Trainer Robert Price is recovering well from a serious trackwork fall and is looking to One Way Ticket to provide a welcome tonic with victory at Randwick on Monday.Price suffered a broken C7 vertebra in his neck and T6 vertebra in his back when he was dumped from a young horse at his NSW south coast property last month.He is still housebound but his recovery is progressing well with his neck brace taken off on Thursday."I'm going along steadily but I'm still stuck at home," Price said."The neck

Trainer Robert Price is recovering well from a serious trackwork fall and is looking to One Way Ticket to provide a welcome tonic with victory at Randwick on Monday.

Price suffered a broken C7 vertebra in his neck and T6 vertebra in his back when he was dumped from a young horse at his NSW south coast property last month.

He is still housebound but his recovery is progressing well with his neck brace taken off on Thursday.

"I'm going along steadily but I'm still stuck at home," Price said.

"The neck brace came off (on Thursday) so I can at least get around the house a little better now."

Price has been told he probably won't be able to resume riding trackwork for six months but will have another CT scan in a couple of weeks.

With Price out of action, his son and fellow trainer Luke has been riding Monday's PJ Bell Country Cup (1400m) contender One Way Ticket in his work.

"Luke's been riding him in his fast work and he's pretty happy with him," Price said.

One Way Ticket has been plagued by injury throughout his career and Monday's race on the Kensington track will be the seven-year-old's third run back from a suspensory injury.

He had previously spent 18 months on the sidelines with a tendon injury to another leg.

"He's always had plenty of ability but he's had a tendon injury and a suspensory injury in the past three years," Price said.

"We've done a good job to get him back."

n two starts this time in One Way Ticket has indicated a seventh career win, and a first for 2-1/2 years, could be in sight.

He resumed with a fifth in the $60,000 Wagga Wagga Town Plate (1200m) last month before a close third over 1400 metres at Rosehill on May 21.

"The little fella (apprentice Sam Clipperton) rode him 10 out of 10 for us last start, I thought he had every chance that day," Price said of the third to New Zealand galloper Klose.

"I thought at Wagga first-up had he drawn a better barrier (than 13 of 14) he might have won that race. From the terrible gate we went back, made a sustained run and got shunted wider on the corner but still ran on strongly to finish in the top five."

One Way Ticket has been piloted by apprentices Josh Adams and Clipperton this preparation but Sydney's leading hoop Nash Rawiller jumps aboard for the first time on Monday.

"Having the number one rider in the country on is only going to help," Price said.