Boilover! Put The Kettle On springs Arkle surprise for De Bromhead and Coleman
Never mind putting the kettle on, as the champagne corks were soon to be popped after a poignantly and well-named mare representing a small-scale set of owners showed just why Henry de Bromhead said she had the heart of a lion with a game and brave Racing Post Arkle triumph.
De Bromhead was also represented by Gigginstown House Stud’s 5-2 favourite Notebook, but he managed only a dim sixth as his stablemate Put The Kettle On fended off the JP McManus-owned Fakir D’oudairies under Aidan Coleman.
The orange and black silks of the One For Luck Racing Syndicate are nowhere near as famous as the McManus or Gigginstown livery, but they were toasted as the six-year-old produced a throw-back victory for a set of connections not among jumping’s superpowers.
When Put The Kettle won at Cheltenham in November, John Dermody had enjoyed such a good weekend that his voice had departed.
It was present for this, but that might have been temporary.
“My voice was gone that day, but this is special,” he beamed. “Henry said she deserved her place in the field, as a course-and-distance winner, but we always thought she needed better ground, although we came over in November and she handled it then.
“She gets two and a half miles so we were going to be prominent, but if they were going to go mad we’d sit in.
Watch Put The Kettle On capture the Arkle in fine style
“There was more hope than confidence, but we’re delighted. We’ll have a good night tonight, as we had in November.”
Dermody owns the daughter of Stowaway with his mother Mary – “who could drink tea for Ireland” – and brother Michael and Keith Fielden.
“My dad Jim passed away two years ago and my mam is a great tea drinker,” he went on. “So when she’d go out, she’d ring home and Dad would always say, ‘Put the kettle on. Your mam’s on her way’.
“My uncle Tom was involved in buying the horse as well and he passed away a month before my dad, so it means a lot.
“Just to be here is amazing and to have a winner of the Arkle is unbelievable.”
Over from Kilkenny for the night with an Airbnb in Gloucester booked, Michael Dermody expected his brother to run to form later and recalled that November victory in an Arkle trial.
He said: “John couldn’t speak then but you won’t shut him up now, although he won’t have his voice tomorrow!
“Everything went to plan and her preparation was perfect. I thought she won easily enough; it’s amazing. We only have one horse and this is beyond our wildest dreams. It’s great for Henry too, who is some man for training a horse over a fence, while Aidan gave her a great ride; he’s a fantastic jockey.”
De Bromhead was also thrilled with Put The Kettle On, the first mare since Anaglogs Daughter in 1980 to win the Arkle.
He might have seemed less enamoured with the prospect of joining the Dermodys for what promised to be a thrills-and-spills night to remember.
“We’ll see,” said the trainer, earning his second Arkle win after Sizing Europe in 2010.
“We’ll certainly do a bit of celebrating, but I’ve got a busy week and have got to be careful.
“They look like they could get a bit dangerous.”
Gloucester, you were warned.
The Champion Hurdle specialists win it again as Epatante storms to victory
In the end, it was blindingly, brilliantly simple. The best horse won – and she won in style.
This had been a Unibet Champion Hurdle left bruised and battered by the court of public opinion, yet there emerged a most worthy winner in the shape of heavily backed 2-1 favourite Epatante, who added her now famous name to a roll of honour on which the names of her nearest and dearest have repeatedly been painted.
JP McManus and Nicky Henderson are by far and away the most successful owner and trainer in Champion Hurdle history, with nine and eight wins respectively in a crown jewel that has now been plundered on four occasions by Barry Geraghty, placing him alongside Ruby Walsh and Tim Molony. Unlike that pair, Geraghty has a serious chance of adding to his haul in 2021.
That is because Epatante is the one to beat in 12 months’ time following a dazzling destruction of 16 opponents by a mare who cruised into contention and led soon after the final flight before sprinting up Cheltenham’s hill to loud roars of approval from so many of the 60,664 people who attended the festival’s opening act.
They cheered a six-year-old who last year ran the one bad race of her life at the Cheltenham Festival. On that occasion she could manage only ninth when 15-8 favourite for the mares’ novice hurdle. It was a performance that deflated her team but their faith was restored when Epatante showed stunning speed on her Newbury return and again when upped to Grade 1 company at Kempton on Boxing Day.
A two-day coughing spell a fortnight ago worried some, but of more concern to Henderson and Geraghty was the gruelling ground on which this Champion Hurdle was staged. As Epatante left Sharjah and Darver Star trailing in her wake, those concerns were quite spectacularly allayed.
“She’s good, isn’t she?” said Henderson, whose opening-day double took him past Willie Mullins in the all-time festival wins table. “She was always travelling so well and Barry gave her a beautiful ride.
“I thought she would win here last year but she didn’t show up. She came back to Seven Barrows and fell to pieces. I sent her home looking dreadful. The people at JP’s Martinstown Stud sent her back to me looking a million dollars.”
Henderson added: “It seems such a long time since the first one in 1985. We have been very lucky to have the good horses – and she looked good the whole way around today. The top hurdlers jump with pinpoint accuracy and waste no time in the air. All my Champion Hurdle winners have been the same.”
This latest Champion Hurdle winner is ridden every day at home by Sophie Candy, whose work was praised to the hilt by her boss. “She is besotted with her,” said Henderson, whose winning rider is now almost certainly besotted with Epatante.
“I thought she would struggle on the ground,” said Geraghty. “I was worried about it all week but every step of the way she was a dream. It was a brilliant performance. She came up trumps.
“You can take them for granted a bit through the years. It’s when they win when you maybe slightly don’t expect it that you get the bigger buzz. I got a great buzz out of that.”
Also buzzing was McManus – but that had very much not been the case at around 5pm on the Thursday of last year’s festival.
McManus, celebrating his 69th birthday, recalled: “Prior to Cheltenham last year I said to Nicky: ‘Give me one for the week and I don’t care whether or not it’s mine.’ He told me: ‘It is yours. It’s Epatante.’ She wasn’t herself that day but things have worked out great with her since then.
“I thought a lot about that day at Newbury when she impressed me. I mentioned to Nicky then that maybe we should have a go at the Christmas Hurdle.”
They had a go there and they had a go here. It all worked out rather well.
“I was delighted Barry rode her with such confidence,” said McManus, adding with a smile: “I’d say she traded short on the machine.”
he would have traded similarly short that day at Newbury, when from there Henderson and McManus watched dual Champion Hurdle hero Buveur D’Air suffer a 2-13 defeat at Newcastle. He also suffered a serious injury that ruled him out for the season, but an even worse fate had earlier befallen McManus’s 2019 Champion Hurdle victor Espoir D’Allen, who lost his life in August.
Denied the chance to run those two established stars in a contest he has made his own, McManus still found himself lifting one of the sport’s most impressive trophies thanks to the victory of a young lady nobody had considered for the race until a few months ago.
How to explain it? “Ah, sure,” said McManus, as if the answer was obvious. “God looks after his own.”
fonte : RacingPost