A field of 10 will head to post for Saturday's Grade 1 Howden Long Walk Hurdle at Ascot, with Paisley Park going for win number four in the three-miler and Nicky Henderson’s Champ bidding to regain the title he won in 2021.
Dan Skelton’s West Balboa will try to extend her three-race winning-run after an impressive display at Aintree last month, while Blueking D’Oroux is on a rapid upward curve and unbeaten in two outings this term. He is one of two runnes for champion trainer Paul Nicholls alongside West Yorkshire hurdle runner-up Red Risk, with the in-form Gavin Sheehan aboard Nigel Twiston-Davies’ Gowel Road.
But it is the Fergal O’Brien-trained Crambo who is the early favourite for the race, even though the six-year-old has been well beaten on both previous occasions he has tackled Grade 1 company.
However, Crambo has looked much improved this season, winning a handicap hurdle with ease in October off a mark of 133 before looking an unlucky third in a premier handicap hurdle won by the Irish-trained Slate Lane at Haydock last month.
Connor Brace has ridden Crambo in his last five races but will be replaced on Saturday by Jonathan Burke.
Botox Has will spearhead Gary Moore’s challenge on Saturday, with stable stalwart Goshen also poised to line-up.
The former produced arguably a career best when claiming Wetherby’s Grade 2 West Yorkshire Hurdle last month and his handler has been waiting for a crack at this Grade 1 ever since.
The form of that race has a strong look with Jeremy Scott’s reopposing Wetherby third Dashel Drasher getting the better of three-time Long Walk hero Paisley Park at Newbury and Moore is now keen to see if Botox Has can back up that performance and cement his place as one of the leading players in a wide-open division.
“I’m looking forward to running him and the form is working out well,” said Moore. “Hopefully he is as good as he was that day at Wetherby but time will tell.
“He’s always been a fair horse and he was probably one of the best English horses during his juvenile year – if it had not been for Goshen he would have been the top four-year-old, he’s always been a good horse.
“He didn’t really take to chasing but has done well reverting back to hurdles.”
The race also offers a huge opportunity to conditional jockey Caoilin Quinn, who was aboard Botox Has when winning a valuable handicap at Haydock last season and when striking at Wetherby, with Moore feeling he deserves the chance to continue the association.
He said: “He has won two nice races on him so you could hardly take him off.”
There are no secrets surrounding the enigmatic Goshen, who was a winner at this track last term and also finished second when this race took place at Kempton last year, but has struggled in both outings over hurdles this term.
Last seen in the rearranged Fighting Fifth at Sandown, Moore feels the return to three miles is just what the seven-year-old now requires and said: “I think that now suits him better, but I don’t know if the ground is going to be soft enough for him.
“It was an afterthought (to go to Sandown) and I probably shouldn’t have run there. He’s danced every dance.”
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