Cheltenham Gold Cup 2022

The 2022 Cheltenham Gold Cup, once again, featured the first three home in the 2021 renewal, namely Minella Indo and A Plus Tard, trained by Henry de Bromhead, and Al Boum Photo, trained by Willie Mullins. Indeed, the first-named pair, once again, dominated the finish, although A Plus Tard reversed the 2021 form with his stable companion to the tune of 16¼ lengths.

Ridden by Rachael Blackmore, as he had been in 2021, A Plus Tard led over the final fence and was ridden clear on the run-in, staying on strongly to win by 15 lengths. Defending champion Minella Indo, in the hands of Robbie Power, led over the third last and attempted to make the best of his way home, but was headed at the final fence and soon left behind by the winner. The third horse home, Protekorat, did himself no favours by blundering at the last, but kept on finish 2½ lengths behind Minella Indo and just a short-head in front of the well-fancied Galvin, in fourth place.

Victory for A Plus Tard made Rachael Blackmore the first female jockey to win the Cheltenham Gold Cup. The accolade was just the latest for the pioneering jockey who, in 2021, became the first woman to win the Champion Hurdle, the Ruby Walsh Trophy, presented to the leading jockey at the Cheltenham Festival, and the Grand National. Reflecting on her string of history-making successes, Blackmore said, “I’ve had so many special days. I wouldn’t swap the Grand National for anything but this is the Gold Cup.”

Cheltenham Gold Cup 2021

The 2021 Cheltenham Gold Cup, run on good to soft going on March 19, featured twelve runners, including Al Boum Photo, Santini and Lostintranslation, who had filled the first three places in the 2020 renewal. Defending champion Al Boum Photo was, once again, sent off favourite as he attempted to become the first horse since Best Mate, in 2004, to win the Cheltenham Gold Cup three years running.

Willie Mullins’ nine-year-old ran well, too, travelling smoothly until ridden and outpaced two out and staying on to finish third, beaten 5½ lengths by the winner. That winner was Minella Indo, trained by Henry de Bromhead in Knockeen, Co. Waterford and ridden by Jack Kennedy, who appeared to be the stable second-string, having been neglected by stable jockey Rachael Blackmore in favour of better-fancied stablemate A Plus Tard. Nevertheless, Minella Indo led over the third last and stayed on gamely on the run-in to win by 1¼ lengths. A Plus Tard kept on well and made up a little ground from the final fence, but was always held.

A notable 1-2 in the Cheltenham Gold Cup marked the end of a memorable week for De Bromhead, who became the first trainer in history to win the Champion Hurdle, Queen Mother Champion Chase and Cheltenham Gold Cup at the same Cheltenham Festival. Of his victory, an emotional Kennedy said, “I can’t believe it. This is what I have dreamed of as a child.” Following his retirement, as a 12-year-old, in 2025, De Bromhead hailed Minella Indo as a “savage horse who came alive every year at Cheltenham”.

Cheltenham Gold Cup 2020

The 2020 Cheltenham Gold Cup was staged on March 13, just 10 days before Prime Minister Boris Johnson addressed the nation to announce the first nationwide lockdown to curb the widening spread of the Covid-19 virus. As such, it was the last major horse racing event before the sport shut down on March 17 and did not resume, behind closed doors, until June 1.

Twelve horses went to post for the ‘Blue Riband’ event and Presenting Percy, who was staying on in seventh place when falling at the second-last fence, was the only casualty. The race was won, for the second year running, by Al Boum Photo, trained by Willie Mullins and Paul Townend, who had won the Savills Chase at Tramore on New Year’s Day, as he had done in 2019, and was sent off 100/30 favourite at Cheltenham.

In a thrilling finish, the first four horses home were covered by just a length and three-quarters. Al Boum Photo and Santini disputed the lead from the fourth-last fence and were joined, on the turn for home, by Lostintranslation. Indeed, Lostintranslation led, narrowly, over the final fence, but soom surrendered the lead to the eventual winner, who stayed on to win all out. Switched right on the run-in, Santini stayed on well in the last half a furlong, but could never quite reach Al Boum Photo and went down by a neck in a driving finish. Lostintranslation finished an honoruable third, beaten a length and a half by the winner, and Monalee fourth, just a neck further behind.

Which horse was twice beaten a short-head in the Cheltenham Gold Cup?

The most valuable steeplechase of its kind in Britain, the Cheltenham Gold Cup is, for many, the highlight not just of the Cheltenham Festival, but of the whole National Hunt season. The race is run over three miles and two-and-a-half miles, and 22 notoriously stiff fences, on the stamina-laden New Course at Prestbury Park and provides a thorough examination of the prowess of any staying steeplechaser.

For the connections to many such horses, to even be in the reckoning for race of the calibre of the Cheltenham Gold Cup is a privilege and actually winning it remains, as pioneering jockey Rachael Blackmore out it, an “impossible dream”. Spare a thought, then, for those horses that are beaten by narrow margins in the ‘Blue Riband’ event because, as connections of On His Own (beaten a short-head in 2014) and Santini (beaten a neck in 2019) will probably acknowledge, it must be an agonising experience.

Of course, neither On His Own nor Santini ever won the Cheltenham Gold Cup, but the horse that was beaten a short-head not once, but twice, did manage to add his name to the roll of honour at the fourth time of asking. The horse in question was The Fellow, trained in France by Francois Doumen and ridden on all four Gold Cup attempts by Adam Kondrat. In 1991, The Fellow was sent off at a relatively unfancied 28/1, but nonetheless came within a whisker of beating Garrison Savannah. The following season, he returned to the Cheltenham Festival off a win in the King George VI Chase at Kempton Park on Boxing Day, but was again beat a short-head, by Cool Ground.

Which is the longest race run at the Cheltenham Festival?

Until fairly recently, the answer to that question would have been the traditional “four miler”, the National Hunt Challenge Cup, which until 2020 was run over 3 miles, 7 furlongs and 147 yards on the Old Course. However, following a contentious renewal in 2019, when only four of the 18 runners finished on the prevailing soft ground and three jockeys were suspended for riding “contrary to the horse’s welfare”, the British Horseracing Authority (BHA) reviewed the distance and eligibility criteria of the race. The suspensions were subsequently quashed, but the distance of the National Hunt Challenge Cup was shortened to 3 miles 5 furlongs and 201 yards from 2020 onwards.

Thus, the oldest race run at the Festival is the longest no more, with that distinction belonging to the Cross Country Chase, which was inaugurated in 2005 and has been sponsored since 2009 by Speyside whisky distillery Glenfarclas. As the title suggests, the race is the only one run on the Cross Country Course at Cheltenham during the Festival and is currently scheduled as the fourth race on the second day, dubbed ‘Style Wednesday’. The Glenfarclas Cross Country Chase is run over 3 miles, 6 furlongs and 37 yards – or, in other words, 56 yards further than the revised National Hunt Challenge Cup – and a total of 32 distinctive obstacles akin to those found in open countryside. Runners must negotiate banks, ditches, hedges and even a Grand National-style fence.

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