
Golden Ace wins dramatic Champion Hurdle at 25-1
Lossiemouth cruises to victory
Lossiemouth retained her Mares' Hurdle crown in convincing style, and left many wondering how she might have fared in the Champion Hurdle.The Willie Mullins-trained grey, owned by Rich Ricci, was handed the easier challenge after falling in the Irish Champion Hurdle last time out.And the 4-6 favourite cruised to victory under Paul Townend by seven and a half lengths from stablemate Jade De Grugy for a third triumph at the Festival."She was very good. I was disappointed with the fact she didn't run in the Champion Hurdle, but her work with State Man last week wasn't Champion Hurdle work so the obvious thing was to come back," said Mullins."It's disappointing for everyone but you look at where you can get winners. Rich hasn't got a big team of runners so we have done the right thing for Rich."
'I'm walking on air' - Kopek Des Bordes seals emotional win
The meeting got off to the perfect start for favourite backers as Kopek Des Bordes also justified odds of 4-6 for Townend and Mullins, a victory greeted by hearty cries of 'Ole, Ole, Ole' from the stands.It was an emotional success for owner Charlie McCarthy, who was diagnosed with kidney cancer at the start of this year and had surgery last month."I'm on cloud nine. I just can't get over it. I'm walking on air," said McCarthy.There was a poignant runner-up in William Munny, running in the same yellow and blue silks of trainer-owner Barry Connell, who triumphed with Marine Nationale two years ago.The contest was renamed the Michael O'Sullivan Supreme Novices' Hurdle in honour of the Irish jockey who won on Marine Nationale. The rider died last month aged 24 after a fall.Mullins hoped to follow up his opening win in the Arkle Chase but a blunder at the penultimate fence from Majborough cost him the race.Both L'Eau Du Sud and Only By Night looked like potential winners before Henderson's 5-1 chance Jango Baie stormed through with a late run under Nico de Boinville to snatch victory.The winner had traded at odds of 300-1 in-running and his victory saved bookmakers who were fearing payouts into the millions if all four hot favourites won on Tuesday.Scottish trainer Lucinda Russell won the Ultima Handicap Chase for the third time in four years as Patrick Wadge guided Myretown to an 11-length demolition with an exhibition round of jumping.
More to follow.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


North Wales Chronicle
3 days ago
- North Wales Chronicle
Zanahiyr gets back to winning ways at Galway
Third in the 2023 Champion Hurdle, Gordon Elliott's one-time Triumph Hurdle favourite was third in the Galway Plate last year and was making his second appearance of the week at the Ballybrit track after finishing seventh and well held in this year's feature chase. Sent off 9-4 in the hands of Jack Kennedy, this was far from an easy assignment with Willie Mullins' Blood Diamond the odds-on favourite, but the eight-year-old rolled back the years to strike for the first time since shedding his maiden status over fences in February 2024. Kennedy said: 'Delighted for the horse. He's been a great horse, placed in Champion Hurdles and it's nice for him to get his head in front today. 'I was happy enough to tip away in front, I didn't go mad, and it worked out well. 'He was brilliant at the last two in the dip and is better when you are going on with him and not getting in too tight. 'It's been a great week.' Elsewhere John McConnell's Ballystone kept on well to win in the Kenny Galway Peugeot Handicap Hurdle. It was a dream success for his jockey Alex Harvey who was full of praise for the 14-1 scorer. Harvey said: 'He's a lovely horse, very genuine. I got a lovely run around on the inside and it was just a matter of holding onto him and pressing the button. 'He put his head down on the run-in and galloped away to the line. 'The ground was a question as he wants a bit of nicer ground. To be honest it's just the slow side of good bar the straight which is borderline heavy. 'He's progressive and I can't wait to see him over a fence. 'I've been coming here since I was a kid and you dream about having a winner so to have two in the week is unbelievable.'

Leader Live
4 days ago
- Leader Live
Zanahiyr gets back to winning ways at Galway
Third in the 2023 Champion Hurdle, Gordon Elliott's one-time Triumph Hurdle favourite was third in the Galway Plate last year and was making his second appearance of the week at the Ballybrit track after finishing seventh and well held in this year's feature chase. Sent off 9-4 in the hands of Jack Kennedy, this was far from an easy assignment with Willie Mullins' Blood Diamond the odds-on favourite, but the eight-year-old rolled back the years to strike for the first time since shedding his maiden status over fences in February 2024. Kennedy said: 'Delighted for the horse. He's been a great horse, placed in Champion Hurdles and it's nice for him to get his head in front today. 'I was happy enough to tip away in front, I didn't go mad, and it worked out well. 'He was brilliant at the last two in the dip and is better when you are going on with him and not getting in too tight. 'It's been a great week.' Elsewhere John McConnell's Ballystone kept on well to win in the Kenny Galway Peugeot Handicap Hurdle. It was a dream success for his jockey Alex Harvey who was full of praise for the 14-1 scorer. Harvey said: 'He's a lovely horse, very genuine. I got a lovely run around on the inside and it was just a matter of holding onto him and pressing the button. 'He put his head down on the run-in and galloped away to the line. 'The ground was a question as he wants a bit of nicer ground. To be honest it's just the slow side of good bar the straight which is borderline heavy. 'He's progressive and I can't wait to see him over a fence. 'I've been coming here since I was a kid and you dream about having a winner so to have two in the week is unbelievable.'


Glasgow Times
4 days ago
- Glasgow Times
Zanahiyr gets back to winning ways at Galway
Third in the 2023 Champion Hurdle, Gordon Elliott's one-time Triumph Hurdle favourite was third in the Galway Plate last year and was making his second appearance of the week at the Ballybrit track after finishing seventh and well held in this year's feature chase. Sent off 9-4 in the hands of Jack Kennedy, this was far from an easy assignment with Willie Mullins' Blood Diamond the odds-on favourite, but the eight-year-old rolled back the years to strike for the first time since shedding his maiden status over fences in February 2024. Kennedy said: 'Delighted for the horse. He's been a great horse, placed in Champion Hurdles and it's nice for him to get his head in front today. 'I was happy enough to tip away in front, I didn't go mad, and it worked out well. 'He was brilliant at the last two in the dip and is better when you are going on with him and not getting in too tight. 'It's been a great week.' Elsewhere John McConnell's Ballystone kept on well to win in the Kenny Galway Peugeot Handicap Hurdle. It was a dream success for his jockey Alex Harvey who was full of praise for the 14-1 scorer. Harvey said: 'He's a lovely horse, very genuine. I got a lovely run around on the inside and it was just a matter of holding onto him and pressing the button. 'He put his head down on the run-in and galloped away to the line. 'The ground was a question as he wants a bit of nicer ground. To be honest it's just the slow side of good bar the straight which is borderline heavy. 'He's progressive and I can't wait to see him over a fence. 'I've been coming here since I was a kid and you dream about having a winner so to have two in the week is unbelievable.'