The Scottish Mail on Sunday

NO NATIONAL RESERVES IS BIZARRE CALL

- Calum McClurkin’s

THE scrapping of the reserve system for the Grand National is a peculiar move by Aintree.

Apparently having reserves on the racecard confuses fans and bettors alike as well as hampering the production of raceday data supply. Seriously?

Surely, prioritisi­ng the race having a full field of 40 runners matters more than some administra­tive quirk that, let’s be honest, isn’t hard to figure out.

Is it that difficult for people to monitor a race where one horse is withdrawn the day before and figuring out the next reserve gets in? There are a lot more complexiti­es to race reading than understand­ing how a basic reserve system works.

It’s been in place since 2000 and proved to be useful. There are four reserves as back-up to the 40 intended runners. Three of those reserves got a run and ensured that an iconic race had a full field. With more unknowns over ground conditions than ever before, the reserve system is a good way to preserve maximum fields.

‘It’s a shame,’ said trainer Michael Scudamore.

It is indeed.

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