Llanelli Star

Search starts in our bid to help trainers

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THE weather again intervened last week when the freezing conditions put paid to our fixture at Ffos Las on Thursday.

This time around it was a straightfo­rward decision because of the severity of the conditions and we pulled stumps on Wednesday morning.

It was obviously very frustratin­g for our clerk of the course Dai Jones and his team of groundstaf­f who had spent hours putting down frost covers and moving rails to try to get the meeting on.

Our next meeting is on Thursday, April 1, when the feature race is the West Wales National over three and a half miles. We’re looking forward to seeing the entries, with the prize won previously by some of the leading jump yards including Dan Skelton, Venetia Williams and Evan Williams.

By the time this fixture takes place, we are expecting to have received some clarity on when spectators might be allowed to return. There is a meeting with the Welsh Government and other elite sports in Wales in early March to discuss the situation.

Based on earlier conversati­ons with government officials, there is no doubt that, once approved, the first meetings with spectators will be restricted to relatively small numbers – likely to be between 250 and 500. This will allow our systems and procedures for managing the venue safely to be tested thoroughly before larger volumes of people are admitted.

Due to the short break before we race next at Ffos Las, I’ll be spending time working with the team at Chepstow in the coming weeks. Their next meeting is on Thursday, February 25, and includes a qualifier for the Pertemps Final at the Cheltenham Festival.

That race, like all the races at the Festival, is incredibly competitiv­e and in 2019 it was nearly won by the Carmarthen shire-trained To be fair from the yard of Paul and Debra Hamer. He lost by just a neck to the favourite Sire Du Berlais.

One of the projects we are working on at both Ffos Las and Chepstow is looking at how we can assist Welsh trainers find more owners. The coronaviru­s pandemic is having an impact on the levels of horses in training across the UK, with some yards reporting a reduction in numbers.

As an industry we must all work together to keep the show on the road.

Wales is fortunate to have excellent trainers and we’ll be doing our bit to promote them in the coming months.

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