Gloucestershire Echo

Good to be back Racing returns - but with no crowds

- Graham CLARK gloslivesp­ort@reachplc.com

ACTION on the track lived up to expectatio­ns as racing returned to Cheltenham over the weekend - but there was a very different scene and feeling at the home of jumping to the one that prevailed in March.

Gone were the roars from the crowds synonymous with sending runners on their way and greeting winners back - with the only noise to be heard in the near-empty stands being that of hooves pounding the turf and jockeys encouragin­g extra from their mounts.

Racing behind closed doors has been the new normal since the resumption of the sport on June 1. However, for Cheltenham it was a first taste of such an experience, having staged the Festival in front of a crowd on all four days during the early stages of the coronaviru­s pandemic.

Ian Renton, Jockey Club Cheltenham and South West regional director, said: “It is an extraordin­ary amount of work to put on a racing-behind-closed-doors day at somewhere as large as Cheltenham.

“The team have done a magnificen­t job. I think we will always be under a degree of scrutiny, but we want to do things as well as we can and we are operating under Government guidelines in exactly the same way we were at the Festival.

“We’ve a temporary weighing room to house 48 jockeys, so they can all be socially distanced, as well as the original weighing room.

“We’ve divided the owners into two restaurant­s, so they are socially distanced, and there are a ridiculous amount of barriers to ensure it is the safest possible environmen­t we can produce.”

Though the official crowd figure will be recorded as zero, a couple of hundred owners were able to enjoy the action.

He added: “The feedback from owners has been very positive. They are very happy with what we have tried to give them.

“It’s something we are going to have to live with for the next couple of meetings, with an attendance nothing more than what we have now.

“I think the team have done a magnificen­t job in trying to create a little bit of atmosphere and ensure the owners’ experience is good and we are a Covidsafe venue.”

Andoversfo­rd trainer Kim Bailey had the privilege of striking gold in the first race back, following the victory of Does He Know.

Bailey said: “I put my suit on this morning and it still had the Cheltenham badge from the Friday (of the Festival), so I took that off thinking we are in a new world.

“It’s great to be back here with the first winner. The racecourse has been fantastic and have looked after the owners very well.”

Champion trainer Nicky Henderson added: “From the owners’ perspectiv­e and with no crowd at all, at least the owners can come and see their horses run.

“They’ve really pushed the boat out and they’ve looked after them enormously, which we appreciate because they are the bread and butter of the game as far as we are concerned.

“It is well organised and very slick and all the owners would echo my thoughts.

“We know what the circumstan­ces are and it is going to be bizarre. It’s still Cheltenham, with or without a crowd.”

Jockey Robbie Power was another only too pleased to be racing following the victory of the Gordon Elliott-trained Galvin, who could easily be one of those back for a big target in the spring.

Power said: “Of course it is different, but we are just very lucky to be racing and it is very important that we do the right things to keep this great sport going.

“That is what we have got to do and hopefully somewhere in the near future, sooner rather than later, we can get the crowds back.”

I think the team have done a magnificen­t job in trying to create a little bit of atmosphere Ian Renton

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 ?? Pictures: David Davies/ PA Wire ?? Runners and riders in front of empty stands during the Pertemps Network Handicap Hurdle
Pictures: David Davies/ PA Wire Runners and riders in front of empty stands during the Pertemps Network Handicap Hurdle

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