money.
Tuesday, 17 March 2020
Stuart Edmunds: In it for the long haul
Stuart Edmunds (homepage) has been based at Fences
Farm in Tyringham, near Newport Pagnell, Buckinghamshire for the
better part of four decades. He was previously assistant trainer to
former Renee Robeson (née de Rothschild) before taking over the
training licence following her death, at the age of 87, in 2015.
Edmunds holds a combined licence, but it would be fair to say that
his focus is on National Hunt racing and, despite operating just a
small string, of thirty or so horses, has achieved some noteworthy
success in that sphere.
In 2015-16, his first full season in
charge, Edmunds saddled 16 winners from 93 runners, at a strike rate
of 17%, and collected nearly£187,000 in win and place prize money.
Highlights included victories for juvenile hurdler Wolf Of Windlesham
in the Grade Two JCB Triumph Hurdle Trial at Cheltenham and the
bet365 Juvenile Handicap Hurdle, which collectively netted over
£48,000 in prize money. The 2016-17 season was less productive,
yielding just nine winners from 77 runners, but they did include
Edmunds’ first and, so far, only Cheltenham Festival winner,
Domesday Book in the Fulke Walwyn Kim Muir Challenge Cup.
Nevertheless, Edmunds bounced back in
2017-18, saddling 23 winners from 121 runners – the highest
seasonal tally of his short career – and collecting nearly £250,000
in prize money. It was a similar story in 2018-19, with 19 winners
from 121 runners and just over £250,000 in prize money and, at the
time of writing, Edmunds is enjoying decent form, with six winners
from 41 runners and nearly £72,000 in prize money in 2019/20 so far.
In recent seasons, Edmunds’ most
successful horses have been Maria’s Benefit and Queenohearts who,
coincidentally, are both mares. Between January, 2017 and December,
2018, Maria’s Benefit won eight of her 13 starts, notably including
the Grade Two Yorkshire Rose Mares’ Hurdle at Doncaster in 2018,
and just over £100,000 in prize money. Queenohearts, now a
six-year-old, has won four of her seven starts, including three
victories at Listed and Grade Two level and amassed nearly £47,000
in prize.
Monday, 16 March 2020
Kerry Lee: Like Father, Like Daughter
It's important to consider a trainer's credentials when you're considering Grand National 2020 horses to follow, and Kerry Lee is a good example of someone who had in the past, had her eye on this very prize. Kerry Lee is the daughter of former
trainer Richard Lee, who retired, after a 29-year-career, in 2015.
Kerry assisted with the running of The Bell House, the family stables
in Byton, Herefordshire, close to the Welsh border, from a young age,
but took over the licence in her own right at the start of the
2015/16 National Hunt season.
She trained her first winner as a
trainer, Jayo Time, in handicap chase at Uttoxeter in September,
2015, but enjoyed her first major success with Mountainous in the
Coral Welsh Grand National at Chepstow the following January. The
race had been postponed two weeks earlier but, in hock-deep ground,
Mountainous went clear over the final two fences and was driven out
on the run-in to beat Firebird Flyer by an ever-dwindling 2½
lengths. “I think it’s absolutely beautiful ground,” joked Lee
afterwards.
In so doing, Mountainous not only
became the first horse since Bonanza Boy in 1989 to win the CoralWelsh Grand National twice, but completed a notable family double,
having won the race for Richard Lee on his first attempt in 2013. At
the time, Lee Snr. said of him, “From the moment he came into our
yard as a 5-year-old, I said he was a Welsh Grand National horse.”
Winning the Coral Welsh National Grand
National within six months of taking over the training licence was an
achievement, in itself, but Kerry enjoyed the purplest of purple
patches in the spring of 2016. Exactly seven days after Mountainous’
victory, she saddled Russe Blanc to win the Betfred Classic Chase at
Warwick and, less than a month later, Top Gamble to win the Game
Spirit Chase at Newbury.
Another week later, she achieved
further high-profile success with Bishops Road in the Betfred Grand
National Trial at Haydock and, not finished yet, rounded off a
memorable campaign with wins for Kylemore Lough in the Ryanair Gold
Cup Novice Chase – her first Grade 1 success – and Top Gamble in
the Normans Grove Chase in the space of 48 hours at Fairyhouse in
March. At the end of her “rookie” season, Kerry had saddled 23
winners from 110 runners, at a strike rate of 21%, and earned
£377,508 in total prize money. She sets lofty goals for herself as her aspirations to win the Aintree Grand National are well known.
Asked about her phenomenal run of
Saturday successes, Kerry said, “People say that new trainers
usually target smaller races, earlier in the week, but you’ve got
to be a little bit bold, and that’s the way I am.”
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