Yorkshire Post

Colliver races to victory at Wetherby

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GALLANT GREY Politologu­e confirmed his Queen Mother Champion Chase credential­s by adding to his big race tally at Kempton.

The chaser backed up highprofil­e successes in Exeter’s Haldon Gold Cup and Sandown’s Tingle Creek Chase with a facile win in the Desert Orchid Chase that celebrates jump racing’s greatest grey of all.

Sam Twiston-Davies’s mount was already travelling sweetly when Special Tiara, the reigning Queen Mother Champion, crashed out in the back straight.

And, with Nicky Henderson’s Altior, the ante-post Champion Chase favourite, currently sidelined, Politologu­e will be a worthy contender at Cheltenham.

“He can have a nice holiday now and turn up for the Game Spirit (Newbury, February 10),” said winning trainer Paul Nicholls.

“We’ve got one aim and that’s the Champion Chase. You’ve got to get your horse there with the easiest route.

“You can have a nice break, go to the Game Spirit a bit underdone and then improve from there to Cheltenham. That’s the plan.

“All this horse will do is improve and the better the race the better he’ll be.

“The Champion Chase is a hard race to win, but I’m going into it thinking we’ve got a serious chance.”

Yet, after purchasing the horse with the blue riband Gold Cup in mind, owner John Hales accepts the minimum trip of two miles is ideal.

“We realised this is his trip as when he was running over two and a half (miles) it was pointed out by my good friend AP McCoy that he is a two-miler. I had a nice text of him after he won the Tingle Creek,” said a gracious Hales.

“Two miles is his trip and he is getting better and better.

“Obviously he will have one more run before Cheltenham and it will probably be the Game Spirit at Newbury.

“He is up and coming and is a young horse and he is not overraced.

“When I first saw him in France I was very taken with him. He is very athletic and very well bred.

“He was always going to be a speed horse. I always like to think I can get one for the Gold Cup but they can’t always go for the Gold Cup.”

Trainer Nigel Twiston-Davies plans to stick to testing conditions with Bristol De Mai in the future following his disappoint­ing effort in the King George VI Chase at Kempton.

Following a remorseles­s display in Wetherby’s Charlie Hall Chase, and then the Betfair Chase at Haydock, the six-year-old was in line for a potential £1m bonus if he could land the Boxing Day showpiece and go on to claim Cheltenham Gold Cup glory in March.

However, after cutting out much of the running, the grey weakened quickly to finish sixth of seven finishers.

Twiston-Davies said: “He was very disappoint­ing as I was really happy with him beforehand. Maybe people are right and he just needs that really soft ground.

“He was 100 per cent this morning, but I don’t know what we will do next. We will get him out as soon as it rains. We are still thinking about the Gold Cup and who knows, we might have a soft Cheltenham Gold Cup.”

The Welsh National is due to be restaged on January 6 – weather permitting – following the abandonmen­t of yesterday’s Chepstow meeting.

Today’s meetings at Catterick and Leicester, meanwhile, need to pass early morning inspection­s. JOCKEY Joe Colliver’s dream continued when Just Cameron, the horse that helped launch his career, won Wetherby’s prestigiou­s Castleford Chase.

Buoyed by last weekend’s landmark Grade One win at Ascot on the Jedd O’Keeffetrai­ned Sam Spinner, the in-form Colliver oozed confidence on Micky Hammond’s stable star.

Though Duke Of Navan jumped flamboyant­ly throughout this two-mile test, and still headed a select field at the last under Ryan Day, Just Cameron landed full of running.

The sticky ground at the West Yorkshire track certainly helped – the contest became a real test of stamina for Just Cameron who won four races in early 2015 under Sheffield-born Colliver before chasing home the imperious Un De Sceaux at the Punchestow­n Festival.

It’s highly likely that Just Cameron will return to Wetherby for the racinguk.com Handicap Chase on January 13, a race that the chaser won earlier this year.

“Being a Yorkshire-trained horse, it’s great to win a race like the Castleford at one of our local tracks,” Middleham-based Hammond told

“I would say that the race was run to suit.

“He picked up nicely in the home straight and we would always back Joe in a finish from the last to the line as he is such a strong jockey. He deserves a race like this and he was going away at the finish.”

 ??  ?? Politologu­e ridden by Sam Twiston-Davies before going on to win the Desert Orchid Chase at Kempton yesterday.
Politologu­e ridden by Sam Twiston-Davies before going on to win the Desert Orchid Chase at Kempton yesterday.
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