Yorkshire Post

McDonald earns his place at top table on merit

- RACING CORRESPOND­ENT

JOCKEY PJ McDonald does not need reminding about horse racing’s glorious uncertaint­y.

For years, he thought nothing would beat his Scottish National win over jumps 10 years ago on Ferdy Murphy’s Hot Weld.

Yet, after switching to the Flat and working tirelessly to establish himself at the upper echelons, he’s enjoying a career-best season.

The 35-year-old has already ridden 83 winners this year – three more than his 2016 tally – and, after years of graft, he no longer goes to the major meetings to make up the numbers.

He’s there on merit, and with a serious chance of success, as exemplifie­d by this week’s William Hill St Leger meeting at Doncaster. He rides Karl Burke’s Laurens in today’s Group Two May Hill Stakes for fillies before partnering stablemate Havana Grey in tomorrow’s Flying Childers Stakes.

First Laurens, who runs in the colours of McDonald’s retained owner John Dance.

“She won nicely at Doncaster and then she got beat by a really good horse in France who could be top class,” the Leyburn-based rider told

“I think we will improve again. Whatever happens at Donny, she’s a real star for the future. She could be top class. By that, I mean a Group One filly.”

Next Havana Grey, who had already won at Ayr, Sandown and, most memorably, Goodwood’s prestigiou­s Molecomb Stakes before being narrowly denied by Unfortunat­ely, another exciting prospect at Burke’s in-form yard, in the Prix Morny over six furlongs.

McDonald believes the drop back in distance to the minimum trip – five furlongs – will suit.

“Havana Grey has done absolutely nothing wrong this season,” he ventured.

“He’s just gone from strength to strength all the way. It’s all systems go for Friday. Karl is delighted. Lucy, the girl who rides him, is delighted. The soft ground shouldn’t be a problem. If he showed up in the same form that you saw at Goodwood, or in France, he’s the one they all have to beat.

“It’s brilliant – races like this, the opportunit­ies, are what you’ve worked for all these years. I’ve got the chance – I’ve got to try and take it.”

McDonald is in a relaxed frame of mind on his drive to Doncaster races yesterday.

He reports his wife Abby, and the couple’s young children Amelia and Lavinia, to be in fine form.

“Kids are good so I can’t ask for much more,” he says.

His alliance with the aforementi­oned Dance, a Newcastleb­ased owner, is one factor behind the jockey’s rise to prominence.

He is becoming more influentia­l with the purchase of young horses, who have the potential to compete on the bigger racedays.

The fact that McDonald is now regularly used by Burke, or fellow Middleham trainer Mark Johnston, is something he regards as equally significan­t.

“Riding for trainers like that, it lifts your profile,” he says. “People think if he’s good enough for Mark Johnston or Karl Burke, then he’s good enough for me. It all helps.”

And then there was the rider’s high-profile victory on Malton trainer Peter Niven’s ever-popular stayer Clever Cookie in last year’s Yorkshire Cup – it proved, more than anything, that this County Wexford-born horseman belonged at racing’s elite level.

It also vindicated the rider’s decision to utilise his relatively light weight and spend a summer on the Flat after Hot Weld’s success in the Scottish equivalent of the Grand National.

“I was very young. It was my first real winner and I didn’t really take it in,” he recalled. “You think the next one will be just around the corner. You don’t realise how hard these top-class winners are to come by.

“I had to wait from Hot Weld to Clever Cookie – that’s nearly 10 years – for another horse to come along. That’s why I need to make the most of these good young horses. I’m under no illusions how hard they are to come across. As long as I can keep the people I ride for happy. You want to be at the bigger meetings and I’d love to win a Group One.

“But I wouldn’t be where I am if it wasn’t for Ferdy Murphy. I was only young when I moved to his yard at West Witton. He was always very, very positive when there were other riders in the yard, like Tom Dreaper and Keith Mercer, who were better than me.

“He believed in me. When I made the switch, he made the decision so easy because he said my job would always be there if it didn’t work out. I had nothing to lose.” RECENTLY-RETIRED National Hunt jockey Brian Harding drove home Off Art to win the Clipper Logistics Leger Legends Stakes at Doncaster.

Harding, who won the Queen Mother Champion Chase on One Man in 1998, spent nearly all of his career connected to the Gordon and Nicky Richards stable in Greystoke, Cumbria.

Off Art, without a win since 2013, got up late in the day from Adrian Nicholls on Fire Palace to provide Great Habton trainer Tim Easterby with a birthday winner.

Seventy-year-old George Duffield, who rode his first winner 50 years ago, could finish no closer than seventh on Brian Ellison’s Soldier Blue.

Harding said: “That was hard work but it was good fun! I ride out three or four horses every day who are being broken in but then you come and do this? I thought ‘Oh my God’. “No, it was good fun really. “I am 45 in two weeks’ time and I left home when I was 15. So I was a jockey for almost 30 years. It just takes a little getting away from. But I do the jockey coaching job and that keeps me involved. Jamie Gormley is one of mine and he is a good lad and there are some cracking good jump lads too.”

Easterby added: “It’s a wonderful race, it’s such a big day for racing. A lot of money is raised for charities that need it. Once racing stops, for a lot of these guys riding and working in the industry, things can happen and they need support.

“Brian’s ridden plenty for me over the years so it was great to have him. A brilliant solid jockey who always gave a horse a good ride. You never had any problems with him and you didn’t have to give him orders!”

Inaugurate­d in 2010, retired riders raise funds for the Northern Racing College and Jack Berry House, the Injured Jockeys Fund complex at Malton.

Meanwhile, Encore D’Or picked up the pieces late on to land yesterday’s Pepsi Max Scarbrough Stakes. It was the Robert Cowell-trained sprinter’s first win on the turf – all six previous successes came on the all-weather.

With the contest one race too far for Paul Midgley’s Final Venture who has been on the go all year, jockey Ryan Moore timed his challenge to perfection.

Moore will be hoping for further success today after persuading Middleham trainer Mark Johnston to run Nyaleti in the William Hill May Hill Stakes.

The jockey suggested that the horse should step up in trip after winning the six-furlong Princess Margaret Stakes at Ascot.

The advice has been heeded after Nyaleti proved no match for Karl Burke’s Unfortunat­ely in the Prix Morny at Deauville last month.

“Ryan did say he thought this is the direction we should be going in, but we decided to punt and go for the Prix Morny,” said Johnston’s son and assistant, Charlie. “We knew after two furlongs that the writing was on the wall.”

The chief rival appears to be the Burke-trained Laurens, the mount of in form jockey PJ McDonald.

 ??  ?? Havana Grey and P J McDonald, seen winning the National Stakes at Sandown earlier this year, are reunited at Doncaster for tomorrow’s Flying Childers Stakes.
Havana Grey and P J McDonald, seen winning the National Stakes at Sandown earlier this year, are reunited at Doncaster for tomorrow’s Flying Childers Stakes.
 ??  ?? Jockey steers Off Art to victory in the Legends Stakes at Doncaster.
Jockey steers Off Art to victory in the Legends Stakes at Doncaster.
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