The Citizen (KZN)

Can Mullins scoop G1 pool at Leopardsto­wn?

- Sportingli­fe.

Willie Mullins recently recorded his 4,000th career winner, could be on the brink of another truly remarkable achievemen­t this weekend?

Some bookmakers are offering 11-1 about Ireland's multiple champion jumps trainer saddling the winner of all eight top-class races at Leopardsto­wn's Dublin Racing Festival tomorrow and Sunday.

Mullins came up short in just two of the races in question at last year's DRF and talk of the clean sweep has gathered apace in the lead-up to this season's meeting with stable stars Galopin Des Champs, Facile Vega, Lossiemout­h, Appreciate It and State Man among those expected to deliver the goods.

The obvious potential stumbling block in that regard could be the very first race on day one - the Nathaniel Lacy & Partners Solicitors '50,000 Cheltenham Bonus For Stable Staff' Novice Hurdle, run over the extended 4400m.

Mullins has been responsibl­e for seven of the past 10 winners of the race, including the last two with Minella Cocooner and Gaillard Du Mesnil, but there are three ahead of the shortest-priced Mullins runner in this year's edition, namely Good Land (Barry Connell), Sandor Clegane (Paul Nolan) and American Mike (Gordon Elliott).

Graham Cunningham, speaking on this week's Sporting Life Racing Podcast, isn't ruling anything out, with Grangeclar­e West and the lightly-raced French import Quais Du Paris set to go to post for Mullins.

He said: "If Willie Mullins manages to win that 'Nathaniel Lacy' race, talk of winning all the eight Grade 1s over the weekend at Leopardsto­wn will be on. "That looks his toughest one." Timeform's Irish handicappe­r Billy Nash gave the lowdown on some of the protagonis­ts, as well as the Mullins-trained pair: "Good Land is the current favourite.

"He was very impressive in a maiden hurdle at Leopardsto­wn over Christmas, a race that's working out fairly well apart from the runner-up (Tag Man) got turned over at a shorter trip last weekend. There have been winners come out of the race, most notable Embassy Gardens who was only fourth on the day.

"But he's (Good Land) short enough in the betting for me. It'll be interestin­g to see what Willie does run here. Grangeclar­e West is coming back after having a legitimate excuse at Naas last time.

"And he's got Quais De Paris who is a bit of a talking horse from the Mullins yard but wasn't impressive at Tramore on his first start.

"Elsewhere, Gordon Elliott's American Mike is another on a bit of a retrieval mission. He was a really good bumper horse, disappoint­ed at Navan the last day but - again - I think he had an excuse."

Timeform's David Johnson feels Mullins could face some stern competitio­n from a rare

British runner in the DRF opener.

Johnson said of the Nigel Twiston-Davies-trained Weveallbee­ncaught: "It looks a sensible bit of campaignin­g from TwistonDav­ies.

"Because it was a Class 2 maiden hurdle he won, he wasn't well in at the weights (at Cheltenham) last weekend, he'd have had a bit more of a penalty that you might have expected a maiden hurdle winner to have.

"So it looks an interestin­g bit of placement as the form has worked out and he doesn't have a great deal to find on the Timeform ratings. I think he's about 11-2 which seems plenty big enough when you consider he's only 12-1 for the Albert Bartlett." –

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