The Daily Telegraph

Buveur D’air to clean up on day for muck-lovers

Heavy ground provides ultimate test this week Last year’s winner can defend hurdling crown

- Marcus Armytage RACING CORRESPOND­ENT at Cheltenham

So often, the ground at Cheltenham has been heavy a week before the Festival but, through a combinatio­n of efficient drainage, a breeze, and a sun with spring warmth in it, it has barely been good-to-soft by the time the roar goes up at the start of the opening race.

But, in a throwback to the days when the winters seemed to last a bit longer – Brown Lad’s Stayers’ Hurdle success in 1975 springs to mind, when the meeting was abandoned after Ten Up’s Gold Cup, as does the image of Chinrullah running away with the 1980 Champion Chase with his tail tied up – there is “heavy” in the going descriptio­n for the first time on the Tuesday since 1982.

The mud will be flying and the only men busier than the barmen pulling pints in the Guinness village will be the jockeys’ valets. Every day this week will be washing day but, at the back of a pretty wet winter, that should be good news for punters. Having watched horses race on heavy going all winter, they will not have to recalibrat­e that form for the uncertaint­y caused by quicker ground.

For much of yesterday morning, the limestone cliffs of Cleeve Hill were invisible in a cloak of low cloud which had stubbornly plonked itself on the Cotswolds.

Below it, Willie

Mullins oversaw a string of 28 – his Tuesday and Wednesday horses

– in the rain as it topped up an already wet course. A fortnight ago, Cheltenham was hoping for a drop of rain.

The Festival’s most successful trainer, Nicky Henderson, has a chance of being the first to saddle the winner of the three big races, the Champion Hurdle, Champion Chase and Gold Cup, at the same meeting. In Buveur D’air, Altior – who has to overcome the last-minute hitch of a poisoned foot – and Might Bite, he has the favourites for each.

None will revel in the mud quite like the reigning champion hurdler, Buveur D’air, who has done nothing wrong this winter, winning all three starts with consummate ease.

The only thing he has not had is a proper race but, even though Buveur D’air is a tubby individual, we can take it for granted no man knows better than Henderson, with six Champion Hurdle trophies on his mantelpiec­e, how to have one ripe for the big day. The race certainly does not look any better than last year’s and lacks the depth of some others. Equally, it is hard to see any chink in the seven-year-old’s armour.

His biggest asset is his jumping, which he conducts with a surgeon’s precision, although, as Henderson says, he would not want to be an inch lower. And, apart from it being a big enough field for a bit of bad luck to be floating around, it is hard to see him being beaten.

His stable companion My Tent Or Yours, a runner-up three times, has been kept fresh and won here in December, but Sea Pigeon and Hatton’s Grace are the only 11-yearolds to have triumphed since the War, so the odds are stacked against him breaking his duck.

Had Faugheen been back to his imperious best, the 2015 winner might even have started favourite. But the addition of cheek-pieces looks like a final throw of the dice in Mullins’s quest to rediscover the old Faugheen.

His stable companion, the mercurial Yorkhill, who won the JLT last year and the Ballymore in 2016, returns to hurdles for the first time in almost two years, but only if a return to Cheltenham gives him that magic ingredient “x” has he any chance of the hat-trick.

That leaves us with one to follow Buveur D’air home. Wicklow Brave, whose last run was in the Melbourne Cup, is a possibilit­y. A County Hurdle winner on the soft, he was seventh in it last year and Patrick Mullins got a good tune out of him when letting him rip along in front at Punchestow­n last April where he beat My Tent Or Yours.

He is, however, just as likely to plant himself at the start, so the progressiv­e Elgin looks the one for the forecast.

Tuesday is traditiona­lly a good day for Mullins, though he drew a blank last year. He will have high hopes for Getabird, impressive in two starts over hurdles, but he possibly lacks the experience of Kalashniko­v, who bids to give 25-year-old Amy Murphy her first Festival winner as a trainer.

Out of an unraced sister to Kick-

ing King, he powered home in the soft in Newbury’s Betfair Hurdle and appears to have improved since he was beaten by Summervill­e Boy in the Tolworth, although Tom George’s charge should not be lightly dismissed here.

The only disappoint­ment about the Racing Post Arkle is that only five, the smallest field ever, go to post, but it comes under the heading “small is beautiful” and is potentiall­y a vintage running.

The first three in the betting, Footpad, Petit Mouchoir and Saint Calvados, all like to make the running, while Brain Power likes to be held up off a strong pace. In the conditions, I prefer the Harry Whittingto­n-trained Saint Calvados.

If Buveur D’air and Apple’s Jade, today’s other odds-on shot, in the OLGB Hurdle, both come in as expected, the bookmakers will take an early bath and punters will be singing about the rain.

 ??  ??
 ??  ?? Class act: Buveur D’air is unbeaten this season
Class act: Buveur D’air is unbeaten this season

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom