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Ashforth's Angles: The tale of a horse who is not bothered

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SYBARITE

Sybarite: can he register an overdue success at Warwick?

 By David Ashforth 3:32PM 3 APR 2016 

Wincanton was one of the first racecourses to offer a baby changing unit. It’s a terrific idea and means that disillusioned parents can either try a different one or swop their unwanted child for a pair of binoculars.

Binoculars, like typewriters and Sherlock Holmes pipes, are rarer sights than they once were but at least they don’t need their nappies changing.

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It’s a pity that it’s Sidbury Hill rather than Silbury Hill that is running in the handicap chase (3.10) because Sidbury Hill is a rather boring iron age hill fort whereas Silbury Hill is a rather impressive neolithic mound dating from about 2,400 BC.

That’s jolly old and if you ever visit trainer Roger Charlton at Beckhampton and drive towards Marlborough you’ll pass it. It’s the largest man made mound in Europe, roughly the same size as Egyptian pyramids. It looks as if there’s bound to be something interesting inside, a bit like Tutankhamun’s tomb. Unfortunately there isn’t.

‘I don’t think he can be bothered’

I don’t know if Warwick’s got a baby changing unit but it does feature the appearance of Sybarite, one of those horses that you wonder if it will ever win a race again.

A successful point-to-pointer, Sybarite started off well, winning four times and finishing runner-up in six of his first 17 races under rules. Foolishly, someone at Nigel Twiston-Davies’s yard then told Sybarite what he was called. He looked it up in the dictionary, discovered that he was named to be a seeker of pleasure and luxury and decided to live up to his name. Since his most recent success, in October 2014, Sybarite has run 13 times without coming either first or second.

It doesn’t help that, despite his point-to-point successes, he has declined to win a chase and, as he moves towards the ranks of the elderly, is being encouraged to add to his three hurdle successes.

Personally, I don’t think Sybarite can be bothered and will probably do his usual – “got behind, rider pushed and shoved, horse ran on when safe in knowledge that race over, strode out well on way to stable.” If he appears in the winner’s enclosure after the 4.00pm race, I’ll know I was wrong and apologise for all those rude things I’ve just written about him.

‘You can’t have everything’

Meanwhile, at Lingfield (3.50), Force Of Destiny will be trying to give the exotic sounding Ilka Gansera-Leveque a welcome winner for owner-breeder Graf Stauffenberg.

Gansera-Leveque’s small Newmarket stable last had a winner when Zebelini won at Ripon in 2014, at 40-1. It would be rather nice if Force Of Destiny gave her another and, being by Galileo out of a Darshaan mare, the four-year-old might well appreciate the step up in trip to almost two miles.

Others may prefer to exploit a link with Silbury Hill, Beckhampton and Roger Charlton and just stick whatever they’ve got on Battlement in the maiden race for three-year-olds (3.20). She’s attractively bred, showed plenty of promise on her debut and is ridden by Ryan Moore. Oh, she’s odds on. You can’t have everything.

 

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