Paisley Park extends unbeaten record in fine style at Cheltenham

Stayers’ Hurdle hero meets Benie Des Dieux challenge, Santini takes Gold Cup trial

Paisley Park (R) and Aidan Coleman jump ahead of Summerville Boy en-route to victory at Cheltenham. Photograph: Davis Davies/PA
Paisley Park (R) and Aidan Coleman jump ahead of Summerville Boy en-route to victory at Cheltenham. Photograph: Davis Davies/PA

Paisley Park stretched his unbeaten run to seven with another professional display in the galliardhomes.com Cleeve Hurdle at Cheltenham.

Last year’s Stayers’ Hurdle hero won on his seasonal return at Newbury and was due to run at Ascot last month, but testing conditions ruled him out on the day of the race.

Trainer Emma Lavelle was not concerned about the change in plan and Paisley Park travelled beautifully through the race, with Aidan Coleman keeping him in a handy position throughout.

Summerville Boy, stepping up to three miles for the first time, tried to make all and he was still in front as they turned into the straight.

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However, Coleman knew what he had under him and on the run to the last, Paisley Park began to make ominous progress.

He jumped the last cleanly and the 4-6 favourite won by a length and a quarter, with Summerville Boy in second and 50-1 chance Lisnagar Oscar third.

Coleman told ITV Racing: “This horse isn’t slow, but we’ve gone slow today and it turned into a big of a sprint, so I knew I was going to have to get stuck into him at some point.

“Usually I get to the front way too soon, but today I got to the front at the last and I thought that was perfect.

“He’s just brilliant, he’s gone round in second gear and he’s an absolute pleasure. I’m just delighted to be associated with him.

“I’ve waited for a horse like this, better riders than me have never found one as good as him.”

Paisley Park was winning the race for a second successive year.

Earlier Santini got the better of an exciting duel with Bristol De Mai in the Paddy Power Cotswold Chase.

The two looked the class acts on paper for the Gold Cup trial and they pulled a long way clear of the others, lead by classy handicappers Top Ville Ben and De Rasher Counter.

For most of the race Bristol De Mai looked the happier of the two, jumping exuberantly out in front for Daryl Jacob.

From some way out Nico de Boinville was niggling on Santini, but when Bristol De Mai stumbled on landing over the third last, Santini was left in front.

However, a slightly slow leap at the penultimate obstacle from Santini allowed Bristol De Mai to retake the lead after jumping the last, looking sure to win at the course for the first time.

Nicky Henderson’s lightly-raced eight-year-old dug deep though, with Santini finding plenty to come home three and a half lengths clear.

Santini (R) saw off the challenge of Bristol De Mai at Cheltenham. Photograph: by Alan Crowhurst/Getty
Santini (R) saw off the challenge of Bristol De Mai at Cheltenham. Photograph: by Alan Crowhurst/Getty

Betfair cut the winner to 13-2 from 8-1 for the Gold Cup.

Henderson said: “It is one step forward but there is a long way to go. It was 200 per cent better (than Sandown) but to be fair we did cauterize him after that, but I don’t think that had a lot to do with it — ours were just a bit fat.

“He can be a bit like that but this horse absolutely lives and thrives on work. The more you can get into him the better he becomes. He has always been the same.

“When you can’t train him he goes the other way again. You have got to fire work at him. The more you do the better he gets. There is more to come.

“When you consider the race he ran in the RSA last year you have to say he likes the track. I don’t say he dislikes Sandown, he was sloppy at Sandown. He wasn’t wound up and I hadn’t done a lot with him.

“The last three weeks he has just been doing that the whole way and I genuinely believe he can do that again.”

Henderson went on: “We’ve just got to get a good run-in now as we had a dreadful time last year. Now we have just got to pray everyone is good to us and we get lucky and get a good prep in. I’d be pleased with that today.

“Bristol is a great benchmark and a solid person. We’ve got away from him and he has come back to us. That is not Santini’s best ground but he copes with it. We are in the ball game anyway.

“Bristol De Mai always jumps well in front on soft ground. Some will say Cheltenham is not his favourite place but he has done nothing wrong today.

“It was a good race between two good horses.

“He is the most beautiful mover. He is a bit of a Bobs Worth, he is not as flamboyant as a Long Run. He is a workmanlike Bobs Worth. Those horses can win Gold Cups. There are a lot of protagonists and he is one of them.”

Nigel Twiston-Davies said of the gallant runner-up: “We were unlucky at the bottom of the hill. Had he not lost his footing at the bottom of the hill he would have probably won but he ran a super race.

“We were all over the winner until his lost his footing on landing. It still looked like he was coming back. It gives us a lot of confidence and we are chuffed to bits.

“We’ve got plenty of time to the Gold Cup and it is all systems go for that.”

Elsewhere Lady Buttons landed the Napoleons Casino Restaurant Owlerton Sheffield Yorkshire Rose Mares' Hurdle at Doncaster for the second successive year in fine style.

It looked like Phil Kirby’s popular 10-year-old faced a much tougher test on paper than 12 months ago and she was not even sent off clear favourite — despite winning a Listed heat over fences last time out.

The honour of 6-4 joint-favouritism went to Nicky Henderson’s improving novice Floressa, who travelled well for much of the contest but was found wanting in the sprint to the line after the final flight.

Timetochill was allowed an easy lead but Irish Roe, Fleur Irlandaise, Litterale Ci and the two market leaders were all queuing up behind at the second last.

Lady Buttons was last to challenge under Sean Quinlan, who was riding her for the first time, and despite causing slight interference when lugging to her right, she quickened clear impressively to the delight of the crowd.

Irish Roe was two and three-quarter lengths back in second with Floressa third.