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Cheltenham Festival 2015: Coneygree's fairy-tale Gold Cup win eclipses farewells for Tony McCoy

Nico de Boinville rides Mark Bradstock to victory in thrilling race

Friday 13 March 2015 16:35 GMT
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(Getty Images)

What brutality there is about the way that sport always moves on, finding new winners with such blatant disregard for sentiment and the sensibilities of those who have put their lives into sustaining it.

AP McCoy learnt that yesterday. It was to have been Cheltenham’s valediction for him but instead a new name was ready, with a story the likes of which we have not known for 40 years.

The champion jockey had made no secret of his yearning for a Gold Cup blue riband to propel him on his way towards retirement – “it’s all about the Gold Cup, always has been,” he said as this day finally dawned – but some upstaging it turned out to be. The roars echoing in his ears as he drove Carlingford Lough up the incline, the mist-shrouded Cleeve Hill behind his back, were for the first novice to win this race since Captain Christy in 1974; a horse which had only run over fences three times before yesterday and which had appeared here against the initial expectation of the stable who have coaxed something extraordinary out of his fragile state.

The prospects of that horse – Coneygree – seizing a Gold Cup field from the start and steadfastly refusing to let it go were never more remote than when the trainer’s wife Sara Bradstock first caught sight of the bay’s mother, about 10 years ago. “This tiny little mare that we bought for nothing, who people thought was a joke,” was how she recalled that horse, Plaid Maid, last night.

Those are the kinds of misconceptions which have been attached since. When Bradstock and her husband, Mark, sought to try him over fences last November after a pelvic injury which had taken two years to repair, a course veterinary surgeon at Plumpton told them – to their own despair and indignation – that he was lame and would not be permitted run. “I said: ‘It’s not any old horse that you are fucking about with,’” Bradstock related. “The vet told us: ‘He’s had two years off. He’s not worth anything.’” That assessment was shot to pieces last night.

The stables have been dealt a heavy blow by that medical verdict. Provincial Plumpton’s attempts to attract good novices means they pay a £60,000 bonus to any trainer whose horse wins there and goes on to triumph at the Cheltenham Festival – money badly needed by the Bradstocks, who raced the horse without problems within a couple of weeks. A winning spree started there. They have always felt that Coneygree is their best horse – an even greater prospect than his half-brother Carruthers, who won the Hennessy Gold Cup at Newbury in 2011.

Even in these past few weeks there have been niggles and doubts. A pulled muscle at the top of the eight-year-old’s leg prevented him running in the Gold Cup trial. As late as Tuesday there were thoughts of keeping him in the company of other novices in the Festival’s RSA Chase instead. (Horses are novices until the end of the season in which they first win a hurdle or chase.)

But the Gold Cup was too much to resist and when the overnight rain persisted well into yesterday morning they were, as jockey Nico de Boinville put it last night, “more certain” that they could be on to something here on the soft ground. How right the jockey, a professional for just over a year, was.

Coneygree and Nico de Boinville win the Gold Cup (REUTERS)

Coneygree, bred by Bradstock’s father, the late Lord Oaksey, went out in front over the first two fences, just as De Boinville had wanted. He dropped last year’s winner Lord Windermere and the tempo he wound up going out on the back stretch for a second time deconstructed Bradstock’s early memory of the young horse with the “ridiculously long legs”.

Silviniaco Conti, who was sent off favourite to win the race at the third time of asking, had nothing left by the final downhill run and neither did Many Clouds, fancied more after the rain had drenched the turf. McCoy was halfway back after losing a length at the fence before the second ditch and eighth as they turned for home. It was a lost cause as he faded into ninth.

Mark Bradstock last night talked of the importance to the small Oxfordshire stables of its loyalty to De Boinville, selected to ride this horse when bigger operations might have sought bigger names for such an attractive proposition. “It’s all about the work he does, coming in whenever we ask him, all the work he does with the other horses as well,” he said of De Boinville. “It was never an option that anyone else would ride. We don’t behave like that.”

He was stating the philosophy behind a triumph of the underdog, in every way. The patronising idea which has prevailed among some in racing that the Bradstock horses would be better if trained at a bigger, more sophisticated yard was dispensed with in the moment De Boinville rode home ahead of a field of monumental rivals.

Tony McCoy comes into the enclosure for the final time at the Festival after taking part in the the A P McCoy Grand Annual Chase (GETTY IMAGES)

Even in midweek, the Bradstocks discovered what appeared to be a bizarre protest against the entry of their novice in this race. Someone hacked into the horse’s Gold Cup registration with the Weatherby’s central administration system, changing De Boinville’s name for that of the jockey Joe Cornwall. Police are investigating.

When dusk began to draw in, McCoy had a last hurrah of sorts, in the last race which had been named the AP McCoy Grand Annual Handicap Chase in his honour. The course which has been such an indomitable foe for him did not allow him a sentimental win, though. His mount, Ned Buntline, finished fourth.

There had been a moment, early in the day’s first race, when McCoy and his old rival Ruby Walsh rode saddle to saddle, and the old times prevailed. The new force of nature announced his arrival less than two hours later. It was in the blink of an eye that the world moved on.

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