OLd Park Star

If you are a regular reader of this blog and hopefully you are, then you will know that I can’t resist the temptation for a quirky pun in the title of some of these posts. Whether it works to make the post more appealing or not is probably open to question, but there are some cases where I simply have to let the data do the talking and this is one of them. Old Park Star was visually superb when winning the Rossington Main at Haydock on Saturday and everything in the data confirms that impression. The 2 mile Novice hurdle division has been a confusing picture this season but it all became clear on Saturday afternoon at Haydock Park and I think it will take an exceptional performance to beat Old Park Star in the Supreme Novices’ Hurdle in March if he turns up in the same form. The Haydock card gives us an ideal race to use for comparison with the 2 mile handicap hurdle run earlier on the card. That race was won by the 134 rated Brentford Hope and we can use his winning performance to give a good guide to what Old Park Star may have achieved 35 minutes later. Brentford Hope is a solid performer in both codes and he finished 2nd to Constitution Hill in the International Hurdle at Cheltenham this time last year. He rallied well on Saturday to get the better of Smart Decision in a driving finish of a race run with a finishing speed of 101%. Brentford Hope was the fastest horse over the final half a mile, closing with furlong splits of 13.71, 13.93, 13.82 and 15.71s to win by a neck in a decent overall time of 3:51.14. The handicapper has given him a 4 lb rise for this win and I think that is very fair given that the runner-up was chasing a hat-trick on Saturday and appears to have run his race. Brentford Hope does have an entry in the International Hurdle at Cheltenham this weekend. If he takes that up, he will be a big priced outsider against some of the main players in the Champion Hurdle market, but as handicappers go, he is a solid performer, especially with some cut in the ground. If we assume that he is a 138 rated performer, then what does that say about Old Park Star?

Sectional Times from Haydock Park, 17th January 2026Let’s start with the overall time. Old Park Star made almost every yard in the Rossington Main, recording an overall time of 3:47.34. That was 3.8s quicker than Brentford Hope who carried a lb less when we factor in Megan Fox’s 7 lb claim. That made Old Park Star the fastest winner of this race since Mister Fisher in 2019, also trained by Nicky Henderson, though the races run in the interim period have mainly been on ground described as Soft or Heavy. The overall time is good without being spectacular, but given that Old Park Star had to make all of his own running and the fact that he pulled 18 lengths clear of the rest means we can add a significant upgrade to the overall time. The closing sectional times that you can see above offer a much better idea as to how quick Old Park Star was in the Haydock straight. Admittedly he started behind Brentford Hope in a race run with a finishing speed of 109%, but over the final 6 furlongs he was 6.19s faster. Given that Nico de Boinville was only nudging away after jumping the 2nd last and Brentford Hope was involved in a driving battle all the way to the line, that suggests this was a top class performance from Old Park Star. A top speed of 35.83 mph made Old Park Star the fastest horse on the speedometer in the Rossington Main, but it also meant that he was the fastest horse to run in any of the 4 hurdles races run on the Haydock card. Hurricane Pat finished 2nd. He was a long way behind Old Park Star at the line, but his final time of 3:51.25 meant that he would have finished just 0.11s (half a length) behind Brentford Hope in the handicap hurdle. He came into this contest on the back of an impressive win at Sandown in December. On that occasion, he was a second quicker than Soldier Reeves over the final quarter of a mile. Soldier Reeves narrowed that margin significantly at Haydock, but I suspect that the early exertions from Hurricane Pat, who attempted to go with Old Park Star when the pace lifted, meant that he finished a tired horse. He was within 0.25s of Old Park Star in furlongs 12 and 13 and paid for that effort after jumping the last. The more patiently ridden Soldier Reeves was ridden to finish his race, but the fact that he was still 0.88s slower than Old Park Star in the final quarter of a mile, despite being driven all the way to the line, points to the gulf in class between them.

When a horse wins a Grade 2 race by 18 lengths, there probably isn’t any need to confirm how good the performance was. However, just in case you were wondering if this was a fluke, let me be clear. This was the best Novice hurdle performance that we have seen in the UK this season. Old Park Star ticked all the boxes. A fast top speed, a good time, fast closing sectional times and placed horses who ran to form. I said at the start of this piece that there wasn’t any need for fancy words or titles to this blog post. Old Park Star was exceptional, all of the data confirms that and he is a worthy favourite for the Supreme Novices’ Hurdle as a result.