L’Eau Du Sud bids to create history in Tingle Creek for title leader Skelton

A picture


After his Crisp-like capitulation around the Elbow in the last two National Hunt trainers’ championships, Dan Skelton has set off at an even faster pace in this season’s title race and has already amassed more than £1,7m in prize money, nearly £1m ahead of second-placed Olly Murphy,The tally that is likely to matter most in April 2026, of course, will belong to Willie Mullins, who has shown that quality matters more than quantity by winning the last two titles with big hauls at the spring festivals, despite an overall aggregate winner-count of 300-66 in Skelton’s favour,But in that respect too there is encouragement for Skelton, who saddled 20 fewer winners in from May to the end of November than in the 2024-25 campaign, but upped his prize money total by nearly £450,000 year-on-year,It is a step up in terms of quality that may be further underscored at Sandown on Saturday when Skelton’s L’Eau Du Sud lines up for the Grade One Tingle Creek Chase against two top-class rivals in Mullins’s Il Etait Temps and Nicky Henderson’s popular and consistent Jonbon, the winner for the past two seasons.

The Tingle Creek is the last of four big feature chases on consecutive Saturdays in November and December after the Paddy Power Gold Cup, the Betfair Chase and the Coral Gold Cup, and Skelton will be the first trainer ever to win all four in the same season if L’Eau Du Sud is first home on Saturday.And while statistical nit-pickers might point out that the Betfair Chase dates back only as far as 2005, the Tingle Creek is the next-youngest on the list having been first run in 1969.Skelton would be the first trainer to complete the Paddy Power/Coral/Tingle Creek treble, too.A win for L’Eau Du Sud might also be a useful nerve-stiffener for his trainer, as Il Etait Temps has the potential to be among Mullins’s biggest money-earners this season.The Flat season was already up and running when the seven-year-old returned from a 359-day absence in the Grade One Celebration Chase over Saturday’s track and trip in late April, and so Il Etait Temps’s impressive five-and-a-half length defeat of Jonbon did not, perhaps, receive quite the attention it deserved.

It was every inch a Grade One performance, though, and backed up by an excellent time, and while Jonbon was much further behind L’Eau Du Sud in the Shloer Chase at Cheltenham last time, better ground could well see Nicky Henderson’s runner improve significantly for the run.With the major contenders all priced up between 10-11 and 4-1, this is a three-way go for the Tingle Creek that summons memories of the match-up between Moscow Flyer, Azertyuiop and Well Chief in this race in 2004.All three principals are Grade One winners over course and distance and while the nine-year-old Jonbon may struggle to reverse his recent form with Il Etait Temps and L’Eau Du Sud, there is very little between the latter pair on ratings, form or the pick of their time-figures.As a result, the bet at the prices in a race to savour is surely L’Eau Du Sud (3.00) at around 5-2.

He won as he pleased at Cheltenham last time but still posted a very strong time in the conditions, and while he may not have as much scope for improvement in fitness terms as his main rivals, a repeat of his latest form could well be enough.Sandown 1.20 A 7lb for a second successive win looks generous for Turndlightsdownlow and is largely offset by Freddie Keighley’s claim.Sandown 1.50 Four exciting novice chase prospects for the card’s first Grade One and none more so than the four-year-old Lulamba, last year’s Triumph Hurdle runner-up.

Aintree 2.05 Edelak, a product of the Aga Khan’s breeding operation, did enough on the Flat for Johnny Murtagh to suggest he will be an interesting recruit to juvenile hurdling.Wetherby 11.10 Ade Boy 11.40 Athair Mor 12.

17 Kilbarry Hill 12.50 Chase A Fortune 1.25 Express Surprise 1.57 Solly’s GoldAintree 11.48 Captain Hugo 12.

24 Sandscape 12,58 Inedit Star 1,30 Margaret’s Legacy 2,05 Edelak 2,40 White Rhino 3.

15 Rambo TChepstow 11.55 The Price Of Peace 12.29 Ben Solo 1.04 Idefix De Ciergues 1.36 Pats Fancy 2.

11 Bective Abbey 2,46 Modern Man 3,21 PresleySandown 12,10 Sober Glory 12,43 Sunset Marquesa 1.

20 Turndlightsdownlow (nap) 1.50 Lulamba 2.25 Go Dante (nb) 3.00 L’Eau du Sud 3.35 TanganyikaWolverhampton 4.

30 Arnaz 5,00 Galileo Charm 5,30 Archers Bay 6,00 R P McMurphy 6,30 Zryan 7.

00 Yurinov 7,30 Hackney Diamonds 8,00 Gilt Edge 8,30 I Can ImagineSandown 2,25 Track specialist Go Dante is just 1lb higher than for the first of his two Imperial Cup victories.

Aintree 2.40 It is still early days for White Rhino as a chaser and his return to action over the National fences in the Grand Sefton was a non-event after he was hampered at the third.The step up in trip will suit and he has been dropped 4lb since.Aintree 3.15 The form of Rambo T’s Chepstow win in October has been franked by two next-time winners from the first four home.

Sandown 3.35 The strong-travelling Tanganyika has the right profile to give Venetia Williams a second win in this race in four years.
technologySee all
A picture

Elon Musk’s X fined €120m by EU in first clash under new digital laws

Elon Musk’s social media platform, X, has been fined €120m (£105m) after it was found in breach of new EU digital laws, in a ruling likely to put the European Commission on a collision course with the US billionaire and potentially Donald Trump.The breaches, under consideration for two years, included what the EU said was a “deceptive” blue tick verification badge given to users and the lack of transparency of the platform’s advertising.The commission rules require tech companies to provide a public list of advertisers to ensure the company’s structures guard against illegal scams, fake advertisements and coordinated campaigns in the context of political elections.In a third breach, the EU also concluded that X had failed to provide the required access to public data available to researchers, who typically keep tabs on contentious issues such as political content.The ruling by the European Commission brings to a close part of an investigation that started two years ago

A picture

Home Office admits facial recognition tech issue with black and Asian subjects

Ministers are facing calls for stronger safeguards on the use of facial recognition technology after the Home Office admitted it is more likely to incorrectly identify black and Asian people than their white counterparts on some settings.Following the latest testing conducted by the National Physical Laboratory (NPL) of the technology’s application within the police national database, the Home Office said it was “more likely to incorrectly include some demographic groups in its search results”.Police and crime commissioners said publication of the NPL’s finding “sheds light on a concerning inbuilt bias” and urged caution over plans for a national expansion.The findings were released on Thursday, hours after Sarah Jones, the policing minister, had described the technology as the “biggest breakthrough since DNA matching”.Facial recognition technology scans people’s faces and then cross-references the images against watchlists of known or wanted criminals

A picture

Tesla launches cheaper version of Model 3 in Europe amid Musk sales backlash

Tesla has launched the lower-priced version of its Model 3 car in Europe in a push to revive sales after a backlash against Elon Musk’s work with Donald Trump and weakening demand for electric vehicles.Musk, the electric car maker’s chief executive, has argued that the cheaper option, launched in the US in October, will reinvigorate demand by appealing to a wider range of buyers.The new Model 3 Standard is listed at €37,970 (£33,166) in Germany, 330,056 Norwegian kroner (£24,473) and 449,990 Swedish kronor (£35,859). The move follows the launch of a lower-priced Model Y SUV, Tesla’s bestselling model, in Europe and the US.The cheaper Model 3 and Model Y cars drop some premium finishes and features of the more expensive versions, but still offer driving ranges above 300 miles (480km)

A picture

Russia blocks Snapchat and restricts Apple’s FaceTime, state officials say

Russian authorities blocked access to Snapchat and imposed restrictions on Apple’s video calling service, FaceTime, the latest step in an effort to tighten control over the internet and communications online, according to state-run news agencies and the country’s communications regulator.The state internet regulator Roskomnadzor alleged in a statement that both apps were being “used to organize and conduct terrorist activities on the territory of the country, to recruit perpetrators [and] commit fraud and other crimes against our citizens”. Apple did not respond to an emailed request for comment, nor did Snap Inc.The Russian regulator said it took action against Snapchat on 10 October, even though it only reported the move on Thursday. The moves follow restrictions against Google’s YouTube, Meta’s WhatsApp and Instagram, and the Telegram messaging service, itself founded by a Russian-born man, that came in the wake of Vladimir Putin’s invasion of Ukraine in 2022

A picture

Google’s AI Nano Banana Pro accused of generating racialised ‘white saviour’ visuals

Nano Banana Pro, Google’s new AI-powered image generator, has been accused of creating racialised and “white saviour” visuals in response to prompts about humanitarian aid in Africa – and sometimes appends the logos of large charities.Asking the tool tens of times to generate an image for the prompt “volunteer helps children in Africa” yielded, with two exceptions, a picture of a white woman surrounded by Black children, often with grass-roofed huts in the background.In several of these images, the woman wore a T-shirt emblazoned with the phrase “Worldwide Vision”, and with the UK charity World Vision’s logo. In another, a woman wearing a Peace Corps T-shirt squatted on the ground, reading The Lion King to a group of children.The prompt “heroic volunteer saves African children” yielded multiple images of a man wearing a vest with the logo of the Red Cross

A picture

Chatbots can sway political opinions but are ‘substantially’ inaccurate, study finds

Chatbots can sway people’s political opinions but the most persuasive artificial intelligence models deliver “substantial” amounts of inaccurate information in the process, according to the UK government’s AI security body.Researchers said the study was the largest and most systematic investigation of AI persuasiveness to date, involving nearly 80,000 British participants holding conversations with 19 different AI models.The AI Security Institute carried out the study amid fears that chatbots can be deployed for illegal activities including fraud and grooming.The topics included “public sector pay and strikes” and “cost of living crisis and inflation”, with participants interacting with a model – the underlying technology behind AI tools such as chatbots – that had been prompted to persuade the users to take a certain stance on an issue.Advanced models behind ChatGPT and Elon Musk’s Grok were among those used in the study, which was also authored by academics at the London School of Economics, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, the University of Oxford and Stanford University