BrancepethFan

Saturday, October 21, 2006

October Fest

It's a bit early to start pronouncing him as being back with a bang, and there remain concerns over the strength in depth of his string as a whole after the last season's succession of blows, but there is certainly no denying that Richard Guest has had a most bountiful ten days since the last post on this blog, gaining five wins from fifteen runners (5-13 over jumps). Having had ready use of Warren Marston in the last few weeks (only Richard Phillips has also booked him to any particular extent) has afforded a degree of continuity and stability to things, although Marston does have a few other irons in the fire (Pam Sly for one) which may divert him back away from Brancepeth more as the autumn progresses.

Nobody should be kidding themselves that European Dream's Wetherby juvenile hurdle win, which started the sequence, marks him out as Triumph Hurdle material, for all that he beat a large field with a few reasonable types behind him - to put it in context, his best Racing Post Rating over hurdles to date trails that of Katchit by all of 40 points. It was, however, a most pleasing performance, which seemed to allay fears regarding how well his stamina would hold when sent over a more exacting course than the Bangor of his debut and indicate his owners You Trotters - assorted Bolton Wanderers personnel - can expect a bit of fun with him in the coming weeks.

Handicaps and novices' handicaps in which 3yos get a stonking weight allowance are starting to appear more and more at this time of year, and I'd have no particular fear of him taking in one such contest.

As with European Dream, Red Scally's previous hurdles run had been around Bangor, and saw him break his duck at the seventh time of asking in a National Hunt-bred 2m1f novices' contest. The view at the time was to take a fairly dim view of the form, as he had only a neck to spare over a 75-rated rival at the death and a David Pipe odds-on shot ran well below expectations, and the 16-1 he went off at Carlisle last Sunday reflected both those facts and that of the very different test he faced - a stiff, soft ground 2m4f versus the sharp 2m1f of Bangor on top of the ground. He had this contest won at the last, however, ghosting to the front after a quiet ride round and finding more than adequate reserves to last out up the hill.

It seems he has needed to get to six years of age to start coming to hand, like so many of Norman Mason's other homebreds before him. He also seems to have picked up some of the aptitudes of both his dam and half-siblings. Mum Southend Scallywag bagged her share of hurdles in her time from Perth two-milers to Hexham contests over half a mile further, but she absolutely needed fast ground to prosper. Red Scally's half-brother, the ill-fated Red Imp, meanwhile, was effective granted a test such as 20f around a Leicester or a Newcastle, but was as reliant on very soft as his dam had been on fast. Red Scally's versatility might yet see him achieve a bit more than either.

He represented the first leg of a double for Richard Guest on the Carlisle card, with Why The Big Paws destroying allcomers by 46l en route to a second C&D victory (and fifth of her career in all) in the 3m handicap chase. Having stated that she wasn't finding significant improvement rising nine in the last Brancepethfan post when a well-held fourth at the same venue previously, I notice that that effort has been accorded an RPR of 125, a career-best by five points. Horses do indeed make liars out of saints!

It is worth reiterating the point of last time that she is clearly none the worse physically or mentally for her skull-rattling fall at Southwell in mid-summer; and on the basis of the confidence that success breeds - plus the likelihood that an inevitable big raise for this will take her back to a career-high mark - the plan to turn her out again under a penalty this coming week is eminently sensible. Why The Big Paws' entry at Taunton on Thursday is intriguing, as there hasn't been a Brancepeth runner there since Norman Mason sent Damza down around seven years ago, but her bulldozing of most fences at Musselburgh even in victory a couple of years ago should serve as reminder enough that she's not at all keen on sharp tracks; Wetherby the day after rates the better engagement to honour in my opinion.

Blushing Prince's surprise 25-1 success at Fakenham yesterday serves to remind us what two of Guest's greatest skills have always been, but which have arguably been lost sight of a little by the trainer in recent times (in the pursuit of sexier stock for more demanding owners):

- buying cheaply,
- bringing back problem animals from lengthy lay-offs in his own time and with positive results.

An 800gns aquisition from Linda Stubbs' yard two and a half years ago, Blushing Prince made one appearance in the Paul Beck colours in a Newcastle selling hurdle at the start of 2005 (43l seventh) before disappearing again completely until this July. There didn't look to have been enough promise in two Flat runs (one a seller) before yesterday to suggest this win, but they must have been enough to blow away the cobwebs, and as a winner of five Wolverhampton Flat races at up to 1m1f, a sharp left-hand track such as Fakenham was never going to hold any terrors if ready to do himself justice.

Given his history of problems and his rising nine you'd not expect him to attract too much attention if turning out quickly in and doing well in a 2m1f Sedgefield seller this Tuesday, although the penalty for that win would compel him to lunk 12st 2lbs around the Co. Durham course and there may have to be recourse to one of the 10lb claimers in the yard - for the record these currently appear to be Jonathan "Bruce" Moorman (not James as we've been calling him on here by mistake for a while) and John Willey.

College City hadn't won at all since landing three chases from five just over a year ago, and not over hurdles since taking a Newcastle seller in February 2003 (one of Guest's first handful of winners as a trainer), but his best timber effort for an eternity had been recorded when second in a Cartmel seller over 2m6f in August, and he appreciated this first step back up to the same trip since in recording a 1 1/2l success at Kelso this afternoon. This constitutes his first win beyond 2m1.5f and he simply can't live with them all over a short trip nowadays, even in the lowest grade, so there doesn't seem to be a terrific amount of point to him honouring his entry in the same Sedgefield race as Blushing Prince is entered in.

Although still only seven, College City is one of the very longest survivors in the Brancepeth string, having made his jumps debut for Norman Mason in December 2002, just a couple of weeks after Our Armageddon. They would be the only two Mason-era horses definitely still in training with Guest - Red Perk (debut April 2002) was sadly killed at Hexham in May whilst chasing a quickfire hat-trick of wins, Vulcan Lane has disappeared off the radar completely since his run in a Catterick seller in March, and the chances of good old Nosam ever making another competitive appearance can't be too high as the old boy approaches his 17th birthday.

College City represents continuity in a yard which has had less of that commodity than before in recent times - he is no star, but he has won five races for the yard now, is yet to sit out a season, and has been in the same ownership, that of Anna Kenny who does the catering at Brancepeth, from the moment the yard went public.

In addition to the winners, two other horses gave grounds for optimism in defeat as jumps action returned to Haydock for the first time this autumn on Thursday. Neven, rated just 69 and running from 7lb wrong, ran the far higher-rated Flake to 3l under youngster Richard Killoran in the 2m "hands and heels" contest, recording his best finish in 16 jumps starts in the process (and also beating two former Brancepeth inmates, Drumossie and Golden Feather. A third old boy to run on Thursday was Jamorin Dancer at Ludlow, but Steve Chadwick has not as yet been able to arrest a decline which has seen the gelding slump to a rating of 52 over fences - he pulled up on this occasion).

Neven's performance may encourage connections to give both horse and rider an extended run in the "hands and heels" series, but the point to consider should be that whilst the next heat at Taunton on Thursday is run over nearly half a mile further, Neven got significantly outpaced at a crucial stage at Haydock before running on again, and they might just not all come back to him the same way around the speedy Somerset circuit.

Formerly owners with Lucinda Russell, the White Horse Racing Club switched Neven to Guest during the summer. By that stage Jendali Lad, who realised just 550gns as an eight month-old foal in late 2001, had already run in two Perth bumpers for White Horse / Guest with little distinction. Given that that one's dam was winless beyond 7f, and never off a BHB rating of more than 40, it's hard to see Jendali Lad cutting much of a dash in the winter game.

Aside from Neven, Haydock elicited a welcome return to form from Shannon's Pride, who was always having to do too much to overhaul the winner of the 2m4f handicap chase but boxed on well enough up the long run-in to take second prize on his first start since late June. Third in last year's Grand Sefton Chase over the big Aintree fences, this proper galloping type's mark started to drop significantly late in the spring, as Guest kept sending him out around whichever of the less sharp tracks were still operative only to see him get outpaced time and again on ground a bit lively for him. He consequently entered Thursday's race off a mark 21lb lower than that off which he'd contested the 3m chase on the same card a year earlier, and the hope will have to be that running a rival rated 17lb superior to 3l doesn't see too much of that leniency rescinded upon reassessement.

Now, as previously, he remains a very good jumper, and if he could talk he'd probably have had a thing or two to say about the new portable fences at the Lancashire venue (possibly) compromising that greatest advantage he'll always have over some or most of his rivals.

So, there have been many positive indicators of the form and wellbeing of the Brancepeth string in the last week and a bit, but before anybody gets too carried away I feel duty bound to report that Aston's jumping has gone the wrong way again in the last few starts (he lasted just two fences at Fakenham on Friday), and the evidence of two recent outings is that Spirit Guide remains utterly hopeless under both codes.

Monday, October 09, 2006

Brancepethfan is active once more

Good morning all,

Not been much on here for the last year or so, or from me on sites such as Neigh or Jumpingforfun either, come to that, largely as I felt honour bound to offer all my intellectual copy to the Sportsman for as long as I was employed there.

As you may have heard by now, that particular publication sadly ceased trading rather suddenly last Thursday evening - certainly more suddenly than those of us at the coalface had anticipated, given the generally encouraging signs there had been regarding ongoing funding of the paper.

Doubtless more details of the demise, its causes, and how, if at all, it could have been avoided, will all come to light in the coming weeks and months. In the immediate term, though, I am once more a totally free agent, and shall endeavour to get some more material on here in the immediate term.

Mr Guest's last twelve months have been even more up and down (mostly down, alas) than my own, of course, and catching up with everything is going to take some time. Suffice it to say that he's not had an especially bountiful season to date, with eight winners and a strike-rate somewhere in the region of 5%. Further, the Paul Beck / Andrew Flintoff article in the Racing Post the other day confirmed that Sobers, the subject of that controversial Ayr hurdles run in March, has now been moved to Nick Gifford after Beck befriended him over games of cricket. There were no further indications as to where Pass Me By is currently residing, but the likelihood that Beck has withdrawn totally from Brancepeth now must be growing by the day.

No wins to report for the yard in the last week, and most of the performances wouldn't offer too much hope for the immediate future. However, Cash On Friday did put up a most encouraging show on his first run for a year and hurdles debut when a staying-on third in a 2m4.5f Hexham maiden on Saturday. His owners, messrs Dixon, Hunter and Roche, could certainly use a change of luck - Cash On Friday has stood no racing at all in his 18 months at Brancepeth, and another horse, On The Verge, managed just a circuit and a half of a 3m hurdle at Southwell in the summer on his first run since October 2004 - Roche had moved him from John Jenkins - before going wrong.

Cash on Friday isn't bred to be much, having cost 1,000gns as a yearling and being out of a selling hurdle winner, but he should find a small handicap at 2m4f or beyond on Saturday's evidence.

Why The Big Paws took the mother and father of falls when still disputing the lead two out in a Southwell chase in July, but thankfully doesn't appear to be bearing any lasting mental scars judged on her run at Carlisle on Friday. Having Strong Resolve taking her on for the lead in that 3m chase wouldn't have been ideal, as she is happiest bossing it on her own up front, and she was ultimately a well-beaten fourth, but she only really made one small mistake on the way round and seemed happy enough.

This then rated a fairly encouraging effort as much from a wellbeing point of view as a form one, but realistically one or two pounds may have to come off yet for her to go in again, as she's still 3lb above her highest winning mark and not really finding significant improvement rising nine.

It won't have been mentioned previously, but the mare has run in the colours of Andrew Bell since reappearing in early Spring, the involvement of the Blaydon Racers Partnership with her and other animals in the yard appearing to have finished.

Monday, April 03, 2006

Four months of fun

Been away from the blog for quite some time, owing to job and house moves, so a month-by-month synopsis of December through March will follow in this space shortly. Suffice it to say, it hasn't been the easiest of periods for the yard, with fitful form and the loss of most of Paul Beck's string, but at least Our Armageddon's Uttoxeter win and Larry McGrath finally riding out his claim have provided some highlights. MORE TO FOLLOW.

Shotgun on the cusp

Following the latest forfeit stage of the Grand National, Shotgun Willy is just the wrong side of the cut-off point for the maximum field, in position 42. Ross Comm and Spot Thedifference are set to carry the same weight as him, 10-5, but I think I'm right in saying he got drawn out before them.

With Ground Ball ultimately more likely to run over the Mildmay course than the big fences, especially is there is more rain, this leaves Richard Guest effectively looking for just one more defector in the next few days to get his charge a run.

Shannon's Pride in the Topham is his only intended runner during the first two days of the meeting, Our Armageddon presumably not sufficiently over his pre-Cheltenham setback as this has been his ultimate target for most of the season.

Wednesday, November 23, 2005

Carpe Momentum - where the result really didn't matter

18th out of 23 having shown very little on the way round is never usually much of a cause of relief, or celebration, even. However, the fact that CARPE MOMENTUM was even able to make a racecourse appearance has seemed very unlikely on at least two occasions in an already eventful past.

Previously known as Cast The Net and trained by Simon Magnier for one Richard Aylward, he appeared in the 2002 Derby entries as far as the second - £9,000 - entry stage, his owner adamant that his racecourse debut should be in the Epsom classic. That ambition was crushed when, three weeks before the race itself, the animal was gelded by mistake at Magnier's yard. Aylward was spared the compulsion of having to pay the second entry stage fee by the BHB, but became a disqualified person some time later for not having paid the initial entry fee of £9,000 either.

Cast The Net had come into the ownership of Seymour Reed by the spring of 2004, and, having been remaned Carpe Momentum and sent to Richard Guest, was entered in a Market Rasen bumper on May 9th. It was given that the horse would need a sound surface, and the projected good to firm seemed alright. However, the Lincolnshire track was lashed by heavy rain during the meeting, and another of Guest's inmates, the similarly fast ground-loving BOLTON BARRIE, was unable to cope with the increasingly skiddy conditions in the classified chase on the card, crashing through numerous fences on the way to a remote last place finish. Presumably pulled about physically by the experience, he has not raced for the yard since. Guest's response to the deteriorating conditions was to withdraw Carpe Momentum from the bumper and to save him for another day - a day which didn't come for another eighteen months.

Carpe Momentum appeared in no further declarations for the yard after the Rasen episode, and nothing more was heard until articles in both the News of the World and Racing Post in April of this year. Aylward had decided to sue Guest and Reed for unlawful re-sale and ownership of Carpe Momentum, despite his being banned effectively removing his right to the title (in all senses of the word) to the horse. Reed, it is claimed, had acquired the rights to the horse by repaying all outstanding training fee monies still owed to Simon Magnier by Aylward, and had sent the horse to Guest once everything - as far as these parties were concerned - had been cleared up money-wise.

The non-appearance of the horse even in declarations since May 2004 was, according to Guest, due to him not being ready to race after that, so Reed had taken him home to recuperate. Aylward had put in an allegation of neglect against Reed and Guest subsequently, Carpe Momentum having allegedly been found in a Northumberland field in an advanced state of neglect, but the RSPCA had quoshed that claim in their own invesitgations of February 2005.

The latest postings in the Racing Post, dated April 2nd 2005, stated that Aylward would have to answer a request for further information from Guest and Reed's lawyers by April 29th, with a court hearing to follow on July 18th - 19th. Whilst I have found no details of this to date, it looks as if, as expected, the court found in favour of Guest and Reed, as the horse is now back in training without Aylward's name anywhere near it. Reed's name is also absent, so I wonder if he had had enough of the whole affair whatever the ultimate outcome. Guest is, for the time being at least, both trainer and owner.

More prosaic runs from the Brancepeth string resulted in fourth places for the returning SCONCED over 2m 5f at Sedgefield on Tuesday, and for ASSUMETHEPOSITION back over hurdles in a conditionals' race at Wetherby today.

Sunday, November 20, 2005

Smashing Shannon's

SHANNON'S PRIDE proved himself further to be an honest, if one-paced, galloper of some merit when clinching third place in the Grand Sefton Chase over the fearsome Grand National course at Aintree, thereby beating the best finish Richard Guest has managed over the "big 'uns" as a trainer - MR BOSSMAN got fourth place in the Topham in 2003. Shannon's was kept close to the leaders but fairly wide throughout, Larry McGrath making doubly sure the horse encountered as little trouble in running as possible, and was rewarded with a very clean round of jumping. Guest had been quick to point out the horse's jumping prowess in the Post earlier this morning, and there was indeed no semblance of an error the whole way round.

A return visit for the Topham must clearly rank as a major target now, although it'll need a soggy Aintree for him to take his chance.

The soft going at Aintree would have counted against TIPSY MOUSE in the same race, ditto the shortish trip of 2m 6f, but for all that the horse didn't seem to enjoy the challenge one iota, not taking a cut at any of his fences and sulking round in a tailed-off 13th position. His lack of obvious progress up the weights so far, plus his apparent dislike for the Aintree fences, to my mind have put paid to any aspirations of a Grand National run for him, and I don't think having run in over the more suitable 3m 3f of the Becher Chase would have made any difference in his present form. Back to the drawing board with this one now....

Saturday, November 19, 2005

Amazing Admiral!

ADMIRAL is a serious racehorse. He has not had his prefered good ground in either of his hurdles races so far this season, yet he defied a 14lb rise in the weights to grind out a victory in the Free Hurdle at Chepstow, and today at Haydock shrugged off another 11lb hike in a hugely gutsy performance in the 4yo Nerak Hurdle. He'd done all the donkey work up to the last flight, was headed by Nicky Richards' equally promising Faasel on the long run-in, but would not be denied in a desperate finish to get the verdict by a short head.

Richard Guest's eulogising that the horse could become a legend is clearly premature, but the facts are that the horse is now the highest-rated hurdler he's ever trained - SPECTROMETER was also mid-140s, but Admiral's victory here will result in another hike to put some distance between him and that one - and his winnings over hurdles for Guest and Willie Mackay have swollen by another £17,000 to around £54,000, all attained in this calendar year. A swift reappearance in the Fighting Fifth Hurdle at Newcastle is now likely.

This also represented, of course, the first Brancepeth victory for over three weeks, but none of the other three runners at Haydock could add to that. St PIRRAN offered grounds for optimism in the opening Flat versus jump jockeys handicap hurdle, being sent to win his race by Flat's Dean McKeown turning for home but tiring into fifth on the unsuitably soft ground after the last. He finished well clear of the remainder, and should be getting close to the sort of fitness level from which he could start worrying rivals again in good-ground two mile chases.

Speaking of chases over the minimum trip, JERICHO III had his fourth run in quick order and for the second time this year didn't prove especially keen on the Lancashire track - odd, really, for a generally fearless jumper. He led until the seventh before deciding to give Patrick Merrigan some bother, cocking his jaw and proving the young rider with no help at all thereafter. He came home last of eight, and is starting to look a bit ungenuine again as well as high in the weights.

Finally, STORMY BAY made his racecourse debut in the concluding bumper for Bard Entertainments and Richard "Desert Orchid" Burridge, with JP Flavin sporting new Bard & Burridge colours of red and blue rather than the famous Dessie dark blue and grey. The horse looks a dour stayer, having got left behind in the early exchanges before staying on in the last half mile for a 12l ninth place. 2m 4f NH novices' hurdles are going to see him in a better light.

Thursday, November 17, 2005

Re-run of last year

For the second year running, a fairly successful October for Richard Guest has been followed by weeks without a win stretching well into November. Doubtlessly some of this will be attributable to a lot of the real "winter" horses coming back in for their first or second runs of the season, and still needing it; but just three second places from 32 runs in the last 12 days does indicate some animals are not running up to their best at present, and at a time where some of those stables below Guest in the trainer's table are starting to take great lumps out of the deficit, this is not helpful.

Also of interest is that Henry Oliver has not ridden for Guest since falling off TIPSY MOUSE at Kelso a week last Saturday. I am not aware of him being injured of late, and whilst he did pick up a whip ban recently, that was just for one day (11/11). Ian Williams and Tracey Barfoot-Saunt both gave him rides last weekend, so I wonder if something has happened that hasn't been made public as yet. If this is the case, once again, this is not going to aid the yard's cause as the season cranks up another few notches.


SEDGEFIELD, Tuesday 8/11/05
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Three of the four runners sent out here offered at least some promise. TANMEYA consented to settle much better than on her debut at Towcester and was actually on the tails of the leaders approaching two out in the novices' hurdle before tiredness crept in. Her eventual fifth place offers enough encouragement that a small handicap could be within her compass.

NORTH LANDING was having his first run since winning at Bangor last August in the 2m 5.5f non-handicap selling hurdle. His hurdling technique was rather tardy early on, but he stayed on better over this new trip and softer than ideal trip than may have been expected (albeit at the one pace), and he should be spot on for his next assignment after this. There is no reason why he cannot continue to ply his trade at this sort of trip rather than 2m from hereon in.

TEME VALLEY was also experiencing a step up to 2m 5.5f in the Betfred Poker handicap hurdle series qualifier and was ridden to stay the trip. Paul O'Neill threw him into the race four out but the horse has to be hard ridden to keep up two flights later and simply plugged on at the one pace into a still respectable enough fourth place. Easier assignments await at this, his favourite track, in the near future.

TOPWELL was the one animal not to show much, his 55l seventh place of 11 in the closing bumper comfortably his worst performance to date. A switch to obstacles now would seem more prudent than hoping his fourth and final bumper run will reverse his fortunes.


LUDLOW, Thursday 10/11/05
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A disappointing non-runner here was DURBA, whose form in novices' / maiden hurdles in mid to late summer had been absolutely diabolical, but who had attracted a lot of paper support running off a commensurately meagre rating of 74 - and the application of lots of headgear - for his handicap debut.

READY TO RUMBLE and TIPSY MOUSE DID run, however, with Paul O'Neill in the plate for both. The former failed to respond to first-time blinkers and being kept in mid-division, and sulked into pulling up three out in the novices' handicap chase. Tipsy Mouse, yet again running over an inadequate trip on a shapr track (3 miles here), was predictably run out of things late on in finishing fourth in the handicap chase. Richard Guest said in the [i]Racing Post[/i] that morning that he had found the key to the horse now, but his hands were being forced by the absence of good ground on suitably testing tracks. There may be the usual poetic licence of a canny trainer in there somewhere, but given the deluges we've had in recent weeks - such that even Cheltenham is running soft, for heaven's sake - he's probably quite right. The removal of quick-draining Doncaster from the jumps calendar due to refurbishment has removed the most obvious likely source of fast winter ground for galloping types this winter, so he could be a bit hard to place if things stay soggy.


NEWCASTLE, Friday 11/11/05
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Panto time came early here as APADI - having his first run for the Fly By Night Syndicate after Anne Kenny let him go - tried to refuse to race in the closing handicap chase, gifted his rivals 25l, showed no interest in the job once he did get going, and pulled up after just three obstacles.

It capped a day on which three out of four Richard Guest runners showed little or nothing. SHEM DYLAN was once again walloped in the 2m 4f novices' hurdle, J P Flavin's 10lb allowance - reducing the horse's burden to 10-1 - aiding the cause not one iota as he trailed in 112l last of 12 finishers. He'll get some patience from Guest and Paul Beck, being another New Zealand horse likely not to have acclimatised fully yet, but he is light years away from winning anything on all UK form to date.

TIGER TALK was stepped back up out of selling company in the 2m 4f handicap hurdle but failed to justify the move, beating home only one rival home in 15th position. He also proved unusually difficult for "Bruce" Moorman to settle on this occasion - had he and Apadi been on the Es and Whizz the night before, one wonders?

RED PERK was the highpoint of an unsatisfactory day, running a sound race under Kenny Johnson to finish 1.25l second to a Ferdy Murphy horse already due to go 10lb up the handicap the following day. He remains in good heart and ought to find another small event before too long, as long as the ground does not tend to extremes.


WETHERBY, Saturday 12/11/05
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Two horses possibly being turned out again a bit too soon posted below-par performances here. The maiden hurdle TANMEYA contested had no strength in depth about it, but she still went off at 66/1 and trailed in tenth, although in fairness she did bring herself almost to a stop when getting four out all wrong, scuppering her forward charge entirely. ASSUMETHEPOSITION only faced four rivals in the 2m 4.5f novices' handicap chase on what looked like perfect ground for him, but he emptied five out and only got fourth place prizemoney when one rival tipped up late on. He's yet to replicate his best hurdles form over fences.


UTTOXETER, Saturday 12/11/05
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Two runners, two second places, and an autumn's best from JERICHO III, although he still gave the impression of being a few pounds too high judged on how easily Dangerousdanmagru - trained, ironically, by Norman Mason's ex-assistant (and therefore Guests's predecessor at Brancepeth) Alan Jones - picked him off in the home straight. Former Brancepeth favourite NEPHITE (seven times a winner for Mason / Guest and twice more for Venetia Williams in the summer) trailed in back in fourth.

SOBERS was one of only two fancied in the bumper, and he duly contested the finish with the other, a Richard Phillips mares' bumper winner. Paul O'Neill gave him first run on the leaders 3f out, but was unable to quicken when the mare came to challenge in the final furlong and was 1.5l adrift at the end. Having run here and at Aintree previously, a stiffer test may be necessary to pinch one of these.


LEICESTER, Monday 14/11/05
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The first jumps meeting of the season at the East Midlands track produced the usual differences in going, with the hurdles course - also the Flat course - riding soft and the chase course good to firm. On that basis it was questionable why MAGICO was allowed to contest the handicap chase; the course will have been stiff enough, but he was outrun by horses much happier on the fast ground than him in finishing fifth.

More disappointing was GHADAMES in the handicap hurdle. Not far off two stone better off over hurdles than fences, and with a proven record of going fresh, he was entitled to do much better than a 21l sixth place on his first run for six months. Chances are his next run over hurdles will tell us more about whether he is, purely and simply, destined to remain a better chaser than hurdler. Easier to assess ni the immediate term is ROAN RAIDER, who remains in rotten form both on the Flat and over hurdles. His eighth place finish in the seller represented a closer finish than at Kelso last time, but he still looks impossible to win with.


FAKENHAM, Tuesday 15/11/05
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Granted her favourite good ground and a lightning fast 2 miles, CERESFIELD would have picked up and carried the opposition in the Class F handicap chase in her pomp, but she trailed in a sad last of nine finishers this time round. The first-time visor which replaced the cheekpieces did not suit, not did the hold-up tactics which connections have persisted with for some time now. Why is this? Why are they not content to let her try to win from the front, which worked so very well on numerous occasions in the past?

Still on the subject of inappropriate tasks, MOSCOW LEADER - back from over a year off and now representing Gryffindor (www.racingtours.co.uk) - has been pencilled in as an Eider horse this season given his apparent staying capabilities and love of soft ground. That being the case, being sent around 2m 5f of Fakenham on good ground could only have ever counted as a pipe-opener (or just daft), and he was never closer than his eventual sixth here. Conversely DARGAVILLE, another having his first run after a lay-off, would have appreciated things a bit better than the gluepot he encountered at Cartmel last time out, but he has not impressed with his consistency since joining Richard Guest and he petered out tamely into sixth here as well. Sharp tracks and fast ground have brought about his best performances (Musselburgh here we come, then), but he has also disappointed on them and he does not look one to trust fully.


HEXHAM, Wednesday 16/11/05
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This was a well above-average card for the track, with the centrepiece, the inaugural Northumberland National, given a Class C rating and a top prize of over £13k. Richard Guest sent the in-form PASS ME BY into battle in this four mile slog, and, having run close to the pace for the greater part, found himself in the lead from 3 out to the last. Here, however, his stamina gave out, and he was demoted to fifth on the run-in.

This was certainly a punt worth taking, with the horse having finished a staying on third over the even more severe Carlisle track in heavy going over 3m 2f last time out, and connections still got £500 for their pains, but on this evidence he needs just a shade shorter than this trip - some of the 3m 6f chases at Newcastle would probably suit.

This was not the only encouraging run of another blank day, as debutant MR IRONMAN showed up well for a long way on his racecourse debut in the concluding bumper before weakening into fourth in the last couple of furlongs. He looks nothing special on breeding, being out of a poor 2m 4f novices' hurdler, and I think that, like TOPWELL, he will struggle to feature in better bumpers away from Hexham, but connections will doubtless find him low-grae hurdles in the fullness of time.

One of last year's lesser lights, PAPAWALDO, made his seasonal bow in the National Hunt novices' hurdle and once again showed nothing, trailing in last of ten finishers. He has now registered four duck-eggs from the same number of races, beating only penny numbers of horses in so doing, and whilst he now qualifies for a handicap mark, the early signs are that this campaign is going to be as unfulfilling for connections as last.

ISELLIDO, another of the NH-bred contingent, is being kept over hurdles for the time being, it would appear, although another comprehensive defeat here suggests she is not able to defy a current mark 9lb above her last winning one. In fairness she did seem to respond to the first-time eyeshield here, and was still leading until 3 out, but the chasing pack were able to overwhelm her pretty easily. I presume she is going to be aimed at mares' novices' chase series qualifiers at some stage soon, if the ground remains swampy enough, but she wouldn't be taking on that assignment in the greatest of heart on this evidence.


MARKET RASEN, Thursday 17/11/05
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ASTRONAUT looks like a horse who will not stand much racing, so opportunities have to be grasped whenever he does step onto the racetrack. The 2m 6f selling handicap hurdle did not appear to be one such opportunity, as for all that the contest was not a great one, the ground was also much stickier than ideal. It became even less of an opportunity at the fifth flight, when the horse gave Paul O'Neill no chance of staying in the plate.

Better luck for O'Neill later in the afternoon, as he got a clear round in aboard BERGERAC in a fair return from nearly six months off in the 2m 4f handicap chase. It was basically a clear round and an altogether more convincing display than on his chasing debut in a beginners' race at Cartmel, but his hurdling mark of 107 was awarded primarily for winning a poor maiden race at the same track only five days earlier, and it looks a tad high for him to be running off over fences at present.

Claire Metcalfe has been in blinding form in the saddle aboard ex-Guest inmate LONGSTONE LASS, now happily ensconced at Tracey Waggott's yard with Metcalfe herself the owner. The lady riders' handicap hurdle had previously been run as an amateurs' novices' event, and Metcalfe had come second in it two years ago when giving a UK racecourse debut to some minor creature called OUR ARMAGEDDON. She occupied the same berth here in the race's new guise, giving UPSWING a nice waiting ride to propel the horse into second place two from home, only for him not to pick up as necessary from that point on. Mind, the 2.5l beating from a horse and rider combination - Parisienne Gale and Caroline Hurley - successful together several times over hurdles and in point-to-points represented a sound effort, and it is only to be hoped that the handicapper does not take the result too literally, as there was 11lb between them on the book before the tapes went up.