The recent form makes for difficult reading. Those back-to-back fourth-place finishes suggested some promise, but the three eleventh-place finishes since then represent a significant step in the wrong direction. In a field of, say, twelve horses, finishing eleventh means crossing the line almost last. Do that once and it might be a bad day. Do it three times in a row and it raises real questions about whether this horse is finding its level.
Get In Order has been pitched mainly at Class 4 level — the middle tier of British racing, not the glamour end of the sport but competitive enough. At that level it has managed nothing from four attempts. Henry Oliver trains out of Abberley in Worcestershire, and his yard has sent out seven winners this season, so there is clearly ability in the stable. The honest truth, though, is that none of it has rubbed off on this particular horse yet. With no wins and no places from six career races, it has not yet given its trainer much to work with.
What keeps things open is that Get In Order raced just days ago and is clearly still being given opportunities to prove itself. At six, it is not ancient — some horses take time to find their confidence or their right conditions. But right now, the record is what it is: six races, no reward, and a lot of ground to make up before anyone could make a case for it being one to watch.
| Course | Races | Results | Last visited | Win rate |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Warwick Sharp |
2 | 2 other | 8 Mar | 0% |
| hereford | 2 | 2 other | 10 Dec | 0% |
| Wincanton Galloping |
1 | 1 other | 1 Apr | 0% |
| Uttoxeter Sharp |
1 | 1 other | 17 Oct | 0% |