Key events
2.00 Jack Richards’ Handicap Chase odds market mover via Oddspedia:
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Firefox (6/1 into 4/1)
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Pic Roc (12/1 into 9/1)
Rachael Blackmore spoke to ITV Racing: ““It’s a magical place to be. She was brilliant and did really well and came through lovely. I want to dedicate this win to my cousin Robert who died at the weekend. His funeral was today. We have had a quieter two days. I felt like I had been spoiled the last few years but Henry [De Bromhead, Air Of Entitlement’s trainer] does such an incredible job and I am very lucky to be on some of their backs.”
2.00 Jack Richards’ Handicap Chase odds
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Firefox 9/2
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Asian Master 7/1
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Caldwell Potter 7/1
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Springwell Bay 7/1
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Nurburgring 8/1
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Pic Roc 10/1
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Lord Of Thunder 12/1
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Answer To Kayf 12/1
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Moon D’Orange 12/1
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What’s Up Darling 25/1
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BAR 33/1 – 19 Runners
Key Race Trends
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11 of 12 winners have been aged 6 or 7.
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10 of the last 12 winners have come from the top three in the betting.
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12 out of 12 winners have had one previous run at Cheltenham.
Cheltenham 1.20 result
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1. Air Of Entitlement (Rachael Blackmore) 16-1
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2. Sixandahalf (K M Donoghue) 85-40 Fav
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3. Diva Luna (Ben Jones) 12-1
23 ran
That’s the old firm of Rachael Blackmore and Henry de Bromhead. Her 17th win at the festival, and collared the favourite. Keith Donoghue denied.
Air of Entitlement wins the 1.20 Mares Novice Hurdle
1.20 Mares Novice Hurdle
Karoline Banbou to the fore, as Sixandahalf takes to the fight. Has Diva Luna escaped? Sixandahalf is giving chase, as they go over the last. Sixandahalf goes clear but…Air of Entitlement, chins her at the line. Another fav done.
1.20 Mares Novice Hurdle
Maughreen is tailing off but continues. Galileo Dame hits one as they went past the main stands. Brenda’sasking leads them with six and then five to go. Diva Luna and Bluey well placed with three to jump, seven furlongs to run.
1.20 Mares Novice Hurdle
And away they go…of course they don’t. The start has been a problem all meeting. The horses asked to turn and face….and now they go. Maughreen gets caught looking in the wrong direction.
There’s sun over the parade ring as the mares take to the course. It looks chilly as Sixandahalf heads out to the course. This race has become a real betting proposition. Novice hurdling has sent a few to the poor house over the years. Sixandhalf goes to 5/2 fav.
Lots of bets going in on familiar names Maughreen and Aurora Vega: memories of Faugheen and Quevega, both legendary Willie Mullins horses. Maughreen is the niece of Champion Hurdle winner Faugheen, and Aurora Vega is daughter to the six-times Mares Hurdle winner. Everyone was on Quevega. She’d get a roar home bigger than a Gold Cup winner. Maughreen’s brother is the rather less poetically named Blow Your Wad.
On a related topic.
1.20 Market movers via Oddspedia:
Thursday, St Patrick’s Thursday race schedule
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1.20 Ryanair Mares’ Novices’ Hurdle 2m 1f
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2.00 Jack Richards Novices’ Chase 2m 4f
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2.40 Pertemps Network Final Handicap Hurdle 3m
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3.20 Ryanair Chase 2m 4f
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4.00 Paddy Power Stayers’ Hurdle 3m
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4.40 TrustATrader Plate Handicap Chase 2m 4f
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5.20 Fulke Walwyn Kim Muir Challenge Cup Handicap Chase 3m 2f
1.20 – Mares’ Novices’ Hurdle odds
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Sixandahalf 5/2
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Galileo Dame 4/1
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Aurora Vega 8/1
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Jubilee Alpha 8/1
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Karoline Banbou 10/1
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Maughreen 11/1
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Diva Luna 14/1
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Bluey 18/1
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Air Of Entitlement 22/1
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Just A Rose 22/1
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BAR 40/1 – 24 Runners
Key Race Trends
Having attended on Tuesday as a losing punter, it’s an expensive day – and night. But that said, I saw some of the best racing you will ever see. It’s still the best. And this was supposed to be a year short on quality. If anything, a slightly lesser crowd can make life easier. Gold Cup last year was bedlam I would be unwilling to repeat. Too few people watching the racing. Rather large queues for the cubicles in the gents, and some sincere overkill of laddy bantz. Wednesday has been my usual day over the many years but Tuesday is where the quality lies. The Champion Chase, other than being a drain for fav backers, isn’t quite the division it was. Now, how will the Stayers’ hold up? The Ryanair Chase is criticised for diluting the Gold Cup but it’s provided some fine, quality races over the years.
The BBC reports on those falling attendances.
The smallest Cheltenham Festival crowd since 1993 was recorded on Wednesday, with 41,949 spectators at the track.
It was a drop of nearly 5,000 from last year and mirrored a fall in Tuesday’s crowd which was down to 55,498 from 60,181.
Attendance for the Queen Mother Champion Chase day on Wednesday was nearly 65,000 in 2022. This year’s figure was the lowest since 40,662 on the second day of the fixture 32 years ago.
Reports from the course suggest a hailstorm. Cheltenham has several seasons in one day in that huge bowl of a course. The snow didn’t have too much effect yesterday. Perhaps the biggest point of discussion is attendances. Thursday is often the quietest day.
Cheltenham Day 2 Attendance:
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2025 – 41,949
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2024 – 46,771
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2023 – 50,387
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2022 – 64,431

Greg Wood
2.40 PERTEMPS NETWORK FINAL HANDICAP HURDLE, 2M 7F 213YD
Sponsors come and sponsors go elsewhere on the festival programme, but the Pertemps Final – first run in 2002 – keeps marching on towards a quarter-century and more. It is a fascinating contest, with runners obliged to qualify via one of more than a dozen races in Britain, Ireland and France, which also means that punters should have plenty of form in similar races to work with when it comes to today’s Final. But it remains a daunting challenge, with no end of possibilities and plotlines for backers to consider including the near-certainty that at least one of the JP McManus-owned runners – Jeriko Du Reponet and Win Some Lose Some – has been steering towards today’s race for months. Dan Skelton, probably the smartest trainer in the British ranks these days when it comes to readying one for a festival handicap, also has a live contender in Catch Him Derry, while Tom Cooper’s D Art D Art, who has not raced since his qualifier in December, has emerged as favourite since I put him up at a few points bigger yesterday. Since my tips here often seem to go the other way in the market, I can only think that the fact that Tom Segal and Paul Kealy, perhaps the two most high-profile tipsters in the Racing Post, have also tipped him up is the main reason for the money.
SELECTION: D ART D ART.

Greg Wood
2.00 JACK RICHARDS NOVICE LIMITED HANDICAP CHASE, 2M 4F 127YD
A race that reverts back to handicap status after 10 years as a level-weights contest, including most recently as a Grade One. The switch has definitely had the desired effect on the field size, as 20 are due to go to post after meagre turnouts of eight, four, seven and 11 in the last four years as a Grade One, but the flip-side for punters is that while four of the last five winners were at single-figure odds, there is much more chance of an upset today. Gordon Elliott’s Firefox, who has raced in Grade One company in two of his last three starts, has emerged from the pack as the likely favourite, but he is giving weight to every runner bar Springwell Bay, a winner over course and distance at the New Year’s Day meeting. Caldwell Potter is another interesting runner, not least as a result of his price tag – £632,000 – when he was bought by a syndicate including Sir Alex Ferguson and the late John Hales at a major dispersal sale in Ireland in February 2024. He has been the beaten favourite on his last two starts but makes his handicap debut on what could yet prove to be a decent mark. Elsewhere in the field, Ireland is well represented and Terence O’Brien’s Answer To Kayf is one that caught my eye. He was a very impressive winner of his handicap debut at Naas in January, and while that race was on heavy ground, he has enough form on a sounder surface to suggest that today’s going will not be an issue.
SELECTION: ANSWER TO KAYF.

Greg Wood
1.20 MARES’ NOVICE HURDLE, GRADE TWO, 2M 179YD
A record field of 24 has been declared for one of the festival’s most recent additions, which has been on the schedule only since 2016 and also earned a big dollop of second-hand kudos when Golden Ace, who beat Brighterdaysahead by just under two lengths in 2024, joined the Champion Hurdle’s roll of honour here on Tuesday. It would be expecting a lot to think that another future champion might be lurking somewhere in today’s monster field, but there is definitely the daughter of a champion as Aurora Vega is the second foal of the great Quevega, who racked up an extraordinary six straight wins in the Mares’ Hurdle from 2009 to 2014. Her first foal – and Aurora Vega’s full brother – was Facile Vega, who took the Bumper here in 2022 and finished second in the Supreme Novice Hurdle a year later, so she has quite the family tradition to live up to. As yet, though, her form has not quite reached the same level, and Galileo Dame, the runner-up in the Grade One Spring Juvenile Hurdle, looks a stronger contender for major honours today, along with Gavin Cromwell’s Sixandahalf, who was useful on the flat and made a striking hurdling debut at Fairyhouse in January, winning by 11 lengths.
SELECTION: SIXANDAHALF
Wednesday at the 2025 festival will be remembered as a tribute to the late Michael O’Sullivan.
Official release from the Jockey Club.
Thursday 13th March
The going for day three of The Cheltenham Festival 2025 today, St Patrick’s Thursday, is:
Good to Soft
Action moves to the New Course today, which will also be in use tomorrow (Gold Cup Day). The first two days of The Festival, Champion Day and Style Wednesday, took place on the Old Course.
Jon Pullin, Clerk of the Course at Cheltenham Racecourse, said this morning: “We have had two great days of racing so far this week and we are looking forward to another great day today.
“Today’s racing starts at 1.20pm and there are seven races, with the first six live on ITV.
“The feature today is the Ryanair Chase which looks a really competitive race with runners from the UK, France and Ireland.
“Temperatures got down to just below -2C for a brief period overnight but it has warmed up now and should be around 8C for the rest of the day.
“The going for today is Good to Soft.”
Non-Runners
4.00pm Paddy Power Stayers’ Hurdle
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8 Langer Dan (IRE) (Vet’s Certificate, Respiratory Infection)
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10 Monmiral (FR) (Self Certificate, Cast in Box)
4.40pm Trustatrader Plate Handicap Chase
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19 Lord of Thunder (IRE) (Double Declaration
5.20pm Fulke Walwyn Kim Muir Handicap Chase (Sponsored by Thames Materials)
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15 Where It All Began (IRE) (Going)
Greg Wood’s selections for Thursday, with full previews of each race to follow.
While the Gold Cup on Friday revolves around the odds-on Galopin Des Champs and his bid for a third consecutive success, the Ryanair Chase over two and a half miles on Thursday is much more open, with live contenders from Britain, Ireland and France, and the prospect of seeing the bold front‑runner Il Est Francais tackling Cheltenham for the first time, with top-class opponents including Fact To File and Protektorat in hot pursuit, is one to savour.
Il Est Francais (3.20) was a clear leader for much of the way in the King George VI Chase at Kempton at Christmas before Banbridge reeled him in on the run to the last, and his devastating front-running success in the Kauto Star Novices Chase at the same meeting in 2023 was one of the best performances by a novice in recent years.
The fact that his best form outside France has come at a flat track is a slight concern, but the drop back on Thursday to an intermediate trip on decent ground should suit and Noel George and Amanda Zetterholm’s seven-year-old has a big chance to become only the second French‑trained winner at the festival meeting since 2005.
Further news, via PA Media: Gordon Elliott has issued a positive update on Galvin, who was taken away in a horse ambulance for assessment after being pulled up in the Cross Country Chase. Elliott said on ITV’s Opening Show: “Galvin had a haematomma on his knee but he was x-rayed and everything was good. He’s on his way home now.”
Weather report: sunny spells expected between 12pm and 5pm today’s conditions should be ideal.
Going news: good to soft ground, no longer soft in places. A dry night in Cheltenham, in one sense at least.
Some news ahead of the third day. Langer Dan is out of the feature race, the Stayers’ Hurdle. Dan Skelton took to X to announce the sad news the Cheltenham specialist will be out.
Unfortunately it’s not great news for Langer Dan this morning,” said Skelton on X. “He had a slightly dirty nose and we’ve had the vet have a look at him. We did a tracheal wash and there’s a bit of mucus and it was too much.
I’ve made him a non-runner which is very disappointing. He’s been a horse who has turned up there every year since he was a four-year-old. I’m absolutely gutted for Colm [Donlon] who owns him.
We always trust him to come alive at this time of year. He will, however, go to Aintree with a bit of luck. It shouldn’t take long to clear up, it’s just bad timing. These things happen and I’m sure he’ll be cheered on in the Aintree Hurdle, one of the great races of the meeting.
Preamble

Greg Wood
Good morning from Cheltenham on day three of the 2025 festival meeting – effectively the day that was added to the schedule 20 years ago to expand it from three to four. It still feels a little uncertain of itself, with two Grade Ones in the middle of the card rather than a standout feature, but one or other of the Ryanair Chase or the Stayers’ Hurdle generally throws up a decent yarn, and sometimes – as was the case on a memorable afternoon in 2019 – it is both.
This year, perhaps – it is always risky to be too dogmatic at Cheltenham – it will be the Ryanair, which is a vanishingly rare meeting of top-class chasers trained in the three major jumping nations. The Irish team is led by Fact To File, who was quoted at fairly short odds for the Gold Cup after winning the three-mile novice here last year but is leaving that to his stable companion, Galopin Des Champs. The British challenge is headed by Protektorat, last year’s winner, while France fields the hugely exciting Il Est Francais.
He is, admittedly, trained in France by an Englishman and a Swede (Noel George and Amanda Zetterholm) but having had just a single winner at this meeting since 2005, the French will celebrate long and hard all the same if the front-running Il Est Francais can stamp his authority on Cheltenham at the first attempt. He announced himself as a major talent with a devastating display in the Grade One novice at Kempton’s Boxing Day meeting in 2023, and put up a similarly spectacular display for much of the way in the King George VI Chase at Christmas. Something similar over this very different course this afternoon will be quite the sight to see.
It is a bright, clear morning in the west country, with a chill in the air but no sign of any of yesterday’s snow as the action switches to the New Course for the final two days of the meeting.
The going is good-to-soft (from good-to-soft, soft in places), while the news from the weighing room is that Jack Kennedy, Gordon Elliott’s number one, will have to pass the doctor to ride today after slightly aggravating the leg injury that ruled him out of much of the earlier part of the season. Since Sam Ewing, who had been filling very successfully for Kennedy earlier in the year, is also ruled out today, it could be a real headache for Elliott.
My picks for the afternoon – full disclosure: currently showing a slight loss of £2.18 to level stakes – are here, and you can get the latest news on Kennedy, his potential replacements and much, much more here on the blog as the day unfolds.