Garden rake stops Hong Kong horse race

This file photo taken on March 31, 2016 shows workers repairing pieces of upturned turf following a night horse race at the Hong Kong Jockey Club in the Happy Valley district of Hong Kong. Picture: Anthony Wallace

This file photo taken on March 31, 2016 shows workers repairing pieces of upturned turf following a night horse race at the Hong Kong Jockey Club in the Happy Valley district of Hong Kong. Picture: Anthony Wallace

Published Oct 28, 2016

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Hong Kong - Hong Kong bookies had to return US$16 million (about R222m) in bets when a garden rake jammed starting barriers at the Happy Valley racecourse, causing what is thought to be the city's first ever no-race.

The rake, left leaning against the barriers at the downtown track, seemed to have become accidentally caught in the starting mechanism, the South China Morning Post said, delaying the opening of all but four stalls.

The Class Four sprint was quickly declared void and the Hong Kong Jockey Club, the city's betting monopoly, handed back HK$126 million (US$16.2 million) to punters, the Post said.

"Given the number of horses which had their chances prejudiced, we felt it was appropriate to declare the race void," chief steward Kim Kelly was quoted as saying.

Veteran trainer John Moore also told the newspaper: "I've been here as long as most, over 40 years, and I've never seen a no-race in Hong Kong."

AFP

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