WINCANTON
Preview review
Once again, a preview was not written for the race so a brief summary will be used to address what was preciously written on several of the participants. Viroflay sweated up prior to his UK debut and jumped very cautiously on his first run for 273 days. He stripped fitter and indeed improved for the experience. Hacker des Places looked green in his French races which was also apparent here. Derek Le Grand jumped right on his debut but it was less pronounced on Sunday, while Calidus Mirabilis had become disappointing.
Race review
This particular contest has been used by Paul Nicholls as a launchpad for some useful sorts in Risk And Roll (3rd in 2017), Romain de Senam (1st in 2015) and last year's winner Sir Psycho. As it transpired, the Nicholls pair dominated the race although it was the lesser fancied of the pair who landed the spoils. Outside of this front two, only the David Pipe horse looked a credible threat but he did not impress with his jumping and reportedly sustained a cut on his leg. The winning time was respectable and the two principles look fairly useful but there was little else of interest finishing behind.
Viroflay came into his debut outing at Kempton a week earlier with strong claims. However, a drift in the market foretold an underwhelming performance as he sweated beforehand, jumped very cautiously and was labouring some way from home. While he was the longer priced of the stable's representatives, he still attracted support in the market and he settled much better on this occasion. Patiently ridden, he made smooth headway to join the leaders approaching the straight and went into the lead before the penultimate flight. From there, he was kept up to his work and extended his superiority to fourteen lengths at the line. He still had a tendency to be big at the first three hurdles and was never especially economical, but there was plenty more left in reserve this time around. Viroflay still has scope for further improvement and though he may not be quite as exciting as Hell Red or Monmiral, he can still emerge as a useful sort. It remains to be seen if he can maintain his improvement on the softer conditions that characterise the winter game. 116
Hacker des Places carried a winners' penalty into the race which he earned when landing an ordinary event at Dax back in June. The runner-up there has since won a couple of minor events of his own but the overall form is only average. His debut effort at Dieppe was more compelling however as he ran close to Nicky Henderson's Paros, who headed the Triumph markets over the summer, and the irrefutably listed class Jeu de Paume. Hacker des Places had shown some greenness on his two starts in France and had jumped overly big on occasion. However, while those traits were prevalent here, his demonstrable ability to jump swiftly was not. He was fresh early without ever really settling and though he traded lower than his SP in running, he never looked like putting his stamp on the race. He was readily outpaced by the winner in the straight and his concluding jumps were rather tired ones. This was not a faithful reflection of his ability and he can be expected to improve for fitness and experience. Particularly as he looks likelier than the winner to go through softer ground. 108
Iron Heart won twice on the flat for Andrew Balding, including last time out in a two runner Salisbury handicap. His best form had been on quicker ground which suggested that these conditions would be as good as they will get for him at this juncture. However, on his first start for David Pipe following his 28,000 guineas transfer, his jumping was untidy and he went through a couple of his hurdles which likely caused the wound on his near fore. He was hesitant going over the last two jumps and this experience will not have filled him with confidence. Iron Heart's flat ability along with his being out of a half-sister to the useful Red Riverman suggest that he can perform in this discipline, but this was not an ideal introduction and may take some time to be brought along. 85
Shutupshirley was making his racecourse debut for a yard with a decent record from few runners in the sphere. Out of a winning chaser and a half-brother to a pair of minor winning hurdlers, Shutupshirley had a profound lack of pace and was getting detached a long way from home. Nevertheless, his jumping was sound and he was eventually able to pass beaten horses in the straight. He may have a future over jumps but it looks unlikely to be an immediate one. 76
Derek Le Grand had been the subject of a plunge ahead of his hurdling debut in a weak Ludlow maiden. However, he jumped awkwardly to the right from the outset and finished tailed off. There were still elements of that trait here but it was much less pronounced. Nevertheless, he was still beaten by over forty lengths and does not look like a solid preposition at this juncture. 75
Calidus Mirabilis was making his sixth start over hurdles and though he was keen early, his jumping was mostly fine. However, while these conditions theoretically should have seen him to best effect, he put up his worst performance to date and is becoming very disappointing. His mark of 104 remains unchanged and he looks in need of some time in a field. 46
Mazikeen was a winner of a Chelmsford maiden last December and her efforts this autumn were largely fair and consistent. She was steady in the market but after walking over the first hurdle, she was too big and landed too steeply when falling at the second. 0
Preview review
Once again, a preview was not written for the race so a brief summary will be used to address what was preciously written on several of the participants. Viroflay sweated up prior to his UK debut and jumped very cautiously on his first run for 273 days. He stripped fitter and indeed improved for the experience. Hacker des Places looked green in his French races which was also apparent here. Derek Le Grand jumped right on his debut but it was less pronounced on Sunday, while Calidus Mirabilis had become disappointing.
Race review
This particular contest has been used by Paul Nicholls as a launchpad for some useful sorts in Risk And Roll (3rd in 2017), Romain de Senam (1st in 2015) and last year's winner Sir Psycho. As it transpired, the Nicholls pair dominated the race although it was the lesser fancied of the pair who landed the spoils. Outside of this front two, only the David Pipe horse looked a credible threat but he did not impress with his jumping and reportedly sustained a cut on his leg. The winning time was respectable and the two principles look fairly useful but there was little else of interest finishing behind.
Viroflay came into his debut outing at Kempton a week earlier with strong claims. However, a drift in the market foretold an underwhelming performance as he sweated beforehand, jumped very cautiously and was labouring some way from home. While he was the longer priced of the stable's representatives, he still attracted support in the market and he settled much better on this occasion. Patiently ridden, he made smooth headway to join the leaders approaching the straight and went into the lead before the penultimate flight. From there, he was kept up to his work and extended his superiority to fourteen lengths at the line. He still had a tendency to be big at the first three hurdles and was never especially economical, but there was plenty more left in reserve this time around. Viroflay still has scope for further improvement and though he may not be quite as exciting as Hell Red or Monmiral, he can still emerge as a useful sort. It remains to be seen if he can maintain his improvement on the softer conditions that characterise the winter game. 116
Hacker des Places carried a winners' penalty into the race which he earned when landing an ordinary event at Dax back in June. The runner-up there has since won a couple of minor events of his own but the overall form is only average. His debut effort at Dieppe was more compelling however as he ran close to Nicky Henderson's Paros, who headed the Triumph markets over the summer, and the irrefutably listed class Jeu de Paume. Hacker des Places had shown some greenness on his two starts in France and had jumped overly big on occasion. However, while those traits were prevalent here, his demonstrable ability to jump swiftly was not. He was fresh early without ever really settling and though he traded lower than his SP in running, he never looked like putting his stamp on the race. He was readily outpaced by the winner in the straight and his concluding jumps were rather tired ones. This was not a faithful reflection of his ability and he can be expected to improve for fitness and experience. Particularly as he looks likelier than the winner to go through softer ground. 108
Iron Heart won twice on the flat for Andrew Balding, including last time out in a two runner Salisbury handicap. His best form had been on quicker ground which suggested that these conditions would be as good as they will get for him at this juncture. However, on his first start for David Pipe following his 28,000 guineas transfer, his jumping was untidy and he went through a couple of his hurdles which likely caused the wound on his near fore. He was hesitant going over the last two jumps and this experience will not have filled him with confidence. Iron Heart's flat ability along with his being out of a half-sister to the useful Red Riverman suggest that he can perform in this discipline, but this was not an ideal introduction and may take some time to be brought along. 85
Shutupshirley was making his racecourse debut for a yard with a decent record from few runners in the sphere. Out of a winning chaser and a half-brother to a pair of minor winning hurdlers, Shutupshirley had a profound lack of pace and was getting detached a long way from home. Nevertheless, his jumping was sound and he was eventually able to pass beaten horses in the straight. He may have a future over jumps but it looks unlikely to be an immediate one. 76
Derek Le Grand had been the subject of a plunge ahead of his hurdling debut in a weak Ludlow maiden. However, he jumped awkwardly to the right from the outset and finished tailed off. There were still elements of that trait here but it was much less pronounced. Nevertheless, he was still beaten by over forty lengths and does not look like a solid preposition at this juncture. 75
Calidus Mirabilis was making his sixth start over hurdles and though he was keen early, his jumping was mostly fine. However, while these conditions theoretically should have seen him to best effect, he put up his worst performance to date and is becoming very disappointing. His mark of 104 remains unchanged and he looks in need of some time in a field. 46
Mazikeen was a winner of a Chelmsford maiden last December and her efforts this autumn were largely fair and consistent. She was steady in the market but after walking over the first hurdle, she was too big and landed too steeply when falling at the second. 0
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