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Samcro the highlight of Elliott's Cheltenham

SamcroSamcro
© Photo Healy Racing

Gordon Elliott pointed to the victory of Samcro as his highlight after saddling a record-equalling eight winners at this year's Cheltenham Festival.

For the second year in a row, the Co Meath handler pipped Willie Mullins to the Leading Trainer Award, with Blow By Blow's success in the Martin Pipe Conditional Jockeys' Hurdle on Friday meaning he beat his great rival by one.

Elliott claimed Grade One prizes with Shattered Love in the RSA Insurance Chase and Farclas in the JCB Triumph Hurdle but it was the success of the unbeaten and much-heralded Samcro in the Ballymore Novices' Hurdle on Wednesday that gave him the most satisfaction.

Speaking on Racing UK's Luck On Sunday programme, the trainer said: "It was a great week, unbelievable. It started off slow but ended up brilliant.

"We had some lows on the first day, Apple's Jade was one of our bankers but got turned over. That's racing.

"I'd have to say Samcro was the main one. There was more pressure on him than on Don Cossack to win the Gold Cup (2016). Thankfully he delivered.

"He lost a shoe, he stumbled going across the road and a few different things happened, but I thought it was a very good performance.

"If you don't put pressure on yourself you shouldn't be doing it. Cheltenham is the Olympics and you need winners. Thankfully we had a few."

Elliott's eight winners and Mullins' seven contributed to Irish trainers claiming 17 of the 28 races at the Festival.

"Irish racing is in a brilliant place at the moment," Elliott added.

"There's a lot of good horses and a lot of good owners who have horses in Ireland. I'm very lucky I have owners who have a lot of good horses.

"Willie is the standard and we have to keep chasing him and following him."

Elliott's principal riders Davy Russell and Jack Kennedy battled it out for the Leading Jockey Award at the Festival, with the former coming out on top on countback.

Elliott said: "Jack is 18 and Davy is 38. The two of them get on well and I'm very lucky to have the two of them riding for me. They fight their own corner and that's the way it is.

"There's no hiding place in Ireland, it's very competitive and you can't duck and dive."