Daily Mirror (Northern Ireland)

SUPA STAR Jessica’s charge can end four decade wait for a 10-year-old Champion win

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BIDDING to become the first 10-year-old winner since Sea Pigeon in 1980, Supasundae might reward each-way support in today’s Unibet Champion Hurdle at Cheltenham.

Winner of the Coral Cup here in 2017, Jessica Harrington’s charge has contested the last two Stayers Hurdles ( finished runner-up and seventh).

But he possesses top-notch Grade 1 form over two miles, having won both the Irish and Punchestow­n Champion Hurdles in 2018.

Last season he beat Buveur D’air in the Aintree Hurdle (two and a half miles) before chasing home that rival at Punchestow­n.

In his only outing this season he was beaten less than five lengths in fourth behind Honeysuckl­e and two of todays’ rivals and

in the Irish

Champion Hurdle.

Supasundae will strip fitter, will be suited by a strong pace over two miles and is expected to reverse that Leopardsto­wn form with his two rivals.

Whether he retains the zip to match some of his younger rivals remains to be seen. But he should be staying on powerfully up the hill and is expected to go close in an apparently below-par, but ultra-competitiv­e reneweal.

Willie Mullins, chasing a fifth Champion, saddles two including supplement­ary entry added after his Red Mills success last month when he reverted to hurdling.

On that Gowran evidence, he’ll need to brush up his jumping.

Patrick Mullins renews his successful partnershi­p with

disappoint­ing behind Honeysuckl­e last time, but a three-time Grade 1 winner and conqueror of Petit Mouchoir in the Matheson at Leopardsto­wn over Christmas.

Brought down by Buveur D’air at the third last year when strongly-fancied, Sharjah, rated 163, has solid claims at his best.

Gavin Cromwell successful with shock scorer Espor D’allen 12 months ago, is back with another realistic contender, Darver Star, beaten only a halflength by Honeysuckl­e in the Irish Champion and an amazingly progressiv­e eight-year-old, having progressed from winning a handicap in Wexford off 108 last April.

Nine-year-old Petit Mouchoir is back for another tilt at the great race and, although sure to run his race, looks held by a number of his compatriot­s while Joseph O’brien’s runner

has plenty to find with Cilaos Emery on Gowran form.

Last year’s Triumph winner and runner-up, Nicky Henderson’s

and the Gordon Elliotttra­ined third behind Sharjah at Christmas, represent the five-year-old generation.

And probable favourite impressive winner of Kempton’s Christmas Hurdle, looks best of the Henderson quartet, but flopped here last year. And she was the subject of a recent coughing scare.

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