Wolverhampton Lincoln Trial Preview

The flat racing turf season is not that far away and it is Lincoln Trial day at Wolverhampton on Saturday. The Lincoln can be something of a lottery but the trial is worth a tidy £50,000 so usually attracts a decent field.

Mindurownbusiness represents trainer Roger Varian and is currently priced at 25-1 for the big Doncaster handicap. Graham Lee takes the ride tomorrow on the four-year-old son of Cape Cross who put up his best performance to date when beating Sovereign Debt at Lingfield last month. Jim Crowley was in the saddle that day and always had the colt handily placed before striking for home with a furlong to run.

He holds Melvin The Grate (fourth), Don’t Call Me (sixth) and Halation (seventh) on that form. Mindurownbusiness has gone up 7lbs and has been beaten on his previous visits to the midlands track but it is difficult to see any of the beaten horses reversing the form.

Halation went on to beat Holiday Magic by a head last week at Lingfield but has five and a half lengths to make up. His cause will certainly be helped by the 7lbs claim of Tom Marquand but he has drawn stall ten. Melvin The Grate looks to be in the grip of the handicapper while top weight Solar Deity has not won since 2013.

The fly in the ointment could be Santefisio who was very unlucky when eighth behind Baddilini last time out. Jockey Joe Fanning could be seen sat up in the irons inside the final furlong with nowhere to go. He was forced to accept the situation and finished less than five lengths off the winner. Santefisio is a bit of a law unto himself so caution is advised but there are probably worse 10-1 shots.

In the Listed race which opens the card I like the chances of Sovereign Debt. He chased home Mindurownbusiness and was then unlucky in running behind Baddilini, flashing home in third place. He is 3lbs better off with runner-up Grey Mirage for three-quarters of a length and 11lbs better off with the winner. He breaks from stall one but Joe Fanning will probably try to get him covered up early on.  Intransigent has been a good friend of this column but all of his wins have come in the Autumn/Winter and he carries a 3lbs penalty here.

Sovereign Debt 2.15 Wolverhampton @6-1 Stan James

Mindurownbusiness 2.50 Wolverhampton @9-2 Stan James

Santefisio 2.50 Wolverhampton @10-1 Ladbrokes

Each-way ¼ odds, 1,2,3

Wolverhampton Thursday Preview

A nice double yesterday with Graphic (9-4 advised) and Balder Succes (8-15) both winning without breaking sweat. If only it was always that simple! Much of the attention on Wednesday will be on Tony McCoy and his quest for winner number 4,000. Jonjo O’Neill is supplying him with a regular stream of winners so it would be no surprise to see him boot one home at Towcester.

I’m heading to Wolverhampton tomorrow in search of a short-priced double. William Haggas has enjoyed a tremendous season and has been picking up handicaps with monotonous regularity. Harris Tweed seems to have been on the racetrack for donkey’s years and his half-sister seems set to uphold the family tradition after romping to a seven-length success at Newmarket recently.

Tweed was having only her second start but bounded clear from a good field in the style of a prospective group horse. Despite being eased down, she still had seven lengths in hand over Duchess of Gazeley. A 6lbs penalty doesn’t even come close to reflecting her supremacy and she faces only two rivals on Thursday. With all due respect to Layl and Corton Lad, they should not be good enough to get her off the bridle.

Of course, Tweed’s odds will reflect her chance so I’m relying on Godolphin’s Musaddas to set up the double in the opening maiden race. Saeed bin Suroor trains this son of Exceed and Excel and this will be his fourth attempt at breaking his duck. To be fair, the gelding looked to have his race won at Windsor last time only for Modernstone to cut him down close home.

Musaddas didn’t help his cause by pulling like a train in the early stages but Silvestre de Sousa will know him better this time and the fact that he will always be on the turn here should help. He holds Arms on that form but may have most to fear from It Must Be Faith. This one has been runner-up twice and has been tried at six to eight furlongs. He ran well at Yarmouth last time and is certainly capable of making a race of it.

Musaddas

Tweed