exasperation venting vehemence, in disbelief at the news the BBC is virtually to phase out its racing coverage, axing all but the most prestigious of meetings. From 2010, it is to show a mere fourteen days of racing a year. This is bad news for Clare Balding and Willie Carson (both of whom will not be short of alternative work) but may not be the disaster it is depicted as being for the viewer.

Racing will get no coverage whatsoever between the months of October and April. In an aggressive decision of Stalin-proportions, the BBC has concluded that horseracing is not worthy of flagship coverage, especially during the winter. The long-term aim of the programme planners appears to be that all bar Royal Ascot and other high profile meetings from the Royal course, the Aintree Grand National Meeting, the Derby and Arc day will disappear from our screens.

If we examine the BBC’s decisions, they are not so surprising. Committed coverage to National Hunt racing for a corporation that attempts to run a tight ship where scheduling is concerned is a pain. As we discovered this weekend, not for the first time, winter racing can fall foul of the weather. Channel Four found themselves with time on their hands after the abandonment of Cheltenham. I have no idea how they filled the slot, but to a degree that is the point. If they had advertised they were showing a film, a re-run of old Muhammad Ali fights, what shoes women with chunky legs should wear, potential viewers would know where they were and could activate or deactivate their remotes accordingly. Racing is a prima donna activity. It is the Beyonce or Britney Spears of sports. It wishes to appear on its own terms; strut its stuff and leave us awestruck. The trouble from its perspective is it cannot command such devotion from its fans, which it keeps in endless suspense. It waits in the wings before making an appearance. Races are invariably late off; the annual farce that is the Cesarewitch even tries Channel Four’s patience. The horses have to cover the two-and-a-quarter mile trip twice. With the exception of a dogleg, Newmarket is a straight course, meaning the participants have to cross from Suffolk to Cambridgeshire and back. Consequently, the event is late off year after year. Impervious to anything other than their own importance (or at least that is the impression created), Newmarket make no attempt to rectify this situation by either re-jigging the overall programme so more time is available, or placing a huntsman in the paddock with a long-tom beforehand to ensure the participants get to post on time.

Talking of time, I remember an occasion when the Hennessy Gold Cup was taken off air because a horse was galloping loose at its leisure before the start of the event. The BBC had a commitment to broadcast a rugby match at 2.30, by which time the wretched beast, trained by Josh Gifford I seem to recall, was romping around the Berkshire track. Now, short of shooting it with a tranquilizer dart, I don’t know what the solution to such a situation is but the BBC handled it by pulling the plug.

As animals form a large part of racing coverage and they are notoriously unreliable, a schedule that includes them has to be either flexible or understanding. In the case of racing, the BBC is neither. It has other fish to fry and they tend to be fish that perform on cue. Football matches, rugby games, motor cross, Formula 1, cycling, the tossing of the caber, all tend to start when advertised. Some of them may be as exciting as watching an egg boil but they do as advertised on the tin. Racing does not. And because races tend to be run in quick time, they are a nuisance. They catch the casual viewer out. They flash on and off the screen without warning: preliminaries conducted at an almost indolent pace before the sudden injection of speed of a race occurring whilst you are turning down the curry or popping out to the garage to replenish beer stocks. It is not a relaxing pursuit to televise. Settle down to watch a rugby, tennis or football match and it starts and finishes when you expect. You can budget for its coverage, which means the comfortable scheduling of bladder and drink breaks. Racing is haphazard to say the least. And it is not just the animals that are responsible. The attitude that racing can operate within some bubble is prevalent and until those responsible for its management realise they are against sports and pursuits that appear to be better regulated, so it will remain.

It is significant that the BBC is only interested in festivals. Entire meetings such as Royal Ascot make for a full and varied programme. Fashion and celebrity spotting can be included, allowing the coverage to embrace a complete syllabus. Much better than zigzagging to Haydock whilst a racing car is having its tyres changed.

I submit that the BBC’s approach to racing is its own business. The premise that horseracing is owed a living is false. It is a minority sport. It may be our sport but that is our problem. Right now, horseracing is available on Racing UK (who do an excellent job when allowed; that is to say when their schedule is not too clogged up with dross that gets in the way of Cheltenham or Newmarket), and the free to air ATR. Okay, the latter station is littered with annoying adverts, but you do get to see the races in a fashion and it is FREE to subscribers of Sky. Genuine racing fans are accommodated by these stations, their existence squeezing potential viewers from terrestrial stations but are preferable to the nail biting situation created by a cluttered BBC schedule.

It is too late for racing to muscle in on the coverage of other sports. The damage has been done. We cannot have it both ways. The racing channels contribute to racing’s finances. If the BBC chooses to show golf, fishing or The Sound of Music in preference to nag-racing, as I have heard it referred to by non-followers, it is their prerogative.

In the meantime, not the first time, racing must look within and try to modernise. It could start by looking at the television that appears on the front page of the Racing Post today. It looks like an Alba or a Bush – you know the old-fashioned television with a back as big as a small van now superseded by the slim line LCD model installed in most modern homes.


 AND ANOTHER THING…

What’s  happened to the Racing Post …

WE ARE WAKING UP TO various degrees of unpleasantness this morning. This depends upon where you live. Snow and ice in the north, wind and rain in the south; I should imagine it’s the sort of day that makes you think twice about setting off to work – that is if you have any work to set off to.

My commute consists of walking down the hall. Traffic is normally light at this time of day, allowing me to hanger right to my office. I listen to the traffic reports on the radio with bewilderment. Accident after accident; I wonder when the penny will drop for both motorists and police that we simply cannot have a country brought to a virtual standstill on major motorways every day between the hours of 6.30am and 10.00am.

Once I arrive at my destination I discover that for such a non-descript day, quite a lot is happening. Firstly, like many others, my username and password were apparently unrecognisable to the new Racing Post website yesterday. So I have not gained access as such, and am still unable to make much sense of its content even though the logging-on procedure has been temporarily dispensed with. I suspect this new site is a precursor to squeezing more money out of us – the long-suffering consumer. Facilities hitherto accessible are likely to be available at a ‘nominal charge’, meaning expenses will rise further.

The Racing Post may do well to rethink this suspected policy. For those of us that have the newspaper every day, our bill already nudges £60 a month. Frankly, I reckon that is enough for a newspaper. They should consider there are free sites out there: The Sporting Life and ATR websites may not be as comprehensive as the one operated by the Post, but they provide enough basic information to be going on with.

This next paragraph comes with a warning. Tidal Bay is one of those horses I rarely call correctly. I thought he was opposable in last year’s Arkle, before that in another event at Cheltenham and again first time out this season. But facts have to be faced, he is a pretty good racehorse. Doubts surround Kauto Star (I have always questioned his so-called supremacy); until Denman he had never met anything of any great merit and won a poor Cheltenham Gold Cup. Therefore, Tidal Bay looks like an ideal alternative King George winner to me. Now he is to run over two miles at Sandown on Saturday. He may well win, but it is close enough to Boxing Day, particularly if he has a hard race against Master Minded. But at a time when bets seemed to be rationed sparingly, Tidal Bay is on a short-list for Kempton at present.

It is a sign of the times that the Ascot executive are pleased and relieved that Betfair are to sponsor one of the major Flat races of the season in the King George VI & Queen Elizabeth II Stakes. At one time such a situation would have been unthinkable. I remember when the part sponsorship of the Royal Meeting was pooh-poohed for fear of an Ann Summers Ascot Stakes. Although Ann Summers would doubtless describe their business as uplifting, the raising of eyebrows is not, as I understand it, their intention. Now Ascot’s great showpiece, sponsorless since the De Beers pullout, is to be financed by the contentious betting firm, doubtless to the gnashing of immaculately maintained upper-class teeth. Epsom face a similar dilemma, having to rattle a begging bowl for next year’s Derby after the disconnection of the Vodafone alliance. Epsom appear confident of announcing a new sponsor before Christmas. I notice with interest that their managing director, Nick Blofeld, made this prediction. It is the surname that is a bother. I don’t suppose we face the Spectre Derby do we? Will Mr Blofeld welcome his new sponsor whilst stroking a white cat with the immortal greeting: ‘We have been expecting you …?’

And through all this, a new racecourse is being built in Wales. Not the most obvious venue one would have thought considering the state of the ground at Chepstow on many an occasion. And to anyone having to cross the border, the title of this racecourse is unpronounceable to all but Tom Jones and Charlotte Church: Ffos Las. It sounds like somewhere in Spain to me. Didn’t we have a lovely time the day we went to Ffos Las; it does not have the ring of Bangor does it?


AND ANOTHER THING…

What were Newcastle thinking …

IN CASE IT HAS ESCAPED the attention of those that manage racecourses, this is the winter. I should also state that the weather has taken an unseasonal turn for the worse. I am no clerk of the course. I do have a garden (well two actually – front and back – but I am not showing off it is not Highgrove) and I know when the ground has been so hardened by frost that it needs to thaw out before I lay hands on a spade. If it has rained for forty days and forty nights, I also know that my garden is waterlogged. I do not need to get up at 7.00am to ascertain this.

So what were Newcastle thinking when on Saturday, after degrees of minus seven overnight, they thought they could race? An inspection scheduled for 8.00am was put back to 9.00am, as if a warm current of air or a zephyr from the Gulfstream was likely to waft across Gosport Park in the extra hour, thus removing all the white stuff that seemingly clung to every blade of turf on the track. Even the two Channel Four presenters, shivering in the covered grandstand, could hardly contain their pessimism. It was obvious to an idiot that beyond the glass panelling of the grandstand, a terrain resembling Siberia offered no prospect of racing taking place. But we are back to that silly season again when racecourse executives believe in Father Christmas, waking to a frozen racetrack that will magically melt into a raceable one within three hours.

Unless they have erected a massive marquee under which a succession of gas burners have been pumping out heat all night, when temperatures dip to the extent they did at Newcastle in the early hours of Saturday, racing ain’t gonna happen. But year after year, we have this ridiculous situation of inspections (most of which are formalities anyway) being put back, until, come race-time the bleedin’ obvious dawns.

I had thought after the debacles of Huntingdon and Warwick, to name but two last season, that some effort would be made to ensure early decisions were reached. As we approach the shortest day of the year, racing starts earlier. Therefore, decisions ought to be made in good time for race goers; but more importantly for trainers, owners and jockeys. There is no point in horseboxes, each gulping copious amounts of diesel, or racing professionals, heading to various frozen destinations only to discover that racing is impossible halfway to the venue or on arrival.

I know it is disappointing for the brogue-wearing fraternity, but this is all part  of the craic that is National Hunt Racing. I have friends who are perfectly happy to arrive at a snowbound or frost-hardened venue so long as the bars are open, Guinness is served and racing shown from the surviving tracks. I cannot claim to understand this but then true jumping fans are a different breed to those of us that go racing in suits and ties and drink Pimms.

Newcastle’s extreme optimism was followed by Carlisle subjecting the racing public to a similar piece of incredulity when they suddenly decided their course was waterlogged on Sunday morning. I cannot claim to know too much about this particular episode as I has already mentally cancelled all racing on Sunday, and was long gone when the clerk of the course squelched his way to what I presume was an obvious decision. Racecourses do not waterlog in a matter of hours. Neither does the A339 to Newbury. What happens is that it starts to rain and it fails to stop. Gradually, a build up of water accrues and it becomes evident, as the rain is showing no sign of letting up, that those areas prone to flooding are filling with water. So if a racecourse looks like a rice field in the monsoon season, racing is not going to take place even if the rain stops immediately. As a layman, this seems elementary information.

I am not a doctor. Some of you may find this surprising considering I appear to have a remedy for most if not all things. But I don’t need to be one to know that if I bang my head on a brick wall, or hit myself on the foot with a hammer, it will hurt. The same logic applies to those that state I am not a groundsman.

So may I make a suggestion. To prevent this will-they-won’t-they-race scenario reoccurring over the coming months, why not adjust our present situation. Forget prolonged prevarication in the hope of one of nature’s miracles occurring before the opener. If a racecourse is not fit for racing by 8.30am and no independent weather forecast stating conditions will dramatically alter is available (and on the head of the forecaster be it), the meeting is automatically abandoned. No headless-chicken squawking, ‘It should be alright – fingers crossed.’ The racecourse is deemed unfit for purpose on that specific day and racing is off, cancelled, abandoned, finished.

In Monty Python terms the Norwegian Blue parrot with beautiful plumage is defunct; bereft of life; it has passed on: it is no more – it is dead!


And Another Thing

A tale of two christmases …

AT THIS TIME OF YEAR, everyone tells you what to do. It is not a good time to be a turkey or a woman as it seems both suffer in different ways.

I suspect a woman’s Christmas begins sometime in December, but according to Nigella Lawson it starts in earnest on Christmas Eve. For both species (turkey and woman), it is a season of sacrifice for what is in essence one meal. I have seen Nigella’s itinerary for Christmas Day, ready for implementation by millions of women, and her instructions resemble those the legendary Ryan Price used to hand out to jockeys. In fact, her approach is rather like a trainer dispensing orders in the parade ring prior to the Grand National.

There is a brief parade of utensils and condiments, an assembly of ingredients, culminating with the removal of the turkey from the fridge twenty-four hours in advance of the big day. That does not sound too demanding but one or two participants may start to get edgy. Then it is giblets in the pan, which will boil and simmer on a stove, steaming the kitchen windows and stinking out the house in the process. This lasts for two hours. Stuffing has to be prepared; cranberry sauce strained. You have to do something with panettone cheese and mix up Italian sausage to make stuffing. There is a warning for women that this is non-negotiable. This means no pulling-up, no refusing; no unseating – keep riding at all costs.

By now, the runners are approaching the tapes. The giblet water, destined for stock, needs attending to. And there is the equivalent of saddle, irons and girth-checking: there has to be sherry, carbonated water, champagne, the fridge organised and, remember, this is only Christmas Eve. Maybe the turkey, quietly defrosting to room temperature in the midst of madness has the better deal after all.

By Christmas Day, the Starter is fidgeting on his rostrum. Some of the runners are over-excited – too frisky, overawed in the knowledge they may have bitten off more than they (or worse case scenario, anyone else) can chew. Grim looks are exchanged. The shirt does not fit; she does not want a basque and stockings as a present – they were not bought for her benefit anyway! The cardigan is the wrong colour, the perfume not right – she knows it was on offer at Debenhams and has been for two months. Three copies of Mamma Mia is two too many.

Through such adversity, the woman of the house is ready for the off. The tapes twang upward, the starter shouts, there is no cheering but she embarks on the lonely journey. She is peeling and cutting potatoes by 10.00am in accordance with Nigella’s self-confessed brutal schedule. She has made that interminable crossing over the Melling Road and is approaching the first.

In the background there is the sound of people only on Wii, children pushing Chinese-made fire engines on a collision course with the skirting board. The phone rings; Dad has a Gordon’s; there is the pop of what sounds suspiciously like a champagne cork, leaving mother wondering whether he will last until early afternoon, as she also detects the clinking of bottles of red wine as they are transferred to the airing cupboard to warm. However, there is no time to concentrate on the opposition so early in the race. The priority right now is to get into a rhythm, maintain it and keep out of trouble. There is the cry from Mrs Simkin at No 42 as she hurtles to the ground at Beecher’s, but it is every woman for herself now. Survivors are preparing the turkey for its final journey, trimming sprouts and seeing to stuffing.

Dad slyly tops up his Gordon’s from the stands.

From hereon in, everything is set in irreversible motion. Potatoes have to be parboiled at 11.00 precisely. The turkey is oven-bound at 11.30. This relentless schedule continues. Ahead there is basting, more parboiling, dredging, draining, chopping, in fact anything ending in i-n-g is likely except the one thing dad might like. At mid-day, after completion of the first circuit, it is acceptable to have a glass of wine or a cup of tea. The table has to be laid, a Christmas pudding steamed, parsnips maple-roasted, sprouts boiled.  I cannot go on…

It is only 12.50 and goose fat needs heating for potatoes. The Chair looms; Dad has opened some Rioja. The kids are bored with I Pods, Nintendos, X Boxes and new Nokias, on which they have annoyed everyone in the house and all their friends.

The inferno continues in the kitchen. The pace increases. Those left standing are jostling for position. It is not merely a question of survival any longer. Chestnuts have to be warmed in butter; there are parcels of chipolatas to wrap, gravy to be made; people are ringing the doorbell. This is a nightmare! Yet the schedule demands everything must on the table by 2.30 for what Goddess Nigella terms as LUNCH!

Why do women have to embark on such dangerous activity alone? Men, be under no illusion, the making of the Christmas lunch or dinner – call it what you will – is a matter of utmost importance to any lady of the house. It is a massive undertaking and one for which they receive little thanks. It is stressful, it is lonely, leaping all those fences and avoiding so many pitfalls single-handed, but they do it despite the fact those eating what has been so precisely prepared are usually halfway out of their heads by serving time.

This is the one day when women claw back all credibility. Yes, they can multi-task; yes, they can organise; yes, they can stare an abyss of adversity in the face and succeed. From the Melling Road dash to that agonisingly long run-in with its cruel elbow that has changed the complexion of many a National, they negotiate the obstacles and storm to the line; exhausted, frazzled, half a stone lighter whilst everyone else is that amount heavier, they have lasted the course. Whilst those they have served lick greasy lips, splash down wine and pick up shredded turkey thighs, the female cook delicately forks a few choice cuts of white breast, drinks half a glass of wine and a full glass of water. The preparing of the Christmas dinner is the female equivalent of a man attempting to affix a pair of shelves that are straight. Only they can do it!

If the pair of shelves fail to line-up or are slanted, which they will be, a man will shrug it off. If anything, his failure is worth repeating in the pub or over subsequent meals. Yet should a woman produce a less than perfect Christmas meal Armageddon is nigh. It is not often I find myself siding with the female of the species but I sympathise in this instance. Wives, partners, girlfriends have not served an apprenticeship for this sort of cookathon. They are not Cunard-trained. Yet they get little if any help from the male members of the household, all of whom lounge around quaffing wine and waiting for the kitchen fairy to deliver the feast. If the woman is lucky she will get some assistance with the washing-up and put her feet up with a glass of something around five o’clock. No wonder they flick through travel brochures during December.

Men, on the other hand are marking time. Christmas for them is a diversion. If they like racing it is something of an intrusion. The 24th and 25th of December are the two days that come between Fontwell and Southwell on the 23rd, and Kempton Park on Boxing Day. During these two blank racing days, they have longer than usual to devote to studying the form. Whilst Mum is in the midst of bone-cracking kitchen action, Dad is drawing up plans to attack the enemy at Kempton Park.

And this is a two-day meeting, which allows them plenty of opportunity to pick their selections with care and, should things not go according to plan on the 26th, they get another chance the following day when the Coral Welsh National is also staged.

For men the two blank days therefore need treating with caution. The automatic assumption is that because there is no racing there is no excuse to sneak to the pub with one’s mates, or to lock oneself up in the spare room with the television. This means in exchange for the Grand National that is the Christmas dinner, men need to tread carefully. Under no circumstances, forget the Christmas card. The present of a new pair of wellie-boots for the garden may be crap, but God help you if the card is missing or the words inside wrong. It needs to express the right sentiment. You could present the woman in your life with a piece of Cartier jewellery but the card needs to contain certain words and phrases. It is not a greetings card, wishing her a Happy Christmas and a Prosperous New Year. This card has to extol love and, although written by some fresh-faced graduate in Delhi, it has to appear to have been composed specially. And never, ever, under peril of death, send a joke Christmas card: nothing to do with age or flatulence. That sort of thing is for Leroy down the pub.

Put the paper hat on; let the mother-in-law in without comment. Look at photos of grandchildren that all look the same, with enlarged heads that could belong to deep-sea groupers, and try not to confuse the sexes of the pictures on show. ‘Isn’t she lovely,’ is not so clever when its name is Henry.

It is most likely to be the drink that will let a man down. Start too early and you are doomed. You will sway in your seat at the dinner table, eat a meal you have no recollection of and snore loudly in a semi-conscious stupor once you leave the dining table and your bottom encounters a soft sofa or armchair. This is unavoidable if the intake of wine has exceeded a bottle, followed by an after dinner port or brandy. Treat alcohol like a horse that needs holding up – that is to say not holding up to your lips on a constant basis. No; restraint is the watchword.

The object for racing folk is to make it unscathed to Boxing Day. Avoid dredging up family grudges, arguing with the wife, killing the kids and you have survived.

As for the King George VI Chase, I suggest it is a race only to bet in if you have a strong opinion about Kauto Star. As far as I am concerned, he is the friend I never got to know. Is he one of the best chasers in recent times or has he got a soft centre and merely been lucky in that he has rarely been seriously tested? Certainly, the Gold Cup he won was sub-standard, but horses can only beat what opposes them. After Friday’s race, for which he is a backable 6/4 in places, he may be the equivalent of the last unopened present discovered under the tree. You could argue three miles against a hotchpotch of rivals of undetermined ability over such a trip presents an easy target; or you could conclude he faces a stronger field than he is used to. Stamina doubts aside, Voy Por Ustedes, and Imperial Commander have the potential to test Kauto Star. But there are doubts, as there are about the enigmatic Old Vic, another to add to the mix.

It is beginning to look a lot like Christmas, or a benefit for Kauto Star. The biggest danger would appear to be the likely principal player – Kauto Star. He will probably win, but we can surely do better over the festive period from a betting point of view.

And Another Thing

2009 AND ALL THAT…

With most punters denouncing 2008 as a bad year, hopes are high they will be hailing 2009 as a good one. It is that time of the year. Off with the old and on with the new…

Here goes – Spy’s Almanac for the coming year…

JANUARY: The Prophet – you know that man that dresses like a pantomime character from 1,001 Arabian Nights with a startled look on his face suggesting he has caught his wife in flagrante delicto with the leading man in his dressing room – realises that it is not a ball of the crystal variety he requires. Nicky Henderson has a blank first Saturday of the New Year causing his immediate placement on the trainers’ cold list. Binocular is floated to 10/3 for the Champion Hurdle, Punchestowns to 5/1 for the World Hurdle and Zaynar withdrawn from the Triumph Hurdle betting. Denman demonstrates his wellbeing by winning a point-to-point at Larkhill and is tips-on for the Gold Cup. The Dubai Carnival starts mid-month and, because of atrocious weather conditions in this country, Nicky Henderson sends a team to Nad Al Sheba, more to put work into them than anything else, resulting in a first-day treble. This prompts a major plunge on his main Cheltenham hopes, forcing Binocular to odds-on and the other two to regain their places at the head of the market for their respective races. Tony McCoy is spotted smiling in Lambourn. Nigel Twiston-Davies has a third at Sedgefield and declares there is nothing wrong with his horses.

FEBRUARY: The Racing Post website is finally comprehensible. Although nowhere near as easy to navigate as its forerunner, most services offered are now chargeable. Interest rates plummet to such an extent that those with a clean credit history are paid by banks to take out loans. This practise ceases with the discovery many recipients are using the money to invest in US dollars, as the city boys reckon before long it will be dollar for pound, cent for pence. Ironically, a dollar used to be slang for today’s equivalent of twenty-five pence sterling. The Government publishes a pamphlet entitled How To Avoid Going Bust. Tips include not borrowing more than individuals can afford, and sidestepping ventures that sound simple in theory, but those where costs are liable to escalate beyond control. Sound familiar? The Dickens-created Mr Micawber quote from David Copperfield opens the booklet: ‘Annual income twenty pounds, expenditure nineteen shillings and eleven pennies, result happiness: Annual income twenty pounds, expenditure twenty pounds sixpence, result misery.’ Wise words, but wasted on those not familiar with Dickens or under the age of sixty for whom pennies are an unknown quantity. This coincides with the pound reaching its lowest rate against the euro and dollar. Snow and ice threatens racing for the latter part of the month, leaving Cheltenham clues in limbo. Ladbrokes float the idea of manufacturing mechanical horses that can function on ice; but for now, they bring back Escalado in all their shops. The fact that the blue horse wins an uncommon amount of races in the last week of February results in a BHA inquiry.

MARCH: The weather relents in time for Cheltenham. Punters starved of racing go berserk on the first day. Binocular is backed down to 4/6 for the Champion Hurdle and wins pulling a cart. Ladbrokes, the only firm to offer evens in the morning, admit to taking a pasting and rumours are afoot that Gary Wiltshire, John McCririck and Barry Dennis are about to make a hostile bid for the betting arm of the company, to be renamed Fatblokes. Master Minded pulls off a similar trick to that of Binocular in the following day’s Champion Chase. The hostile bid gathers pace over several glasses of Guinness and a couple of bottles of champagne, in the case of McCririck, as the trio observe long Ladbrokes faces after racing. However, this is Cheltenham and rain of biblical proportions threatens the last two days of the meeting. Whilst we in this country consider the ground barely raceable, the Irish claim it is no worse than yielding, pleading for the meeting to go on; go on, go on – which it does. Punchestowns falls at the last when clear in the World Hurdle. Kauto Star ploughs through the fence in front of the stands on the first circuit of the Gold Cup, mistakenly assuming it is the last. This catches poor Ruby Walsh by surprise and he is unshipped. Exotic Dancer refuses at the top of the hill, leaving a horse with an unpronounceable German name to win at 100/1. Ladbrokes declare they have recovered losses with interest, resulting in the quashing of the hostile bid, forcing Messrs Wiltshire, McCririck and Dennis to resume gainful employment. Denman wins at Barbury Castle and is declared to be on course for a tilt at regaining his Gold Cup crown in 2010.

APRIL: Aidan O’Brien wins the Grand National with Galileo, whom he declares was getting bored with the same old routine at Coolmore and needed an outing to freshen him up. Paul Carberry rides. Such is Galileo’s superiority that he is half a furlong clear at the Chair, and is pulled up for a breather and to ensure he gets the trip before giving chase to the field for the second circuit. Despite a mistake at Valentines, he is back in front before the Melling Road. Godolphin responds by announcing they are to train the eight million dollar purchase, Pluvius, and the similarly expensive Jalil with next year’s Cheltenham Festival in mind. Frankie Dettori states he has other winter plans and suggests Kevin McEvoy might like to return from Australia for the assignment. McEvoy is not available for comment. The Craven meeting at Newmarket signals the return of Flat racing in earnest. The usual stables fire their big guns with the usual unexpected results. Horses that looked close to good things for major honours sink without trace, replaced by once-raced maidens who, unheard of a month ago, are promoted to single-figure prices for the upcoming Classics. This trend continues in the Classic Trial at Sandown on what will always be known as Whitbread Day. The race itself, which has changed hands several times since the brewery pullout, goes to Cloudy Bay.

MAY: The Aga Khan wins both Guineas, causing a shortfall in the national economy. To avoid embarrassment, Gordon Brown, buoyed up by watching a DVD of Casino Royale, suggests that the Aga Khan visits Downing Street to play a hand of poker – double or quits. Brown loses and ups the ante by throwing the keys to his car and those of Chequers on the table. He loses again. Only after intervention from Buckingham Palace are the crown jewels protected. Gordon Brown declares there is no problem and that he will merely borrow the necessary cash to pay our debts. As the card game was conducted on his turf, the cabinet is quick to point out to the Prime Minister that taking a leaf out of the cheating Goldfinger’s manner of card playing might have been preferable to using Casino Royale as his template. Gordon Brown responds by declaring he has a cunning plan. From now on, the cabinet will form a Saturday syndicate and, with funds that can rival the Findlays and Nevisons of the punting world, attempt the Tote Scoop Six. This coincides with the publication of Dave Nevison’s latest book entitled, A Right Rogering. It does not actually have anything to do with betting, concerning as it does the sex lives of the travelling Tote girls and the racecourse catering staff.

JUNE: The BBC attempts to fill our screens with their coverage of the two-day Derby meeting. Unfortunately, it is subject to constant interruptions from a little known show-jumping venue and a darts competition. We see a recording of the Oaks, won in a desperate finish by Leocorno from the short-priced favourite, Fantasia. Winning jockey Ryan Moore is noted smiling after the race for a second or two. The BBC manage to show the last two furlongs of the Derby, which is won by Aidan O’Brien’s sixth string, the unraced and unpronounceable EurystheusofTiryns. When asked how such a name came to be, Mrs Mangier, who is charged with the task of naming thoroughbreds for Ballydoyle, explained he was the king that set Hercules the twelve impossible labours. Pressed further, she reveals having been told the horse was not much and might win the Turkish St Leger one day. Michael Tabor avoids using the horse’s name in the post-race interview. The BBC has another stab at bringing racing to the nation two weeks later at Royal Ascot – that most English of all occasions, resplendent with fashion, popping champagne corks, the presence of royalty and, oh yes, a few horses. Such is the state of the nation’s finances that there is a renaming of many of the races. The Queen Anne Stakes opens the card but the inclusion of the Prince Faisal Stakes, the Emir Of Qatar Cup and the Sultan Of Saudi Arabia Palace Stakes leaves some racegoers confused. The Queen seems equally affected. Betting on the colour of her dress on the first day is suspended after a flood of cash for white is vindicated when she arrives resplendent in a dish-dash.

JULY: A prolonged dry spell and baking hot conditions mean rock hard ground, and doomists proclaiming Global Warming and the end of the world. For some it arrives immediately after the results of the first day at Newmarket’s July Meeting, where nothing under the price of 12/1 manages to oblige. Parts of Lingfield are used as an overflow for Gatwick airport. The King George VI and Queen Elizabeth II Stakes – now the Emirates Stakes – is run at Great Leighs as Ascot resembles a moonscape. Ladbrokes rethink the mechanical horse idea, stating that each horse could be fitted with a Yamaha motor of finite difference in strength, be named, trained and would resemble a normal horse in every way. The Government is concerned that these horses would not need feeding or working, making many stable staff redundant. The whole idea threatens to reduce the workforce and cause widespread unemployment. Such sentiment has conveniently overlooked the fact that unemployment is running at five million and rising. Ladbrokes agree to shelve the idea but are still keen on developing a prototype on the sly.

AUGUST: Betting offices join a general exodus of shops from the high street. No longer attracting a generation interested in betting on horses, they are used by those wishing to play fruit machines. In an obvious but clever ploy, in that those that play these machines are inherently missing a screw or two, comes the introduction of a new machine that only pays out 10% of the time. It is called The Belcher, as when it does pay out it appears to belch coins. Catch it right, you scoop a pot, but one that represents only half of what is fed into its grinning metallic mouth. The principle appears to match the Lottery and the Scoop Six. Some offices open late at night or early in the morning, when Australian racing is also beamed onto the screens to keep those occupied as they queue in front of The Belcher. Goodwood go ahead with their Glorious meeting despite the fact the ground is fast, verging on concrete. The fields are small, the prices of winners big. All bar the big three bookmakers are now operating abroad.

SEPTEMBER: Keiren Fallon returns to the saddle and promptly rides the winner of the St Leger for Michael Stoute – a trainer that waited until 2008 to break his duck in the last Classic, and now wins it back-to-back. Not everyone is pleased however, as Ryan Moore chooses the wrong one and scowls his way to the weighing room. It transpires that the trainer is not the only one to achieve consecutive success in the oldest Classic. The winner was not a three-year-old at all, but last year’s victor, Conduit, who becomes the only known four-year-old to win the St Leger. Of course, Conduit is disqualified, leaving his entourage perplexed. The BHA and members of the Metropolitan Police interview Keiren Fallon. After the driest summer on record since the last one, the rains arrive, inciting the doomists to change tack and assume Armageddon is nigh. With rain falling on top of baked turf, most racecourses are awash. So, despite the increased number of meetings for 2009, in fact, due to abandonments, the actual number proves to be less than in 2008. Great Leighs stages the Tote International from a washed-out Ascot during the day and an abandoned Chester card in the evening. Southwell is the venue for the Haydock Sprint.

OCTOBER: Gordon Brown calls a snap election and sensationally loses to the Liberal Democrats. They are elected because of radical proposals to cure the ills besieging this nation. The list is long and includes tackling the issues of the day: economy, transport, crime, health, education and world peace to name just six. When asked by Jeremy Paxman what he will tackle first, a bemused Nick Clegg mutters that it will take time. Challenged, he admits it is one thing to pontificate when out of power and quite another to implement policies when elected. From that moment it is clear he is in charge of a clueless government. No change there then! Racing trundles along as if little has changed since the turn of the century.

NOVEMBER: Highlight of the month is the Breeders’ Cup renewal at Santa Anita. European horses migrate to California, connections encouraged by the prospect of racing on the Pro-Ride surface that brought so much success in 2008. The reward is a haul of 40% of all prize-money on offer. This leaves Californian Governor, Arnold Schwarzenegger, somewhat crestfallen when faced with the task of presenting trophies to lanky over-dressed Englishmen in European suits wearing ties.

Cheltenham fails to dry out in time for the Paddy Power Gold Cup meeting. Ladbrokes produce six of their prototype mechanical horses that are permitted to slosh through the sodden ground in what is billed as a race. The event is named; some sort of form produced and six top jockeys booked to sit astride these metal constructions. Things get off to a fair start until they plod downhill and hit a patch of particularly soft ground. They become bogged-down at this point, sinking into the mud up to their ball bearings. Tony McCoy is the last jockey to stop riding, whilst Messrs Murphy, Brennan, Johnson, Geraghty and Thornton pile into the waiting Land Rovers. The crowd retires to the Centaur stand and proceeds to drink the bar dry. The Paddy Power Gold Cup is run through a computer, but reminiscent of the famous malfunctioning HAL from 2001: A Space Odyssey, it spews out a 66/1 winner, much to the disgust of those foolish enough to bet on the outcome. At a dried-out Newbury, Denman wins the Hennessy and is installed as favourite for the 2010 Cheltenham Gold Cup.

DECEMBER: Unseasonably warm weather continues, allowing racing to resume as normal. Meanwhile the all-weather tracks are in need of an overhaul as their surfaces have been so overused they need re-laying. Therefore, after the Boylesports Cheltenham meeting, it is Plumpton, Huntingdon, Ludlow, Bangor and Fontwell all the way to Boxing Day and Kempton Park. Binocular wins the Christmas Hurdle and Kauto Star his fourth King George. But it is too little too late as far as punters are concerned. They denounce 2009 as a bad year and hope to be hailing 2010 as a good one. It is that time of year. Off with the old and on with the new…


And Another Thing – Nov Archive

AND ANOTHER THING

Worried about Jack

I AM WORRIED ABOUT JACK. In case you do not know (and why should you), Jack is described by Sporting Index as their, Bet on the Move manager. I am not sure why ‘bet’ and ‘move’ are capitalised here and manager is not, but I assume Sporting Index know what they are doing. Or do they?

Leaving aside the possibility of a grammatical faux pas, Jack’s function, according to today’s advert that appears in the back page of the Post, is to prevent punters from becoming frustrated. Stopping people from becoming frustrated seems like a neat trick and if Jack can pull it off – why stop at punters. He sounds like the sort of guy we should be electing to high office.

But hang on a minute; all is not quite as it seems. Jack is your bookmaker at the end of a mobile phone. According to the advert he is there so that workers that are ‘slaving at their desks’ can bet on sports even if the firm they work for has blocked internet access. Firstly, if you are actually slaving at a desk, it is a reasonable assumption that you are engaged in important work. Let us say you could be a bank employee, in a call centre, working in insurance or advertising. Slaving at your desk implies other people are relying on your judgement. Under these circumstances, the reason access to betting sites is denied is because employers would rather that judgement was not impaired.

Sorry to say this folks, but betting, rather like any other heady activity, does tend to take your eye off the metaphorical ball. Knowing you have money riding on something in the 2.30 at Cheltenham might just mean your priorities shift before, during and after the result is known. For that reason, gamblers are not particularly popular employees. Anyone faced with the interests and hobbies section of an application form is well advised to steer clear of a reply that includes the words ‘gambling,’ or ‘horseracing’ in the same way they would avoid, ‘visiting my local massage parlour.’

Sporting Index are offering to kindly circumnavigate the gambling issue with good old Jack. You can keep in touch with Jack when you should be working by downloading Bet on the Move, which, according to these jolly good sports, will ‘take the worry out of getting on.’

Now look here Jack, most of us are not worried about getting on, what really worries us is what happens after we have got on. Just to cover themselves, Sporting Index then go on to explain that we ought to understand the risks with sports spread betting as it involves a higher level of risk and we can lose more than our original stake. There follows a reminder to bet responsibly.

My definition of betting responsibly is not to bet when I am supposed to be working. Do you know something Jack; I think I will take the chance of being frustrated by the situation of not being able to get on and not being able to bet on the move. I hope any surgeon that is likely to take a scalpel to my torso feels the same. I hope Gordon Brown and Barak Obama agree; I know the Emirates Foreign Minister, Sheikh Mohammed, most certainly does.

Commercial times may be hard just now, but this hardship extends to us all. We do not want people encouraging us to bet when we should be working, drink a bottle of wine a night, take substances that make us sniff excessively or smoke cigarettes. For most punters, it does matter more when there is money on it, but for all the wrong reasons.

So let us cut out all this sporty, good fun nonsense that surrounds betting. For most people, who do not know what they are doing, it is okay to have a bet on a day off to watch their selections on the television, but to encourage them to make it part of their daily ritual is not responsible. Backing losers, which most of us do more often than backing winners, is not fun. It can result in the kids wearing shoes that are half a size too small and not joining the rest of the school on the Christmas outing. Or it can mean the parents wish in the new year deep in debt and in the wee rather than only on it!

The prototype for Jack’s attention is a well-dressed guy sitting at a desk in a white shirt and wearing a silver tie. He looks as if he could use losing a few pounds in weight rather than in cash. I suspect Jack or Sporting Index care little about his welfare and more about how much money he might lose whilst he forgets about his obligation to the company he is employed to represent.

Give it a rest lads! Betting is tough. It is not a pursuit for people squeezing it in between meetings, deadlines and making decisions that will effect others. Drinking the odd glass of wine or having a few pints is fine and something most of us look forward to after a hard day’s work. But, like drinking, serious betting, portrayed as a bit of fun or an obligation to support such-and-such a team, is for the few and certainly does not mix well with the working day. Under those circumstances, fun it ain’t!

Try getting a proper job Jack and, for the guy texting through his selections when he should be justifying his wage, try losing a few of those excess pounds round your middle rather than in your wallet. The pounds in your pocket are likely to be much needed, and if they are not at present, they will be before long. This is going to be a difficult winter. This advert represents all that is worst about our industry.


And Another thing

Horse of the year

IT WON’T MAKE ANY difference to her of course but I am pleased she got it. I am talking about the acclamation of Zarkava as Horse of the Year in the Cartier awards.

Everyone who knows me suggests I should get out more: this confirms it. I mean it is just another day at the stables for Zarkava. Her box will be raked over, she will be fed and watered and may have a groom and brush-up, be led out, do a bit of light exercise and get patted a lot. Not a bad life for her but then she has earned it. Unbeaten in seven spins (let’s face it she was so good she made them look like bits of work), winner of five Group 1s, versatile over trip, a filly with character and a beautiful physical presence to match, she transformed taking the proverbial out of her opposition into an art form. Oh; and she won the Prix de L’Arc de Triomphe, which is not easy for a three-year-old filly.

She was unable to attend the ceremony in London but sent a sheepskin noseband to represent her instead. It is a pity she was unable to a give a speech but I suppose pressing matters at home took precedent. I am not sure what she would have said. I suspect her acceptance would have trumped Gwyneth Paltrow’s famous Oscar acceptance, but Zarkava is nowhere near as emotional as Gwyneth although some would say she has better legs and of course, there are four of them to gaze at as opposed to two! And you get to see them all, right from the ankle to the very top… Sorry, am I in danger of transcending into the realm of fantasy now?

So Zarkava is Horse of the Year and Filly of the Year. New Approach is Three-Year-Old Colt and best older horse is Duke Of Marmalade. Top Sprinter is Marchand D’Or, Stayer goes to Yeats. No controversy there!

Racing owes a debt to companies like Cartier for their involvement. May I also make a small endorsement on their behalf. Their after-shave and EDT is expensive but is different class to all but two other main brands. Of which Lynx is not one!

As well as recognition of equines, Cartier bestowed an Award of Merit upon Sheikh Mohammed. If ever such an accolade was deserved, surely Sheikh Mohammed is the most apt recipient. British and global racing would be so much poorer (not just financially) without him as his contribution to our sport is incalculable. Here’s to you Your Highness and to a Godolphin revival next season.

One member of the illustrious gathering at London’s Grosvenor House was the ebullient and often controversial ATR presenter Matt Chapman. He appears to be in a spot of bother with the racing channel at present and there is talk of him being temporararily suspended for comments over a ride given to an Irish horse, beaten something approaching a hundred lengths. Matt has always been outspoken but is a beacon of energy and a bubble of fun in between the solemn Michael Parkinson funeral adverts and that prat saying he is Confused Dot Com. Frankly, looking at him, I am not surprised. Should he be let out unattended, let alone encouraged to make a public announcement? And what does his demeanour say about the people his firm are attempting to snare into their business net? Confused Dot Com…is that a sensible name for an insurance company? And who is confused here; the company or prospective customer? Does not the very advertisement tend to send a message that says: Can’t be bothered to get the best deal? Just leave it to us and we will come up with some sort of quote? I don’t know. I am confused – no dot – no com. Hurry back Matt, the channel is not the same without you!

Lastly, we have an advertisement on page 22 in today’s Post. Boylesports are offering an On-Line Tipster Competition. To promote it there are the usual pictures of horses streaking past the winning line. No problem there, but take a look at the man in the red polo shirt. He looks like Warren Mitchell, or Alf Garnett. And I know he is meant to be cheering one of his selections home, but a closer look does suggest he may be celebrating by indulging in something a little less savoury.

Maybe it’s me. I have been consigned to serious articles just lately as I believe our lawyers are on holiday. Time to return to my room…


AND ANOTHER THING…

A Love Affair with Newmarket

NEWMARKET TENDS TO BE cold this time of year. There is a north-easterly wind that originates from Siberia, Norway, or maybe even Neptune, that tears across the flatlands of the fens and, with nothing to stop it, decides to make the town of Newmarket one of its first stops.

Newmarket is the original Western town, except it is east. It is Clint Eastwood country, a one-horse town, except that it houses several thousand. It should be a ghost town this time of year, except it is not. It seems to be thriving.

Nowadays, with all-weather racing at least four times a week, the show goes on. It may not be the show of high summer but it is a show. The talk in the pubs is of what might have been; it is too early to talk of what might be. You can tell which of the various stables the lads belong to as they wear baseball caps embossed with the names of racehorses. They wear them like badges gained in battle. There is King’s Best, Pivotal, Raven’s Pass, Oasis Dream, the list goes on. They haven’t got round to making a cap with the name of Fantasia yet, but the Cumani team walk around as if it is only a question of time. Assessment of her varies from, ‘She’ll win the Oaks,’ to ‘She’ll win the Guineas as well as the Oaks’ or, ‘She is next year’s Zarkava.’

I smile sagely. I have heard this sort of thing a few times before; talk of horses destined to sink in the Limekilns or never to make it beyond Racecourse Side, but it stills excites. Perhaps it is the display of enthusiasm undiminished by previous disappointments, perhaps the time of year when if you do not have something to keep you awake at night, there is little point working in Flat racing.  Michael Bell’s staff mutter about Sariska but no one is suggesting they will be wearing a hat bearing her name just yet.

That’s the way of it in a ten-thousand horse town. There is plenty to talk about even in November. I get the feeling some of it is being kept from a stranger that has just rode in and looks vaguely out of place in a suit and tie. There will be more to talk about in January, more still in February and then March, by which time there will be at least ten Derby winners housed in Newmarket. But as the Classic season approaches its height, the talk will become less and open secrets become more closed.

Last year it was all Twice Over – this year the talk is about fillies. There are the two mentioned, surprisingly little about Rainbow View, a little about the Michael Stoute-trained Leocorno – but you get the feeling that at this stage it is merely a question of throwing a hat in the ring against the Cumani boys just to shut them up. It doesn’t work though as the rhetoric from the Italian-run yard is not fuelled by Bank’s bitter. They seem to truly believe they have a vey good filly on their hands with Fantasia.

At one time that would be all you needed to know. Go to Newmarket, buy a few drinks, talk to a few jocks, a few ex-jocks, see how the land lies, and chances are you have the names of next year’s stars, in no particular order, in your back pocket. The trick is to remember them after drinking copious quantities of Adnams or Bank’s bitter, both of which have a taste that screams, ‘And another of those’ at you which your mouth transfers to the barman. Nights in Newmarket tend to be expensive because there is no shortage of places to roll on to after the drinking has finished, only to start again.

There is a good Indian, a famous Chinese, a nightclub. By the time you hit them, you are past caring about your shrinking wallet and anyway you have enough names to satisfy MI5 let alone pay for the night. The walk to the hotel in a raw wind almost sobers you up and you are so cold when you pick up your room key that it seems a brandy will thaw you out. It doesn’t of course, but you put it on your tab without thinking and stagger up the stairs before flaking out half-dressed.

I like Newmarket. I used to live there but on the wrong side of the tracks. Anywhere north of the racecourse is a bad idea unless you have arrived in a horse-drawn wagon and sell pots and pans for a living. You are venturing close to American air bases and some camp sites where odd things happen in the middle of the night. The west is better. The south is okay so long as you keep close to Newmarket central.

Stetchworth, where Frankie Dettori lives, Dullingham, or Burrough Green, home of Julian Wilson, and a village with a typical English cricket green – are all fine. The village of Ashley is nice, as is Wickhambrook although it is dangerously close to a meat-processing factory so it can get whiffy.

The county line comes as you approach Haverhill, a blot on any landscape and certainly one here. Men in Haverhill will still be wearing shorts in November. There are no baseball caps with the names of horses to be seen. Any caps you do see will likely have NYC written on them at best, something rude at worst. The upside is you are unlikely to understand the message. T-shirts are worn over heavily tattooed bodies up until Christmas. They are splodged with indecipherable lettering and pictures that are either great works of art or unspeakable sexual acts. In Haverhill, making that distinction is not always easy but it is usually safer to assume the latter. After Haverhill you are heading for deepest darkest Essex, where even to get your grass mowed means you have to pay cash as cheques are not trusted.

With the exception of the little havens mentioned, east of Newmarket is the most sought after. Tie your horse up to a saloon in Moulton and you will be fine, as you should be in parts of Kentford. But Newmarket takes some knowing; walk into the wrong pub and you could find yourself in a ditch an hour later minus your shoes and socks.

But to get back to my point about an excursion there once being a pilgrimage in search of all knowledge. The Holy Grail path now extends to Lambourn, Ballydoyle, Dubai and France, so knowing what horses are on the lips of townsfolk in this sprawly Suffolk town is only to be privy to a fifth of the overall picture.

Next year’s Flat season seems an age away. There is to be triumph and tragedy on the battlefield of Cheltenham, Aintree and Wetherby to name a few before then. The jumping boys are preparing to dig in. They are talking the talk and walking the walk. Jumping horses have their names abbreviated so that Kauto Star becomes, Kauto and Master Minded, I imagine, gets called Master, but I don’t really know. I know they used to call Cab On Target, merely ‘Cab.’

It’s a long time since I actually went jumping so I have no idea what they get up to. I imagine they get cold, have a drink, splash their shoes in the lavatory (which is why brogues are so popular) sing Irish songs and hail Ruby Walsh and Paul Nicholls a lot. I know the last time I went, Trabolgan – or should that be ‘Trab’ – won the Hennessy.

It appears, that judging by the title of his autobiography, Mick Fitgerald seems to think jump racing is better than sex. As I appear to be losing track of both, I shall have to take his word for it – which makes me think that by swerving this year’s Newbury spectacular, I may not be missing too much!


AND ANOTHER THING

Take a chance

HAVING STAYED UP late last night studying form (yes really), I have made my final decisions as far as today is concerned this morning to the accompaniment of the Scouting For Girls Cd. For those of you not on the cutting edge, they are the band that had hits with She’s So Lovely, It’s Not About You, Heartbeat and Elvis Ain’t Dead. These are unabashed pop songs with upbeat tempos and downbeat lyrics mainly about unrequited love. That is kind of the story of my life and I am not sure such a background is conducive to making the tricky bull or bear judgements required for a successful afternoon. Probably not but, after all the dissecting, all the consideration of what the form book says to you in those dark uninterrupted moments in the middle of the night, basically you have to act or sit on the fence.

Maybe it is because it is the last day at Newmarket; maybe I have been swept away by the cheerful trivia of the band and think I am a resurrected Elvis, or James Bond (another of their songs), causing me to throw caution to the winds.

It makes me think though: Does this game have to be so hard? When you consider it, backing a winner depends on many things failing into place. Your thought processes have to be correctly, even incorrectly tuned if that is what it takes, in order to make that all-important phone call or computer transaction.

I don’t know whether I am doing the right thing but I am backing Gold Sovereign and Virtual. And that’s it. Someone has to make a decision on occasions like this and I am leaving it to the band and me. After all, It’s Not About Me, my Heartbeat is steady, I Ain’t Dead and could have been James Bond if I had applied myself.

The difference between a successful and unsuccessful day often rests on an impulse decision. After all the careful and considered analysis, what eventually happens frequently comes down to a split second decision made somewhere in the recesses of the brain. Of course, you know when you really should bet because you are straining at the leash to do so, but you cannot always wait for the perfect wager, growing a beard in the process, sometimes you just have to take a chance.

So that is today sorted. A nice early finish means I can have a glass or two before dinner whatever happens then watch X Factor like a sad git – it is Saturday night after all – but no matter.

I owe it to the Flat season to see it out in style, one way or another. Yes, I know there is a meeting at Doncaster to come and that they will be circling around Kempton, Great Leighs, Lingfield and Wolverhampton throughout the winter but this is the last chance saloon as far as turf racing is concerned. If this weather persists, the chances are they will stage Doncaster in a shroud of mist, fog, or on the brink of a hurricane. Might as well go for broke now and get it over with.