British stables beware: Ireland’s green tide is ready to roll into Cheltenham

A picture


The first four Grade One favourites at the festival are British horses but the Irish battalions are ready for battleThe first four Grade One favourites at Cheltenham next month are stabled in British yards.So are three of the top six names in the Gold Cup betting.From a safe distance on the British side of the water, it is possible to imagine a festival when, for the first time in a decade, the home team heads to the West Country with a spring in its step.But make no mistake, the green tide is coming.Across the length and breadth of the country, from the biggest yards with dozens of festival runners to 10-horse operations with a single stable star, there has been the unmistakeable sense of a confident, well-drilled army mobilising for action at pre-festival media events in Ireland this week.

Ireland’s rugby team took a beating in Paris last week and the footballers are struggling to reach even a 48-team World Cup, but its horses, trainers and jockeys are not about to surrender their dominance in National Hunt racing,The re-emergence of Gordon Elliott as a serious rival for Willie Mullins in the Irish title race feels particularly ominous from a British perspective,Ireland came away from last year’s festival with 20 winners, its second-biggest return after the extraordinary 23-winner spree in 2021, despite Elliott drawing a blank with his first 51 runners at the meeting before Wodhooh, the 52nd and last, took the final race on Friday,It was a frustrating week that culminated in tears of joy and relief as Elliott welcomed her back to the winner’s enclosure, and one that he is in no mood to repeat,“In racing, soccer, rugby, it’s the same, you’ve got to keep your head going,” Elliott said this week.

“But as hard as it was for me, for all my staff who were putting in all the hours, it was harder for them.The horses didn’t run badly, we just didn’t get the bounce of the ball.“When you look at this season, everything is bouncing right for us.That’s sport.You just put those days behind you but that’s what makes it better when you win.

”The headliners from Elliott’s stable next month will include Brighterdaysahead, the second-favourite for the Champion Hurdle, and Teahupoo, the market leader for the Stayers’ Hurdle, alongside the unbeaten novice chaser, Romeo Coolio, a likely runner in the two-mile Arkle Trophy but with an option to switch to the three-mile Brown Advisory Novice Chase instead.Brighterdaysahead was a disappointing 5-2 shot in last year’s Champion Hurdle but Elliott remains hopeful that she will be able to translate her exceptional form around Leopardstown – including a win in the Irish Champion Hurdle this month – to Cheltenham.“I think last year she wasn’t right,” Elliott said.“After Punchestown [in April] we discovered something and we rectified it.She was beaten after a hurdle last year.

We might do something different this year,We might stable her outside Cheltenham and just try to do something different,“You’re always thinking of something different,She’s been to Cheltenham twice and hasn’t won and last year was very bad, but if you don’t try to tweak and change things then you shouldn’t be training horses,That’s my job and I’m trying to do something different every day.

”Elliott is about €500,000 (£435,000) clear of Willie Mullins in the Irish trainers’ championship, and feels that his 50-strong team for this year’s festival is his deepest for a decade.Mullins, though, seems sure to outdo him for numbers, at least, with a squad of about 70 runners horses expected to travel to the meeting.Typically for Mullins, there are late decisions to be made on the running plans for several of his stable stars, including whether the impressive Irish Gold Cup winner, Fact To File, will be supplemented for the Gold Cup or attempt a repeat success in the Ryanair Chase.Mullins suggested on Wednesday that his team could be a little behind in terms of its preparation this year, not least due to the effects of the wettest winter for many years.“I didn’t think things would be as quiet [in the first part of the season],” Mullins said, “but we had a very wet time from November up to right after Christmas.

We were waiting for a little less weather but it never really happened.“There was no bug or anything l like that.They were all eating well and they all seemed to be fine.But sometimes at that time of the year, we are a bit slow and then in the spring, things come right.”Mullins and Elliott lead the way for Ireland in terms of numbers, ably supported by trainers including Henry de Bromhead, who has not drawn a blank at the festival since 2016 and has a 12-point profit to level stakes over the last decade.

But there are much smaller operations too that add further depth and colour to the country’s festival challenge,Jimmy Mangan, who has not saddled a winner in Britain since Monty’s Pass in the 2003 Grand National, will send the 8-1 chance Spillane’s Tower to the Gold Cup, while Declan Queally, who both trains and rides the Grade One-winning I’ll Sort That, will run his stable star in either the Turners Novice Hurdle or the Albert Bartlett,And there will be two runners too from Barry Connell’s bespoke stable in County Kildare, including Marine Nationale, the defending champion in the Queen Mother Champion Chase,Connell is a former hedge-fund manager who learned to ride in his late 30s, took out an amateur jockey’s licence in his 40s and then turned his attention to training having observed trainers including Elliott at close hand during several decades as an owner,His operation is a seamless combination of tradition and modern ideas, in a built-from-scratch stable where the handful of “store” horses that he buys each year are given all the time they need to mature and thrive, and everything from airflow to the disposal of manure is meticulously planned.

And Connell’s record at the festival speaks for itself: five runners, two wins, one second, one fourth and just one runner out of the frame,Marine Nationale is the second-favourite for the Champion Chase behind Mullins’s Majborough, who beat him at the Dubin racing festival last time out, but Connell is confident that he can turn the tables next month,Taunton 1,05 Western Cross 1,40 Five Bar Gate 2.

15 Cooler Than Me 2.50 Jongleur D’Etoiles 3.25 Welsh Charger 4.00 Beacon EdgeLingfield 1.23 Joseph 1.

58 Spanish Voice 2,33 U S S Charleston 3,08 An Laochmor 3,43 Haveagobeau 4,15 Lexington Jet 4.

50 WoodraffLeicester 1.30 Grandad’s Cap 2.05 Epic West 2.40 A Little Something 3.15 Hawk Stone 3.

50 No Tackle 4,25 St Cuthbert’s CaveChelmsford 4,55 Amarachi 5,30 Numero Vingt 6,00 Gallant 6.

30 Carlton (nap) 7.00 Stay Salty 7.30 Crimson Rambler (nb) 8.00 Captain Parma“He has been to Cheltenham twice, won there twice and not been off the bridle twice,” Connell said.“When he walks around the pre-parade ring [there] it’s like he’s walking around the courtyard here at home.

Having the right temperament is a huge thing, especially for those championship races.“I think we’ll see a different horse again in March.That’s not just my opinion, it’s backed up by the form book when you look at what he does when he goes there every year.”Fakenham 1.20 Character Testing 1.

50 Brother Boris 2,20 Jurys In 2,50 Kalista Love 3,25 Stattler 4,00 Castanea Breeze 4.

35 CooltobecarelessKelso 1.30 Kocktail Bleu 2.00 Judicial Deference 2.30 Bertie’s Ballet 3.00 Empire Steel 3.

35 Moon Phases 4.10 Slaney Opera 4.45 Lion Rose SivolaChepstow 1.40 Bossman Jack 2.10 Merci Mam 2.

40 Juby Ball 3,10 Getaway Theatre 3,45 The Big Reveal 4,20 Churchman 4,55 Delta Blues BelleWolverhampton 5.

15 R P McMurphy 5,45 Desiderata 6,15 Miss Lady Grace 6,45 City Cyclone (nap) 7,15 Al Najashi 7.

45 Sam’s Xpress (nb) 8.15 My GenghisWill Team Ireland reach the giddy heights of 2021 this year? Probably not.But a repeat of last year’s 20-8 final score is an entirely realistic ambition for National Hunt’s dominant force and punters on both sides of the Irish Sea will need to ride the green wave to stand any chance of finishing the festival in profit.
sportSee all
A picture

Heraskevych’s ‘helmet of memory’ forces IOC into PR fiasco at Winter Olympics | Sean Ingle

Skeleton racer sacrificed his dream of winning a medal and succeeded in putting the horrors of the war in Ukraine back on the agendaTo be an Olympic-class skeleton racer requires extraordinary guts and impeccable nerve, as the corners loom and then whoosh past at frightening speed. So did anybody really believe that Ukraine’s Vladyslav Heraskevych would lose his when the world’s eyes were upon him?Not the International Olympic Committee, who flipped between threats of expulsion and sweet talk over the past fortnight, without coming close to changing his mind. And certainly not those of us who have spoken and messaged Heraskevych, and found a man utterly prepared to sacrifice his dream of winning a Winter Olympic medal for a higher purpose.In public and private his message was the same: he would not back down. And if the IOC barred from competing in his “helmet of memory”, which commemorates some of the 600 Ukrainian athletes and coaches killed by Russian bombs and bullets since 2022, he would accept his fate

A picture

‘It’s emptiness’: banned Ukrainian athlete accuses IOC of fuelling Russia’s propaganda

Vladyslav Heraskevych has accused the International Olympic Committee of doing Russia’s propaganda for them after he was barred from racing in the Winter Games because he wanted to wear a “helmet of memory” in honour of Ukraine’s war dead.In one of the most controversial decisions in recent Olympic history, the Ukrainian skeleton racer was informed only minutes before he was due to compete that his accreditation had been rescinded.It followed a last-ditch meeting in Cortina on Thursday morning with the IOC’s president, Kirsty Coventry, who left in tears after she failed to persuade Heraskevych to change his mind.The IOC has maintained all week that the helmet, which shows the images of 24 athletes and children that died from Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, violates its athletes’ charter because the field of play must be free from political expression.However Heraskevych, who had a genuine chance of winning Ukraine’s first medal at these Winter Olympics, has insisted that the helmet is an act of remembrance for the friends he has lost and that it would be a “betrayal” to back down

A picture

Move over Pommel Horse Guy: USA’s Curling Rambo becomes cult hero of Winter Olympics

At Paris 2024, the US had Pommel Horse Guy. At these Winter Olympics, the Americans have a new cult hero: Curling Rambo.Aidan Oldenburg, a member of the US men’s curling team, has attracted attention for his glasses, thick thatch of hair and red bandana. His appeal as an unlikely hero has drawn comparisons with Stephen Nedoroscik, USA’s bespectacled, Rubik’s Cube-solving gymnastics hero who won two bronze medals at the Paris Olympics.Like Nedoroscik, the 24-year-old Oldenburg has hobbies away from his sport

A picture

‘If they’re a chef short, I’ll fill that role’: Safyaan Sharif ready to cook up T20 World Cup shock

It is fair to say that England’s first two games at the T20 World Cup have not inspired much confidence – unless you’re one of their future opponents. For Scotland, last-minute call-ups after the decision to banish Bangladesh from the tournament last month, English travails have put some extra pep in their step ahead of the now-crucial Group C clash in Kolkata on Saturday.“Definitely,” says the seamer Safyaan Sharif. “They’ll be feeling pressure because they know they have to win if they want to qualify. Obviously that’s the same with us, but I don’t think we have too much to lose

A picture

Olympic champion Breezy Johnson crashes out of super-G then gets engaged at end of course

Olympic downhill champion Breezy Johnson didn’t add to her medal haul during the women’s super-G on Thursday, but she left Tofane with something precious anyway: an engagement ring.Johnson, who won gold on Sunday in the downhill, crashed out of the super-G after she clipped a gate with one of her poles, sending her tumbling into the safety fence. However, there was some consolation: her boyfriend, Connor Watkins, proposed to her near the finish line. Surrounded by members of the US Ski Team, Johnson said “Yes!” and the two embraced.Johnson said she had an idea Watkins would propose, although the exact location and timing was still a surprise

A picture

Victoria and WA shook the foundations as Origin hit a peak that it will never reach again | Brendan Foster

When a late snap from Gary Buckenara put Western Australia ahead of Victoria in the 1986 State of Origin game, I feared the stands at Subiaco Oval were about to collapse under the weight of the thunderous thumping of rapturous fans.Almost 40,000 supporters squeezed into the ageing Soviet-style concrete stadium on a Tuesday afternoon in July to watch the Sandgropers take on the Big V in what is widely regarded as one of the greatest interstate football matches.Maybe it was because the ground was bulging at the seams with thousands of jittery, sugar-fuelled school kids and slightly sloshed Sandgropers, whose bosses had turned a blind eye to their midweek sickies – but I’ve never experienced an atmosphere like it.There was a chaotic, Colosseum-like frenzy to the noise, without the gladiators or the lions. (If you think I’m dishing up a decent serving of hyperbolic hogwash, watch the last quarter to see why the game remains timeless