REVIEW THURLOW HORSEHEATH SATURDAY 1 MARCH 2003 by Richard Hall |
A Saturday in early March is a difficult time to attract a
large crowd. The weather has not yet turned for the better, so the posing
picnic brigade stay away, and the fan who is not totally committed (i.e.
one who may have a life outside the sport) has already had eight meetings
in as many weekends and his appetite is not quite what it was. This leaves
just a dependable hard core of regulars and the hunt supporters for the
organisers to build on. One way of offering an extra inducement would have been to
put on extra races, or to divide, in advance, those with large entries.
The Maiden, for example, had thirty entered, and, with a safety factor of
eighteen, looked ripe for such an approach. The organisers however chose
not to, no doubt unable or unwilling to find an additional sponsor at such
short notice. As a result, a large percentage of owners, obviously
reluctant to have their inexperienced charges facing the hustle and bustle
of what they believed would be a large field at such an early stage in
their careers, chose to take them elsewhere. At this time of year the
season is in full swing all around the country and, unlike in January and
early February, there are plenty of other options within easy driving
distance of East Anglia. In some instances these owners may well have
taken their Open and Intermediate runners with them, rather than go to the
expense of sending two horseboxes to two different parts of the country. The consequence was that only nine bothered to declare and, I
feel, everyone lost out. If the race had been divided in advance we would
surely have had double that number interested in competing? This would
have also guaranteed a seventh race for the paying public and may have
persuaded a few more to leave the comfort of their armchairs and Channel
Four racing. As it was there were many empty paces in both the inner and
outer car parks. The race itself threw up an interesting recruit in Cantarinho,
a five year old Aldebrook gelding making his point debut for the Kemp
stable. He was very green in the paddock, and looked nervous and a bit
unruly. The stable obviously thought a bit of him for, as soon as his lad
had him settled and walking, he handed an acquaintance a wad of notes with
the request to get “twenty five each way”. His price fell from 8’s
to 6’s but he was only fourth in the betting. Fine And Dandy (a faller
two out when challenging at High Easter) headed the market at 5/4, with
Gunner Be True (with a string of placings to his credit) at 7/2 and Table
For Four (an interesting recruit from Charlie Mann’s stable) available
at 5/1. As with most of the Kemp runners, Cantarinho was asked to make the
running. He did it gamely and with three fences to go only Fine and Dandy,
who had been patiently ridden by James Owen, presented any danger. On the
run in, Cantarinho came away again. Whilst Fine and Dandy was being hard
ridden, David Kemp did not even have to raise his whip hand. The horse
obviously enjoyed the experience and kept going well after the winning
post. David Kemp complained as he was being led in that he thought he
would never manage to pull him up! The victory was not spectacular, and the bare form may not
amount to much, but the horse willingly did all that was asked of him and
will certainly come on leaps and bounds for the experience. He is, I would
suggest, one to follow. Another that may similarly be better next time is
Ruth Hayter’s selected representative, Present Moment, also a five year
old. He ran well for a long while under typically gentle handling from
Christian Ward Thomas, and, like Brookfield Bass last week at Marks Tey,
will undoubtedly have picked up a positive attitude to racing as a result. David Kemp repeated the pillar to post tactics later in the
afternoon on many people’s bet of the day, Bard of Drumcoo in the
Restricted. Today’s opposition was significantly weaker than that met in
his earlier outings at Ampton and High Easter, and he was allowed to
dictate throughout without being exposed to the mid race injection of pace
that had caught him out before. Call The Tune ran well in second and
Westfield John confirmed that he is probably a better horse on a sharper
course when fading from two out to finish third. Carlton Brae, in fourth,
was given a tender ride by Alexander Merriam who was riding her for the
first time. Perhaps the most surprising thing about the race was the 2/1
(in places) available about the winner. This was probably due to the
“Stuart Morris factor”. He was riding Ruth Hayter’s Marmalade
Mountain (a lucky second to Native Status in a Hunt Members last time) and
the bookies were reluctant to go bigger than 5/2. Stuart Morris had earlier kept up his excellent record in
raids on East Anglia when taking the Mens Open on Gallant Glen at 6/1. The
race was run at a good pace with Endeavour (evens) and Minino (9/2) taking
each other on from the word go. Morris moved easily behind and joined them
in a line of three as they took the downhill run for the final time. As
they came to the third last it was Minino who gave way first, and Gallant
Glen who swept past both he and Endeavour to gain what was looking to be
an easy victory. A few yards after hitting the front however, he seemed
reluctant to race and Endeavour regained ground between fences. At the
last they were upsides and my money was on the gallant Endeavour to sprint
clear on the run in. George Cooper’s mount, however, in his truly
enigmatic style, had other ideas. He failed to negotiate the fence and
fell; not for the first time snatching defeat from the jaws of certain
victory! This left Gallant Glen to be pushed out and kidded home. Royal
Action, who had been tapped for toe early on the second circuit, ran on
resolutely to collar Minino for second. This was still further evidence of
his improvement this season and he is a horse that would probably stay
forever. Perhaps a four mile Hunter Chase could be within his grasp? The
veteran Corston Joker showed his first glimmer of form for the year, and
he may improve further when the going firms up. Before racing I had walked the course and stopped to chat to
a mother and daughter who were entrenched by the second downhill fence
with a tripod, like an angler’s rod rest, pointing at the fence and the
dramatic skyline above it. “I come here every year,” said the mother.
“It’s the only meeting I do go to. I can take between five and ten
shots every time they jump it. I snapped about a hundred altogether last
year. Got a great one of George Cooper being thrown in the air.” She must have been pleased with the opportunities this
year’s racing gave her; there were several close shaves and a fair
number of fallers. Two of the most spectacular were on the first circuit
of the Restricted Race when Rachael Barrow and Tony Humphrey parted
company with Castle Road and Holmby Copse respectively. This left Society
Lad and New Ross to cut out the running between them and hopefully expose
any lack of fitness in the first and second favourites (Millenium Way and
Sense of Adventure) who were both making their seasonal debuts. New
Ross’ effort faded five from home but Society Lad, ridden by owner Annie
Bowles, still led the field to the third last. Earlymorningcall was being
hard ridden alongsides, but it soon became apparent that both the market
leaders were merely being waited with. They soon reeled in Society Lad
and, at the last, they had the race between them. It was Sense of
Adventure under Nibby Bloom, who had the greater acceleration to pull a
length clear on the run in leaving James Owen on the Turner horse having
to content himself with yet another placing! Although a ten year old, this was only Sense of Adventure’s
fifth race and his third victory. He had been off for all of 2002, and his
last run in 2001 had been when a good third to Fair Exchange at this
corresponding meeting. He is clearly a horse that is difficult to keep
right but, when he does make it to the racecourse, he should not be
dismissed lightly. Society Lad ran his best race for a long while for his
sporting rider and his trainer John Ibbott, neither of whom can be
described as being amongst the sport’s big boys. Their enthusiasm should
not go unrewarded however, and they can surely take the Members race at
the Waveney Harriers meeting at Higham on March 23rd? The Ladies race cut up badly again, this time producing just
four runners. The Turners have had a runner in all such events this year,
and I hate to think what dire fields we would be left with if they should
ever decide to leave the arena. This time their Spring Gale recorded a
facile victory, coming with a smooth run from three out. At one point it
looked as if Gatchou Mans might offer a degree of resistance, but he made
a bad mistake at the second last and Amy Stennet did exceptionally well to
ride him out for second. The concluding race was the Hunt Members, with six lining up.
Wrekengale, ridden for the first time this year by trainer Neil King, was
made the even money favourite with Parsonhumfrywebber at 2/1 and
Kingfisher Star at 4/1. These three dominated the race with Kingfisher
Star, who made several jumping errors, and Parsonhumfrywebber, ridden for
the first time by Andrew Braithwaite as regular pilot Emma Bell had chosen
to ride her own Blue Monk, shared the donkeywork between them. At the
fourth last (the downhill) Blue Monk made a mistake and effectively bought
his promising reappearance to an end. This left Wrekengale as the only
danger. He closed on, and eventually overtook, Kingfisher Star but he was
no match for “The Parson” who finished in his customary manner, but
this time with a head start! It was a conservative ten length margin at
the post. The result must have left Ms Bell with mixed feelings. She
was obviously pleased with her horse’s performance but she must also be
worried that she will not get to sit on “The Parson’s” back in
public again for quite a while. He went really well for Andrew Braithwaite
who was able to keep him interested, not only in contention but up with
the pace throughout, and still produce that electrifying finishing speed
at the end. The owners must surely be tempted to ask him to ride again? As has become customary, I will not close without a comment
about the bookmakers. They truly need to be congratulated today. There was
a comparatively small crowd for the sixteen of them to get stuck into, but
at no time did the overrounds go above 140%! Even in the Maiden 137% could
be achieved! OK they were not with one book at one time, but they were
gettable if you shopped around. Perhaps an element of competition is
creeping back? I was perplexed by their actions at the last race, however. Seven of them just packed up their boards without taking a bet and, unable to leave the course until racing had finished, just went and sat in their cars. Was this really a question of “if I can’t win, I’m going to take my bat and ball and go home”? |