Sunday, December 22, 2024

Title gap grows for sidelined McNab

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McNab voluntarily stood himself down from all meeting last weekend but that gap between his competitive riding days continues to grow as he will now not be back until at least this Saturday.

“I don’t want to rush back again so I have a plan for this week,” he informs.

“I intend riding trackwork then maybe at the trials and be back riding on Saturday.”

That means McNab will have only have had two rides in three weeks by this Saturday and while that gap grows, so too does that one between himself and Kennedy.

The ex-pat South African heads to tomorrow’s Arawa Park meeting six wins clear (125-119) on the premiership with the option to ride at three meetings before McNab is up and about again on Saturday.

If both men can remain injury and suspension-free for the remainder of the season from Saturday they would have the option of riding at 15 more meetings each before the season ends on July 31.

If McNab is still only six wins behind Kennedy by the time he gets back to the saddle his task would not be impossible but with smaller winter fields and jumps races which neither jockey competes in, he would need to do something remarkable to defend his title.

It doesn’t help that Kennedy, who also suffered a fall three weeks ago but wasn’t as badly injured, is marching relentlessly toward his first New Zealand premiership, rarely missing a meeting and seemingly over his earlier troubles with suspensions.

The TAB market on the premiership, remains closed because of the uncertainty over McNab’s return.

“It is really frustrating and has been annoying me,” says McNab of the setback.

“I felt I was riding really well and had worked really hard to get back on level terms so to maybe have my chance taken away by a fall is hard to cop.

“But I am not giving up yet. I hope things go better this week and I can stick to the plan and then give myself a shot at it but it won’t be easy, I know that.”

The injury may end up robbing New Zealand race fans of a rare premiership battle and the TAB of the unique promotional and betting opportunities that would bring.

While the senior rider’s premiership may be slipping from McNab’s grasp the battle to be New Zealand’s leading young rider has intensified with only two wins separating Niranjan Parmar (48) and Lily Sutherland (46) for the apprentice title.

Parmar still suspended until after this Sunday, so unable to ride again until Cambridge tomorrow week.

Michael Guerin wrote his first nationally published racing articles while still in school and started writing about horse racing and the gambling industry for the Herald as a 20-year-old in 1990. He became the Herald’s Racing Editor in 1995 and covers the world’s biggest horse racing carnivals.

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