|Cheltenham Gold Cup 2018
The 2018 Cheltenham Gold Cup was notable for the fact that, at the time of writing, it was the last renewal to be won by a horse trained on British soil. Indeed, 15 horses went to post, but the race developed into a match between two British-trained runners, Native River and Might Bite, after the leading Irish fancy Our Duke failed to run his race and was pulled up four fences from home.
Might Bite, trained by Nicky Henderson and ridden by Nico de Boinville, had won his last seven completed starts, including the RSA Chase, Mildmay Chase and King George VI Chase, so looked a worthy, albeit marginal, favourite. Native River, trained by Colin Tizzard and Richard Johnson, on the other hand, had finished a close third in the 2017 Cheltenham Gold Cup on ground faster than ideal and proved his well-being with a facile, 12-length win in the Denman Chase at Newbury on his return to action. On the prevailing soft going, he, too, was strongly fancied to go two places better this time.
Native River made virtually all the running, but was closely attended by Might Bite all the way to the home turn, where the latter drew alongside and appeared to be going much the better of the pair. Indeed, it was but until approaching the final fence that Nico de Boinville asked Might Bite for maximum effort but, on the climb to the finish line, his mount soon came to the end of his tether. Native River was not for passing and stayed on gamely to win by 4½ lengths. Nothing else really featured and, although Anibale Fly finished well for third place, 4 lengths further back, he never posed a threat to the front pair.