BRITISH RACING NEWS:PAUL NOLAN is praying for rain to give his dual Grade One winner Joncol the best possible chance in in the Hennessy Gold Cup at Newbury on Saturday.
The recent Thurles winner will never have encountered ground as lively as he is likely to at Newbury this weekend and Nolan admits he is unsure how he will handle it.
“At the moment the intention is to travel and I’m just hoping they get the bit of rain that’s forecast. As long as the ground is good to soft I think he’ll take his chance,” said Nolan.
“It will be interesting to see how he handles it as it will be the first time he’s run on a bit of nice ground. We won’t really know how he handles it until we have a go.
“Hopefully he can prove he’s not a total mudlark, but obviously the more rain they get the better.
“He did it very nicely in Thurles the last day and should improve on that as he had a good blow afterwards. Barry Geraghty will ride him on Saturday, which is great news, so we’re looking forward to it.”
Noel Fehily is confident a lack of race fitness will not be a problem for Michel Le Bon after riding his Hennessy mount in a schooling session yesterday morning.
With stable jockey Ruby Walsh partnering long-term Hennessy favourite Aiteen Thirtythree and second rider Daryl Jacob heading to Newcastle to partner Celestial Halo in the Stanjames.com Fighting Fifth Hurdle, Paul Nicholls snapped up the services of Fehily for his second major contender for the Newbury showpiece.
Michel Le Bon has been sidelined by injury since winning a Grade Two novice chase at this fixture two years ago, but Fehily feels the eight-year-old is ready to do himself justice. “I went and had a sit on him this morning and he jumped absolutely fantastic, so I’m really looking forward to it,” said Fehily.
Aiteen Thirtythree was a highly-encouraging second to Somersby on his seasonal reappearance at Kempton and part-owner Andy Stewart is looking forward to his weekend return.
“We were very pleased he was only beaten three lengths by Somersby at Kempton and he wasn’t disgraced at Ascot on Saturday,” Stewart said yesterday.
“He seems to like Newbury, the distance is absolutely fine, and so is the going. I was very impressed with David Johnson’s Great Endeavour at Cheltenham in the Paddy Power.
Ian Williams saddles Wayward Prince, a three-time winner during his novice campaign over fences and not disgraced at Cheltenham and Aintree in the spring. “It was always the plan after Aintree last year to run in the Hennessy. We thought the handicapper had been fair with his mark,” said Williams.
“He’s been trained all autumn with the Hennessy in mind and it’s crept up on us quite quickly now.
“It’s a crossroads in his career. I think how he runs at the weekend will map out his plans for the season.”
Great Endeavour’s trainer David Pipe is hoping his charge can complete the double in two of the season’s most prestigious handicaps.
“While I have some reservations about the trip of three miles, two furlongs, especially if we have significant rain in the run-up to Saturday, I am encouraged by the fact that he was able to finish a close third in a Cheltenham handicap hurdle on soft ground in November 2009,” he said.
“He will be ridden accordingly and we are hopeful that he will be able to put up a bold bid to emulate my father, who completed the double with Celestial Gold back in 2004.”
Meanwhile, Cooldine’s brother Fists Of Fury runs in the Bramham Hall Beginners’ For Conferences and Events Chase at Wetherby today for Gigginstown House Stud and Charles Byrnes. In a decent heat over three miles and a furlong, Tony McCoy takes the ride on Fists Of Fury