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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Capacity Crowds Expected For DWC Night

The Mar. 26 Dubai World Cup night, which features $30.5 million in purses spread across nine races, is expected to attract a full house of fans for the 26th edition. Since the COVID-19 pandemic began, race meetings have been conducted with restrictions placed on the number of people allowed to attend, but for the first time since 2019, there are no restrictions at a Meydan race day. Meydan Racecourse can hold up to 80,000 spectators.

Sheikh Rashid bin Dalmook Al Maktoum, the Chairman of Dubai Racing Club, said, “We are so happy to have everyone back here for what will be a fantastic 26th running of the Dubai World Cup meeting. The atmosphere will be absolutely electrifying.

“The quality of the horses, trainers, owners and jockeys who have assembled is better than ever and we are looking forward to a superb day of racing with our guests from all over the world.

“I would like to thank our partners for their support and also the team at Dubai Racing Club, who have worked so hard to bring this meeting together.”

For the first time, the Goffs Dubai Breeze-Up Sale will be held on Mar. 23 leading up to Dubai World Cup night. The sale will be held at Meydan Racecourse, with the breezes conducted over the Tapeta track.

He added, “The first-ever Dubai Breeze-Up Sale is something we are all looking forward to eagerly as well, as it gives owners and connections in the region the chance to view and purchase some of the best bred 2-year-old horses in their backyard. It is something that will further cement Dubai's position as one of the main centres for racing, not just in the region, but globally too.”

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The Sweet Roar Of Success For Cheltenham’s Golden Girls

CHELTENHAM, UK–There are horses, and then there's Honeysuckle (GB). Thought it may seem like sacrilege to compare the superstar hurdler to the greatest racehorse of the modern era, there has been no better winning sequence on the turf since Frankel (GB) stepped off it to the breeding shed a decade ago, and Honeysuckle isn't stopping yet.

The daughter of Sulamani (Ire) is now a dual Champion Hurdle winner, a treble Irish Champion Hurdle winner, unbeaten in 15 starts under rules, plus her debut triumph in a point-to-point at Dromahane at the age of four. It was that romp of a maiden win when still a raw frame of a filly that pricked up the ears of Peter Molony, who manages the racing and breeding interests of Honeysuckle's owner Kenny Alexander and bought the mare at the Goffs Punchestown HIT Sale on his behalf for €110,000.

Visibly emotional as Honeysuckle was led in from her third consecutive victory at the Cheltenham Festival, Molony admitted, “I looked at her pedigree and I wasn't interested. But I was working for Goffs and I thought I had better go and have a look at her. And to do what she did in her point-to-point when she was just such a big frame of a horse was quite something. Then I just had to persuade Kenny.”

It is an understatement to say that Alexander will be glad that he did. For there is currently no bigger star in National Hunt racing than Honeysuckle. The mare's lustre is enhanced immeasurably for her unbreakable partnership with Rachael Blackmore, who owned Cheltenham last year with her six Festival wins. All that was missing then was the famous roar, but boy did she and Honeysuckle receive one this time around.

With the crowds returned to Prestbury Park two years on from the world coming almost to a standstill as the pandemic took its grip, those who packed the tiers that make up the heady amphitheatre surrounding Cheltenham's winner's enclosure gave it their lusty best as the golden girls returned triumphant again.

“It was incredible, walking back down there,” said Blackmore. “I've never felt an atmosphere like that. There wasn't a moment's silence. People here, it's just an amazing crowd, an amazing atmosphere. It's easy to say that when you're winning, but it's a very special place and to hear those cheers this year was very special.”

She continued, “Part of me was thinking that I should have been more nervous before the race, but I actually do have a lot of confidence in her. It would be weird if I didn't, because she's never let me down. She's incredible. Henry [de Bromhead] gets her to the races every day in the form he does, and that's an extremely tough feat, to train a horse to win all those races in succession.”

While Blackmore was happy to put her faith in her faultless mount, Molony confessed that the nerves had been getting to him.

“To be honest, the weeks leading up to her races, it's torture,” he said. “But it's first-world torture, and we'll enjoy it now looking back.”

He added, “She's eight now and we're probably looking at next year being her last season.”

Whenever Honeysuckle does eventually retire she will become an important foundation mare at Alexander's New Hall Stud in his native Scotland, a farm made famous by the Thom family, breeders of Group 1 winner Donna Blini (GB), who went on to greater fame as the dam of Japanese superstar Gentildonna (Jpn).

Alexander, who predominantly races mares with a view to establishing a formidable National Hunt broodmare band, has the majority of his horses in training in Ireland, and the British-bred Honeysuckle, a graduate of Dorset-based The Glanvilles Stud, has been a huge credit to her trainer Henry de Bromhead, whose annus mirabilis in 2021 included landing Cheltenham's holy trinity of the Champion Hurdle, Champion Chase and Gold Cup, and then adding his first Grand National success to the mix. 

Four of the last seven runnings of the Champion Hurdles have been won by mares, the last two by Honeysuckle, who on Tuesday was chased home by Epatante (Fr) (No Risk At All {Fr}), the 2020 winner. The latter's trainer Nicky Henderson has had plenty of success in that race over the years, with his eight wins stretching back to 1985, and though he had to settle for second in the day's feature race, he will have returned to Lambourn a happy man on Tuesday evening. 

Henderson drew first blood at Prestbury Park during the afternoon, sending out Constitution Hill (GB) (Blue Bresil {Fr}) and Jonbon (Fr) (Walk In The Park {Ire}) to finish first and second in a fiercely competitive running of the G1 Sky Bet Supreme Novices' Hurdle. He then struck again in the G1 Close Brothers Mares' Hurdle with Marie's Rock (Ire) (Milan {Ire}) for the Middleham Park Racing team. 

“We had four runners today and if you'd have told me this morning I'd have had all four finishing in the first two I'd have said it was going to be a good day,” said Henderson, the most successful British trainer of all time at the Festival with 72 wins. “In golf you're meant to play to your age, so when you're 66 you've got to go round in 66 and so on. I'm 71 so the first winner this week took me to that and we've put one in the bank for next year just in case I don't last.”

With 23 horses set to run at Cheltenham this week, Henderson is the best represented among the British trainers but his team pales into relative insignificance against the amassed troops from the Irish stables of Willie Mullins and Gordon Elliott, who have 71 and 68 potential runners respectively. 

Mullins had to wait until the last race of the day for his first win in the Ukraine Appeal National Hunt Challenge Cup with Stattler (Ire) (Stowaway {Ire}), ridden by his son Patrick. As an acknowledgement of the grave troubles beyond the bubble of the Cheltenham Festival, the six runners in the finale all carried saddle cloths in the colours of the Ukrainian flag, while the jockeys bore armbands in blue and yellow throughout the day. 

Edwardstone A Homegrown Star

Prices for the top National Hunt horses may have skyrocketed past the reach of many owners but there is still the odd fairytale to be written, even at Cheltenham. And it will be hard to find a more heartwarming result all season than that of Edwardstone (GB) (Kayf Tara {GB}) in the G1 Sporting Life Arkle Trophy. 

Bred by his owners Robert Abrey and Ian Thurtle, the 8-year-old has been the star turn this season for Alan King, who in the last 12 months has been represented by the dual Group 1-winning stayer Trueshan (Fr) (Planteur {Ire}) and Group 2-winning juvenile Asymmetric (Ire) (Showcasing {GB}). Such results are testament to his all-round skills as a horseman, but it is the jumps world with which King has been more readily associated over the years, and in Edwardstone he looks to have a prospect to rival former stable stars such as Voy Por Ustedes (Fr), My Way De Solzen (Fr) and Katchit (GB).

Abrey and Thurtle, two old friends based in Norfolk, currently have only Edwardstone's dam, the 17-year-old Nothingtoloose (Ire) (Luso {GB}), in their paddocks. She is soon to be joined by Midnightreferendum (GB) (Midnight Legend {GB}), the Grade 2-placed four-time winner and daughter of their late broodmare Forget The Ref (Ire) (Dr Massini {Ire}). Both the latter and Nothingtoloose were campaigned in the point-to-point field by the pair before retiring to stud, and are now both black-type producers.

Edwardstone, already a treble winner over hurdles, has been one of the revelations of the season since going novice chasing and, after being brought down on his debut over fences in November, hasn't looked back, remaining unbeaten in his last five starts. 

Hailing the result “a dream come true”, Robert Abrey said, “The adrenaline is running a bit at the moment. We were just trying to breed a nice horse and this fella turned up.”

He added, “We're just a couple of amateurs. We looked down the list even in our bumpers and thought 'what are we doing here?'. Alan got him going and the horse could be quite bullish as a youngster. It's really all credit to Alan and his team at Barbury Castle for all the work they have put into this horse over the last three or four years.”

With Nothingtoloose heading to Ireland to visit Walk In The Park (Ire) this season, the mare is set to be represented by another runner in the coming days as Edwardstone's full-sister Nothingtochance (GB) is entered to make her debut in the bumper at Southwell on Monday. 

As James Thomas outlined in Tuesday's TDN, the numbers are stacked against British breeders in the National Hunt division but the opening day at Cheltenham was one to savour in that regard, with three Grade 1 winners carrying the GB suffix. And, as also referenced, top-class jumpers are often not that far removed from top-class horses on the Flat. 

A reminder of that was delivered by Brazil (Ire), winner of the G3 Boodles Juvenile Handicap Hurdle to give trainer Padraig Roche his debut Festival victory with his first runner. This time last year, the 4-year-old son of Galileo (Ire) was still under the care of Aidan O'Brien at Ballydoyle, where his full-brother Capri (Ire) was also trained to win the St Leger for the Coolmore partners. Capri, bred, like Brazil, by Lynch Bages Ltd and Camas Park Stud, is now ensconced at Grange Stud and has been presented with a rather nice update by his brother as he embarks on his career as a National Hunt stallion.

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Tattersalls Ascot March Catalogue Released

The catalogue for the Mar. 31 Tattersalls Ascot March Sale is now online. Comprised of 102 lots, there are 22 fillies and mares in/out of training, 63 colts and geldings in/out of training, 11 point-to-pointers, a pair of 2-year-olds and four store horses. Many leading stables have horses catalogued, including Barbury Castle Stables, Bective Stud, Closutton Stables, Cullentra House, Godolphin, Kingsley Park, Lodge Hill Stables, Saxon Gate and Park House Stables. Of the nine lots consigned by Godolphin, Angel's Thunder (Ire) (Night of Thunder {Ire}) (lot 59) is the highlight, as an unraced relative of the G1 Oaks heroine Qualify (Ire) (Fastnet Rock {Aus}). A point-to-point bumper winner at Great Trethew, Valereum Bridge (Ire) (Fame And Glory {GB}) (lot 83) will go through the ring from Shannon Lodge Stables. Petit Mouchoir (Fr) (Al Namix {Fr}) (lot 125), who won the G1 Irish Champion Hurdle, hails from the draft of Bective Stud. Entries will be accepted through Mar. 28.

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