No Drama This End brings back glory days for Nicholls – and it’s Cheltenham next

A picture


Days like these were once almost a weekly experience for Paul Nicholls, as he strung together one title-winning season after another, so the 14-time champion will have taken particular pleasure from his double on Monday as No Drama This End, in the Grade One Challow Hurdle, and Minella Yoga both emerged as contenders for the Cheltenham festival in March.The Challow has often been an early proving ground for future stars over fences, and No Drama This End, Nicholls’s seventh winner of the race, joined former champions from the yard including Denman, the 2008 Gold Cup winner, and Bravemansgame, the 2022 King George VI Chase winner, on the roll of honour.Sent off at 4-9, the five-year-old made all the running under Harry Cobden and needed little encouragement to maintain a one-and-a-quarter length lead to the line.“Someone just said to me, how does he compare with your other Challow winners, like Denman and Bravemansgame and all those,” Nicholls said, “and he compares with all of them.In three runs over hurdles, he’s won two Grade Twos and a Grade One, and none of them achieved that.

“To back it up after three weeks [from his last win at Sandown] is not ideal [but] we wanted to give him a nice bit of time before Cheltenham rather than go to Trials day [in late January] and it’s worked out beautiful, so we’ll go straight to the festival.I’d say that will be his last run over hurdles if that goes right, then we’ll go chasing.”No Drama This End was already the favourite for the Turners Novice Hurdle over two miles and five furlongs at Cheltenham in March before Monday’s race, and was cut to a top price of 4-1 to go one place better than Denman, the runner-up in 2006, and give Nicholls his first ever victory in the race.Classy novice hurdlers with the potential to be better still over fences are just what Nicholls needs as he tries to build back towards his former dominance and he will have taken particular pleasure from the success of Minella Yoga’s defeat of Act of Innocence, the 2-7 favourite, in the card’s Introductory Hurdle.The result had added significance for Nicholls as Act Of Innocence was among several horses switched away from his stable over the summer by his owners, Gordon and Su Hall, while Minella Yoga’s owner, Michael Geoghegan, has been a significant recent investor in Nicholls’s Ditcheat operation.

“As you can imagine, I loved that, absolutely delighted,” Nicholls said.“He’s a very nice youngster and I obviously felt I had half a chance by running him against Act Of Innocence, and I couldn’t have had a better result, to be honest.Haydock 12.35 Nazare 1.05 Wolf Walker 1.

35 Ned Tanner 2.05 Sole Solution 2.35 Majordomo 3.05 Jupiter Des Bordes (nb) 3.40 Brentford HopeTaunton 12.

50 Innamorato 1.20 Le Beau Madrik 1.50 Fat Faced Columbo 2.20 Al Fonce 2.50 Square Du Roule 3.

23 Faitque De L’Isle 3.55 Inferno SacreeWolverhampton 4.30 Gifted Angel 5.00 Mister Moet 5.30 Havana Rum 6.

00 Seeing Stars 6.30 Jamie Sommers 7.00 Credit Forgedd It 7.30 Ghaiyyath Park (nap) 8.00 Bownder 8.

30 Son Of Astar“He’s one of the nicest youngsters we have and it’s great for Michael, who has heavily invested and bought a few nice horses with me lately,”Minella Yoga was cut to around 16-1 for the Triumph Hurdle at Cheltenham in March, and could take in the track’s trial for the juvenile hurdling championship on 24 January on the way to the festival,“He’ll definitely have an entry for the Triumph and I wouldn’t be afraid of running him in it,” Nicholls said,“You could definitely see him galloping up that Cheltenham hill OK,It won’t be the be-all and end-all though, and … ultimately, he’ll be a really nice horse in the future.

technologySee all
A picture

‘This will be a stressful job’: Sam Altman offers $555k salary to fill most daunting role in AI

The maker of ChatGPT has advertised a $555,000-a-year vacancy with a daunting job description that would cause Superman to take a sharp intake of breath.In what may be close to the impossible job, the “head of preparedness” at OpenAI will be directly responsible for defending against risks from ever more powerful AIs to human mental health, cybersecurity and biological weapons.That is before the successful candidate has to start worrying about the possibility that AIs may soon begin training themselves amid fears from some experts they could “turn against us”.“This will be a stressful job, and you’ll jump into the deep end pretty much immediately,” said Sam Altman, the chief executive of the San Francisco-based organisation, as he launched the hunt to fill “a critical role” to “help the world”.The successful candidate will be responsible for evaluating and mitigating emerging threats and “tracking and preparing for frontier capabilities that create new risks of severe harm”

A picture

‘Why should we pay these criminals?’: the hidden world of ransomware negotiations

They call it “stopping the bleeding”: the vital window to prevent an entire database from being ransacked by criminals or a production line grinding to a halt.When a call comes into the cybersecurity firm S-RM, headquartered on Whitechapel High Street in east London, a hacked business or institution may have just minutes to protect themselves.S-RM, which helped a high-profile retail client recover from a Scattered Spider cyber-attack has become a quiet, often word-of-mouth, success.Many of the company’s senior workers are multilingual and have a minimal online footprint, which reveals scant but impressive CVs suggestive of corporate or government intelligence-based careers.S-RM now claims the UK’s largest cyber-incident response team

A picture

Louis Gerstner, man credited with turning around IBM, dies aged 83

Louis Gerstner, the businessman credited with turning around IBM, has died aged 83, the company announced on Sunday.Gerstner was chair and CEO of IBM from 1993 to 2002, a time when the company was struggling for relevance in the face of competition from rivals such as Microsoft and Sun Microsystems.After becoming the first outsider to run the company, Gerstner abandoned a plan to split IBM, which was known as Big Blue, into a number of autonomous “Baby Blues” that would have focused on specific product areas such as processors or software.IBM’s current chair and CEO, Arvind Krishna, told staff in an email on Sunday that this decision was key to the company’s survival because “Lou understood that clients didn’t want fragmented technology, they wanted integrated solutions.”“Lou arrived at IBM at a moment when the company’s future was genuinely uncertain,” he wrote

A picture

Nvidia insists it isn’t Enron, but its AI deals are testing investor faith

Nvidia is, in crucial ways, nothing like Enron – the Houston energy giant that imploded through multibillion-dollar accounting fraud in 2001. Nor is it similar to companies such as Lucent or Worldcom that folded during the dotcom bubble.But the fact that it needs to reiterate this to its investors is less than ideal.Now worth more than $4tn (£3tn), Nvidia makes the specialised technology that powers the world’s AI surge: silicon chips and software packages that train and host systems such as ChatGPT. Its products fill datacentres from Norway to New Jersey

A picture

From shrimp Jesus to erotic tractors: how viral AI slop took over the internet

Flood of unreality is an endpoint of algorithm-driven internet and product of an economy dependent on a few top tech firms In the algorithm-driven economy of 2025, one man’s shrimp Jesus is another man’s side hustle.AI slop – the low-quality, surreal content flooding social media platforms, designed to farm views – is a phenomenon, some would say the phenomenon of the 2024 and 2025 internet. Merriam-Webster’s word of the year this year is “slop”, referring exclusively to the internet variety.It came about shortly after the advent of popular large language models, such as ChatGPT and Dall-E, which democratised content creation and enabled vast swathes of internet denizens to create images and videos that resembled – to varying degrees – the creations of professionals.In 2024, it began to achieve peak cultural moments

A picture

More than 20% of videos shown to new YouTube users are ‘AI slop’, study finds

More than 20% of the videos that YouTube’s algorithm shows to new users are “AI slop” – low-quality AI-generated content designed to farm views, research has found.The video-editing company Kapwing surveyed 15,000 of the world’s most popular YouTube channels – the top 100 in every country – and found that 278 of them contain only AI slop.Together, these AI slop channels have amassed more than 63bn views and 221 million subscribers, generating about $117m (£90m) in revenue each year, according to estimates.The researchers also made a new YouTube account and found that 104 of the first 500 videos recommended to its feed were AI slop. One-third of the 500 videos were “brainrot”, a category that includes AI slop and other low-quality content made to monetise attention