led, ridden over 2f out, headed and no extra inside final furlong
tracked leaders, ridden 4f out, kept on final furlong
mid-division, ridden over 3f out, weakened final furlong
mid-division, ridden over 3f out, kept on inside final furlong
stumbled start and soon behind, ridden over 3f out, not clear run until switched left and headway over 1f out, kept on to lead inside final furlong
prominent, ridden over 2f out, every chance until weakened inside final furlong
mid-division, ridden over 3f out, headway over 1f out, kept on inside final furlong
tracked leaders, ridden over 3f out, kept on one pace
mid-division, ridden over 3f out, soon one pace
Indibraun sets a decent standard here and gets the vote over Zolash and Mytton's Bell. The selection, a winner of an auction maiden at Doncaster in May, has struggled since but this represents an ease in grade for Pat Haslam's gelding and he should have too much class for his rivals. Zolash showed at Salisbury last time that this would be more his level and he has to be respected although a bigger threat may come from Mytton's Bell. Alan Bailey's filly showed promise in a Chester nursery earlier this month and again at Haydock subsequently. The Michael Dods-trained Royal Flynn takes a drop in class after three runs in maidens and is another worthy of a mention, along with James Bethell's Twice Nightly, who has shown signs of ability. Mick Channon's two-year-olds have been running better of late so Wiltshire is probably better than his debut effort would suggest, while Strathtay, a stablemate of the selection has to be respected in receipt of so much weight. However, Indibraun has an obvious chance in this grade and gets the vote.