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Ashforth's Angles: All-weather at Newcastle? What would Aunt Beth say

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Josephine Gordon

Josephine Gordon: rides for David Barron, and he knows what he’s doing

  PICTURE: Edward Whitaker (racingpost.com/photos)  

 By David Ashforth 6:00PM 16 MAY 2016 

WHO’D have thought it? Newcastle an all-weather track, Flat racing at Wetherby, over a third of this year’s Flat meetings on non-turf surfaces. As my Aunt Beth would have said if she hadn’t died, “What is the world coming to?”

Never mind, the Tapeta surface at Newcastle is said to be splendid and northern trainers are bound to run their horses there regularly, especially the ones that can’t go round bends or get travel sick on the way to Wolverhampton.

There are doubtless more important observations to be made about the launch of a new generation of racing at Gosforth Park but what I’ve noticed is that Josephine Gordon is making her first appearance at Newcastle before going on to make her first appearance at Wetherby, where she has her first rides for Les Eyre.

Gordon, as you will already know if you have been paying attention, is an extremely capable apprentice who has already ridden 25 winners this year for 11 different trainers.

People often speculate about “the next Hayley Turner.” Gordon, with the usual provisos (loss of claim, loss of brain, sticky toffee pudding obsession, men etc) has a realistic chance of a successful career as a fully fledged professional jockey. If she’s got any significant remaining shortcomings apart from lack of experience I haven’t noticed them and nor, judging by the number of rides she’s getting, have a lot of trainers. Gordon has ridden for 45 different ones so far this season, to be 46 after she’s ridden for Eyre.

David Barron, as the saying goes, knows what he’s doing and Gordon has won twice for him already this season on Chilworth Bells who attempts to defy a career high handicap mark in the 2.35 at Newcastle.

Then she’s off to Wetherby to ride Qibtee, drawn an unhelpful 16 of 16 in the opening apprentice handicap (5.40) and the more helpfully drawn (3 of 16) Disclosure in a non-apprentice handicap (6.40).

I can’t help thinking that Qibtee’s chance has been seriously compromised by connections breaking the rule that a Q is always followed by a U. The six-year-old has won twice for Eyre without a U but would surely have won more often if he’d been called Quibtee, as he should have been. Eyre wouldn’t have got away with it at school and he shouldn’t be allowed to get away with it now.

There’s no such problem with Disclosure but he’s been off for over seven months, possibly on a world tour, and has a tough task. On the other hand, he is going for a four-timer, having finished seventh on each of his last three runs. Can he make it four?

Meanwhile, in another apprentice handicap at Lingfield (5.35), the veteran Bennelong is reunited with Rhiain Ingram over a much more suitable 12 furlongs than the seven furlongs he attempted on his last run. Bennelong seems better at Kempton and nowadays, whatever the trip, tends to leave his late rattle too late but I’ll be egging him on anyway.

 

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