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Matthew Smith

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My Racing Story

Matthew Smith pictured with his son James and jockey Billy Lee after One Cool Poet won 3 times at GalwayMatthew Smith pictured with his son James and jockey Billy Lee after One Cool Poet won 3 times at Galway
© Healy Racing Photos

We have had some good fun this year already with One Cool Poet but it is very exciting now to have Ronald Pump competing in the Grade 1 Bar One Racing Drinmore Chase at Fairyhouse on Sunday. He’s ready to roll and in good form.

I bought him in the August Sale at Tattersalls as a three-year-old for €1,000 three years ago. He was cheap but I liked his page and there was just something about him. It was small money so we took a chance.

We brought him to a schooling race in Thurles early as a four-year-old, around February or March, and he showed plenty of ability, but he was just a bit excitable early on. He was losing the plot really, boiling over, getting himself worked up.

He’s calmed down as time has gone on but there are certain things you have to do with him. If you hop up on him, he won’t just walk straight out of the yard. You just have to mess around a bit with him. There are just a few little things you have to do but once you know him he’s grand. And Robbie Power, who rides on Sunday, won on him last year so that is no problem.

He won four of his last five races over hurdles, which showed the progress he had made temperamentally. We didn’t really push to see how far he could go in that sphere. He won a handicap off of 136 over hurdles and would probably be around 150 over fences now, give or take a pound, so I don’t really know how good he is over hurdles.

He looked fairly good in his beginners’ chase at Fairyhouse when he won by eight lengths but I suppose Sunday will tell us what he might do over fences. He has always jumped well.

We had no real options only to take in this race on his second chase start. You could have gone to England for a novice chase but we didn’t really want to go travelling with him at this stage in his development, not yet. There’s nothing else here for him before Christmas unless you dropped back to 2m1f for a Grade 2 in Navan. There aren’t too many places you can go.

There is stiff opposition as you would expect this weekend. Samcro and Fakir D’Oudairies were top class over hurdles and won their debuts over fences well. Burrows Saint won the Irish Grand National last April.

But Ronald Pump doesn’t have to win to have run a good race and for us to leave happy. He stays three miles — three of his hurdle wins were over that distance. If he ran a good enough race that would warrant running him in the three-mile Grade 1 at Christmas, we’d be very pleased, because he obviously stays.

The lads in the Laois Limerick Syndicate that own him are great. Dave O’Sullivan was involved in a horse I had when I started, Run Sally Run. She wasn’t any good and they fell away. I bumped into Dave in Kilbeggan, not long before I bought Ronald Pump, and he was talking about maybe getting involved in something again. So I bought three at Tatts at that sale. Dave got a couple of lads together and they picked Ronald and the rest is history.

They’ve had great fun. It’s a fairytale really to buy a horse like that for a thousand euro and to be running in a Grade 1, already after winning a lot of prizemoney. Hopefully there’s more to come.

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My Racing Story. Jane Carpenter

I'm from just outside Kells, Co Meath and I suppose racing has always been a passion of mine. I do love the sport, and it is brilliant to make a career out of it now. My family are huge racing fans and I suppose the apple doesn't fall far from the tree. Racing is a highly discussed topic at home with my family as well as farming. The racing is never off the TV. We take an annual family holiday to Galway every year. We go down for the week, and I've been going since I was a child. It is a proper family tradition now. We have going to the same house for the races I'd say for 14 or 15 years now. There are so many bedrooms there and some of my friends from home come down towards the weekend. It is a proper good holiday, and it is always in our calendars every single year. We were in Punchestown recently after Fairyhouse, so we would be big supporters of going racing. My parents are farmers, so I wouldn't have a close association with horses. I grew up on the farm, and I've been surrounded by animals all of my life. I know at first hand the effort, work and dedication that goes into animals and caring for them. I would have helped dad out on the farm alongside my two brothers. We still try to give a hand when time allows. We've no horses here on the farm, but I'm extremely confident that we will one day! I used to do a bit of riding when I was younger at my local equestrian centre. Things just got in the way then, but last summer I took it back up as a hobby. I'm really enjoying that again.