Irish Daily Mail

FINE RUN WILL HAVE ANIBALE FLYING HIGH

- By EOGHAN O’BRIEN

ANIBALE FLY will warm up for a potential third tilt at the Randox Grand National with his first competitiv­e appearance in almost a year in the Bobbyjo Chase at Fairyhouse. The 11-year-old has been a fantastic servant to trainer Tony Martin and owner JP McManus, placed in the Cheltenham Gold Cup in 2018 and 2019, as well as finishing fourth and fifth in the last two runnings of the National behind Tiger Roll. Anibale Fly, who has not managed to get his head in front since landing the Paddy Power Chase at Leopardsto­wn in 2017, has been off the track since finishing third over hurdles at Naas last March. McManus’ racing manager Frank Berry said: ‘Tony is very happy with him. He’d be hoping he’d improve for the run. ‘He was to run in the Red Mills Chase in Gowran last week, but it was called off. ‘He’s had one or two issues that have delayed his comeback, so hopefully we can get him out now and he’ll run a nice race. ‘That (Grand National) is the plan if all goes well and we can get him there.’ Willie Mullins has saddled a record 10 previous winners of today’s feature race, first striking gold with his subsequent National hero Hedgehunte­r in 2005. This year the Closutton handler fires a twin assault - with last year’s winner Acapella Bourgeois joined by stablemate Burrows Saint, who provided Mullins with his first Irish Grand

National success in 2019. Philip Dempsey’s The Long Mile, who also carries the McManus silks, and Tout Est Permis from Noel Meade’s yard complete the line-up. Of The Long Mile, Berry added: ‘He’s up a good bit in grade, but he needs to run to qualify for the National, so we’ll see how he runs.’ The first of three Grade Threes on the card is the Norman Colfer Winning Fair Juvenile Hurdle, for which the Gordon Elliott-trained Teahupoo will be a hot favourite. The French recruit made an impressive Irish debut over the course and distance in January, and holds several engagement­s at next month’s Cheltenham Festival. “I was very pleased with his first start for us when he won a conditions event at this track last month,’ Elliott told Betfair. ‘He possibly had fortune on his side, because a horse of Willie’s (Youmdor) came down at the last when holding a slender lead. ‘In fairness though, our horse had managed to get Youmdor off the bridle - and the way he went to the line suggested that it would have been close enough if both horses had cleared the last without incident. He looks like he has progressed from that last run, which would suggest that he has a future at graded level, and I’d like to think he will be closely involved.’

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