Nicky Henderson: “It's
getting a bit ridiculous, really.”
Nicholas John ‘Nicky’
Henderson is the most successful trainer in the history of the
Cheltenham Festival with 51 victories, including the Champion Hurdle
(three times), the World Hurdle (twice) and the Cheltenham Gold Cup.
Having ridden 75 winners as an amateur jockey, Henderson began his
training career as assistant to the legendary Fred Winter at Uplands,
Lambourn in 1974, before taking out a training licence at nearby
Windsor House four years later.
Henderson recorded his
first win at the Cheltenham Festival in 1985, when the fragile See
You Then powered clear on the run-in to win the Champion Hurdle. See
You Then was to win the Champion Hurdle again in 1986, and in 1987,
joining Hatton’s Grace, Sir Ken and Persian War as the fourth horse
to win the race three years running. Following a move to Seven
Barrows, just north of Lambourn, in 1992, Henderson has continued to
churn out Cheltenham Festival winners year after year.
Now 63, he has won all
eleven of the Grade 1 races staged over the four days and has won the
Irish Independent Leading Trainer Award no fewer than nine times. On
the second day of the Cheltenham Festival in 2012 he saddled four
winners, Finian’s Rainbow in the Queen Mother Champion Chase,
Simonsig in the Neptune Investment Management Novices’ Hurdle, Bobs
Worth in the RSA Chase and Une Artiste in the Fred Winter Juvenile
Novices’ Handicap Hurdle at cumulative odds of 3,381/1. A record
seven winners, in total, that year took him clear of another National
Hunt legend, Fulke Winner, as the most successful trainer of all time
at the Cheltenham Festival.
The following year, he
sent out another four Cheltenham Festival winners and, although just
denied by Willie Mullins in his quest for his tenth Irish Independent
Leading Trainer Award, he had the satisfaction of becoming the first
trainer to saddle 50 winners at the Festival, courtesy of Bobs Worth
in the Cheltenham Gold Cup.
Prior to the 2014
Cheltenham Festival, Henderson acknowledged that his team was
weakened by the absence of Sprinter Sacre, whom he described as
‘missing 10%’ after being pulled up at Kempton over Christmas
amid fears of an irregular heartbeat, Simonsig, out for the season
after developing a splint on his near fore, and Long Run, who ran in
the Grand National instead. Nevertheless, he still saddled a total of
fifteen runners who came home in the first six, including Whisper,
the winner of the hugely competitive Coral Cup on the second day.
Former Cheltenham Gold
Cup winner Long Run may not be quite the force of old but, no doubt
Nicky Henderson will be doing everything in his power to make sure
that Sprinter Sacre and Simonsig are 100% for their return next
season. Established stars, such as Bobs Worth, My Tent Or Yours and
Whisper, to name but a few, should ensure that Henderson remains a
force to be reckoned with at the Cheltenham Festival but, as ever,
he’s unlikely to rush them or any of his other horses. His patient
training methods mean that many of his charges peak late in the
season, in March or April, which is definitely a contributory factor
in his success at the Cheltenham Festival.