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LATEST NEWS

QUARENTA WINS AT WARWICK

23/2/2019

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It was great to see Quarenta win at Warwick yesterday.

Well done to Sam Twiston-Davies and congratulations to owners Sir Martin, Lady Jocelyn and Steve Broughton.

 Here he is looking chuffed after the race!
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SEATON CAREW WINS AT WETHERBY

19/2/2019

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Huge congratulations to owners Jon & Julia Aisbitt after Seaton Carew and Richie McLernon won the bumper at Wetherby this afternoon . 
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WATCH THE END OF THE RACE BELOW

Half-sister to Grade 1 winner Coney Island, Seaton Carew is also related to Wichita Lineman and Rhinestone Cowboy and she gets off the mark nicely for @JonjoONeill in the finale at @WetherbyRaces pic.twitter.com/J6XQxrpZgQ

— Racing TV (@RacingTV) February 19, 2019
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JONJO Q&A WITH THE LUCKY ONION

16/2/2019

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Jonjo recently  sat down with The Lucky Onion fro a Q&A ​in anticipation of the 2019 Cheltenham Festival.
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​Q: YOU’VE HAD SOME STELLAR ACHIEVEMENTS THROUGHOUT YOUR CAREER BUT WHAT WOULD BE YOUR FAVOURITE FESTIVAL MOMENT?

It has to be winning the Gold Cup as a trainer with Synchronised. To be fair, as a jockey by the time you get onto them in the paddock all the work has been done. Winning on Alverton and especially on Dawn Run was brilliant but when you’ve lived with them and seen them grow, they become like your children. We’ve been lucky to have a few winners and Synchronised was special because it was so unexpected. We knew he had talent but there aren’t many who can clobber as many fences and appear to be so uninterested that end up winning. The Jockey (AP McCoy) might have had something to do with it, mind.

Q: ARE THERE ANY FUTURE STARS IN THE YARD THAT WE SHOULD KEEP AN EYE OUT FOR?

We have a whole stable full of future stars and some of them are still looking for an owner so when can you come and take a look at them? In all honesty, you never know which might turn into the next superstar. For Cheltenham, they need to be athletic and mentally strong and that’s a rare combination. Keep an eye on the horses we run through the season at Cheltenham and at the Festival in the novice races and, hopefully, one of those will train on to get near the top given all the luck you need.

Q: WHAT DO YOU LOOK FORWARD TO THE MOST OVER THE FESTIVAL?

Having been there so many times, it holds so many great memories for me and just walking around, they’ll be plenty of people reminding me of the ones they backed and got beat and the few that win. The whole place is magic really. Having runners is the icing on the cake. Obviously meeting up with old friends and making new friends too. Its the perfect place to meet people who share my passion for this fabulous sport.

Q: HAVE YOU GOT ANY TOP TIPS ON HOW PEOPLE CAN MAKE THE MOST OF THEIR EXPERIENCE AT THE FESTIVAL?

Get there early and soak it all in. Experience The Hall of Fame, The Guinness Village and Shopping Mall. There is also a great new addition called The Orchard this year, which I cannot wait to visit. There’s nothing worse that being stuck in the traffic so get yourself organised find somewhere you can make a base and enjoy the craic. The races are only part of it. The people are amazing. There’s nothing beats standing beside a jump with a big field so long as you don’t mind some of the language you might hear from the jockeys. Or being on the rail when the horses run up to the winning line. If you’ve never been to Cheltenham you might think all the action is miles away. That is not the case. It’s a surprisingly tight track and you can really feel part of the action.

Q: WHERE IS YOUR FAVOURITE PLACE TO CELEBRATE OR RELAX AFTER A DAY AT THE FESTIVAL?
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Well if its celebrating, then I’m usually the last to leave the racecourse. Depending on my work schedule the next day, I love popping into 131 The Promenade and Crazy Eights Bar, the atmosphere is electric, or after a winner back to The Plough at Ford to celebrate with the team. The people I most want to be with when we have a winner are the owners, its often a long journey we have been on together and believe me there is nothing nicer than sharing these moments together. The yard the following morning is when it really begins to sink in. There’s a real buzz about the place. The staff have done all the hard work and I will have a chance to celebrate when it’s all over with my team.

theluckyonion.com
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GRAND NATIONAL WEIGHTS

12/2/2019

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Minella Rocco was allotted 10st 11lb for the Randox Grand National at the weights lunch in Liverpool today. 

The weights lunch was hosted in the city of the prestigious race for the first time. 
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The Fab Four - Image via Aintree Racecourse
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RACING TO RESUME ON WEDNESDAY 13TH FEBRUARY

11/2/2019

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It was announced this evening that racing will resume this Wednesday. 

Below is the press release from the BHA. 

The British Horseracing Authority (BHA) tonight announced a risk-managed return to racing will take place from Wednesday this week.

After consultation with its veterinary committee, and based on the latest tests conducted by the Animal Health Trust, the BHA’s Chief Regulatory Officer, Brant Dunshea, tonight confirmed that racing could resume, but only with strict biosecurity controls in place. 

This decision to return racing in a controlled, risk-managed manner was unanimously supported by the industry veterinary committee.

Brant Dunshea said:

“Our approach since hearing about the first positive results last Wednesday has been based on accumulating as much information as we could as quickly as possible so we could properly understand the risks of this virulent strain of flu spreading to more horses. That would be harmful to them and damaging to any trainers’ yards that became infected. 

“It has also been our intention to ensure that we avoid an issue that could result in a longterm disruption to racing with the risk of many of our major events being unduly impacted.

“After analysis of thousands of samples, and no further positive tests on Monday, we still only have two confirmed sites of infection. We have put robust containment measures in place around both. 

“From the testing and analysis conducted the disease appears to be contained at present. The BHA veterinary committee believe that the swift controls on movement that were put in place have clearly helped to restrict the spread of this virus.

“There have been significant logistical issues associated with testing and processing so many tests in such a short space of time. Fortunately, owing to the tireless efforts of the Animal Health Trust, trainers and their local vets, and BHA staff, the vast majority of yards which had been placed on hold will be in a position to resume racing.

“Clearly, there is some risk associated with returning to racing. This risk has been assessed and, based on the evidence - and ensuring biosecurity measures are in place – the level of risk is viewed as acceptable.”

As such the BHA has confirmed that two scheduled Jump fixtures will go ahead at Musselburgh and Plumpton on Wednesday 13 February, alongside the All Weather fixtures at Southwell and Kempton. 

Return to racing

As part of the controlled return, the BHA has developed a risk framework which allows us to categorise individual trainers by the level of risk they have been exposed to. The ability of runners to return to racing from those yards will depend on the risk categories the yards are placed in.

We are finalising overnight which category individual trainers will currently be placed in. The BHA will contact trainers tomorrow morning to inform them of their category and eligibility to run. 

Declarations

Trainers who hold entries for Wednesday are advised to declare at 10am on Tuesday. Confirmed declarations will not be issued to the media, betting organisations and data customers until 1:30pm. In this period the BHA will review all declarations to ensure none have been declared which do not meet the risk criteria.

Please note declarations for Thursday’s Flat All Weather meetings will now be at the 24 hour stage.

Biosecurity measures

In addition to the risk factors outlined above, and as an interim measure, the BHA has ordered that no entries or declarations will be accepted from horses that have not been vaccinated in the previous six months. Trainers are advised to check current vaccination records before declaring tomorrow morning. In addition, all trainers will be required to provide a health declaration upon arrival at a racecourse.

The BHA’s Director of Equine Health and Welfare, David Sykes said;

The BHA and the veterinary committee agree that, on balance, the level of risk is acceptable for a return to racing.

“We have developed a risk model, which the veterinary committee support, in order to assist the return to racing.

“We will observe closely those horses who are taken to the racecourse and will intervene as a precaution to prevent a horse running or accessing a racecourse if we believe it might put other horses at risk of infection.

“The veterinary committee are of the view that an unprecedented amount of this disease has been identified in Europe. This is not a typical endemic period and it was essential that precautions be taken to protect the horse population.”
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RACING POST ARTICLE - THE JONJOS

10/2/2019

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When you get a phone call asking for any special requests for breakfast days before your visit, you know you are in for a good morning and Jackdaws Castle does not disappoint in the slightest.

The epitome of a state-of-the-art, no-expense-spared training centre; for the equine residents, owners and even a scribe on location, it is VIP treatment all the way at Jackdaws.

As imagined on the winding drive through stone-housed villages to the heart of the Cotswolds, breakfast served in the yard’s snazzy owners’ room is plentiful, well it is for yours truly at least.

Jonjo O’Neill - the king of this castle - is more disciplined as he picks away at a single sausage and spoonful of soft scrambled egg, while for Jonjo Jnr. it is a rider’s portion of diddly-squat.

Trainer and jockey might be separated by 45 years, yet sitting side-by-side at the breakfast bar there is no mistaking they are two peas from the same pod.

Similarly understated and softly spoken, the trademark twinkle in Jonjo’s eye is reflected in his son’s, while their matching schoolboy grins could illuminate Blackpool during a power cut.

The real symmetry, however, comes from their steely side and a shared desire to succeed in a sport that defines the O’Neill name.

“You either love the game or you don’t and we as a family love it,” declares Dad.  “All I want to do is train winners and all he wants to do is ride winners, so we’re on the same wavelength. It’s all about winners.”

Winning is something O’Neill Snr. 66, was rather good at during 15 years in the saddle over jumps. Jonjo was Champion conditional jockey then went on to be ‘twice Britain’s champion jump jockey’, he set a ‘then’ record of 149 winners when landing his first title in 1978, a top score that stood for more than a decade.

O’Neill, who was the master of the driving finish, partnered champions like Dawn Run, Sea Pigeon and Alverton to historic wins and was the undisputed people’s favourite.
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Indeed, when he came back from 14 months off a leg injury in 1981 that at one stage had surgeons contemplating amputation, a record crowd flocked to Wetherby, with newsmen, television crews and photographers hounding him like a film star on the red carpet.

A born winner, his record as a trainer has a similar shimmer, with a famous Grand National victory and 26 Cheltenham Festival successes, including the Gold Cup.

“It was great fun and I still say we had the best time,” he says, focussing on his career in the saddle and itching to elaborate with a story.

“It was a totally different game then and it’s probably too serious now. We had great fun - we’d be going around in a novice chase and at halfway Ron Barry would start singing.

"Then everybody would join in and we’d be having a sing song on the way around. If you did that now you’d be locked up! No one was doing anything wrong; it was just good fun and we had a lot of craic.”

Stepping out on the same road, albeit one with a very different landscape to when his father began riding professionally, is 21-year-old Jonjo Jnr. or, to save confusion, Jonj as he is known at Jackdaws Castle.

The eldest of two sons from Jonjo’s second marriage, Jonj has something impossible to live up to as he steps into his father’s riding boots, but just as he pointed out after the biggest win of his career to date in the Lanzarote Hurdle last month, he is a young jockey with his own agenda and neither history nor his title is going to burden him.

“It doesn’t bother me,” says Jonj when asked if the comparisons have become tiresome yet. “I’ve had it for years and I’m kind of immune to it. Dad’s achievements are something I’d like to aim to but nothing I feel when I go out to ride. I want to strive for the best anyway so it’s only a good thing.”

Inspired rather than stifled by the past, he continues: “I’ve read the books and watched all the videos on YouTube. It’s amazing really. There’re top jockeys now who wouldn’t ride 149 winners in one season and Dad was doing it when there was a lot less racing in a season and as a freelance. It’s madness; he was doing it 40 years ago.”

According to Jonj, he has always had an ambition to follow suit, although at no stage of his childhood can he recall any shepherding from his parents.

“Dad never pointed me towards riding,” he says. “He always said it’s a very hard game and not all sunshine and rainbows like it might seem on TV. He never pointed me away but certainly not towards it either. There was never any pressure.”

A self-proclaimed adrenaline junkie, the youngster was a promising open-side flanker on the rugby pitch at school and the roar of a packed Twickenham rather than Prestbury Park was the only thing that ever tempted him away from riding.

“I soon realised riding and rugby didn’t go hand in hand,” he says. “I broke my leg when I was 17 out hunting in Ireland and that’s when I thought I needed to make a decision. Do I use that time to bulk up for rugby or slim down for racing?

"I’m only 5ft 5½in and my size wouldn’t have got me to where I wanted to be in rugby. I decided racing was more what I knew anyway and what I had a better chance at.”

“One’s bad and the other’s worse,” pipes up Dad with a giggle as he joins the racing or rugby debate. “I always said to him and his brother AJ (Anthony Joseph what you enjoy most, because if you enjoy doing it, you put in that little bit extra.

"I’m delighted he’s gone in that direction but if he hadn’t it wouldn’t have bothered me. I’ve got three older kids and none of them have any interest in racing whatsoever and it doesn’t bother me in the slightest.

"It’s nice because we go through races together and chat about things, so it works well for both of us. He brings fresh ideas that I might not have thought of.”
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For all that success featured heavily in O’Neill senior’s riding career, he was also on the receiving end of some sickening injuries, something Jonj has already had to contend with too.

For the past three summers he has been side-lined but, almost perversely, it was his latest injury that proved key to his breakthrough in the saddle this season.

Jonjo Jnr. broke his L5 vertebra in the indoor school at Jackdaws last March, leaving him out of action for eight months. That followed a series of nasty falls when his focus was being increasingly clouded by his weight.

“Every young jockey goes through it,” he says. “All you want to do is ride so if you’re offered a ride at a low weight you say you can get to that weight and you do get there. You see it all the time in the weighing room.

"The young lads are taking off too much and they’ll ride rubbish and fall off, like I have. But it only takes one fall or one injury to realise there’s a line and you’ve got to set your limit and stick to it.”

Whereas now the scales are rock steady at his comfortable riding weight of 10st 7lb, a year ago he was weighing out at an impossible 9st 7lb, although he has little recollection. 

“At that stage you’re not in your own head at all - it’s stupid but you’ve got to do it once to realise,” he reveals. “Going to the races, 80 per cent of me would be worrying about the weight and 20 per cent the race.

"Now, nothing is about the weight because I know I’m comfortable and all the focus is on the race. It makes a heck of a difference. I had eight months to sort it out, so there were no excuses.

“I’m in a good place now, I eat healthy and I’m not having to waste, unless you’ve got a few days’ and it’s for a decent ride (I can do 10 3lb) otherwise you have to and honest with yourself and say you can’t do it. 

Having listened intently to his son, Jonjo Snr. offers some sage fatherly advice. “It’s not just about riding - it’s about learning how to handle yourself,” he says, “always do what you’re best at - forget the rest of the rubbish. You need to learn what weight you can get down to with your mind still on the job.”

Junior’s riding has been eye catching for the right reasons since he came back from injury towards the end of last year and with nine winners left before his 5lb claim is shed, he could prove a valuable asset at the spring festivals.

“He’s got the will to win and if he has some luck in running, he’s got a chance of making it to the top,” says his Dad. “But you have to be lucky. He’s had a few injuries already so has had a slow start. I was the same - I missed three of the 15 seasons I was in the game with injury.

"You have to be committed 100 per cent to make it work otherwise you will get badly hurt. He’s always had that commitment. He doesn’t do too much wrong but he’s not AP yet!”

His first Cheltenham winner back in November with Palmer’s Hill was something junior had thought about for a long time and, with Dad training the winner for JP McManus, who is a great supporter of the yard, it was exactly how he imagined. 

“I’ve an Equicizer at home and, honestly, I can’t tell you how many times I’ve rode that race,” he relives once more. “Everything went exactly right. It was nice, because everyone was there - JP and Kieran - and it’s a day I’ll never forget.”

Perhaps more important for his career was last month’s Lanzarote success aboard Big Time Dancer, which as wellbeing financially the biggest win of his career, crucially came for an outside yard thanks to Jennie Candlish.

“It was a turning point,” says Jonj. “It was in different colours for different people and you need the Saturday winners on ITV. That’s what gets you noticed. There was no better time to get the message out there that I’m my own man.”

His last comment gets Dad’s nod of approval as, for all Jonjo wants to help his son succeed, he knows that ultimately only he can help himself.

“I can only help him so far and hopefully away he goes,” says the trainer. “I don’t want to get into the situation, and he doesn’t want to get into the situation either, where if you’ve a horse here Jonj has to ride. The owners can have the best available or whoever suits the horses better. Neither of us have a problem with that.” 

With AJ riding out and helping his Mum Jacqui and Cousin Joe in the office there is an unmistakable family feel one would not necessarily have envisaged at Jackdaws.

“It’s with thanks to JP Noreen and their family we’re here but a lot of people still believe that there’s only JP horses here, well that’s not the case,” he says. “We’ve had Taquin Du Seuil, Iris’s Gift, Albertas Run and lots of other good horses stabled with us."

For the past 11 years Jewson’s have been an integral part of Jonjo O’Neill Racing they have been a terrific yard sponsor and we are highly honoured to be partnered with the world leader in Construction.

Jonjo is the first to acknowledge that the quality that was the hallmark of Jackdaws Castle at the turn of the decade has been missing over the past couple of seasons but, with many of the old guard ushered into retirement, plans for a revival are in place.

There has been and continues to be a big investment in young stock here and while the results will not be immediate, the trainer is determined to see the halcyon days of Exotic Dancer, Synchronised and Don’t Push It return to one of Britain’s most spectacular training centres.

“We’ve a lot of babies, a lot of syndicates and a lot of new owners, and it’s exciting,” he says, his soft County Cork lilt momentarily giving way to that infectious grin. “It’s falling into place again but it takes time.”

He concludes: “It’s so hard to find the good horses and I like to give them time to mature and come right. So long as the owners have the patience to partner me on our journey we’ll be flying again very soon!”

Words: Lewis Porteous
Pictures: Ed Whitaker

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BHA UPDATE REGARDING EQUINE INFLUENZA CASE

7/2/2019

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The BHA relased the flowing statement this morning regarding equine influenza case. 

"​Racing was shut down today as a precautionary measure to restrict the movement of thoroughbred race horses and prevent any further spread of the virus. This is a standard contingency in the event of an infectious disease affecting our horses. It was essential that racing be stood down today and controls on movements of horses be put in place in order to attempt to control the spread of the disease, and the decision was taken swiftly last night that this course of action should be taken, once the extent of the issue was known. The BHA consulted with its veterinary committee before making this decision.

We will endeavour to issue regular information but we are still in the early stages of assessing the scale and severity of the outbreak. We are working quickly to identify the extent of the infection and will have more information when further test results are returned today. The results from those tests will not be known until this evening. Following these results being known a call will be convened to discuss the implications and a decision will then be made as to the impact on racing in the coming days.

We are aware that people want to know the situation as regards racing tomorrow and this weekend and we will seek to provide more clarity as soon as we are able. It is likely that any definitive decisions on whether racing can take place tomorrow will be taken later this evening.

We are contacting trainers of all yards which might conceivably have had contact with horses from the affected yard in order to advise them on biosecurity measures and to ask them not to move horses. We are also issuing guidance to the wider population of trainers. We are working closely with the National Trainers Federation to share this information and ensure that trainers are kept as informed as possible. Trainers are being sent a contact number should they have further questions, and they are advised to contact their vets with any further concerns.

Anyone visiting a racing yard should exercise appropriate caution and check with a trainer before visiting, and trainers are advised to limit where possible the movement of people to and from their yard. There is a Code of Practice for dealing with infectious diseases on the website of the National Trainers Federation.

All British race horses are vaccinated against equine influenza. However this strain has affected vaccinated horses. The disease may be serious in unvaccinated horses, although symptoms in vaccinated horses are usually mild and transient. Symptoms may include a raised temperature, a cough and nasal discharge. It is highly contagious. Humans are not at risk from the virus though can be transmitters of the virus.

The situation here is not the same as the incident in Australia in 2007. Australian thoroughbreds are not vaccinated against influenza, while British thoroughbreds are, as the virus is endemic in the UK. Therefore an important barrier is in place to prevent the same situation occurring here. However, as we have seen in Europe, the virus has affected vaccinated horses in this case. The vaccine should however help reduce to a certain extent the effect and spread of the disease in thoroughbreds.

This is a wider horse health issue which is not confined to horseracing. Unlike thoroughbreds, the wider horse population in Britain is not vaccinated against equine flu. Whilst the BHA is not specifically responsible for non-race-horses, the general advice to owners would be to contact your vet if you have concerns."
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Jackdaws Castle 
Temple Guiting,
Cheltenham,
Gloucestershire
GL54 5XU
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​jackdawscastle@jonjooneillracing.com
Tel: +44 (0)1386 584 209 
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