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Yorkhill peaks at Cheltenham

Wed 16th Mar 2016, 13:53

Yorkhill and Ruby WalshYorkhill and Ruby Walsh
© Photo Healy Racing

Yorkhill gave Willie Mullins and Ruby Walsh their fourth winner of the Cheltenham Festival when comfortably outpointing Yanworth in the Neptune Investment Management Novices' Hurdle.

Walsh made a decisive move on Yorkhill (3-1) by steering an inside path and getting a great run turning for home.

Pulling double to that point, the Graham Wylie-owned six-year-old had all of his rivals at full stretch, including Yanworth, who had been sent off the 11-10 favourite to maintain his 100 per cent record over hurdles.

Instead, it is Yorkhill who remains unbeaten over hurdles after beating his main rival by a length and three-quarters. Its'afreebee who was always to the fore, stuck on pluckily for third, seven lengths behind the classy first two.

Mullins said: "Ruby gave him a super ride - he needed a bit of luck. It opened up, and he shot through. He jumped the last well.

"We seriously thought about going for the Supreme, but the more I looked at it, the more I thought Altior was hard to beat and that this race was the one.

"He can go novice chasing, but we've sort of abandoned that to go down the Champion Hurdle route - he looked very sharp going off that bend. He's a real smart hurdler."

Walsh admitted the race had not panned out as he had planned, but was full of praise for his classy mount.

He said: "I'd hoped to sit fourth or fifth down the inner, but he was rank going to the start so I had to go back a bit further.

"The last thing I said I was going to do was be upsides at the last and in front for too long, but when I got to the second-last I couldn't resist and the gap opened up.

"He's a very, very good horse. David Casey rides him every morning and he was pretty adamant he wanted two and a half (miles) with better ground, and he was right.

"He could have been the best of the bumper horses last year but we didn't get to run him until just before Cheltenham and then he went and won in Punchestown.

"Since he came back in, a lot of people have been impressed with him. He's a fine specimen."

Wylie said: "It was a great race. There was a big debate as to which race to put him into, Willie chose the right race.

"He loved that better ground - you could see him bouncing away - and he (Walsh) had a double handful all the way. I've had so many horses fall at the last, I don't get excited until after it. When he came and jumped the last I was just thrilled.

"When Willie bought him for me he said, 'I think I might have got you a Gold Cup horse'. I'm hoping that's the case as it's such a great race to try and win. Let's see how it goes after this. He'll go novice chasing next season, I expect.

"Willie is buying good horses and placing them in the right races and his horses are always very fit. I think his success is down to a combination of all those things."