18+ | T&Cs apply | Wagering and T&Cs apply | Play Responsibly | Advertising Disclosure
icon

Romeo Coolio Cheltenham decision to be left late

Press Association

Press Association

Romeo Coolio and Jack Kennedy with groom Matty Sheridan Romeo Coolio and Jack Kennedy with groom Matty Sheridan
© Healy Racing Photos

Gordon Elliott plans to make a late call on which race Romeo Coolio will line up in at the Cheltenham Festival next month.

Gordon Elliott Weighs Options for Romeo Coolio at Cheltenham

Third in the Supreme Novices’ Hurdle last March, the seven-year-old is four from four over fences including a hat-trick of wins at Grade One level.

He has been made to pull out all the stops on his last couple of starts over two miles at Leopardstown, most recently edging out Kargese in the Irish Arkle, and Elliott feels his charge would ideally like to step up in distance.

However, that would mean tackling three miles and a furlong in the Brown Advisory Novices’ Chase at the Festival, meaning the Arkle Trophy remains a viable option.

“We’re going to keep everything up in the air for the moment. We have the Arkle and the Brown Advisory,” the trainer said at his Cullentra House stables on Tuesday.

“I don’t think three miles will be a problem at all, just whether it’s the right thing to do at this stage of his career or not, I’m not sure.

With every week you get a week closer, we’ll get a racecourse gallop into him and he’ll go straight to Cheltenham.

“The owners are from the UK and are very keen to have runners at Cheltenham. If the middle-distance race was still there, we wouldn’t be having this conversation. I suppose for racing it’s good that it’s not as it will make either race better, but for Romeo it’s not ideal.”

Elliott has a strong team of novice hurdlers bound for the Cotswolds in four weeks’ time, headed by leading Supreme Novices’ Hurdle contender El Cairos Skylight Hustle won a Grade One at Leopardstown over Christmas over two miles, but is set to step up in trip for the Turners Novices’ Hurdle, while Ballyfad could run in either race after being touched off by Talk The Talk at the Dublin Racing Festival.

“I haven’t spoken to Michael and Eddie (O’Leary, of Gigginstown House Stud) about Ballyfad yet, but my own feeling is the further he goes, the better he’s going to be,” Elliott continued,

“He’s not a fancy work horse at home and if you look at him in his races, he nearly looks beaten turning in but he’s very gutsy and keeps picking up. That might suit the Supreme as well, but he has both options.

“We’ll worry about it a week or 10 days out, if it was tomorrow my feeling is the middle-distance race would suit him better, but I suppose we’ll have to keep an eye on the ground and the weather.”

Stayers’ Hurdle Powerhouse and Mares’ Prospects Bolster Cullentra Team

With 41 Festival wins to his name already, Elliott is set to fire two major bullets at the Paddy Power Stayers’ Hurdle, with former winner Teahupoo to be joined by stablemate Honesty Policy.

Teahupoo finished second to Bob Olinger when bidding for back-to-back wins last season, while Honesty Policy marked himself down as a serious contender by finishing an eye-catching third in the Long Walk at Ascot on his only start this season.

Elliott said: “Teahupoo probably sets the standard and for me Honesty Policy is the young gun coming behind them. They’re two nice horses, but Teahupoo has the form and I wouldn’t swap him.

“I was impressed with Honesty Policy at Ascot – he was the horse to take out of it, he hit the line strong.

“I was keen to run him at Navan the other day, but the ground was just so heavy and he’s not the biggest or most robust horse.

“With every week you get a week closer, we’ll get a racecourse gallop into him and he’ll go straight to Cheltenham.”

Other leading hopes for the team include the Mares’ Hurdle bound Wodhooh and Oldschool Outlaw, who must be one of Elliott’s best chances of the entire meeting in the Mares’ Novices’ Hurdle.

He said: “I was impressed with Oldschool Outlaw the last day. She has a good attitude. I liked the way she quickened from the last to the line.

“She’s obviously beaten Bambino Fever already and while she’ll have come on, ours will have as well. I think she’s improved at home, she’s improving the whole time. She’s a nice mare.”