5 MARCH 2005, Page 50

Girl power

Robin Oakley

Ginger Rogers did everything that Fred Astaire did, a show-biz historian once pointed out. Only she did it backwards. The feminists do have a point, and while women riders still don’t get a fair deal in British racing, Kempton on Saturday provided yet another reminder of how well women trainers take their opportunities.

My hope that Best Mate can prove a Cheltenham hero again this year was restored when I bumped into the ever-amiable Henrietta Knight, who was sat chatting with a friend in the betting hall. Perhaps because she already has three consecutive Gold Cup victories under her belt, she seems more relaxed this year and she assured me that ‘Matey’ is in very good shape despite the snuffles that have affected some other occupants of her West Lockinge yard. Foolishly, I failed to ask Henrietta about the prospects of her Old Vic gelding Glasker Mill in the bumper. He coasted through the race, moved into the lead without being asked a serious question and skied away from his field in the straight to win at a tasty 14–1. This looks like a serious horse in the making.

One of the pleasures of seeing Venetia Williams’s runners triumph is anticipating what racing’s best-turned-out trainer will be wearing in the winner’s enclosure. After Clear Thinking’s success at Newbury the other day, it was a brown suede creation with black tassels. Elegant tassels, I hasten to add, not tassels of the twirling kind. When Limerick Boy came smoothly home at Kempton to capture the Favourites Racing Pendil Novices’ Chase, the trainer arrived to greet him in a coat that was not so much something to keep the cold out as a piece of modern art with buttons. Mrs Oakley, and my credit-card company, would no doubt have been able to name the designer. I can only describe it as either a snowstorm in a coalmine or a soot blast in an ice-cream factory. White on black or black on white, it was quite literally dazzling. So much so that, Biro poised and jaw dropping, I only narrowly escaped a kick from Limerick Boy, which would have removed my right kneecap. Perhaps he prefers the brown suede.

Having won the Lanzarote Hurdle on the track last year, Limerick Boy clearly likes Kempton. He had coasted through the tacky ground for two-and-a-half miles. I was having trouble lifting my feet out of the muddy turf across five yards of the parade ring. All credit, then, to the principals in the day’s big race, the three-mile Racing Post Chase.

Among them was Venetia Williams’s Banker Count, who finished third after contesting the lead most of the way. Nothing so surprising about that, you might say, except that the old boy, who clearly relished every moment of the race and had won his previous three contests, is now 13. Had he not had trouble with a corn, she would have been running the 14year-old Trouble Ahead in the next race. And the young stripling Itsonlyme, a mere 12, will be out before long. I asked Venetia what her secret was with older horses. The answer seems to be patience. She insists, ‘It’s too easy to write off some of these older horses after a couple of poor races.’ She wasn’t saying it, but Banker Count may have found life a little more comfortable in female hands after a spell with Mick Easterby, the epitome of northern grit. You’d be as likely to see him spending money on a fashionable coat as you would to see me scrumming down for England against Scotland.

The third winning female trainer of the day was Lucy Wadham (fancy fur hat, in case you’re wondering, and what Mrs Oakley would probably have confirmed as pale-blue denim trousers). A rarity among jumping handlers in that her yard is in Newmarket, she landed the coralpoker.com Handicap Hurdle with Migwell, who eased home 12 lengths clear of his field in the sticky ground. Clearly slightly miffed to have been included briefly on the ‘cold trainers’ list after a spell of seconds and thirds, she was posting a second win within a few days. She is now hoping that Migwell will get into the Coral Cup at Cheltenham. But as we all gear up for the National Hunt Festival, it was Alan King’s horses who caught the eye.

Crystal d’Alnay, constantly coming up against the great Baracouda, has been a consistent performer at the highest level, but has had trouble getting his head in front. After three second places in a row, he disappointed at Cheltenham last time out. But he finally came good in the Rendlesham Hurdle. His trainer reckons it was more an off-day at Cheltenham than the fitting of a visor this time that made the difference. He will now take on Baracouda again at the Festival, with renewed hope and a horse who clearly does stay three miles. But I suspect Baracouda’s trainer Francois Doumen will still be sleeping soundly.

The real eye-catcher was Penzance, owned by the Elite Racing Club of Soviet Song fame. Penzance is a half-brother to the talented filly. Before he ran, Alan said he would be happy with any kind of decent performance in the testing ground. Instead, we saw Penzance accelerate clear of his novice hurdle field to retain his unbeaten record. He has now been promoted favourite for the Triumph Hurdle, and his trainer is confident he has kept him fresh enough for that.