Chester 2.05 result: Tricky Tel lands a gamble on debut
1. TRICKY TEL 5-6 FAV, 2. Call Me By My Name 25-1, 3. Senorita Vega 9-1.
Horse racing: Chester’s May meeting day two, Zanzoun blow for Gosdens – live | Horse racing![]() Key events Chester 2.05 result: Tricky Tel lands a gamble on debut1. TRICKY TEL 5-6 FAV, 2. Call Me By My Name 25-1, 3. Senorita Vega 9-1. They are off and running at Chester, and Bring It On is not with the field, he wouldn’t go into the stalls … Davvy and Tricky Tel both prominent, Maynora close up alongside Call Me By My Name, … Tricky Tel takes it up at the top of the straight … he’s going clear, wins easily … the money was spot on, a double in the first two races for Hugo Palmer and Oisin Murphy. They are behind the stalls for the maiden here at 2.05, Tricky Tel is down to even-money to give Oisin Murphy a quickfire double. Dubai Time at 4-1 is second-favourite, Bring It On is 7-1 and it’s 14-1 bar. CHESTER 2.35, DEE STAKES, LISTED, 1M 2F 70YD Even the most devoted fans of Chester’s May meeting – and I’m very much a paid-up member of the club – would claim that the Dee Stakes is a major Derby trial, and it has not been won by the subsequent Derby winner since Kris Kin beat three rivals back in 2003. As a result, it has yo-yoed between Group Three and Listed status over the years, but on paper at least, this year’s renewal looks a cut above several recent runnnings, as Aidan O’Brien’s two-strong challenge faces real opposition from High Stock, the Wood Ditton Stakes winner, and, on paper at least, Ralph Beckett’s Calla Lagoon. Calla Lagoon, though, is a massive drifter in the betting today, out to 20-1 from 5-1 overnight, in the face of serious support for O’Brien’s Mount Kilimanjaro, the mount of Ryan Moore. Mount Kilimanjaro rounded off his juvenile career as the one-and-a-quarter length runner-up behind his stable companion, Twain – another leading ante-post fancy for the Derby – in the Criterium International at Saint-Cloud in Paris last October. High Stock is the only other runner attracting significant support for today’s race and is currently 4-1 to back up his win in the Wood Ditton Stakes at Newmarket last month when, like all the runners in the race, he was making his racecourse debut. Zanzoun 'off behind' and will miss outingAway from the Roodee, there’s news of another setback for the John & Thady Gosden stable as their filly Zanzoun, who took the Nell Gwyn Stakes at Newmarket’s Craven meeting, was “off behind” after exercise on Thursday morning and will miss her intended engagement in the Poule D’Essai Des Pouliches (French 1,000 Guineas) on Sunday. “John and Thady called to say after she cantered they weren’t happy with her and she looked a little tight behind,” Barry Mahon, the European racing manager for Juddmonte, Zanzoun’s owner, said earlier today. “When you are not in peak condition, you can’t be heading off to the races, so we will have to sit and wait and diagnose whether it is muscular or something a bit more – and when she tells us she’s ready, we will make a plan then. Unfortunately, she’s just not ready for Sunday.” Here’s the closing stages of the opener from the At The Races Twitter/X feed: Fair Taxes went off favourite in the end and Saffie Osborne did her best to exploit her ideal draw but the course-specialist Roman Dragon was always tracking the pace going well and came with an irresistible run down the middle of the track to grab the win under Oisin Murphy. Chester 1.30 result: Roman Dragon fired up for sixth course win1. ROMAN DRAGON 8-1, 2. Rosenspur 12-1, 3. Balmoral Lady 16-1. Off and running in the 1.30 Chester … Good break by Fair Taxes, Rosenspur right there too, approaching halfway already …. Rosenspur leads into the straight, Fair Taxes staying on better though, here comes Roman Dragon under Oisin Murphy, he’s got there with something spare, Roman Dragon wins for Hugo Palmer at 8-1. The runners are going down for the opening sprint handicap, the market is struggling to separate Fair Taxes and Jer Batt at around 7-2. Current full betting list: 7-2 Fair Taxes & Jer Batt CHESTER 2.05, MAIDEN STAKES, 2YO, 5F 110YD Maiden races – for horses that have yet to win - don’t normally make it onto the ITV Racing schedule, but then, most maiden races are not worth £20k to the winner and this is a contest that will have been circled in red in many trainers’ programme books for some time. The original 13-runner field at declaration time has been reduced to 11 as, surprise, surprise, the horses drawn in stalls 12 and 13 have both been scratched. Bad case of high-numberitis, the cynics might suggest. Four of the remaining 11 runners are making their seasonal debut today, including two from Hugo Palmer’s local yard, which has plenty of success on the Roodee. One of those – Tricky Tel, the mount of Oisin Murphy – has been strongly backed today, and is currently priced up at even-money, while stable companion Dubai Time is the 8-1 second-favourite. That feels quite significant given that neither horse has been seen in public as yet, but I plumped for Dubai Time as the pick for the Racing Post tipping table yesterday and so feel obliged to stick with it, albeit that this is a race where only the foolish, brave or very well-informed will be getting involved. SELECTION: DUBAI TIME HUNTINGDON 1.45, MARES’ HANDICAP HURDLE, 2M 3F 137YD After a trip to Newton Abbot yesterday, Huntingdon gets the nod to strut its stuff for the ITV Racing audience today, although this looks like a very trappy little handicap hurdle that is perhaps best left alone for betting purposes. Four of the runners lined up for the same Class 2 race – two levels above this one - at Cheltenham last time, but all were well beaten or pulled up bar Ile De Jersey in sixth. Of Course You Can’s best form is at Ludlow, which is right-handed and flat, so she should be at home around Huntingdon, but if pressed for a pick, it would probably be the lightly-raced Taxus Baccata, who returns to hurdles in first-time cheekpieces on a reasonable mark. SELECTION: TAXUS BACCATA Jumping ahead briefly to Saturday, the final fields are through for the Derby and Oaks trials at Lingfield this weekend. There are just three runners in the Oaks Trial, although it does feature the seasonal debut of Aidan O’Brien’s Giselle, a supremely well-bred daughter of Frankel out of Newspaperofrecord, who took the Breeders’ Cup Juvenile Fillies’ Turf in 2018. She was an unlucky third in a Group Three on her final start at two and is currently a 20-1 shot for the Oaks. Lingfield’s Derby Trial is longer on numbers, with seven declared runners headed by two colts from the O’Brien yard: Puppet Master, who was fourth in the Ballysax Stakes in March, and Stay True, the winner of his only start to date, in a maiden at Leopardstown in early April. CHESTER 1.30, HANDICAP, 5F A quick dash around the five-furlong course to open Thursday’s proceedings, and it may not be necessary to look much further than stall one for the likeliest winner. Fair Taxes, a four-year-old trained in Ireland by Ross O’Sullivan, likes to make the running, has the perfect pitch by the rail and showed that he acts around here when finishing third, off a 1lb lower mark, on similar ground here last August. He was beaten less than two lengths that day having had the worst of the draw in 12. Jer Batt has returned in fine fettle and posted a fine effort on the clock at Musselburgh last time, when running for the first time in 175 days, but he is out in stall nine, which is hardly ideal. SELECTION: FAIR TAXES. PreambleGood afternoon from the Roodee in Chester – and welcome back to anyone who was following the action yesterday – on day two of Chester’s May festival, ahead of the Dee Stakes, the meeting’s second Derby trial, and the Group Three Ormonde Stakes for stayers. The Dee has blown occasionally hot but generally cold as a pointer towards the Derby over the course of its 212-year history (though it may well be the only recognised Derby trial that has been won by a future Grand National winner, as Voluptuary, the Dee winner in 1881, ran unplaced at Epsom a few weeks later and landed the Aintree spectacular three years after that). But today’s renewal looks stronger than several recent renewals, not least as the recent Wood Ditton Stakes winner, High Stock, is among the runners. The Wood Ditton, over a mile at Newmarket’s Craven meeting in mid-April, is restricted to unraced three-year-olds and frequently includes a future top-notcher that, for whatever reason, simply couldn’t get to a track as a juvenile. High Stock is bred to get at least a mile-and-a-quarter and today’s race is the perfect way to find out if it might be worth supplementing him for the Derby. The Ormonde, meanwhile, is also a fascinating contest which pits Illinois, the runner-up in last year’s St Leger, against the impressively versatile Absurde, a former winner of the County Handicap Hurdle at the Cheltenham festival who has performed with credit in the last two runnings of the Melbourne Cup. The Dee is due off at 2.35 while the Ormonde is at 3.05, and the card opens at 1.30 with a five-furlong handicap in which, unusually for a track where the draw is all-important in sprints, has a field of a dozen runners with no withdrawals from the higher-numbered stalls. Source link Posted: 2025-05-08 14:21:37 |
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