THERE’S ONLY ONE CORRECT HOPPLE LENGTH

Pick On (Percy Hall) - 1952 Inter Dominion Championship at Harold Park.

Pick On (Percy Hall) - 1952 Inter Dominion Championship at Harold Park.

This week’s Friday Flashback shows a pacer called Pick On (Percy Hall) winning a qualifying division of the 1952 Inter Dominion Championship at Harold Park. Note the “snug” hopple length on a horse who stood close to 17 hands.

In winning this heat over fifteen and a half furlongs (3118m), Pick On defeated Retinue - a horse well known to Hall. Just over two years earlier Percy had driven Retinue into second place in the first race run under lights at Harold Park. He later won several races on the horse for trainer Goran Kelly.

One of the trickiest jobs faced by harness horse trainers is to work out the exact hopple length required by each horse. One hole too long can cause a horse to pace roughly - one hole too short can slow them down and result in chafing.

Trainers sometimes experiment for long periods with troublesome horses - constantly tweaking the hopple length until satisfied.

One thing we do know is that the size of the horse isn’t always a guide to the hopple length required. It gives the trainer a starting point, but in many cases the horse’s hopple length belies its size.

Pick On was one of 500 Harold Park winners trained by Percy Hall - a legend in the trotting sport from the late 1920’s until his death in 1981.

I enjoyed many conversations with the master horseman over the years and Pick On, the horse in the photo, was mentioned more than once. Perc said Pick On was a very big horse who always looked like he was “screaming” for a long hopple.

Hall experimented with the stallion’s hopple length “forever”. Every time he tried to lengthen the hopples, the horse would lose confidence and pace roughly. “In the end I just forgot about the horse’s size and set the hopples where he felt his most comfortable, his most fluent and his fastest. When I finally measured them, I was shocked to find they were only 52 inches (132cm)”, said Percy.

Many other trainers at the time were intrigued by Pick On’s tiny hopple and many present day trainers will find it hard to believe. Despite his height, Pick On was short through the body and had a short, rapid fire action.

He may well hold the distinction of being the “shortest hopple” horse to ever contest an Inter Dom Series. He finished seventh in the Grand Final to Avian Derby.

Percy was forced to relinquish his race driving licence at age 65, but continued to train for several years from the Badgerys Creek property of his son in law Owen Glendenning.

I can still see him sitting on a bale of lucerne hay in the stables the day he told me the story of Pick On. It was almost thirty years since Pick On had raced and P.J.Hall was still shaking his head.