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Havaila wins Gold Cup as champions crowned at Sandown

BBC Sport 1 переглядів 4 хв читання
Havaila wins at Sandown in the Bet365 Gold CupImage source, Getty Images
Image caption,

Havaila claimed a third consecutive win after victories at Newbury and Plumpton in his two previous outings

ByCraig NelsonBBC Sport Journalist
  • Published2 hours ago

Havaila won the Bet365 Gold Cup in the jump finale at Sandown, where Sean Bowen was crowned champion jockey and champion trainer Dan Skelton broke through the £5m barrier in prize money.

Havaila, ridden by Caoilin Quinn and trained by Gary Moore, was a 5-1 chance for the handicap chase and won a three-way sprint to the finish, beating Our Power (14-1) into second place by a short head, with 4-1 favourite Road to Home in third.

It was a third win in as many races for Havaila.

Having landed the Sussex National last time out, co-trainer Gary Moore said that the seven-year-old could be ready to take on the Grand National.

"I suppose we might have to go down the Grand National route after that, but let's get today over with and worry about next season in the autumn," said Moore.

The winning jockey, meanwhile, believed that the hardening ground at sun-kissed Sandown, where 18 horses were withdrawn from the day's eight races, had a part to play in his victory.

"He's going from strength to strength," said Quinn. "He loves this quick ground and he's not stopping yet, I'd say."

Elsewhere, it was a bittersweet day for champion trainer Dan Skelton, who had two early winners before his horse Thistle Ask had to be put down following a heavy fall in the Celebration Chase.

Nicky Henderson chose to withdraw the hugely popular Jonbon from the Grade One race, which was won by 12-year-old 11-1 chance Edwardstone, with the trainer saying: "You can't be risking him, it's quick."

The going was confirmed as 'good, but good-to-firm in places', with Montregard, owned by JP McManus and trained by Tom Lacey, taken out of the Gold Cup, in which he was expected to go off as favourite.

Sir Anthony McCoy, a 20-time champion jockey, was heavily critical of the going, highlighting the number of withdrawals and saying the Sandown finale should never be held on a course that is firmer than good.

Andrew Cooper, Sandown's clerk of the course, agreed that the conditions should ideally be either good or even good-to-soft, but added that while the course had a good watering system there had not been "a millimetre of rain in April".

"It's not a good look for people wanting to watch good horse racing at the end of the season," said McCoy on ITV Sport, before accepting the clerk of the course had a "thankless task".

"I don't know what you can do, maybe Sandown is not the right place to have the end of the jump season, if that is the case, but I just don't think it is a good look to have that many non-runners on a day like today."

Bowen caps sensational season as champion jockey

Sean Bowen lifts the award at champion jockeyImage source, Getty Images
Image caption,

Sean Bowen was named champion jockey for the first time in 2025

There was joy elsewhere for champion jockey Sean Bowen, who retained the trophy after riding 241 winners in the season, 114 more than second-placed Harry Skelton.

Other awards were handed out to champion owner JP McManus and the season's champion conditional jockey Tristan Durrell, while there were special plaudits for Dan Skelton as he broke new ground as champion trainer.

Durrell secured the first of two winners on the day for Dan Skelton, finishing first on Queen Maeve in the opening Juvenile Handicap Hurdle.

Dan Skelton's brother Harry Skelton then won the Oaksey Chase on Doyen Quest (11-4) to help him become the first trainer to go past £5m in winnings in a National Hunt season.

Harry was also tipped to challenge on board Thistle Ask in the Celebration Chase, but the horse suffered what proved to be a fatal injury in the two-mile feature.

Dan Skelton had been pipped to the top trainer title by Willie Mullins for the past two seasons.

He was understandably elated after watching his brother ride the winner in the day's third race to push him past the landmark £5m prize total.

Trainer Skelton said that "days like this might never happen again, you have to enjoy it", but Thistle Act then suffered his tragic fall in the very next race.

Paying tribute to the Clarence House runner-up, who before that had won four consecutive races, Skelton added: "He's just been amazing and we'll remember the things he's done rather than today, which is a very sad situation.

"He's just splayed his legs on landing and that's been the result of it, which is awfully sad.

"He's just been an amazing horse and he was out there absolutely flying, loving what he does, and there you go, it's the ups and downs of our sport."

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