will work back from the
Festival with
following his successful debut for the yard at Prestbury Park on Saturday.
A dual winner for Joseph O’Brien during the summer, the three-year-old was thrown into a JCB Triumph Trial on his British bow and charged home after the final flight to force a dead-heat with the Warren Greatrex-trained
.
The victory provided Jones with back-to-back wins in the race, having struck gold with another ex-O’Brien runner in
12 months ago.
An Bradan Feasa went on to finish eighth in the Fred Winter at the Festival and Jones feels his latest Irish recruit is capable of bettering that result come March.
"Faity tale stuff"
Jones has recently purchased the yard of the retiring Rae Guest in the latest filip to his burgeoning operation
Jones, who is moving into the retiring Rae Guest’s stables in Newmarket, said: “It’s fairy tale stuff really to have a winner at Cheltenham and to win that race for a second time was brilliant.
“We obviously don’t have many jumpers, but we do OK with the ones have and Teriferma obviously came from the same school as An Bradan Feasa.
“We’ve had him three or four months and he’s been very straightforward, he’s shown a good level of ability in his work and his schooling and I think he’s probably better than the lad last year.
“I was gobsmacked he was 18-1, but I loved the way he hit the line and even if he’d been beaten a couple of lengths I think you’d have said he was the one take out of the race.”
Jones expects to have a clearer idea of what Teriferma’s Festival target will be after his next run, with several options under consideration.
"Match practice" preferred for "exciting prospect"
“The handicapper has put him up to 128 and the Fred Winter (Boodles) would look the logical target, but at the same time he’s not far off being an outsider for the Triumph,” the Newmarket handler added.
“The Chatteris Fen comes a bit too soon and I’m not sure
would be his track, so that leaves us with Cheltenham on Trials Day, Musselburgh (Scottish Triumph Hurdle) and Kempton (Adonis Hurdle).
“We went to Musselburgh last season (with An Bradan Feasa) and that didn’t really work out. It’s a long way and I don’t think the owners are that keen to go back.
“East India Dock is probably going to Cheltenham, but do you run scared of one horse? Probably not.
“I was contemplating not giving him another run between now and the Festival to protect his mark, but I think he could probably do with the match practice. He’s an exciting prospect.”