Greg Wood 

Cesarewitch result changed for second time to put whip rules back in spotlight

The whip rules are under scrutiny again after connections of Alphonse Le Grande were successful in their appeal against his disqualification in the Cesarewitch
  
  

Alphonse Le Grande, ridden by Jamie Powell (yellow cap), is pictured winning the Cesarewitch last month.
Alphonse Le Grande, ridden by Jamie Powell (yellow cap), is pictured winning the Cesarewitch last month. Photograph: Mike Egerton for The Jockey Club/PA

A £50,000 question about what, exactly, constitutes a “use” of the whip was resolved in favour of the connections of Alphonse Le Grande on Thursday, as the horse that won last month’s Cesarewitch Handicap by a nose and was then thrown out by the British Horseracing Authority’s whip review committee three days later was reinstated as the winner following an appeal hearing in London.

Jamie Powell, an apprentice jockey with only a handful of previous rides in Britain, was judged to have used his whip 10 times on Alphonse Le Grande when the case was considered by the WRC on 15 October – four strokes over the limit of six, and therefore triggering automatic disqualification under a strict new regime on use of the whip which was introduced in early 2023.

Powell was also suspended for 28 days, while Manxman, the original runner-up in the historic handicap at Newmarket on 12 October, was promoted to first place, earning an extra £50,000 in prize money for his connections.

Having considered Powell’s ride in granular detail for around three hours on Thursday, however, an appeal panel decided that the last of Powell’s apparent 10 strokes of the whip had in fact been an inadvertent contact between stick and horse.

That, in turn, meant that while Powell was still significantly over the six-stroke limit, and Alphonse Le Grande had prevailed by just a nose, he was not sufficiently in breach to trigger the ultimate sanction of disqualification.

“We find that his body position was different to the first nine strikes, it seems to us that he was somewhat crouched and off balance to his left and very low in the saddle,” Sarah Crowther KC, the panel’s chair, said.

“It was common ground that as Mr Powell retrieved his whip from that strike on the way back, pulling it back towards his right-hand side and bringing it forward, there was contact. It seemed to us the question for us was whether that contact constituted use of the whip.

“Adopting a pragmatic interpretation of the word ‘use’ in context of the rules as a whole and from our experience … of racing, we find it is not every single contact between a whip and a horse that will amount to a use.

“Specifically on the facts of this case we find the contact was made in circumstances where Mr Powell was retrieving his stick from the wrong side of the horse, and it was effectively an unavoidable contact which could not have had any material impact on the performance of the horse.”

Under the longstanding rules of betting, punters who backed Alphonse Le Grande were paid out on the day and equally, supporters of Manxman also knew their fate, regardless of the WRC decision three days later.

The latter group, though, might well argue that the appeal panel’s insistence that the crucial 10th stroke – or non-stroke, as it turned out – was not performance-enhancing is arguable, given that first and second were separated by just a nose. And they could certainly suggest that Powell’s seventh, eighth and ninth strokes made all the difference, and the rider will still serve a 20-day suspension for that offence.

The latest of the BHA’s many attempts to strengthen the rules around use of the whip, meanwhile, may now require further attention, to ensure that the WRC’s idea of a “use” of the whip is in accord with that of the appeals panel.

Calls to determine whip DQs on the day, however, may now recede. Manxman’s supporters were understandably aggrieved when Alphonse Le Grande was initially thrown out last month, as it seemed that Manxman’s connections would get their win money when the punters who backed him would not.

Newcastle 12.10 Lathan 12.45 Jeteye 1.20 Coqolino 1.55 Fromheretoeternity 2.30 Kingofthegame 3.05 Hunters Spring

 

Southwell 12.23 Stringtoyourbow 12.58 Lady Gwen 1.33 Icare Grandchamp 2.08 Little Watson 2.43 Dance And Glance 3.18 Thankyourluckystar 3.52 Officer Of State

 

Cheltenham 1.10 Whatsupwithyou 1.45 Resplendent Grey (nb) 2.20 Jonbon 2.55 Fameaftertheglory 3.30 Valgrand 4.00

Wreckless Eric (nap)

 

Wolverhampton 4.25 Beauzon 5.00 Havana Force 5.30 American Gal 6.00 Princess Qajar 6.30 Street Life 7.00 Straight A 7.30 Port Noir 8.00 Trojan Truth 8.30 Unico

The fact that it took the appeals panel three hours to decide that, under the current rules, the original result should be reinstated shows the complexity involved. Attempting to get it done on the day would risk the greater embarrassment – and, from a punter’s point of view, the greater injustice – of a disqualified winner being reinstated on appeal.

There is a wider question, though, of whether it is ever a smart move to impose an automatic trigger point for disqualification on what is, quite clearly after Thursday’s result, a subjective count of “uses” of the whip. Unfortunately, once it is there, there is probably no way back.

New jackpot for jump jockeys to chase

Britain’s jump jockeys will have a valuable new jackpot to chase over the five months leading up to the Grand National at Aintree in April following the launch of the David Power Jockeys’ Cup, a points-based contest around races televised live on ITV, with a total prize fund of £1.5m including £500,000 prize for the winning rider.

It is sponsored by Flutter Entertainment and named to honour the late David Power, one of Ireland’s best-known bookmakers, who died in July. The new contest will award 10, 8, 6 and 4 points to jockeys in every race televised on ITV between the opening day of the November meeting at Cheltenham on Friday and the last race at Aintree on 4 April 2025.

Other significant prizes include £200,000 for the runner-up, £25,000 for the leading conditional rider, £50,000 for the trainer supplying the most winners to the winning rider, and another £50,000 to be shared between the trainer’s staff.

Top jockeys on the Flat often enjoy lucrative retainers with leading owners as well as bonuses around stallion fees when their best horses retire to stud. Jumping, by contrast, is something of a poor relation, despite being responsible for an overwhelming majority of the most popular races of the year in terms of betting turnover.

The disparity is also reflected in the higher overall levels of prize money on the Flat, from which winning riders received a fixed percentage. Oisin Murphy, the latest British champion on the Flat, won total prize money of £6.18m, while Harry Cobden, his counterpart over jumps, won £3.1m in 2023-24.

The new initiative will attempt to partly redress the balance, and Cobden is the early 6-4 favourite with Paddy Power to win the inaugural Jockeys’ Cup. The firm then bets: 9-4 Harry Skelton, 5-1 Nico de Boinville, 11-2 Sean Bowen, 16-1 Paul Townend, 20-1 Johnny Burke, Gavin Sheehan, Sam Twiston-Davies, 40-1 bar.

 

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