Joseph O’Brien is targeting the King George VI Chase with Banbridge following his late exit at Cork on Sunday.
While disappointing on his seasonal reappearance in the Fortria Chase at Navan last month, the eight-year-old looked right back to his best in the Hilly Way as he looked set to give dual Champion Chase hero Energumene a real run for his money when unseating Richie Deegan at the final fence.
O’Brien reports his charge to have emerged from the incident unscathed and is now hoping a long-term plan comes to fruition, with Banbridge set to tackle three miles over fences for the first time since his point-to-point days in Kempton’s St Stephen’s Day feature.
“He’s come out of it fine and I was very pleased with him. Giving Energumene 10lb, to give him a little bit of a fright at the last I thought was a great run over that trip,” said O’Brien.
“We knew he’d come on from Navan and we’ve been working from race to race. Since Punchestown [in the spring], we’ve been targeting the King George and the plan was that we’d have the two prep runs. We’ve been happy with how both of those races have gone and now, pending conditions at Kempton, he’ll go for the King George. The drier the ground the better for him.”
Banbridge is a previous winner at Kempton, having claimed the notable scalp of Pic D’Orhy when landing the Grade Two Silviniaco Conti Chase at the track in January, and race sponsors Ladbrokes make him a 14-1 shot for the King George.
O’Brien also provided a positive update on the wellbeing of Home By The Lee, who made a successful start to his campaign in the Lismullen Hurdle at Navan last month.
The Leopardstown Christmas Hurdle – a race he won in 2022 – is next on the nine-year-old’s agenda.
“He’ll go back to Leopardstown and he’s been training well,” O’Brien added.
Meanwhile, Daryl Jacob will step up the recovery from his latest collarbone injury by riding out later this week.
Jacob, who joined an elite list of jockeys to have ridden 1,000 winners recently, has already announced this will be his final season in the saddle.
Having missed several months when needing surgery on a broken collarbone sustained in March, he returned to action to register his milestone victory last month only to suffer a freak injury a few days later.
He was in Ireland at Henry de Bromhead’s yard when the incident happened during a schooling session in early November.
“The recovery is going great. I’m riding out this week, I’ll probably go to Harry Derham’s in the middle of the week and go from there,” said Jacob.
“I’m hoping to further the rehab this week and we’re all happy with it.
“We’ll just see how it feels when I ride out, but I’m meeting the targets and I’m hopeful it won’t be too long before I can get back to it. Everything is going according to plan.”