By Tony Calvin - 2 October 2025
It sounds as if Longchamp and Redcar got plenty of rain yesterday but we have no updated details there yet (as of 6.20am).
Newmarket and Ascot have live rain gauges, so it looks like they got around 13mm and 14mm respectively since midnight yesterday (details to be confirmed).
It is currently described as soft at Ascot, and good at Newmarket, but I’d say we could be looking at soft/heavy and good to soft/soft respectively when they update.
Maybe soft at Redcar and Longchamp.
I’ll update when the tracks do (Ascot, Newmarket and Redcar have just updated, details below – I would have been expecting officially deeper ground at all three courses but the times will tell all later).
Longchamp is now very soft after 9mm.
Keep an eye out for NRs (especially Ascot) and maybe changing each-way terms (we already have two in the 1.30pm and 3.50pm at Newmarket), but at least the worst of the rain has passed through now (see forecasts below).
I will be back with an AKBets-focused update around 9am – by the way, they are pretty much bold type on all Arc runners (see below – I’ll preview that race first thing on Sunday once we know how much Saturday rain has landed) – but hopefully this gives you a fair headstart, and an assessment of the movers to date.
Until around 9am then, pop pickers.
Richard Hoiles has kindly been on and has confirmed there is a strong headwind at Ascot, perhaps not ideal for front-runners like Quinault – and Hafeet Alain (now a NR).
Will front-runners change their usual run-style?
First things first, as I said above, keep an eye out for non-runners coming through at all tracks throughout the day (and tomorrow morning) after the expected rain everywhere on Friday into Saturday morning.
I called this race “nasty” at the five-day stage when there were 27 entries, and it looks just as punter-unfriendly now with 16 rocking up for the 7f fillies and mares Listed race.
I’d love to tell you I have a betting angle into the contest, but I haven’t.
Flight is the clear form choice on her Guineas second and she could well be suited by the drop to 7f, but she has a regressive profile and the stable are in pretty awful form.
And, equally as importantly, she is only a best-priced [11/2] short enough given the doubts.
Sunfall won this race in the soft last season when in the care of William Haggas and she isn’t a bad price at 18s and 16s, but it is not a race I am having a bet in.
So I’ll be all square after the first ITV race.
Bright Thunder is very strong in the market; 2s with AKBets, having been 4s yesterday morning.
Another tricky little race to open up with, but I thought the two possible pace angles, North Star and Our Golden One, looked okay 12s and 22s respectively (the latter was briefly available at 50s and 40s on Thursday morning).
Our Golden One is back on a winnable mark again and North Star will benefit from stepping back to 1m2f once again after looking an obvious non-stayer over an extended 1m3f in the soft at Yarmouth last time.
Chic Colombine, a 14s chance, didn’t run too badly after a break at Donny last time but I have gone to the well once too often with her on the back of an unlucky Epsom defeat in 2024 (even though a mark of 94 is a gift on that form) and this is another race which I have decided to sit out.
With Our Golden One out, 14/1 chance North Star is set to get an uncontested lead . That now makes her of interest.
But each-way punters be aware this is now a seven-runner race, as Aiming High is out, too.
Nothing much doing here betting-wise apart from that shocking news.
It is blowing a gale at Newmarket too, but here it may suit front-runners.
We lost eight at the overnight stage but most of the main players are still in the race, and there is little between the four form horses – Beautiful Diamond, Shagraan, Cover Up and Kerdos – at these weights.
The first-named pair dominate the betting at [5/2] and 3s.
Kerdos opened up at 12s in a place at the 48-hour stage (still there) and clearly has a huge chance on his King Charles III fifth here in June (the King’s Stand in old money) but he is becoming very disappointing, and the recent form of the Clive Cox yard is poor.
That said, I think the 12s and 11s about him is probably the bet in the race if you want one.
I’m not bothering.
The 5s poke Candy is a shorter price than Cover Up and Kerdos, but understandably so, perhaps.
This time last year he was landing a mini-gamble from 40s to 18s when winning Redcar’s Two Year Old Trophy and he fairly bolted up, from flagfall to winning line, off a mark of 92 in the Ayr Silver Cup last time.
But the general [9/2] – a point bigger in one spot – is no bargain as he steps up in grade, for all the Group/Listed-class sprint division is about a frightening as sticking your hand in a goldfish bowl.
On the fish theme, I always think of Larry Blackmon in his red codpiece when I think of Candy….”you’re giving me a heart attack, it’s the part I like…”
Cover Up and Pearl Of Windsor are NRs and, them aside, there has been little change in this market.
I thought you’d be on your own here in this 26-runner auction stakes – and disappearing prices, once again, means you probably are.
But I did like one in here if the prices becomes right.
One firm went an early [5/2] about Half Sovereign on Thursday but they soon retreated into the general [11/8], though there is a drifting [15/8] out there now.
Even that is a price I can all too easily resist, for all she is an uncomplicated improver getting 7lb from her main form rival Jel Pepper, who I was not surprised to see shorten from 20s into 10s. That was a mad opening price.
True Test is an obvious danger at [5/1] on her Group 2 run in France two starts ago and it is no surprise to the sexier once-raced winner Colori Forever short in the betting, as well.
He won well in a decent time on his debut at Yarmouth – visually it was very impressive, really picking up in a willing manner when asked to go and win his race – and the second (Rosa Inglesea, who re-opposes here after winning at Chelmsford), third (now rated 87 after two subsequent successes) and fourth won next time, and the world is his lobster after just one start.
Yes, he needs to improve, but I can see him giving the favourite something to think about and his draw in two may not be too punitive with plenty of pace beside him in one, four and five.
The problem is the 8s went, and 6s is now the best on offer.
I like to think we will get bigger on Saturday; if we do, I’ll play win-only. I have done at 13/2, win-only, this morning.
The bookmakers have been shortening a few in here, so the current prices look stingy (as they often do the day before these days – and this race is a classic example).
The once-raced contender, Accidental Bid, is another whose [150/1] Thirsk second on debut has worked out well.
The winner and third haven’t raced since but the fourth, fifth and sixth won next time and I see there have been nibbles for him from 28s to 14s and 12s.
Blakefell (33s into 16s) is another early shortener following a luckless run at Donny last time.
Jel Pepper (20s and 16s after the final field was known) continues to shorten and he is into 4s with AKBets.
There were 17 in this at the five-day stage and we will now be lucky if we get each way 1,2 betting on the day.
The most notable no-show from the five-day entries was Ethical Diamond.
That has seen Hamish and Al Qareem shorten into 2s joint-favourites – Hamish won this race in 2022 and Al Qareem has won the last two renewals – with [6/1] Tenability now next up, with [7/1] Military Academy and 8s Sir Dinadan
Tenability has been the mover/horse cut, albeit to what would have been very little sums at this stage.
He was immediately trimmed into 10s from 14s on Thursday morning, and he is now a general 5s and 6s.
I wouldn’t be so sure he will run if the ground gets very deep, though that looks unlikely at this stage (maybe William Haggas played it cute here by declaring both him and mudlover Hamish to cover himself going-wise – Hamish will go clear favourite if they get plenty of rain obviously), but he is a horse going places.
It was officially soft when Tenability won here last time, but Timeform called it good to soft and all his earlier form was on a better surface.
Sure, he has 17lb and 11lb to find respectively with his stablemate and Al Qareem, but he at least he gets the 6lb age allowance and I thought it was very strong handicap form when he saw off Push The Limit, with 5 ½ lengths back to the third, here last time.
I think connections of the runner-up (who runs in the Listed race at Ascot today at 4.05pm) were not expecting defeat there.
But 6 and 5s is clearly nothing flash now.
AKBets are top price about 5/4 Hamish and 11/4 Al Qareem, and very competitive on the other three.
The Group 1 race of the day domestically, and the numbers have stood up well.
Aidan O’Brien took his three out, preferring Longchamp for them all, but all the rest confirmed (Roger Varian stuck in his Lady Of Spain pretty late).
Cinderella’s Dream and Fallen Angel have the obvious form claims – they are the [11/4] joint favourites, but the latter will shorten with the rain – but Blue Bolt looks a fair each way angle at [9/1] now.
She was beaten ½-length by Lady Of Spain at Sandown last time but Colin Keane was all over the place on her close home – the Irish champion momentarily looked like a 7lb claimer trying to organise her on the thrust to the line – and I thought she should have won.
So do others, as she hit 1.04 in running.
That was only her fifth start, as it was the unbeaten Lady of Spain’s, but I’d be happy enough to side with Andrew Balding’s 3yo to at least hit the frame here.
Only a small each way bet though, as the race has obvious depth, with place claims easy enough to make for her Sandown conqueror and the likes of Cathedral at the current prices, to name but two outside of the principals.
Not a great deal happening here with the betting this morning but Sparks Fly has just been pulled out.
I was very sweet on Annaf at 8s on Tuesday but he is drawn in three and away from the probable pace in eight, 10 and 13, so Danny Muscutt may have to switch him inside and ride for luck.
Not ideal but my money is already down, so I can’t change that.
The draw is a pity though (or rather a potential pitfall), as is the fact that the field stood up so well at the overnight stage (we only lost three on Thursday morning), so I am little surprised not to see him on offer at bigger than 7s.
I do think he has a huge chance if things go his way, though.
This is what I wrote on Tuesday:
“He won this race as the [5/2] favourite in 2023 and I think a reproduction of any three of his 10 performances this season will see him hard to beat here.
“Sure, he hasn’t won in those 10 starts in 2025 (at least he doesn’t carry a penalty, like Quinault), but he will take some whacking on his 3-length seventh to Never So Brave in the 7f Group 1 City Of York Stakes on his penultimate start, a trip that stretches his stamina.
“I had a fair old go at him at massive prices in the Betfair Sprint Cup last time but, coming out of trap four, he had no chance in that draw-bias race (the first four home were berthed in 15-19-16-13, with 18 not occupied).
“Aside from his win in this race two years ago, he has also finished third in a King’s Stand here in 2023, and, even though he is getting on a bit at six and potentially faces progressive 3yos such as the dangerous Prince Of India – so he is hardly the sexy angle – he has the class to take care of these if on song.
“Annaf has been travelling into his races like a winner waiting to happen given the right opportunity, and this is his grade and time to shine.”
If the draw isn’t a barrier to success, then I think he has a great chance. The weather can do what it likes for him, and I suspect I will press up if he hits 8s again (currently a general 7s but I think he is set to drift as an older uglier man of the party – more Steve Buscemi than Brad Pitt).
Sorry, Steve.
There has been a lot of betting love around for the aforementioned Prince Of India since the overnight decs and he is into [9/2] tops, and as short as [10/3].
Alfa Kellenic is a NR as at 6.22pm, and has been followed by Elmonjed and Lou Lou’s Gift and Celandine.
Apollo One is currently winning the favouritism battle all round; that one is 4s with AKBets (was 6s yesterday). The headwind is not great news for the forward-going Quinault.
The wind could play a role at Redcar too, so keep an eye on the earlier races.
I nailed my colours to the mast of Arduis Invicta when she was 16s and 14s and 12s on Tuesday, so I am obviously happy with that position now she is just [15/2] and we are down to 16 runners (seven shy of the maximum allowed for this 150k Listed race).
But that looks about her price now and I am not entirely happy to see her drawn in two, as I don’t like being drawn on wings in sprints.
Or sprints, full stop, in the main.
That said, she is drawn to get on the far rail that proved to be the place to be last year (5-2-3-7-8-4 led them home in that 18-runner race).
And what I wrote on Tuesday obviously holds true:
“She isn’t ground-dependent and she is rapidly improving on the evidence of a seemingly much-improved third in Listed company at Ayr last time on soft ground as a 40s poke (the handicapper upped her a whopping 18lb for it – it is always “whopping” in these circumstances).
That was the first time she had raced on anything slower than good according to Timeform (though it was officially good to soft when she won at Musselburgh previously, the form of which admittedly is less than impressive), so the ground could be the key to her sudden progress.”
On second thoughts, I think the current [9/1] is fair though, again, I can see her drifting perhaps.
Hugo Palmer is having a moderate spell of late but his Ardisia appeared to put up a much-improved performance on soft ground at Ayr last time and he looked an okay price at a general 8s, as is Listed race winner Argentine Tango, who simply wins this off 8st 3lb on her best placed Group 2 and 3 race form, at 9s.
But the latter may have danced too many dances for this season (this is number 11 of the campaign), as her form has tailed off on her last three starts.
This looks a pretty static market as of 8.45am on Saturday.
Hafeet Alain, Linwood and Dosman are NRs as at 9.30am.
It is always amusing to see bookmakers rushing prices out on Thursday mornings (quite why I am not so sure), and some very early birds are sitting on some fair prices.
There is no point mentioning them as they would have been cut quicker than a thin-skinned boxer, and for a lot less money, and Balmacara presents a big dilemma for punters.
Or presented.
Read on.
He was available at 25s ante-post, despite being 7lb well-in after a great second against horses rated in the 100s in a Sandown Listed race last time , but a reason for that seeming generosity is that he also had the option of Redcar on Saturday.
As soon as I saw him confirmed for this when decs-tracking I assumed we’d be looking at a 10-12s poke here.
But, then he got stall one, and 20s and 22s soon became available.
However, that over-reaction has corrected itself, with the last of the 20s going on Friday morning. He is now a general 11s (he is bigger than that at 14s but that will be coming under pressure soon enough).
That draw towards the middle and far side would worry me for him, but maybe the rain will change the dynamic and the usual stands’ side rail bias may not be in operation now the track has been narrowed.
The expected further rain is a plus for him (especially over this 7f trip) and everything about him screams “handicapped to win again” after that back to form run last time (actually the handicapper has it as a career-best).
But the representative 11s is pretty much his price now in a race this competitive.
Talking of reduced prices, I wouldn’t have been laying Hafeet Alain at the opening 22s either, as he could get on the lead on the near rail from stall 15 of 18 and be hard to catch (someone presumably did, as he is now into a general 20s and 18s).
As regards his stall in 15, they raced down the centre in this last year and Volterra, from stall two, ended up drifting towards the far rail in winning, and we are always guessing about the draw to a large extent.
We haven’t seen Hafeet Alain since he made all to win by a wide margin at Sandown in May but he goes well of a break and his 6lb rise for that 3 ¼-length defeat of Whip Cracker and Hickory looked fair enough.
He ran well enough on his only start here last year, on soft ground, off just a 1lb lower mark than this.
In his Weekender column, Ed Walker said he purposedly left him alone for the summer, with a view to running him in some big autumn prizes (this is worth 180k) before retiring him. I’ve had a small win-only bet on him and may press up on Saturday (now 25s).
Trip, ground and freshness are all positives, for all he is now 3lb higher than for his career-best win.
For what it is worth, one group put him at 33s on Thursday morning and were soon into 12s.
However, that headwind news is not ideal if they are looking to go from the front again (it has put me off pressing up).
Native Warrior is into [7/2] and 3s, but Apiarist is the big mover.
As big as 66s in the ante-post market, he is now 9s.
It looks like he was 25s this morning, according to Oddschecker – I think the excellent Monty from Withnail put him up earlier in the week at 66s….
What a terrible c…..
The dangerous dead-eight for this 1m4f fillies’ handicap.
The early brigade scalped some [13/2] about Perfect Your Craft on Thursday, which was good business clearly as she is now just 4s, but this looks a trappy enough race to me.
And one that I wouldn’t bet in until Saturday.
You clearly want to see how the numbers stand up after the rain but David Simcock had a double on Thursday and Miss Wong looks okay at a general 7s.
Actually, I have seen this race has been kicked off the ITV schedule, so I’ll leave it there.
Albany is a NR anyway, so down to seven. Now six, as Loving Look is out, too.
We obviously have some high-class racing at Longchamp on Saturday (live on Sky Sports Racing – well perhaps live, with a 10-second delay) with plenty of UK and Irish involvement.
I’d be lying if I said I had a decent handle on the home team throughout the weekend – I pretty much had to start from scratch when looking at the Arc – but I backed Queenstown each way at 8s for the Prix du Cadran (12.58pm) on Thursday and that price is still available.
If you can’t get it, then the general 7s each way, including with AKBets, is fine.
I’d be willing to back him at 5s if all eight go, three places (dangerous dead-eight rules apply but you think they’d all run in the circumstances – see below – though Sunway’s participation does worry me a touch).
The reason I backed him is someone alerted me to the fact that this race was full of non-stayers for this 2m4f test, and I had to agree on closer inspection, not that Queenstown is proven over the distance admittedly.
Well, my first inspection.
There were originally only three in the race (Alsakib, Coltrane and Sunway) before five were supplemented for 20-odd bags, including Queenstown obviously, so hopefully the eight will stand.
I will deal with all his seven rivals before coming on to Queenstown.
The [11/4] favourite Coltrane stays well and finished a good third to Kyprios in this race last season – he is the one to beat – but he comes here on the back of a poor run in the Doncaster Cup last time, albeit that came after a 70-day break.
As for the non-stayers (or at least those unproven beyond 2m), I have Alsakib and Sunway firmly in that camp, as well as Coetzee and Sacred Spirit.
I can see Caballo De Mar at 4s as a big danger, but not the 25s outsider Tashkhan, and I am struggling to work out why Queenstown is 8s, for all he is rather lowly-rated to be winning a Group 1.
Normal rules about ratings don’t tend to hold these talent-drain days, however, and this could be a tale of three stayers.
Now, I know this was an afterthought after his third in the Irish Cesarewitch last weekend, going on at the finish in that 2m1f test off a mark of 104, but he just looks like a one-paced boat who could relish this test.
He had some decent runs to his name against Kyprios last year – what price would he be in here against this rum bunch? – and if all eight go, then he surely hits the frame at least on stamina grounds alone.
He is ground-versatile, handling fast and heavy, so the weather can do what it wants.
Plenty of rain will probably suit, as it will further drag the stamina (sorry for using that word a lot) out of the others.
I wouldn’t be averse to see him going off in front, putting pain into the equation and grinding this lot into submission, and hopefully finishing in the first three at the very least.
Pain and gain – and after yesterday’s rain (see details below) dubious stayers need not apply at Longchamp this weekend.
Hopefully Queenstown isn’t one.
Queenstown each way at [8/1] in 12.58pm at Longchamp
GOING – Good, good to soft in places
Going stick: 6.4, Saturday, 6am (was 6.9, Friday midday; was 7.5, Wednesday 1.30pm)
Rails: Far Side Course in Use
Stalls: Centre
Saturday morning course update: 12mm of rain over the past 24 hours. Forecast: Early morning showers before turning to a dry afternoon with the odd sunny spell. Guests of 45mph are expected during the afternoon, peaking during racing.
Weather: 1mm Saturday, light showers in afternoon
GOING – Soft
Going stick – Straight: 6.3; Round: 5.1 (Saturday 7.30am)
Moisture: 41%
Some drainage works; sand slitting has been completed on the round course between the 1M 4F start and the 5F marker since the previous meeting
Rails: The rail on the round course is positioned between 5 and 8yds out from the 1M 4F start to the Home bend where it increases to 14yds out at the Home straight where the rail finishes in a cutaway. The straight course is divided in two with a rail in the middle of the course from the 1m start to approx 2.5f from the winning line. The stands side will be in use for this meeting.
Saturday morning course update: 7mm rain recorded since racing yesterday, only 2.5mm since midnight. 14mm rain recorded since Thursday. The rainband has passed through now, occasional showers are possible on a windy day. For access to our live weather station and for the latest Going info please go to www.ascot.com/thegoing
Weather: Largely dry now
GOING – Good to soft, good in places
Going stick: 7.1, Saturday 10.10am
Saturday morning course update: 3mm rain on Saturday night. Dry & sunny afternoon on Sunday, 17C. Dry, calm and overcast on Monday, 15C. Dry, warm and light breeze on Tuesday, 20C. 1mm rain during Wednesday morning, then dry and calm, with temps of 16C. Dry and overcast on Thursday. 3mm rain overnight into Friday, followed by a further 5.5mm which finished around 8pm on Friday evening. It has been dry since then. Possibility of 2-3mm of rain Saturday morning, with strong winds continuing throughout Saturday.
Weather: 1mm Saturday
GOING: Very soft (from Good to soft) after 9mm yesterday into this morning – but how will it ride?
Weather : Now dry and sunny after early Saturday rain
Giavellotto Andrea Atzeni (drawn 5)
White Birch Dylan Browne McMonagle (9)
Arrow Eagle Ioritz Mendizabal (16)
Sosie Stephane Pasquier (3)
Los Angeles Wayne Lordan (14)
Byzantine Dream Oisin Murphy (15)
Estrange Danny Tudhope (18)
Quisisana Alexis Pouchin (7)
Kalpana Colin Keane (10)
Aventure Maxime Guyon (12)
Daryz Mickael Barzalona (2)
Leffard Cristian Demuro (6)
Cualificar William Buick (8)
Hotazhell Shane Foley (11)
Croix Du Nord Yuichi Kitamura (17)
Alohi Alii Christophe Lemaire (4)
Minnie Hauk Christophe Soumillon (1)
Gezora Tom Marquand (13)
AKBETS on The Arc (click on race link to go to the website betting and place a bet – prices as of 7.20am Saturday – they are pretty much top price about everything): 4/1 Minnie Hauk, 5/1 Aventure, 9/1 Sosie, 11/1 Kalpana, Daryz, 14/1 Byzantine Dream, Cualificar, 16/1 Alohi Alli, Croix Du Nord, 18/1 Gezora, 20/1 Quisisana, 28/1 Los Angeles, Giavellotto, White Birch, 33/1 Leffard, 80/1 Hotazhell, 100/1 Arrow Eagle
3.35pm Ascot: Billyjoh, Back In Black, King’s Lynn, Leadman, Crimson Spirit, Glenfinnan, Sword, Walson’s Law, Wodao, Arctic Dawn, Tolstoy, Dapper Guest
1.15pm Ascot: Fair Point (4), Queen’s Reign (9), Sunfall (12) – Dubai Treasure NR as at 6.52am
1.30pm Newmarket (uncontested lead possibility now): North Star (1) – Our Golden One is a NR, as is Aiming High, so we are down to just seven runners
1.50pm Ascot: Candy (6), Beautiful Diamond (11), Enchanting (10) Minnie Wildes (if not starting slowly – 8) – Cover Up and Pearl Of Windsor are NRs
2.05pm Newmarket: Court Alert (8), Elan d’Or (19), Wetsand (12), Runswick (5), Half Sovereign (4), Harlequin Angel (1), Lady Hornblower (13), Mystic Moment (9), Come on Eibhlin (23)
2.25pm Ascot: Al Qareem (5), Sir Dinadan (1)
2.40pm Newmarket: Fallen Star (3), Spiritual (10), Blue Bolt (5), Saqqara Sands (1) – Sparks Fly is a NR
3pm Ascot: Quinault (10), Run Boy Run (8) (Tuco Salamanca is a NR, as are Alfa Kellenic, Elmonjed, Lou Lou’s Gift and Celandine
3.20pm Redcar: Exclamation (4), Song Of The Clyde (10), Kanishka (11), Straight Ahead (9), Isle Of Fernandez (5), Magistery (7), Argentine Tango (12)
3.35pm Ascot: Balmacara (1), Tarkhan (10), Yanifer (3) – Hafeet Alain, Dosman and Linwood are NRs
3.50pm Newmarket: Hot Flame (1), Orionis (2), Alpine Oasis (5) – Albany is a NR
Good: Andrew Balding, George Boughey, William Haggas, Charlie Appleby, Karl Burke, Ralph Beckett, Charles Hills, Roger Varian, Charlie Fellowes, Harry Charlton, John Andrew Kinsella (one 13-2 winner from 4 runners, so sample is questionable), Saeed bin Suroor, Coyle and Wood, Jamie Osborne, Oliver Cole (25-1 winner on Thursday), John and Thady Gosden, James Tate
Fair: Richard Spencer, Tim Easterby, Brian Ellison, Craig Lidster (borderline good), Kevin Philippart De Foy, Ed Walker (winner on Thursday), Alan King (13-2 winner on Friday, nearing good), David Simcock (double on Thursday), Muir and Grassick, Stuart Williams (winner on Thursday; borderline good) Marco Botti, James Owen, Ed Dunlop, James Fanshawe, Jane Chapple-Hyam (no winners), Ivan Furtado, Richard Hannon (double on Friday), Tom Ward (no winners), Charlie Johnston, David O’Meara, Mick Appleby (pretty good), Simon and Ed Crisford, Johnny Murtagh, Daniel and Claire Kubler, Dylan Cunha (broke the winless run with a 13-2 scorer on Thursday)
Moderate in the main: Grace Harris, Hugo Palmer (8-1 winner on Friday), Clive Cox, Richard Fahey (11-1 winner of the opener at Ascot on Friday), Kevin Ryan, Michael Dods (2-1 winner on Thursday), David Loughnane, Donnacha O’Brien (a Group 1 runner-up aside), Lemos De Souza, Sean Woods, Adrian Nicholls, Archie Watson, Jedd O’Keeffe (small sample), Eve Johnson Houghton (winner on Thursday, though), William Knight, Hughie Morrison, Ollie Sangster (poor), Jack Channon (winner on Thursday, though), Rod Millman, Paul Midgley, Henry Candy, Michael Bell, Dominic Ffrench Davis
Don’t know: Conrad Allen (very few runners), Charalambous and Clutterbuck, Harriet Bethell
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