Check out what the trainers of the fancied runners are saying ahead of Saturday's Randox Grand National at Aintree.
Trainer Lucinda Russell - Corach Rambler (11st 6lb)
“I love coming to Aintree, we’ve had so many great days here and the crowd are always so appreciative, I feel a great affinity with it, it’s magic.
“I wish I could skip forward to Sunday, but I’m really hopeful and obviously watching Ahoy Senor has boosted his form again as the winner (Gerri Colombe) was just in front of him in the Gold Cup.
“We didn’t travel down until Thursday morning, which is different for us, but Scu (Peter Scudamore, assistant and partner) wanted to ride Corach on Thursday morning. The ground must be drying out and that is in his favour.”
Trainer Emmet Mullins – Noble Yeats (11st 12lb)
“Noble is great, he got the ferry over on Thursday. He’s had a good prep and came out of Cheltenham very well. The ground has to be seen as a bit of a negative as his best form is on nice spring ground, but he’s in good form and hopefully he’ll run a good race.
“He’s got top-weight now but he’s only got 1lb more to carry than if Conflated was running so that’s neither here nor there. He’s got the weight for a good reason and ran a brilliant race with similar last year. Hopefully the route we’ve gone this year, Stayers’ Hurdle rather than Gold Cup, will just leave him that little bit fresher.”
Trainer Gordon Elliott – Coko Beach (11st 8lb), Delta Work (11st 4lb), Galvin (11st 2lb), Farouk D’Alene (11st 1lb), Run Wild Fred (10st 10lb), Minella Crooner (10st 10lb), Chemical Energy (10st 9lb), The Goffer (10st 8lb)
“To be honest the ground has gone against a few of then, Galvin would have loved a bit of better ground. Delta Work and Coko Beach are probably the pick of them on the ground. Coko Beach loves the mud, he’s probably not that well handicapped but hopefully he’ll run well. I’m really happy with Delta, he’s never been working as well and I haven’t had him moving as well in the last two years. I’m looking forward to it.”
Trainer Gavin Cromwell - Vanillier (10st 12lb), Limerick Lace (10st 8lb)
“We’ve trained him all year with this race in mind and he seems in good nick at home, so hopefully he will be right there. He likes it at Aintree, so it would be good to see him run well there again.”
“I suppose she goes on the ground, but whether she will stay on that ground, I’m not particularly sure – it’s going to take a lot of getting. She’s only a seven-year-old, but she is going into the race in good form and off a light weight and we hope she has a chance.”
Jockey Jack Tudor - Kitty's Light (10st 7lb)
“We kind of sacrificed our whole season for this one race, so to be guaranteed a run now is massive. From this time last year, it’s kind of all been leading to this and to now finally have a go at it, we’re looking forward to it. He’s obviously very used to big handicaps and big-runner fields and the only difference is going to be the fences and as long as he takes to them, they actually ride like a very nice fence, so we just hope he can get into a nice rhythm early and then hope for a bit of luck.”
Trainer Martin Brassil - Panda Boy (10st 7lb)
“It will all depend on how he copes, but he has coped with a couple of big fields so far and hopefully it won’t be a problem. With the reduced sized field, it might make things easier too, but the ground would be the one thing I would be worried about if there is heavy in there.
“He’s had two solid runs in good company and he’s about 10 or 11lb better off with Meetingofthewaters from the Leopardstown race where he was beaten and hopefully if Meetingofthewaters is involved, Panda Boy might be somewhere in and around at the finish.”
Trainer John McConnell - Mahler Mission (11st 5lb)
“We couldn’t be happier with him and we’re hoping that translates on the day – and if we get some above average luck, he should run a big race. We’ve never had him better and from that point of view we’re very happy. The ground should be OK and we’re looking forward to it.
“It’s a very big day and I just hope we get no hard-luck stories and then whatever will be will be, but we’ve enormous confidence in the horse.”
Trainer Henry de Bromhead – Minella Indo (11st 6lb), Ain’t That A Shame (10st 13lb), Eklat De Rire (10st 7lb)
“Minella Indo would obviously have a squeak, he has a good chance on his best form. Ain’t That A Shame ran well in the race last year, David Maxwell is on him and hopefully he’ll give him a good spin round. He was very good in the Thyestes. Eklat De Rire was disappointing at Cheltenham, we felt he was coming back before that. He’s in good form and we’re hoping that type of race will bring him back. I think drying ground would suit Indo, probably the other two like a bit of dig in the ground.”
Trainer Dan Skelton – Galia Des Liteaux (10st 7lb)
“She loves the soft ground and I think she’ll stay the trip, you can never absolutely certain until they have but everything about her says she’ll stay it. She’s in great form and we’ve trained her specifically for it, just like everyone else in the race has. There are no negatives. There’s a lot of water to go under that bridge (trainers’ championship), but having good chances at this meeting with the prize-money on offer there is obviously very important.”
Jockey James Reveley – Roi Mage (10st 8lb)
“He’s a horse I’ve ridden a few times and I know quite well. I’d ridden him in France and I thought he’d be a good National type. I think things have gone a bit better for him this year, his last run was good, very solid, and I liked how he stayed on to the line. They campaign him quietly, they don’t over-race him and that’s good for an older horse. He enjoys his life with the Griffins in Ireland and I’m quietly confident.”
Trainer Gary Moore – Nassalam (11st 8lb)
“He couldn’t be in a better place at home and I’m really happy with him. Everything has gone to plan except the sun has come out and it’s drying the ground out and I can’t see any rain about. The fact he’s got so much weight, it will be easier to carry it on better ground. But he is a stone better horse on heavy ground and it just limits his chances a bit to be honest. I would rather have deep ground and he will probably have two things against him now – the weight and the ground.”
Trainer Tom Ellis – Latenightpass (10st 10lb)
“It’s a big day and arguably our biggest, but I’m looking forward to it. We’ve had a really good run with him coming into the race to be fair and we’ve had a nice run with him. He looks really well and he’s done all his work now and we’ve had this in mind since December. It’s just been a case of following the plan since. The fences and the course are not a worry with him, but the ground would be a slight concern. Although it’s the same for them all and at least Latenightpass has won on soft and heavy before anyway. Hopefully he will run well.”
Assistant trainer Patrick Mullins – I Am Maximus (11st 6lb), Meetingofthewaters (10st 8lb), Mr Incredible (10st 11lb), Stattler (11st 5lb)
“It’s obviously going to dry up before Saturday and I imagine it will be sticky rather than wet. I Am Maximus has a big engine but I’m not sure how his jumping will stand up. In the Irish National he jumped himself out of it in the first two miles then got back into it but that is a lot harder to do over here. His best form seems to be right-handed at Fairyhouse even though he jumps left so he has a few questions to answer.
"Meetingofthewaters I think has a great profile, he is a young horse and unexposed and it was a great run at Cheltenham. He’ll have to settle and that will be a big thing for him – he was a bit keen at Cheltenham. I think he has a lovely racing weight and he’s right down the bottom really. Mr Incredible is a bit of a maverick and the standing start is a bit of a concern for him, he doesn’t need any encouragement to stand still for any length of time. If he does jump off, he was running a cracker here last year and this place lights him up a bit so you would have to take him seriously as well.
“I’m riding Stattler and I would have to worry about the ground for him, it will need to dry up. For me the National is the race that counts and if you are not in it you can’t win it. Any chance I get to ride in it, I’ll be taking it ”
Trainer Mouse Morris – Foxy Jacks (11st 4lb)
“It’s been a very lucky place for me, I’ve had a good few winners here and I’ve been lucky enough to win the big one before. Foxy Jacks is jumping super and he gave an exhibition at Cheltenham in the cross-country (in November). The handicapper hasn’t been good to him and gave him 8lb for winning the cross-country and I think Hewick only got 2lb for winning the King George so I can’t work out the mathematics.
“It’s a big day and a big race so we will let him take his chance. He’s 10 now and very easy to train now so I’m not worried (about the cross-country being cancelled at the Cheltenham Festival). He probably won’t be at his best in the ground and I think it is whoever gets round that will win. We live and dream, there’s no point sleeping if you don’t dream.”
More Grand National tips and features
- Grand National Preview Podcast
- Horse-by-horse guide
- Statistical analysis and trends
- What the pedigrees say
- Graham Cunningham: Mission possible
- 'Jumpability' ratings and insight
- Key numbers behind the National
- Simon Holt on the remarkable Kitty's Light
- Record of Gold Cup horses
- Heavy ground Grand Nationals
- National runners who love soft ground
- Grand National Quiz
- Andrew Asquith's Weekend View
- Alex Hammond Blog
- WATCH: Grand National thoughts
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