Yorkshire Post

CHASE IS ON FOR JEFFERSON

- TOM RICHMOND RACING CORRESPOND­ENT ■ Email: tom.richmond@jpimedia.co.uk ■ Twitter: @OpinionYP

Ruth Jefferson’s Waiting Patiently could race at Kempton on Boxing Day.

HOPES are growing that Malton trainer Ruth Jefferson’s stable star Waiting Patiently could win his fitness race – and line up in Kempton’s King George Chase on Boxing Day.

The North Yorkshire horse, who has not raced since beating the now retired Cue Card in a Grade One chase at Ascot in February, pleased connection­s with a racecourse gallop at Hexham.

With a stablemate giving him a lead, Waiting Patiently went less than a circuit and jumped four fences accurately under regular rider Brian Highes who had earlier recorded a treble at the Northumber­land track.

“It wasn’t really a gallop, to be honest. It was just a case of letting him have a day away having not run in a while,” said Hughes afterwards.

“He cantered behind his lead horse and jumped the fences well and Ruth was happy with him.

“From my point of view he felt great and was nice and settled,” he added.

Waiting Patiently is a bestpriced 6-1 second-favourite for the King George, with last year’s winner Might Bite still favourite despite finishing last of five in Haydock’s Betfair Chase last month.

Hughes added: “It’s obviously going to be a tough ask – running in a King George on his first run of the season – but it is what it is.

“He feels as well as ever and we’re looking forward to it,” he added.

Meanwhile, the British Horseracin­g Authority’s review of equine fatalities at this year’s Cheltenham Festival has – as expected – recommende­d a reduction in field sizes for all two-mile chases at thetrack.

The ruling body conducted what it described as a “rigorous process of data evaluation, consultati­on and review of video evidence” following the death of six horses during the showpiece meeting in March – including three in the concluding Grand Annual Chase.

The BHA noted there had been suggestion­s in the immediate aftermath that the fatality rate in the Grand Annual had been “adversely affected by the race being positioned at the end of Friday’s card”.

However, after comparing the race to the County Hurdle – previously the concluding race of the Festival – it said the position of the race had “little impact on the faller rate”.

But the review did recommend that field size for the Grand Annual and all two-mile chases run at the track should be reduced from 24 to 20.

Brant Dunshea, chief regulatory officer for the BHA, said: “The publishing of this report does not by any means represent the end of our commitment to enhancing welfare standards, at Cheltenham racecourse and across all British racecourse­s.”

The review was led by a dedicated group and with external inputs including the RSPCA and World Horse Welfare, with the analysis covering all races run at the Festival from 2007 to 2018 – including 5,451 runners and 208 fallers.

Along with the field-size reduction, key recommenda­tions include a change to the race conditions of the Martin Pipe Conditiona­l Jockeys’ Handicap Hurdle, which would mean all rider weight-claiming allowances would be removed in a bid to encourage connection­s to use the most experience­d jockeys.

The review also recommends pre-race veterinary examinatio­ns be increased to include all runners in all races at the Festival.

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