He is trained by the joint partnership of Joel Parkinson and Sue Smith, based at High Eldwick in West Yorkshire. It is a yard in good form — 42 winners already this season — and the team clearly think Get On George is one of their more interesting prospects. Parkinson was effusive after the Wetherby win, pointing out that the horse had already shown plenty at Carlisle before that and flagging him as a future chaser. The comparison drawn internally is to Grand Geste, a horse who has had a strong season, and the suggestion is that Get On George could do something similar — and then some.
What makes that ambition feel grounded rather than wishful is the way the team describe him. Fast enough to win on good ground, stays well enough to grind out a result when it gets tougher, jumps cleanly, and — perhaps most importantly — has the right attitude. In racing, horses with genuine ability but a difficult temperament often frustrate; a horse that combines talent with a good head tends to keep improving. His recent form reading 1-4-1 in his last three completed runs shows he is competitive at this level, and the team's view is that fences will suit him even better than the hurdles he has been racing over.
He raced just yesterday, so there is more to come from Get On George very soon. For a horse only in the early chapters of his career, the signs are genuinely encouraging.
| Course | Races | Results | Last visited | Win rate |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Doncaster Galloping |
2 | 1 win, 1 other | 24 Jan | 50% |
| Wetherby Galloping |
1 | 1 win | 15 Nov | 100% |
| Hexham Undulating |
1 | 1 second | 11 Oct | 0% |
| Aintree Galloping |
1 | 1 other | 11 Apr | 0% |
| Carlisle Undulating |
1 | 1 other | 2 Nov | 0% |
| Sandown Park Galloping |
1 | 1 second | 7 Mar | 0% |
| Newcastle Galloping |
1 | 1 other | 29 Nov | 0% |