Late Livamol entry for Close Up

Close Up

HIGH-PROFILE jockey Grant Cooksley has had to cancel his travel plans after trainer Shelley Hale decided to enter Close Up into the Group One Livamol Classic at Hastings on Saturday.

Cooksley has been the eight-year-old’s regular rider this year and the pair have combined for a win in the Group One Tarzino Trophy and a close second to Gingernuts in the Group One Windsor Park Plate, the first two legs of the Hawke’s Bay Triple Crown, plus a second in the Group Two Lisa Chittick Foxbridge Plate at Te Rapa.

Close Up’s last-minute entry into the Livamol Classic was never on the cards, and while Cooksley now has to cancel a week-long Thailand holiday, the hoop they call the ‘Ice Man’ is more than happy to oblige.

“I can take a holiday any time,” he said.

“I don’t want to miss riding him on Saturday. He deserves a go at that race.”

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Cooksley believes the horse will not be simply making up the numbers in the third leg of the triple crown.

“It was a top run last time and if I’d drawn out a bit more he would have been harder to beat. From his inside draw I had to try and push out and he got on the bit to keep up there.

“He should be able to settle better over ground.”

Close Up has yet to be tried beyond 1600 metres, but Hale believes the eight-year-old’s form warrants a late nomination for the 2040-metre feature.

“It’s just because of soreness that he has never got to extend out to a trip,” Hale said.

“He’s had four or five runs then felt it.”

Hale has purposely waited to see how Close Up came through the Windsor Park Plate run before deciding to press ahead with the late payment of $1581 for the Livamol Classic.

“He’s done well and he’s proven himself at weight-for-age,” she said.

“He’s in a purple patch of form and the only question mark is the distance but his family have gone over a bit of ground. I don’t think it will be a problem.

“He did a bit of work over ground last Friday and he worked nicely. I couldn’t be happier with him.”

Hale was particularly pleased with the last-start second in the Windsor Park Plate.

“I think it showed some people his win in the Tarzino wasn’t a fluke,” the Cambridge trainer said.

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Close Up has won a third of its 30 starts and earned almost $350,000 in prizemoney for Hale and her other partners in the Shinko King eight-year-old, co-owner-breeders, Robin Stent and the Noel and Alison Johnstone Family Trust.

Hale is likely to freshen Close Up after Saturday’s Livamol Classic.

“The next big one is the Captain Cook Stakes, but there’s a big gap to that.

“He’d have done enough by Saturday. He’s exceeded my expectations.”

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