A Champion Crowned As A Champion Bows Out

CHELTENHAM, UK–It is a rare moment when a beaten horse elicits a more rousing reception than a winner, but then Tiger Roll (Ire) (Authorized {Ire}) is the rarest of beasts. An enigma sometimes, but scintillating on his many days in the sun, he retires a proper champion of a horse after giving his all for one final run in relentless rain. 

Nobody could claim that the Glenfarclas Cross Country Chase is a championship race – in fact there are those who call for its exclusion from the Festival – but the quirky up-hill-down-dale marathon contest is one that has seen one of the most popular horses in training at his very best over the years. Tiger Roll has won the race three times since 2018, and going into this swansong year for one last hurrah it looked very much like the script had been read and understood. Indeed, it had been by Tiger Roll, who despite the sodden ground looked dead set on giving the Cheltenham faithful the result they longed to see. But his younger stable-mate Delta Work (Fr) (Network {Ger}), who was promoted to favourite as the rain continued to fall, decided to play the role of party-pooper. 

With Tiger Roll skipping round in his usual workmanlike manner in the hands of Davey Russell, the master of the National Hunt weighing-room, the duo led the field a merry dance through the final lap, but danger loomed as Delta Work and Jack Kennedy came to challenge over the final flight, setting up a battle royal up the stamina-sapping run-in. At the line, the 12-year-old Tiger Roll, a five-time winner at the Festival and a dual Grand National hero, was but a length down, giving Michael O'Leary's Gigginstown House Stud and Gordon Elliott a truly memorable quinella.

“Tiger is the horse of a lifetime and he's going to have a brilliant retirement back at Gigginstown,” said Elliott as both horses were welcomed back to the winner's enclosure in tandem.

“He's been with us for nine years now, we've always had faith in him and we've really enjoyed today. Tiger made it the race it was. In one way I'm delighted with the one-two, but if he'd won that would have been really special. But I'm delighted with him and he got the reaction he deserved.”

Eight years ago, on just the third start of his life, Tiger Roll landed his first win at Cheltenham in the G1 JCB Triumph Hurdle over two miles. Three years later he took the National Hunt Chase over double the distance under Elliott's assistant Lisa O'Neill before returning 12 months on to win his first Cross Country Chase followed by his first Grand National just a month after that. He bows out having won 13 of his 44 starts, but the stats don't really do the little horse justice. The son of a Derby winner, bred for the Flat and bought initially to race for Sheikh Mohammed, he was considered surplus to requirements at Godolphin and was sold unraced for just £10,000 to Nigel Hawke, who trained him to win on his debut before he changed stables again.

“He is a great horse and he has got a fitting send-off,” said Russell, who rode Tiger Roll to both his Grand National victories. “I always felt Jack breathing down my neck and I would say the rain and the ground just caught us out as Delta Work is very effective on that ground and I'd say Tiger is not as effective on it.

“He went down on his sword the way he deserved to go down. You can see the public are fantastic. It doesn't matter where they are from they are cheering both horses. It is such a marvellous sport we have and we are so lucky. He is just a marvellous horse.”

In eight appearances at the Cheltenham Festival, Tiger Roll has finished in the first two on seven occasions to force his way into the hearts of those who make the annual pilgrimage to the Cotswolds. It will be a while before we see his like again – or hear a winning favourite booed over the line.

Mullins Leads The Irish Charge

Willie Mullins, a man as urbane as he is successful, extended his comfortable lead at the head of the Cheltenham Festival trainers' roll of honour, with another three victories on Wednesday to add to his win in Tuesday's finale. For Mullins, winning races comes as naturally as breathing, but a glaring omission in his well-rounded curriculum vitae had been the G1 Queen Mother Champion Chase. Thanks to Energumene (Fr) (Denham Red {Fr}) that is no longer the case.

The race had been billed as one of the clashes of the week but a variety of factors led to Wednesday's feature being as damp a squib as the racegoers dodging in and out of the rain that persisted throughout the afternoon. The ground, which was downgraded from good to soft, to soft, and then to heavy as the day wore on, was no hindrance to the winner, however, even though it apparently scuppered the chances of the only horse to have beaten him in more than two years, Shishkin (Ire) (Sholokhov {Ire}). From the off, Energumene's main rival was never travelling and his usually exuberant jumping folded in the heavy going. Sensibly, Shishkin, who has lit up the last two Festivals with his authoritative victories in the G1 Supreme Novices' Hurdle and G1 Arkle Trophy, was pulled up by Nico de Boinville soon after the eighth fence. Disappointing but no disaster.

With another of the leading lights, Chacun Pour Soi (Fr) (Policy Maker {Ire}), taking a tumble five fences from home to further weaken the field, Energumene crept into contention after being hunted round toward the rear under a canny energy-saving ride from Paul Townend. He challenged eventual runner-up Funambule Sivola (Fr) (Noroit {Ger}) for the lead three out and thereafter the race was at his mercy, with the 8-year-old striding clear from the penultimate fence to win convincingly.

“He jumped so well, he got me into the race and I was able to fill up everywhere,” said Townend after riding his second winner of the day for Mullins, who is now the most successful trainer of all time at the Festival with 82 winners to his name. 

“Riding a Champion Chase winner for Willie is great. Ruby [Walsh] didn't leave many behind him but we are glad to pick up what scraps he left. We were out of luck yesterday but in luck today, so that's all right and everyone's in one piece.”

Jumping may be the name of the game at Cheltenham but arguably the race in which Mullins has been feared the most over the years is the G1 Weatherbys Champion Bumper, which traditionally brings the curtain down on Wednesday. In fact, the trainer even rode his first winner of the Festival bumper, Wither Or Which (Ire), in 1996, and he has trained another 11 winners of the race since then. The most recent is doubtless one to savour as Facile Vega (Ire) (Walk In The Park {Ire}) is the son of a Festival darling in the six-time G1 Mares' Hurdle winner Quevega (Fr) (Robin Des Champs {Fr}). 

“To me, the fact we had the dam and she was so good, and that he has come through and he looks to be as good as her is fantastic,” Mullins said. 

“He is very easy to train and we just keep a lid on him all the time. The only pressure I had with him was the pressure I put on myself. That's what I just see at home every day. This horse just travels and now you're seeing what I see. He really impressed me in Leopardstown and just impressed me again today. He's a real sort.”

The 5-year-old Facile Vega is now unbeaten in his three starts and his owners in the Hammer & Trowel Syndicate will be hoping he can follow a similar trajectory to his stable-mate and last year's Champion Bumper winner Sir Gerhard (Ire) (Jeremy). The Cheveley Park Stud representative has been beaten only once in his life and ensured the day started well for the Mullins team when winning the G1 Ballymore Novices' Hurdle.

Man On A Mission

Rumours of the death of British National Hunt racing appear to have been greatly exaggerated, certainly in the novice chasing division. Victory for Alan King in Tuesday's Arkle with Edwardstone (GB) (Kayf Tara {GB}) was followed by another five-time winner this season, the exciting L'Homme Presse (Fr) (Diamond Boy {Fr}), who slogged through the mud under jockey Charlie Deutsch in the manner expected of a Venetia Williams trainee to claim the G1 Brown Advisory Novice Chase from the Lucinda Russell-trained Ahoy Senor (Ire) (Dylan Thomas {Ire}).

“He has been absolutely fantastic,” said Williams. “All credit to Andy [Edwards, owner], who picked him out and has seen him right the way through to here. I'm just thrilled and honoured to have been the custodian of him.”

She continued, “Andy was recommended him when he had had two runs in France and he had ended up with a tendon injury. He was damaged goods at that point but with most tendon injuries if you do the right thing and give them time you can get them back. He joined me just a year after that injury in the September and he didn't have his first run for us until Grand National day.

“It was a long played-out story but here we are. He is a big horse and always looked like he was going to be a chaser. What a fabulous ride Charlie gave him, he did everything right. We can dream about anything now.”

Both Williams and Russell hold the rare distinction of having trained a Grand National winner and the two trainers, one based almost in Wales and the other in Scotland, are clearly great friends.

Russell, who struck on the first day with Corach Rambler (Ire) (Jeremy) in the G3 Ultima Handicap Chase, said sportingly after finishing second, “I'm delighted for Venetia. If I'm going to get beaten by anybody I'm happy that it's Venetia.”

The two women join Nicky Henderson, his former assistant Ben Pauling, and Alan King on the winners' sheet for Britain but, as widely expected, the Irish team has surged ahead after two days with eight winners on the board to the home team's six. At half-time in Cheltenham after a brutally wet day, every victory over the final two days will be hard earned. 

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Luna Belle Chasing Fourth Consecutive Stakes Victory In Beyond The Wire

Deborah Greene and Hamilton Smith's Luna Belle will attempt to stretch her talent beyond a sprint for the first time as she goes after a fourth consecutive stakes victory in Saturday's $100,000 Beyond the Wire at Laurel Park.

The 34th running of the one-mile Beyond the Wire for 3-year-old fillies is among five stakes worth $450,000 in purses on an 11-race program, co-headlined by the $100,000 Private Terms for 3-year-olds.

First race post time is 12:40 p.m.

Named last month as Maryland's champion 2-year-old filly of 2021, Luna Belle was bred by Greene and her late father, Fred Greene Jr., and is based with Smith at Laurel. The Great Notion filly is two-for-two at 3, winning the six-furlong Xtra Heat Jan. 29 and seven-furlong Wide Country Feb. 19 by nine combined lengths.

The Beyond the Wire is a stepping stone to the 1 1/16-mile Weber City Miss April 16 at Laurel, a 'Win and In' qualifier for the $250,000 Black-Eyed Susan (G2) May 20 at historic Pimlico Race Course.

“The way she ran her last race going seven-eighths, it looks like she can handle the mile pretty easy. The distance is something I've been hoping she can do all along. I prefer a route horse over a sprinter any day,” Smith said. “The way they've got the program set up here it's really good for a young horse. You start out going three-quarters, then seven-eighths, then go a mile and right on up the ladder. It gives a young horse a chance to mature and everything.”

Luna Belle had to overcome some traffic trouble in her most recent start, where she broke a step slow and then had to steady in tight quarters leaving the backstretch. Jockey Denis Araujo weaved his way between horses to the outside where Luna Belle unleashed a powerful kick to pass her rivals.

“She ran into trouble the last time going into the turn and [Araujo] had to take her up two or three times. She had to overcome all that and still won pretty impressively,” Smith said. “That was, by far, her best race from what she's done so far.”

Smith said they have been approached several times about selling Luna Belle, a filly who began her career with a pair of turf starts before breaking her maiden by six furlongs last August sprinting six furlongs in 1:09.89 on the main track at Colonial Downs, where Smith was leading trainer in 2021.

“When I first ran her on the dirt down at Colonial Downs and she broke her maiden running [1:09] and change, and I knew I had a filly that could really run,” Smith said. “Some people say that the track's fast down there, but she still ran nine and change and for maiden 2-year-old to run like that I thought was pretty impressive.

“Deborah is having a lot of fun with her and she's had a lot good offers to sell, but she doesn't want to sell. I'm right along with her,” he added. “She's having fun and like she says, if you sell her you can get the money and try to go buy one and hope they're as good as she is, so we might as well as have fun with the one we've got. So, that's what we're doing.”

Araujo, aboard for each race during the streak, rides back from Post 7 in a field of eight.

No Guts No Glory Farm's homebred Mama G's Wish is entered to make her stakes debut off four straight wins for owner-trainer John 'Jerry' Robb. She has won from 5 ½ to seven furlongs during her streak, all with stable rider Xavier Perez up, who gets the return call from Post 2.

“She seems to be on the improve pretty good here lately. She's won four in a row and she's as good as she can get right now so now would be the time to take a shot,” Robb said. “The mile I'm not sure about, but there's no reason why she shouldn't be able to go a mile.”

Robb leads Laurel's winter meet with 21 wins, one more than Maryland's five-time defending overall champion Claudio Gonzalez. Both are looking for their first stakes win of the year.

“Things have fallen right into place for us. I've had the right races go and the right type of racetrack each time,” Robb said. “A lot of horses were coming back fresh. It's all just lined up in the stars for once. You've got to get it while you can because there's going to come a time when you have to stop.”

Trainer Rodolfo Sanchez-Salomon entered the pair of Click to Confirm and Red Wine Time. Mi Patria Racing's Click to Confirm was claimed for $25,000 last fall at Laurel and has hit the board in five of seven subsequent starts with one win, a third in the Nov. 13 Smart Halo and back-to-back seconds going one mile in her two most recent efforts. She also ran sixth to Luna Belle in the Maryland Juvenile Fillies in mid-December.

“She's doing great,” Sanchez-Salomon said. “She's been running her guts out lately going long, which is I think what she likes. That's what she wants to do.”

J R Sanchez Racing Stable's Red Wine Time will be making her first start since being claimed for $10,000 out of a 5 ¾-length debut win March 5 at Laurel, where she fell behind by a dozen lengths after a quarter mile and continued to trail the field through four furlongs before rallying.

“When I claimed that filly, a lot of people were going to go in for her and then everybody backed out. I went in myself and I got her. She was very, very impressive,” Sanchez-Salomon said. “I think I've got a nice filly. I just had to work on her. She had some back end problems but I think I've got her in the right spot.”

Angel Cruz is named on Click to Confirm from Post 6 while Red Wine Time will break from Post 5 with meet-leading rider Jevian Toledo.

A pair of horses shipping in from opposite directions will converge on Laurel for the Beyond the Wire. From South Florida comes Ha' Penny, a maiden special weight winner last November at Gulfstream Park for trainer Joe Orseno that ran fourth in back-to-back stakes at Tampa Bay Downs to open 2022 – the seven-furlong Gasparilla Jan. 15 and one-mile, 70-yard Suncoast Feb. 12.

Horacio Karamanos gets the riding assignment from Post 3.

Blue Devil Racing Stable's Diamond Collector makes the short trip from New York for trainer Carlos Martin. The daughter of Grade 1 winner Blame ran second in her two starts at 2 before breaking through with a front-running 4 ½-length maiden special weight triumph Feb. 6 at Aqueduct. She has yet to race beyond seven furlongs.

“This is a good test for her,” Martin said. “She seems like she's improved from race to race to race and hopefully when we get her stretched out she'll even be more effective. She doesn't have a quick, quick turn of foot but she's just got a real steady way about her and she's bred to run on. We're optimistic that with maturity and time that she'll be a mile and an eighth, mile and a quarter-type filly that can maybe do both surfaces.”

Victor Carrasco will be aboard from Post 4.

Barak Farm's She Is Wisky, beaten two lengths when second to Luna Belle in the Wide Country, her stakes debut; and Fortune Racing's Candy Light, popular last out maiden special weight winner going one mile Feb. 24 at Laurel, round out the field.

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PET Scan Installed at Rood & Riddle

Edited Press Release

Rood & Riddle Equine Hospital is pleased to announce the installation of an equine positron emission tomography (PET) scanner at the Lexington, Kentucky, hospital. This modality is used for diagnostic imaging in select lameness cases and can be used in standing, sedated horses. It does not require general anesthesia. The scans result in quantitative, three-dimensional, cross-sectional images that can help accurately pinpoint the location and severity of a problem. Any area on the limb from the foot to the carpus (knee) and tarsus (hock) can be imaged. Two different types of scans can be performed. One looks at areas of increased bone metabolism and is useful to identify sub-chondral bone disease, signs of impending fracture, suspensory ligament attachment disorders, and osteoarthritis. The other looks at the overall tissue metabolism and is useful in cases of soft tissue injury or laminitis. Rood & Riddle is the fourth location for this standing PET scanner for horses globally and is the site of the first installation at a private practice.

“We are excited to introduce this new technology for our patients,” said Dr. Katherine Garrett, Rood & Riddle's director of Imaging. “PET scans will increase our ability to detect bony injury in horses, which will hopefully lead to improved outcomes.”

Orthopedic surgeon Dr. Larry Bramlage added, “We started with radiographs alone, and they depended on celluloid and silver ions for an image. Then, digital radiographs moved us forward in the quality of what we could see. Nuclear scintigraphy was the next step because we could image physiology, not just anatomy. Then, the three-dimensional imaging with computed tomography (CAT) scans and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) further expanded our capabilities. We have now moved forward to another level with PET scanning, which combines the physiology of nuclear medicine and the three-dimensional capabilities of CAT and MRI into a three-dimensional image of bone physiology. It can also look at the three-dimensional activity of some soft tissues. PET adds significantly to our imaging and understanding of the true status of the equine athlete.”

In 2015, Grayson-Jockey Club Research Foundation funded the first-ever research project that performed PET scans on equine athletes and followed that up with additional research funding in 2019. Now, this new cutting-edge research will assist vets coast to coast in identifying lameness problems that are hard to locate.

“Grayson has been a longtime supporter of research on the efficacy of PET scans in diagnosing injuries in horses, and we are pleased to see a PET scanner installed at one of the premier equine hospitals in the world,” said Jamie Haydon, president of Grayson. “We are proud to have contributed to the development of a technology that will help countless horses at Rood & Riddle for years to come.”

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‘Horse Of A Lifetime’ Tiger Roll Retired After Runner-Up Finish At Cheltenham Festival

Delta Work (5-2 favorite) won Wednesday's Glenfarclas Cross Country Handicap Chase at the Cheltenham Festival, getting up to defeat stable companion Tiger Roll (3-1) by three-quarters of a length. Both horses are owned by Michael O'Leary's Gigginstown House Stud and entered the winner's enclosure together.

The 12-year old-Tiger Roll, a five-time winner at The Festival and twice successful in the Randox Grand National (2018 and 2019), was retired following his run today. Tiger Roll's five wins at The Festival came in the JCB Triumph Hurdle (2014), National Hunt Chase (2017) and Glenfarclas Cross Country Chase (2018, 2019 and 2021). His career earnings came to just under £1.5 million.

Delta Work handed a 32nd Festival success to owner Gigginstown House Stud, a 34th to trainer Gordon Elliott and a 10th to jockey Jack Kennedy.

Gordon Elliott, trainer of Delta Work and Tiger Roll, said:

“Of course, I wanted the Tiger to win but once I'd won the race I didn't mind as it was for Gigginstown who are massive supporters of us – and the reception he got when he came into the ring is what it's all about. He's been the horse of a lifetime and I'm very lucky to have had him – he goes back to Michael O'Leary's now. He's been with us for nine years now and to be honest I had a tear in my eye there, it's unbelievable. If he'd have won it would have been special but he ran his heart out and we're absolutely delighted.

“We've always had faith in him and it's brilliant, he's really enjoyed the game and it's a great result. The reaction from the crowd didn't really surprise me to be honest and if he'd have won the cheer would have been unbelievable. He got the reaction he deserved and we're very proud of him. He will be a big loss for the yard but he'll only be at Gigginstown which is down the road, so they can go and see him whenever they want.

“The ground really suited Delta Work and it was a great performance from the winner – he can enjoy this race for a few years now.”

Winning jockey Jack Kennedy said:

“Everybody hates me now but I don't care! I thought I was always going to get there really. A lot of people don't like me now after that but it doesn't really bother me to be honest. After I schooled him the other day I said to my brother that I might be the most hated man in Cheltenham on Wednesday evening, and I was right.

“He's been very disappointing all year but the switch to this cross country race has rejuvenated him. All of the schooling and everything was brilliant and I'm delighted.

“I thought the ground had gone for Tiger Roll and I was surprised at how well he was going to be honest, but I suppose it was in the back of my head that he might not get up the hill as good as my lad on that ground. I actually expected to pick him up a bit easier, but my lad just ground him down in the end.

“Delta Work is after getting a new lease of life. He hasn't been travelling as well as he's travelled today and maybe he's got sick of it, but this has really lit him up.

“I was disappointed yesterday as I had a great book of rides, but we are on the board now.

“He's in the Grand National, and I would hope I'd be on him.

“This has to be well up there amongst my riding highlights. I've always wanted to ride in a cross country race and this is my first ride in one. It was unbelievable riding a class horse like him, jumping and travelling. It was a great thrill. I'm delighted.”

Michael O'Leary, owner of Delta Work and Tiger Roll, said:

“The great thing is he (Tiger Roll) has finished in one piece and has come back safe and sound. He will now have a very long and well-earned retirement.

“He could have slipped at the first or pulled up after two fences. All I wanted today was for Tiger to run well and come home in one piece.

“The risk was as I told you before that he might pull up on ground he didn't like but he was brilliant. He is a warrior.

“He has given us so many great days. He has won here five times, finished second twice and won two Grand Nationals. Don Cossack and War Of Attrition were the best as they won two Gold Cups. This would have just been a fairytale.

“If I could have controlled it, I would have roared at Jack to finish second on Delta. You have to roll so many at the dartboard here and hope that something will stick.

“He ran well and came home sound. We will retire him now and everyone will get to celebrate him as it will be the last time that they will see him run on a racetrack. What a warrior he is he is a legend. I was booing myself and was saying please Jack don't go past him let him win it God help us. It is not often you want to give away a win at Cheltenham but it really would have been fairytale if he could have won today. He has run a fantastic race and owes us nothing.”

Davy Russell, rider of Tiger Roll, said:

“He is a great horse and he has got a fitting send off so it is great. I always felt Jack breathing down my neck and I would say the rain and the ground just caught us out as Delta work is very effective on that ground and I'd say Tiger is not as effective on it.

“He went down on his sword the way he deserved to go down. You can see the public are fantastic. It doesn't matter where they are from they are cheering both horses. It is such a marvellous sport we have and we are so lucky. He is just a marvellous horse.

“Tongue in cheek some people booed Delta Work and I didn't think that was fair as he put in the same effort as Tiger so he deserved the plaudits.

“I don't think I could have done any different. He likes to get to the front at some stage of the race at this age of his career as he likes to boss a race. I will miss him for sure but that is life and we move on and we live in the fast line.

“He is going to a good home and he has had a marvellous life and career and will be looked after where he is going.

“I've not ridden him that many times. I've been beaten on him twice and won three times on him. The first National was a bit heart and mouth stuff with the photo finish but the second one was marvellous. Today was marvellous. Any time you get clapped in and out is a special day.”

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