Cheltenham News

Supreme Novices’ Hurdle

Supreme Novices' Hurdle  The Supreme Novices’ Hurdle is a Grade 1 novices’ hurdle race run over 2 miles and 87 yards on the Old Course. Open to horses aged four years and upwards, with ‘novice’ status over hurdles – that is, having started the season without a win over the smaller obstacles – the race has the distinction of being the opening contest on the first day of the Cheltenham Festival. As such, in a normal, non-Covid year, the start is greeted by a deafening cheer from the grandstands, known as the ‘Cheltenham Roar’.

The Supreme Novices’ Hurdle was inaugurated, as the Gloucestershire Hurdle, at the first post-war Cheltenham Festival, in 1946. Indeed, such was its popularity that, until 1972, when it became a single race, it was split into two, or occasionally three, separate divisions. In 1974, for sponsorship purposes, the race became known as the Lloyds Bank Champion Novices’ Hurdle and, in 1978, as the Waterford Crystal Supreme Novices’ Hurdle. Waterford Crystal ceased sponsorship in 1991, but the ‘Supreme Novices’ Hurdle’ portion of the race title has remained ever since.

Befitting the ‘championship’ race for novice hurdlers over the minimum distance, the roll of honour for the Supreme Novices’ Hurdle includes such luminaries as Flyingbolt, L’Escargot and Bula and, more recently, Brave Inca, Vautour and Altior. Willie Mullins, trainer of Vautour (2014), also saddled Tourist Attraction (1995), Ebaziyan (2007), Champagne Fever (2013), Douvan (2015), Klassical Dream (2019) and Appreciate It (2021) for a total of seven wins, so far, and is the leading handler in the history of the Supreme Novices’ Hurdle.

Looking ahead to the 2023 renewal, due off at 1:30pm on Tuesday, March 15, Mullins, once again, holds a strong hand. His Weatherbys Champion Bumper winner, Facile Vega, heads the ante-post betting, while Hunters Yarn, Champ Kiely, Grangeclare West and Hercule Du Seuil are all in the first half a dozen or so in the market.

Gigginstown House Stud

Under the auspices of Michael O’Leary, who is also the chief executive of Ryanair, Gigginstown House Stud continues to wind down its National Hunt operation. Consequently, the Co. Westmeath outfit may never again hit the heights that saw it win the leading owner award at the 2018 Cheltenham Festival with seven winners.

Nevertheless, since Gigginstown House Stud was founded in 2000, a total of 313 runners have carried its now familiar maroon and white silks at Cheltenham and 33 of them have won, yielding nearly £4 million in prize money. At the Cheltenham Festival, Gigginstown first hit the headlines when War Of Attrition, trained by Michael ‘Mouse’ Morris, won the Cheltenham Gold Cup in 2006. Don Cossack, trained by Gordon Elliott, would do so again in 2016.

Of course, dual Grand National winner Tiger Roll has also left an indelible mark on the Cheltenham Festival. Once described by O’Leary as ‘a little rat of a thing’, the dimunitive gelding won the Triumph Hurdle in 2014, the National Hunt Challenge Cup in 2017 and the Glenfarclas Chase three times, in 2018, 2019 and 2021. Other notable Festival winners down the years include Weapon’s Amnesty, who won the Albert Bartlett Novices’ Hurdle in 2009 and the RSA Chase in 2010, and Samcro, who won the Ballymore Novices’ Hurdle in 2018 and the Marsh Novices’ Chase in 2020.

Master Minded

 

Formerly trained in France by Guillaume Macaire, for whom he won three times over hurdles and fences, Master Minded was bought by Clive Smith and transferred to Paul Nicholls in Ditcheat, Somerset in November, 2007. He made an inauspicious start to his British chasing career, blundering and unseating jockey Sam Thomas at the third fence on his debut at Exeter the following month.

Neverthless, having won his next two starts under Ruby Walsh, including the Grade 2 Game Spirit Chase at Newbury, Master Minded headed to Prestbury Park for his first appearance at the Cheltenham Festival. Sent off 3/1 favourite for the Queen Mother Champion Chase, he readily went clear in the closing stages for an impressive, 19-length victory over Voy Por Ustedes.

By the time the 2009 Cheltenham Festival rolled around, Master Minded had established himself as the dominant force in the two-mile chasing division, adding the Tingle Creek Chase at Sandown and the Victor Chandler Chase at Ascot to his winning tally with a minimum of fuss. Sent off at a prohibitive 4/11, he had little difficulty is winning the Queen Mother Champion Chase for the second year running, comfortably beating Well Chief by 7 lengths.

Master Minded was actually sent off favourite for the Queen Mother Champion Chase in 2010 and 2011, but failed to show quite the same sparkle as in previous years, finishing fourth and eighth, respectively. On his retirement from racing, in December, 2011, he had won 16 of his 28 races and over £1.16 million in prize money.