The Daily Telegraph - Sport

Derby hope Hidden Law fatally injured yards after winning line

Godolphin colt breaks leg in freak post-race accident Trainer Appleby says Chester victor ‘just took a false step’

- By Marcus Armytage RACING CORRESPOND­ENT

Triumph instantly turned to tragedy for potential Derby contender Hidden Law yesterday when he suffered a fatal injury soon after passing the winning post as an impressive victor of the feature Boodles Chester Vase.

Four days after winning Saturday’s 2,000 Guineas with Notable Speech, trainer Charlie Appleby and jockey William Buick experience­d a very different emotion.

Their colt, who had left the Aidan O’brien pair Agenda and Grosvenor Square standing in the latter stages of the race, would almost certainly have emerged from the Derby trial as favourite for Epsom. But that is immaterial now after he appeared to take a false step at the road crossing and fractured a front leg. He was subsequent­ly put down.

The road crossing to the middle of the course car park is about 10 strides past the winning post and covered with a synthetic surface sprinkled with grass cuttings to make it indistingu­ishable from the turf. Hundreds of horses cross it every season both during a race and pulling up without incident and Appleby apportione­d no blame to it.

“He just took a false step and it was the force of it,” he explained. “It was a freak accident. I’m very sorry for [owner] Sheikh Mohammed and team Godolphin. To have a horse like him coming through the ranks was very exciting.

“I have to thank everyone at the racecourse, they’ve been very accommodat­ing and were very quick with what they had to do. It’s a sad day. William is OK. He’s a bit shook up. All the way round the horse was on the correct lead, he picked up, quickened, crossed the road. It’s no fault of the track. It’s a great shame.”

Louise Stewart, the Chester chief executive, said: “Our thoughts and

‘It’s no fault of the track. It’s a great shame. To have a horse like him was very exciting’

minds are with the connection­s of the horse affected. It’s not what we want to happen.

“Just to reiterate, these are elite athletes and unfortunat­ely this sometimes happens in our sport. None of us like it and we’re constantly working to try and eradicate it.

“We’ll look at what happened here and I’d like to thank the trainers for their support.”

Meanwhile, Ralph Beckett’s filly

Forest Fairy, part-owned by Chester local Guy Myddelton, will head to Epsom as a 10-1 shot for the Oaks after she battled hard to overhaul Port Fairy in the closing stages and win the Weatherbys E-passport Cheshire Oaks by a head.

“She’s got to go to Epsom now,” said Beckett, who has won the Classic twice, with Look Here and Talent. “I think she’ll be suited to Epsom – she’s the right shape and make. We’re all very pleased.”

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 ?? ?? Final victory: Hidden Law storms clear at Chester before tragedy struck
Final victory: Hidden Law storms clear at Chester before tragedy struck

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