The Daily Telegraph - Sport

The antithesis of the gentleman jockey

His name suggests a life of privilege but, as he explains to Paul Hayward, Festival favourite Nico de Boinville has had to battle his way to the top

- Nico de Boinville is a Unibet ambassador. Read his daily Cheltenham Festival thoughts on www.unibet.co.uk/blog /nico-deboinvill­e

It sounds counter-intuitive to talk of a man called Nicolai de Boinville fighting his way to the top, but there was no “leg-up” in life for one of the stars of this week’s Cheltenham Festival.

Nico de Boinville, to give him his everyday name, walked into the powerful Nicky Henderson yard in 2009 with an outside chance of making it as a National Hunt jockey. Henderson’s stables teemed with A-list pilots – AP Mccoy and Barry Geraghty among them.

De Boinville – who rides Might Bite, the favourite for the Cheltenham Gold Cup, and Altior, assuming he recovers from lameness in a fore leg, in the Queen Mother Champion Chase – was a university dropout who might have advanced no further than luxury work rider.

Behold, nine years on: the big-race specialist, the man for the marquee moment. Among De Boinville’s major victories are Altior in last year’s Arkle Chase and 2016 Supreme Novices’ Hurdle, Coneygree in the Gold Cup three years ago and Might Bite in the King George VI Chase at Kempton in December. He also rode Sprinter Sacre in a triumphant comeback in the 2016 Queen Mother Champion Chase.

It was Sprinter Sacre who gave De

Boinville his first feel of equine greatness when they were randomly paired at Henderson’s yard: “A horse turned up. I was allocated the name of it. Third or fourth lot, quite late on in the morning – and then I thought: I quite like this horse. And it stuck with me.”

Stylish and cool under pressure, De Boinville is the antithesis of the gentleman jockey his name evokes.

To ask about that moniker – rooted in French revolution­ary times – might seem a bit class conscious, but he smiles when you wonder how much weighingro­om banter it unleashed. “Well, don’t forget I’d been at boarding school, so you get very used to the banterish thing,” he says.

“Obviously, people do rib you, but nothing I couldn’t take, or that was going to be nasty or anything. I’d like to think I could give as good as I get. The weighing room is a very honest place. There are no lines there.”

The De Boinvilles came to England when the guillotine was dropping too frequently for comfort. Yet his background was not classicall­y National Hunt and there was no pre-laid path into profession­al jockeyship. For him, riding was more compulsion than hobby; or, as his mother, Shaunagh, once said: “He didn’t just like riding, he needed it.” At nine years old he was Supreme Champion in the “Search for a Star” class at the Horse of the Year Show. He says now of his childhood love of riding: “I was fairly obsessed with it. That was what I did. That was my identity when I was younger. As soon as I was born pretty much, I was put on a pony, to get rid of all the energy I had.”

In his gap year, De Boinville joined Richard Gibson as a pupil assistant in Chantilly. He takes up the story: “It was coming up to the stage where I was going to go to university – and I never really wanted to go to university. Richard gave me my first rides, in France, and I think after that I was fairly hell bent on giving it a go. Not that I thought I was going to get anywhere.”

University was a disaster. De Boinville hated being away from riding.

“Yeah, pretty much, and it was cold and miserable. I just never wanted to be there. I went there in the wrong frame of mind. I didn’t give it a chance. Six weeks, bang, I was gone.

“I’ve always been very ambitious in that I wanted to get on, but perhaps when I went in there [at Henderson’s yard] I was thinking – if I could become a good amateur, that’s great. Then I can move on and do something else.”

From there to elite Cheltenham Festival finisher is a leap, which his big-race temperamen­t helped him make. He says: “I think so. I’ve always competed from a very young age, so I’ve always been subject to that atmosphere – big atmosphere­s – and you learn to cope with it. It’s like any big sport or big sports team, you have to deliver on the big stage if you want to get anywhere.”

The Festival exerts a special pressure of having to deliver the “expected” winner (or not mess it up), with owner and trainer staring through binoculars and the steaming pit of the betting ring demanding its payout.

De Boinville regards this with equanimity. “You try and treat it all the same, and try and keep as level as you can,” he says. “The more you make it into a big deal, the more it becomes one.” Fighting chance: Nico de Boinville says he has learned to cope with ‘big atmosphere­s’; (below left) riding a winner at Sandown last Friday

One of his “big deals” is Altior, a potential Cheltenham legend. De Boinville had been speaking confidentl­y about his prospects, explaining that the two months off necessitat­ed by a wind operation “didn’t set him back too much because he had that base level of fitness”. That, however, was before Henderson confirmed yesterday morning that he had pulled up lame with a leg problem that will require intensive treatment before tomorrow’s Champion Chase.

Even so, comparison­s between Altior and Sprinter Sacre are unavoidabl­e. “Sprinter probably travelled a lot more enthusiast­ically and was a bit more of a hothead – which Altior used to

‘People do rib you, but I think I could give as good as I get. The weighing room is an honest place’

be in his younger days, but now he seems to have settled down and become very profession­al,” he said. “He’ll lob along wherever you want, at any pace you want. He’s got a terrific turn of foot after the last.”

Might Bite landed De Boinville in his biggest Festival pickle when he jumped the last in the RSA Chase last year then veered towards the Arkle bar before stopping. De Boinville thought his chance had gone: “Oh yeah. And I thought – oh, God. Things flash past in your mind so fast, but it’s one of pure frustratio­n that it’s happening to you, and you’re willing for something to happen.

“And something did happen, in that a loose horse came past [Might Bite decided to chase it]. I was just very fortunate to get back up on the line.”

He has a habit of being “fortunate” in big events. Another word for it is skill.

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