1965 English Greyhound Derby Explained

1965 English Greyhound Derby
Date Start:12 June
Date End:26 June
Prize Money:£5,000 (winner)
Location:White City Stadium
Prev:1964
Next:1966

The 1965 English Greyhound Derby took place during June with the final being held on 26 June 1965 at White City Stadium.[1] The winner was Chittering Clapton and the winning owners, father and son, Victor Leah and Peter Leah received £5,000.[2]

Final result

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

width=50Positionwidth=180Name of Greyhoundwidth=280Breedingwidth=50Trapwidth=50SPwidth=80Timewidth=250Trainer
1stChittering Clapton Noted Crusader - Chittering Hope 65-228.82Adam Jackson (Clapton)
2ndSunbow Prairie Flash - Dainty Sister 12-1f29.26Nora Gleeson (Wimbledon)
3rdShy Prairie Prairie Flash - Craggs Pet 39-129.48Jack Toseland (Perry Barr)
4thCreggan Bush Mile Bush Pride - Creggandoveskey 43-129.78Reg Webb (Private)
5thFlash Solar Solar Prince - Cinders 5100-830.24Stan Mitchell (Perry Barr)
6thGreenane Flame Knock Hill Chieftain - Wild Princess 211-200.00Jack Harvey (Wembley)

Distances

5¾, 3, 4, 6, Dis (lengths)
The distances between the greyhounds are in finishing order and shown in lengths. From 1950 one length was equal to 0.08 of one second.[4]

Competition Report

The 1965 Derby lacked a greyhound of the calibre of Magourna Reject, Endless Gossip or Mile Bush Pride, resulting in a wide-open competition when the bookmakers compiled the ante-post prices. Leading the list were Booked Out, trained privately by Eric Adkins, the Northern raider Clonmannon Flash, Cesarewitch champion Clifden Orbit and defending champion Hack Up Chieftain. Cranog Bet was missing with an injury and Hi Joe, the ante-post favourite at the turn of the year, had disappeared. In January the Juvenile champion trained by Noreen Collin and owned by bookmaker Victor Chandler Sr. was stolen from his Epping kennels. Initial hopes were that he could be recovered quickly to allow him to line up for the Greyhound Derby as planned. Sadly, as the weeks passed Collin received countless phone calls that led nowhere.[5]

Hack Up Chieftain failed to even make the final 48 after the qualifying trials and lost his £60 entry fee. New rules determined that all of the entry fee £60 or £100 for late entries would be lost if failing to make the first round proper. Previously, just £5 or £10 of the entry fee was forfeited.[6] When the first round competition started, five of the top seven ante-post market leaders failed to progress from the first round. Booked Out finished third after trouble in his heat and then was knocked out in the second round. Clifden Orbit made it through to the semi-finals but further trouble in the semis produced the top four left in the betting all going home including Clifden Orbit.[5]

The final contained six greyhounds that no one could have predicted. Sunbow, trained by first year trainer Nora Gleeson, was the favourite. The night before the final there was an attempt by a gang to infiltrate the kennels of Creggan Bush which was foiled by a group of his owners. The race was an anti-climax with the Adam Jackson trained Chittering Clapton from Clapton Stadium being quick away and then drawing clear to win by five and three quarter lengths. Bunching at the first bend led to Greenane Flame being knocked over.[5]

Chittering Clapton had been purchased for just £25 and started the competition at 250-1. The fawn and white dog collected £5,000, the biggest ever prize on offer in the history of the sport up to this date.[5]

See also

Notes and References

  1. Book: Hobbs, Jonathan. Greyhound Annual 2008, page 90. 2007. Raceform. 978-1-905153-53-4.
  2. Book: Genders, Roy. The Encyclopedia of Greyhound Racing, page 110. 1981. Pelham Books Ltd. 07207-1106-1.
  3. Web site: 1965. Greyhound Data.
  4. Book: Genders, Roy. NGRC book of Greyhound Racing (Timekeeper) p310. 1990. Pelham Books Ltd. 0-7207-1804-X.
  5. Book: Dack, Barrie. Greyhound Derby, the first 60 years, pages 121/122/123. 1990. Ringpress Books. 0-948955-36-8.
  6. News: Monthly Greyhound Star (Remember When 1965) June edition. 2012. Greyhound Star.