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The Guardian - UK
The Guardian - UK
Sport
Chris Cook

Talking Horses: Phoenix could win Ebor despite threat to quit UK racing

Harry Bentley in Phoenix’s white and orange colours after winning the Old Newton Cup. He has been booked to ride Deja on Saturday.
Harry Bentley in Phoenix’s white and orange colours after winning the Old Newton Cup. He has been booked to ride Deja on Saturday. Photograph: Steve Davies/PA

Phoenix Thoroughbreds’ continuing stay in British racing could extend to winning one of the season’s most valuable handicaps, as Deja is expected to carry their colours in the Ebor on Saturday. The bloodstock operation put out a statement one week ago saying it would quit the sport in this country “with immediate effect” over what it described as “unfair” press coverage but it has since continued to race its horses with no evident change in pattern.

Peter Chapple-Hyam, trainer of Deja, was asked on Monday whether Phoenix were happy to run the horse in the Ebor and replied: “Yes, as far as I know. I haven’t heard anything different.” He said the organisation had given him no information about plans to stop having runners.

Harry Bentley is booked to ride Deja, the pair having won Haydock’s Old Newton Cup last month, and the bookmakers quite like their chances of landing the high-profile pot, having them fourth in betting lists at 14-1. “I’m very happy with him,” Chapple-Hyam said. “Any rain will help.

“The handicapper might just have him. He’s got to give Group winners weight, which is not the way it normally should be.”

While the appearance of Phoenix’s silks at York would be at odds with its seeming determination to leave last week, it amounts to good news for Chapple-Hyam, who would be left with just five horses at his Newmarket yard if the Dubai-based outfit actually left.

Meanwhile, Battaash, the hot favourite for Friday’s Nunthorpe Stakes, is said to be a more mature horse these days than the one who boiled over in the preliminaries before the 2017 race. “In the past, getting him to the start was always the most important thing, and keeping him calm,” said his regular jockey, Jim Crowley, during a Qipco Champions Series press conference. “Touch wood, this year he’s been really good. He seems to be in that routine now.

“Before, you’d get on him in the paddock and you’d feel him tensing up. You’d canter to post and he’d be grinding his teeth. He was like a little ticking time bomb, waiting to go off. Whereas this year, he’s been so much more relaxed. You get on him and you can feel him relax, whereas before he was tense and wanting to do everything at 100mph.”

Rain may be the biggest danger to Battaash, generally priced up as the 1-2 favourite for the sprint contest, following the withdrawal of Golden Pal. Crowley wants a dry week at York after the 9mm that turned the going good on Monday morning.

“I’m just praying the rain stays away,” the jockey said. “It’s not going to be as easy for him if the ground turns soft.”

Star horses cannot expect to have everything their own way but, from Crowley’s perspective, it would have been ideal for the Nunthorpe to have been staged on the kind of rattling quick ground that prevailed at most tracks last week. “He’d have bounced off it.”

Tuesday’s best bets

Perhaps I’ve woken up feeling cowardly but those big-field handicaps at Beverley do not tempt. And so to Fontwell, where it’s Paul Nicholls v Nicky Henderson in the novice handicap chase.

Henderson’s Jen’s Boy bumped into a well-treated rival on his chasing debut but even if one makes allowances, he would need to be improved by fences to be attractive as favourite in this contest and I don’t think he has been.

Easyrun De Vassy (2.15) has been made to look slow in a couple of hurdle runs this summer but he was a dual points winner in Ireland and this should be his game. He’s fairly priced at 5-2.

Chapmanshype (2.45) won at this track in August, September and October last year, and appeals at 100-30 to go in again. He needs to be sharper for his reappearance run at Southwell, when he was down the field.

Having been conservatively priced at the early 6-1, Peltwell (4.20) is out to 8-1 and may go bigger. I think she’s well treated on her autumn form but she was very uneasy in the market before being withdrawn last week. Perhaps she will need her first run back but she’s one to be interested in.

Beverley 
1.00 Bay Of Whispers 1.30 Beechwood Donna 2.00 Princess Power 2.30 Diamond Haze 3.00 Eldelbar 3.30 How Bizarre 4.00 The Trendy Man 4.30 Sea Sister 5.05 Lismore

Fontwell 
1.45 Filou Des Issards 2.15 Easyrun De Vassy 2.45 Chapmanshype 3.15 Shiroccan Roll 3.45 Arthur's Sixpence 4.20 Peltwell 4.50 Molliana (nb) 5.20 Auld Sod 5.50 Nellie Kernow

Kempton
4.25 Guru 5.00 Dreamloper 5.30 Sadiqa 6.00 Nigel Nott 6.30 Renaissance Rose 7.00 Oslo 7.30 Mutalahef 8.00 Bullfinch 8.30 Machios (nap)

At the end of Kempton’s card, Machios (8.30) should be capable of another big run under a penalty for his Lingfield win last week. He could do with calming down in the early stages but can be helped by a stronger pace this time and 4-1 is fine.

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