1964 English Greyhound Derby

1964 English Greyhound Derby
Venue White City Stadium
Location White City, London

The 1964 Greyhound Derby took place during June with the final being held on 27 June 1964 at White City Stadium. [1] The winner Hack up Chieftain received £3,000. [2]

Final result

At White City (over 525 yards):[3]

Position Winning Greyhound Breeding Trap SP Finish Time Trainer
1st Hack up Chieftain Knock Hill Chieftain - Bunclody Queen 120-128.92Percy Stagg (Belle Vue)
2nd Die Cast Crazy Parachute - Brennans Girl 22-1f29.04Jimmy Rimmer (Wembley)
3rd Rupuninni Knock Hill Chieftain - Lovely Sister 53-129.26Jim Irving (Private)
4th We'll See Knock Hill Chieftain - Bunnykins 49-429.38Joe Pickering (White City - London)
5th Crazy Platinum Crazy Parachute - Bridgetown Girl 68-129.42 Bessie Lewis (Private)
6th Scamp Boy Keep Moving - Flying Fanny 35-129.56 Bessie Lewis (Private)

Distances

1¾, 3, 1¾, 1¾, 2 (lengths)

Competition Report

[4] The best bitch in the country Cranog Bet headed the market leaders when the ante-post lists were compiled; the Phil Rees trained January 1962 whelp was aiming to become just the third bitch in history to win the Derby. Leading Midlands trainer Joe De Mulder sent a strong team headed by Cahara Rover the Pall Mall Stakes, Birmingham Cup and Stewards Cup champion. Scottish Greyhound Derby winner 'We’ll See' now in the hands of Joe Pickering was also considered a leading entry.

Cranog Bet was eliminated during the first round continuing the trend of ante-post favourites failing to pass the first stage. One of the main Irish entries called Wonder Valley also failed to make it past round one, he had exceptional pace but his large size meant that he tended to encounter trouble. Cahara Rover and We’ll See safely progressed to round two.

The second round saw Scamp Boy and Jerpoint Prince oblige as favourites and the well supported Rupunnini and Die Cast claimed the other two heats. The semi-finals were disappointing due to the fact that the greyhounds encountered so much trouble. The first semi left 20-1 chance Crazy Platinum in front after missing first bend trouble, he held off Die Cast and Rupuninni, both of whom had recovered well to make the final. The second semi was won in 29.77 slower than some of the graded* races and Cahara Rover and Jerpoint Prince were both knocked over. We’ll See finished first with Scamp Boy and Hack It Chieftain taking the minor places.

The final had three runners connected to Scotland and three from England. Bessie Lewis had travelled from near Mount Vernon in Glasgow and We’ll See was owned by Scotsman Harry Louden. The newspapers picked up on the fact and announced that it was the England versus Scotland final. The final was seen as being wide open with Die Cast starting 2-1 favourite. First to break was Crazy Platinum followed by We’ll See but both bumped each other at the first bend effectively ending the chances of the pair. Hack Up Chieftain went through a gap that appeared and took full advantage by going on to win the race at odds of 20-1, the first time the rank outsider in the final had claimed the crown. Die Cast finished well to take second place.

Graded races* (Races for slightly slower greyhounds, graded on ability on a number scale.)

See also

References

  1. Hobbs, Jonathan (2007). Greyhound Annual 2008, page 90. Raceform. ISBN 978-1-905153-53-4.
  2. Genders, Roy (1981). The Encyclopedia of Greyhound Racing, page 110. Pelham Books Ltd. ISBN 07207-1106-1.
  3. "1964". Greyhound Data.
  4. Dick, Barrie (1990). Greyhound Derby, the first 60 years, pages 119/120. Ringpress Books. ISBN 0-948955-36-8.
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