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And down the stretch they moan: why it's only natural we all want our say about commentators

People love to critique racing commentaries and Chris Cook doesn't object

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Senior writer
Noel Fehily (centre) gets the better of a close finish with Richard Johnson (far side) and Tony McCoy
Messrs Johnson, Fehily and McCoy settle down to fight it outCredit: Mark Cranham (racingpost.com/photos)

This being a sport of the countryside, I expect racing folk are fully aware of the risks of, say, carelessly chucking away a fag end into tinder-dry grasses after weeks of pitiless sun.

But I greatly fear a Racing Post reader has done the conversational equivalent with a letter this week, pleading for commentators to give up certain figures of speech, an intervention which, based on past experience, might easily lead to a conflagration of correspondence.

"Jumping from fence to fence." Are you a fan of that one? Is it better or worse than "settling down to fight it out"? Let's have a heated debate.

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Published on inChris Cook

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