Sunday Sun

Brain switch proves to be smart choice

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NICKY Henderson’s decision to switch Brain Power back from fences paid off as he claimed victory in the Unibet Internatio­nal Hurdle at Cheltenham.

The Seven Barrows maestro made a similar call with subsequent dual Champion Hurdle hero Buveur D’air a couple of seasons ago and while it would fanciful to suggest Brain Power can go on to scale those heights, he made a fine start to his second stint hurdling in this prestigiou­s contest.

Brain Power was second in the Arkle Trophy here in March, but fell on his final outing of the campaign at Aintree.

And having finished well beaten on his reappearan­ce in the Shloer Chase at Cheltenham last month, he reverted to the smaller obstacles for what looked a sub-standard renewal of this Grade Two event.

Nico de Boinville positioned the 7-1 shot in midfield for much of two-mile-one-furlong journey, giving him plenty of light at his hurdles out wide.

The New One – bidding for a fourth victory in the race – raced enthusiast­ically on the front end in the first-time visor but faded quickly from the home turn and was pulled up by Sam Twistondav­ies before the final flight. The veteran was subsequent­ly retired.

Vision Des Flos led into the home straight, but the strongtrav­elling Brain Power soon took over and was good value for the eventual winning margin of a length and three-quarters. Silver Streak finished strongly to grab the runner-up spot ahead of 4-1 favourite Western Ryder in third.

 ??  ?? ■ Barry Geraghty after the Unibet Internatio­nal Hurdle
■ Barry Geraghty after the Unibet Internatio­nal Hurdle

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