The National Hunt Festival at
Cheltenham had been a three-day spectacle since 1923 but, in 2005,
was extended from three to four days. Four new races – namely, the
Fred Winter Juvenile Novices' Handicap Hurdle, the Glenfarclas Cross
Country Chase, the Festival Trophy, or Ryanair Chase and the Spa
Novices’ Hurdle, or Albert Bartlett Novices’ Hurdle – were
added to the programme, along with an additional £500,000 in prize
money.
The first Cheltenham Gold Cup to be run
on a Friday was won by Kicking King, trained by Tom Taafe and ridden
by Barry Geraghty, in front of a sell-out crowd of 50,000 spectators.
Hardy Eustace completed a double in the Smurfit Champion Hurdle and
Moscow Flyer made amends for his fall the previous year by winning
the Queen Mother Champion Chase. Missed That, in the Weatherbys
Champion Bumper, was one of two winners for Ruby Walsh and Inglis
Drever, in the renamed Ladbrokes World Hurdle, was one of three for
Graham Lee.
Lee also won the Letherby &
Christopher Supreme Novices’ Hurdle on Arcalis and the Royal &
Sun Alliance Novices’ Hurdle on No Refuge to claim the leading
jockey title for himself and the leading trainer title for his boss,
Howard Johnson.