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Twiston-Davies says Bristol De Mai can thrive on quicker going in Betfair Chase

Bristol De Mai and Daryl Jacob clear a fence down the far side impressively on their way to a runaway win in in the Betfair Chase at Haydock
Bristol De Mai: back in action in the Betfair Chase at Haydock on SaturdayCredit: John Grossick

Bristol De Mai beat his rivals by 57 lengths in the Betfair Chase last season and trainer Nigel Twiston-Davies believes he will prove a tough rival again at Haydock on Saturday.

Owned by Simon Munir and Isaac Souede, the grey produced one of the performances of the season when flattening the field in the Betfair Chase, powering on relentlessly in the heavy going as the rest struggling to maintain forward momentum.


Watch Bristol De Mai win last year's Betfair Chase at Haydock


This year the going is set to be significantly different with rain in short supply at Haydock, which was good to soft, good in places on the chase course on Thursday, but Twiston-Davies believes him to be much more than a soft-ground bully.

Bristol De Mai has the small matter of Cheltenham Gold Cup first and second Native River and Might Bite as opposition in his bid for back-to-back titles, meaning he was on Thursday the 7-1 third favourite with the sponsors for a contest also set to feature Thistlecrack and Clan Des Obeaux.

But Twiston-Davies said: "As long as the ground is on the soft side of good I’d say he’d go. If he goes there and shows what he can do he’s as good as any of them."

Bristol De Mai is undefeated in three starts at Haydock, winning last year’s Peter Marsh Chase by 22 lengths and the 2016 Altcar Novices’ Chase by 32 lengths.

All three of his wins at Haydock have been on soft or heavy ground, but Twiston-Davies points to performances such as his seconds in the JLT Novices’ Chase and Bowl Chase at Aintree as showing his can run just as well under quicker conditions.

"He’s run well on good ground before so as long as we’re happy we’ll go and find out – that’s what racing’s all about in the end, isn’t it?,” he said.

"There are no other races for him to go for and I think he should be able to perform to his best on it, but we’ve got to go out there and see."


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Peter ScargillDeputy industry editor

Published on 22 November 2018inNews

Last updated 17:28, 22 November 2018

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