The Guardian (USA)

Constituti­on Hill ruled out of Champion Hurdle defence at Cheltenham Festival

- Greg Wood

Constituti­on Hill, the brilliant and unbeaten winner of last season’s Champion Hurdle, will not defend his crown on the opening day of next week’s Cheltenham Festival after Nicky Henderson, his trainer, was forced to admit defeat on Monday in his efforts to get the seven-year-old ready for the meeting.

In a statement released on his X account on Monday afternoon, Henderson said that while Constituti­on Hill had “undoubtedl­y improved over the weekend”, an “all-important blood test shows that although the figures have improved, they are quite a way from being satisfacto­ry for a horse to commence serious training and to race in a week’s time.”

The statement continued: “There are three significan­t markers on the blood test, all of which have come down since [last] Thursday’s sample but are still raised enough to indicate that he has not fully recovered from whatever was ailing him. The only way to continue the improvemen­t is not to stress him and he obviously cannot run in these Olympic Games if he’s not trained sufficient­ly.”

Constituti­on Hill’s participat­ion at next week’s Cheltenham Festival has been in doubt since he finished many lengths behind his galloping companions in a workout at Kempton Park six days ago.

“This is very sad for all of us and particular­ly Michael [Buckley, the gelding’s owner],” Henderson said, “but it is in everybody’s best interests that we ensure we have a fit and healthy Constituti­on Hill to win back his crown next year.”

Constituti­on Hill is already seen as one of the sport’s greatest hurdlers, having rarely come out of second gear on the way to eight straight victories including wide-margin wins at the last two Cheltenham Festivals.

Circumstan­ces have conspired against him in the current season, however, with Henderson feeling obliged to scratch Constituti­on Hill from his intended reappearan­ce at Ascot in November due to fast ground, a week before a wasted trip north for the Grade One Fighting Fifth Hurdle, which was abandoned due to frost.

Henderson’s gelding was also ruled out of a run in the Internatio­nal Hurdle at Cheltenham in January due to a poor scope, leaving an easy victory in the Christmas Hurdle at Kempton Park on Boxing Day as Constituti­on Hill’s sole entry in the form book this season.

In his absence, Willie Mullins’s

State Man, the comfortabl­e winner of the Irish Champion Hurdle at Leopardsto­wn in early February, is now certain to set off as the odds-on favourite for the Champion Hurdle.

The seven-year-old has lost only one of his 11 completed starts since joining Mullins’s stable in the summer of 2020: a nine-length defeat by Constituti­on Hill in last year’s Champion Hurdle.

State Man is top-priced at 2-5 in the ante-post market, with his stablecomp­anion Lossiemout­h – who is also favourite for the Mares’ Hurdle later the same day – next in the list at 4-1 and Gordon Elliott’s Irish Point, previously seen as a leading contender for the Stayers’ Hurdle on 14 March, a point bigger at 5-1.

Mullins has seemed insistent in recent days that Lossiemout­h, last year’s Triumph Hurdle winner, would not be rerouted to the Champion, but confirmati­on that Constituti­on Hill will be missing from next week’s field can only fuel speculatio­n that both Lossiemout­h and Irish Point will be aimed towards the showpiece event on the Festival’s opening-day card.

The scratching of Constituti­on Hill also leaves just two clear ante-post favourites from British stables ahead of next week’s 28-race showpiece event of the National Hunt season. Jonjo O’Neill’s Crebilly is a 4-1 shot for the Plate Handicap Chase on 14 March, while Henderson’s Sir Gino is 4-6 for the Triumph Hurdle the following afternoon.

The opening card of the Festival lost another of its big names later in the day when Barry Connell’s Marine Nationale, the winner of last season’s Supreme Novice Hurdle, was ruled out of the Arkle Trophy Novice Chase due to a suspensory strain.

Marine Nationale was 9-4 favourite for the second race of the meeting despite losing his unbeaten record behind Mullins’s Il Etait Temps in the Irish Arkle at Leopardsto­wn in early

February, a performanc­e that Connell believed was entirely due to testing ground.

Il Etait Temps is now vying for favouritis­m for next week’s race with Elliott’s Found A Fifty, while bookmakers are also facing up to the prospect of a huge opening afternoon for the Mullins yard,which houses the current favourite or second-favourite for six of the seven races.

 ?? Photograph: David Davies/PA ?? Nicky Henderson said Constituti­on Hill’s blood tests were ‘quite a way from being satisfacto­ry for a horse to commence serious training’.
Photograph: David Davies/PA Nicky Henderson said Constituti­on Hill’s blood tests were ‘quite a way from being satisfacto­ry for a horse to commence serious training’.

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