The four-day Cheltenham Festival has concluded and much of the money wagered on the final day will have been on the Gold Cup at 3.30pm which was won by Galopin Des Champs, the defending champion and strong favourite.
Cheltenham Festival day 4: full results
1.30: JCB Triumph Hurdle (Grade 1)
Winner: Majborough
2.10: County Handicap Hurdle (Premier Handicap)
Winner: Absurde
2.50: Albert Bartlett Novices’ Hurdle (Grade 1)
Winner: Stellar Story
3.30: Boodles Cheltenham Gold Cup Chase (Grade 1)
Winner: Galopin Des Champs
4.10: St. James’s Place Festival Challenge Cup Open Hunters’ Chase
Winner: Sine Nomine
4.50: Paddy Power Mares’ Chase (Grade 2)
Winner: Limerick Lace
5.30: Martin Pipe Conditional Jockeys’ Handicap Hurdle
Winner: Better Days Ahead
The ten best Cheltenham Gold Cups
GOLDEN MILLER 1935: The great chaser of the inter-war years who won it an unequalled five consecutive times between 1932 and 1936 and raised the race’s profile from Grand National trial to nearing its status of jump racing’s blue riband. Thomond II was his big rival at the time and a record crowd came to see them. There was nothing between the big two at the second last and though the ‘Miller’ was half a length up at the last Thomond jumped level only for Golden Miller to prevail by three quarters of a length in a record time. When they pulled up Thomond’s jockey Billy Speck turned to winning jockey Jerry Wilson and said: “When we are old and sitting back enjoying a drink, we can tell them how we did ride at least one great horse race one day in our lives.”
ARKLE 1964: Generally reckoned to be the greatest steeplechaser of all time, Arkle largely scared off his rivals in ‘65 and ‘66 but, in his first, he took on the reigning champion, Mill House. The race was run on a Saturday (for the first and only time). It was not long after Sonny Liston’s shock defeat to Cassius Clay (Muhammed Ali) for the world heavyweight championship and this was considered racing’s equivalent. Mill House had beaten Arkle in that season’s Hennessy Gold Cup and was odds-on. They jumped the second last together but Arkle was in charge turning in and as he accelerated clear to win by five lengths commentator Peter O’Sullevan said: “This is the best we’ve seen for a long time.” No one could argue with that.
MASTER SMUDGE 1980: A winner by default after the front-running Tied Cottage, who had fallen at the last when winning in 1979, comfortably won but failed a post-race drugs test for a miniscule amount of something which was found to have come from contaminated horse feed. Where do you start for the stories here? Tied Cottage’s owner, Anthony Robinson, an amateur rider who won the 1979 Irish National on the horse despite being weakened by terminal cancer, died shortly after handing over the Gold Cup to Master Smudge’s owner that summer. Dan Moore, his trainer, also died that summer while Master Smudge was sold by his breeder to local gypsies for a crate of whiskey, sold on for £75 which represented a 50 per cent profit to a Bridgwater pig farmer who sold him on, as a two-year-old for £312 to his trainer Arthur Barrow.
DAWN RUN 1986: If you are looking for the roots of the current Mullins family domination, look no further than the mare trained by family patriarch, Paddy Mullins. Only one horse has ever won the Champion Hurdle over two miles and Gold Cup over fences and three and a quarter miles; one Cheltenham’s greatest test of speed, the other a greater test of stamina. She was essentially a novice as it was only her fifth start over fences. At the last it looked a lost cause. Wayward Lad and Forgive ‘N Forget were duelling for the lead but, half way up the run-in, Jonjo O’Neill coaxed one last effort from the mare who the Irish had sent off favourite. “The mare’s beginning to get up,” remains one of the late Sir Peter O’Sullevan’s most iconic lines.
BREGAWN 1983: We talk about the domination of Willie Mullins these days but for a very short time Michael Dickinson, who had taken over from his father Tony, at Harewood in Yorkshire was in charge of the most powerful yard in the land. He had won the 1982 race, in his second season, with Silver Buck but his five runners in 1983, headed by the Graham Bradley ridden Bregawn, led home a stable 1-2-3-4-5. For the record completing the ‘Famous Five’ were Captain John in second, Wayward Lad third, Silver Buck fourth and Ashley House fifth.
DESERT ORCHID 1989: ‘Dessie’ was already a horse who transcended racing before he went to Cheltenham, (he had failed to win at five previous Festival attempts), in conditions so wet - the fire brigade and helicopters were employed to try and dry it out - they probably would not be considered acceptable today. David Elsworth’s exuberant grey wore his heart on his sleeve, was campaigned in handicaps and graded races alike over trips ranging between two miles and three and three quarters and only Arkle and Red Rum had resonated with the public beyond racing’s parish boundaries. This was his crowning moment though as he rallied after the last under Simon Sherwood to overhaul the mud-loving Yahoo in an absolute epic. Over the three days of that meeting the Irish returned no winners for the first time in 40 years.
BEST MATE 2004: Since Arkle no horse had managed to win three consecutive Gold Cups but Henrietta Knight managed to achieve that feat with the Jim Lewis owned Jim Culloty ridden Best Mate. It should not be underestimated how hard it is to get a horse to an annual target in the form of their lives several years in a row. Knight had spotted him a point-to-point in Ireland and against the backdrop of the late flourishing love story between the trainer and her husband Terry Biddlecome who won the race on Woodland Venture, Best Mate might not have been an Arkle but he loved Cheltenham and he matched him with three wins.
DENMAN 2008: It may seem a little incongruous to pick Denman, ‘The Tank,’ over his two-time Gold Cup winning stablemate Kauto Star, whose triumphs sandwiched his but the 2008 race was the talk of pubs up and down the land; Denman, last season’s star staying novice, or Kauto, the king? The liver chestnut Denman, however, was the embodiment of the old fashioned staying chaser and had a set of lungs to match. In the race Sam Thomas sent him on with a circuit to go and the writing was on the wall four out when the jockey took a look under his arm to see how his rivals were travelling. They, including the runner-up Kauto Star, were all toiling and he went on to win by seven lengths. His joint owner Harry Findlay, a professional punter, reckoned to win £1.5m in bets. Denman then suffered from an irregular heart-beat but still finished second in two more Gold Cups.
CONEYGREE 2015: The dream which, ultimately, sustains racing is that against the big-spending all-conquering big yard a small one with an inexpensive or homebred horse can still win its biggest races. In that respect Coneygree’s victory in 2015 for Mark and Sara Bradstock was worth five times any marketing campaign. One of only a dozen horses in their yard, the tall, leggy homebred out of mare called Plaid Maid who cost £3,000 before winning seven races herself, Coneygree’s long levers were as much his asset as they were his Achilles heel but when he was right he was formidable and he is the last of a handful of novices to win the race.
A PLUS TARD 2022: Jenny Pitman, Henrietta Knight and Jessica Harrington have all won Gold Cups but the race would be 98 years old before a female jockey would win it. Rachael Blackmore had already won nearly every race worth having, including two Champion Hurdles on Honeysuckle and the Grand National on Minella Times. The Gold Cup was the final piece in the jigsaw. A year earlier she had picked the ‘wrong’ one choosing A Plus Tard over stablemate Minella Indo. This year she stuck to her guns, went with A Plus Tard and there was no stopping them. He reversed the previous year’s form in no certain style sprinting clear of Minella Indo from the second last to win by 15 lengths and break the last ‘glass ceiling’ for female jockeys in jump racing.