Friday, 19 June 2026

Royal Ascot's most unlikely winners

Royal Ascot has a tendency to expose horses. Five days, the sharpest fields in flat racing, and a track that punishes anything less than a proper performance. Most long shots are long shots for a reason, which is why those putting together their ante-post selections for Royal Ascot tend to gravitate toward the familiar names at the top of the market. But every so often, a horse arrives at the meeting carrying no real expectation and leaves having rewritten their own story.

With Royal Ascot 2026 running from 16 to 20 June and a fresh set of contenders heading to Berkshire, it's worth looking back at some of the horses who showed what the meeting can do to a reputation when everything falls right.

 

Accidental Agent (2018 Queen Anne Stakes)

Few horses at a Group 1 level have looked less ready before a race than Accidental Agent looked before the 2018 Queen Anne Stakes. Sweating visibly in the parade ring and sent off at 33/1, Eve Johnson Houghton's five-year-old looked an unlikely candidate. He won by half a length, flying home from the back of the field under Charles Bishop. The performance came from nowhere and went against everything the betting suggested. Accidental Agent never reached those heights again, but the day itself was undeniable.

 

Flashmans Papers (2008 Windsor Castle Stakes)

Trainer John Best had never saddled a Royal Ascot winner when he entered Flashmans Papers in the Windsor Castle Stakes. The horse went off at 100/1 and was behind even his own stablemates in the market. Best had given him a break to strengthen, hoping the additional distance of five furlongs would suit him better than the minimum trips where his form had faded. It did. Flashmans Papers came from behind in the final two furlongs to win by half a length. At triple-figure odds, it remains one of the most unlikely group race results the meeting has produced.

 

Mostahdaf (2023 Prince of Wales's Stakes)

Mostahdaf arrived at the 2023 Prince of Wales's Stakes as a 10/1 outsider in a field that included that year's Irish Champion Stakes winner Luxembourg. John and Thady Gosden's five-year-old had been placed in Group 3 company and had finished fourth in the Dubai Sheema Classic on his previous start. Under Jim Crowley, he settled at the back of the six-runner field before running on powerfully to beat Luxembourg by four lengths. The margin told a clearer story than the odds had suggested. Mostahdaf went on to defend the title in 2024 and became one of the most recognisable middle-distance horses in training.

 

Docklands (2025 Queen Anne Stakes)

Last year's opener produced one of the more recent examples. Docklands, a five-year-old trained by Harry Eustace and ridden by Mark Zahra, started at 13/1 in a field headed by Rosallion, the 9/5 favourite who had won the St James's Palace Stakes at the previous year's meeting. Zahra dropped his whip inside the final furlong, but it made no difference. Docklands had finished second in this race 12 months earlier and went one better this time, holding on by a nose. For a horse with Ascot form, the price was always arguably on the generous side.

 

Khaadem (2022 Queen Elizabeth II Jubilee Stakes)

Perhaps the most extreme result of recent years. Khaadem started at 80/1 for the Queen Elizabeth II Jubilee Stakes and won by a length and a half under Oisin Murphy. Trained by Charlie Hills, he had won the race two years earlier but had given little sign heading into the 2021 renewal that he was about to run a career-best. Bookmakers reported significant losses on the day. For those who had backed him, the return was substantial. For everyone else, it was the kind of result that reminds you how much can go undetected in a large field on a big day.

 

2026 Cheltenham Festival

 The 2026 Cheltenham Festival took place between Tuesday, March 10 and Friday, March 13 and took its customary form, with 28 races staged over the four days. All five feature races of the week went the way of Irish-trained horses, Willie Mullins winning the Champion Hurdle, Queen Mother Champion Chase and Cheltenham Gold Cup with Lossiemouth, Il Etait Temps and Gaelic Warrior, respectively, Joseph Patrick O'Brien the Stayers' Hurdle with Home By The Lee and Henry De Bromhead the Ryanair Chase with Heart Wood. Overall, though, the Prestbury Cup went down to the wire, with Ireland eventually winning 15-13 after Air Of Entitlement, another trained by De Bromhead, took the closing Martin Pipe Conditional Jockeys' Handicap Hurdle under Patrick O'Brien.


All told, six outright or joint-favourites won at the 2026 Cheltenham Festival but, even so, the average starting price of all 28 winners was the highest it has been for a decade, at 14/1. Martator, trained by Venetia Williams and ridden by Charlie Deutsch, produced the biggest shock of the week when winning the Grand Annual Chase at 66/1 on Ladies' Day, but was followed by White Noise (40/1) in the Dawn Run Mares' Novices' Hurdle and Home By The Lee (33/1) in the Stayers' Hurdle, both on St. Patrick's Thursday, and Apolon De Charnie (50/1) in the opening Triumph Hurdle on Gold Cup Day.


Rather more predictably, Willie Mullins won the leading trainer award for the eighth year running and the thirteenth time in all, with eight winners, and his stable jockey, Paul Townend, won the leading jockey award for the fifth year running and the sixth time in all, with four winners. Aside from their three feature race winners, the pair also combined for King Rasko Grey in the Turners Novices' Hurdle, while Mullins also saddled Kargese, ridden by his nephew, Danny, in the Arkle Challenge Trophy, Kitzbuhel, ridden by Harry Cobden, in the Brown Advisory Novices' Chase, the aforementioned Apolon De Charnie, ridden by his son Patrick, and Dino Blue, ridden by Mark Walsh, in the Liberthine Mares' Chase. His career tally currently stands at an eye-watering 121 Cheltenham Festival winners.

Monday, 15 June 2026

Royal Ascot's most unlikely winners


   

Royal Ascot has a tendency to expose horses. Five days, the sharpest fields in flat racing, and a track that punishes anything less than a proper performance. Most long shots are long shots for a reason, which is why those putting together their ante-post selections for Royal Ascot tend to gravitate toward the familiar names at the top of the market. But every so often, a horse arrives at the meeting carrying no real expectation and leaves having rewritten their own story.

With Royal Ascot 2026 running from 16 to 20 June and a fresh set of contenders heading to Berkshire, it's worth looking back at some of the horses who showed what the meeting can do to a reputation when everything falls right.

 

Accidental Agent (2018 Queen Anne Stakes)

Few horses at a Group 1 level have looked less ready before a race than Accidental Agent looked before the 2018 Queen Anne Stakes. Sweating visibly in the parade ring and sent off at 33/1, Eve Johnson Houghton's five-year-old looked an unlikely candidate. He won by half a length, flying home from the back of the field under Charles Bishop. The performance came from nowhere and went against everything the betting suggested. Accidental Agent never reached those heights again, but the day itself was undeniable.

 

Flashmans Papers (2008 Windsor Castle Stakes)

Trainer John Best had never saddled a Royal Ascot winner when he entered Flashmans Papers in the Windsor Castle Stakes. The horse went off at 100/1 and was behind even his own stablemates in the market. Best had given him a break to strengthen, hoping the additional distance of five furlongs would suit him better than the minimum trips where his form had faded. It did. Flashmans Papers came from behind in the final two furlongs to win by half a length. At triple-figure odds, it remains one of the most unlikely group race results the meeting has produced.

 

Mostahdaf (2023 Prince of Wales's Stakes)

Mostahdaf arrived at the 2023 Prince of Wales's Stakes as a 10/1 outsider in a field that included that year's Irish Champion Stakes winner Luxembourg. John and Thady Gosden's five-year-old had been placed in Group 3 company and had finished fourth in the Dubai Sheema Classic on his previous start. Under Jim Crowley, he settled at the back of the six-runner field before running on powerfully to beat Luxembourg by four lengths. The margin told a clearer story than the odds had suggested. Mostahdaf went on to defend the title in 2024 and became one of the most recognisable middle-distance horses in training.

 

Docklands (2025 Queen Anne Stakes)

Last year's opener produced one of the more recent examples. Docklands, a five-year-old trained by Harry Eustace and ridden by Mark Zahra, started at 13/1 in a field headed by Rosallion, the 9/5 favourite who had won the St James's Palace Stakes at the previous year's meeting. Zahra dropped his whip inside the final furlong, but it made no difference. Docklands had finished second in this race 12 months earlier and went one better this time, holding on by a nose. For a horse with Ascot form, the price was always arguably on the generous side.

 

Khaadem (2022 Queen Elizabeth II Jubilee Stakes)

Perhaps the most extreme result of recent years. Khaadem started at 80/1 for the Queen Elizabeth II Jubilee Stakes and won by a length and a half under Oisin Murphy. Trained by Charlie Hills, he had won the race two years earlier but had given little sign heading into the 2021 renewal that he was about to run a career-best. Bookmakers reported significant losses on the day. For those who had backed him, the return was substantial. For everyone else, it was the kind of result that reminds you how much can go undetected in a large field on a big day.

 

Thursday, 26 February 2026

Cheltenham Festival 2025

 Since the inception of the Prestbury Cup – that is, the official competition between British- and Irish-trained horses at the Cheltenam Festival – in 2014, the closest the home team have come to winning was a 14-14 draw in 2019. Unsurprisingly, Ireland was long odds-on to win again in 2025 and did so in style, by 20-8, the biggest winning margin since the infamous 23-5 'greenwash' in 2021. The results on the fourth and final day, Gold Cup Day, made particularly grim reading for British supporters, with Willie Mullins winning the first four races and Gavin Cromwell, Sam Curling and Gordon Elliott chipping in with a winner apiece for an Irish clean sweep of all seven races on the card.


To be fair to Cromwell, who also won the Cross Country Chase with Stumptown the previous day, "chipping in" hardly does justice to his achievement in winning the Cheltenham Gold Cup with Inothewayurthinkin, owned by J.P. McManus and ridden by Mark Walsh. Beforehand, most of the hype revolved around Galopin Des Champs, trained by Willie Mullins and ridden by Paul Townend, who was attempting to become the first horse since Best Mate, in 2004, to win the 'Blue Riband' event three years running. Still only a nine-year-old, Galopin Des Champs was sent off at odds-on to complete the hat-trick, but when push came to shove he had no answer to his younger rival, who readily drew clear in the closing stages to win by six lengths.


Mullins, though, enjoyed an exemplary week, even by his standards. He saddled 10 winners over the four days, including Fact To File, ridden by Mark Walsh, in the Ryanor Chase, to equal his own record, set in 2022, and become leading trainer for the seventh year running. His stable jockey, Paul Townend, with four winners, just edged out Walsh on countback to become the leading jockey for the fifth time in six years.


The feature race on day one, the Champion Hurdle, was a highly eventful affair. Odds-on favourite Constitution Hill fell at the fourth-last flight and the 2024 winner, State Man, fell when five lengths ahead at the final flight. The eventual winner was 25/1 chance Golden Ace, trained by Jeremy Scott and ridden by Lorcan Williams.

Cheltenham Festival 2024

 The 2024 Cheltenham Festival was notable for the centenary of the 'Blue Riband' event, the Cheltenham Gold Cup, which first won, as a steeplechase, by Red Splash, trained by Fred Withington, in 1924. To the surprise of no-one, though, the 2024 renewal went to the defending champion, Galopin Des Champs, trained by Willie Mullins and ridden by Paul Townend. The eight-year-old provided the pair with their fourth Cheltenham Gold Cup in six years, enabling Townend to equal the record set by the late Pat Taaffe – best known as the jockey of the legendary Arkle – on Fort Leney in 1968.


Aside from the Cheltenham Gold Cup, Mullins and Townend also won the Champion Hurdle with State Man. In the absence of defending champion Constitution Hill, sidelined with a severe respiratory infection, the 2023 runner-up was sent off at odds of 2/5 to land the two-mile hurdling championship and did so with a minimum of fuss, keeping on well on the run-in to beat his chief market rival, Irish Point, by a length and a quarter.


Elsewhere, the Queen Mother Chase and the Stayers' Hurdle went to horses trained in Ireland, but Warwickshire trainer Dan Skelton struck a blow for the home team when winning the Ryanair Chase with Protektorat, ridden by his brother, Harry. In fact, Skelton also saddled Langer Dan to win the Coral Cup, Unexpected Party to win the Grand Annual Chase and Grey Dawning to win the Turners' Novices' Chase. The leading trainer title, though, went to Willie Mullins, with nine winners, and the leading jockey title to Paul Townend, with six. Mullins also reached the milestone of 100 Cheltenham winners when Jasmin De Vaux, ridden by his son, Patrick, won the Champion Bumper.


Keen-eyed students may have noticed that, while the Cheltenham Festival typically features 28 races, the final score in the 2025 Prestbury Cup was 18-9 in favour of Irish-trained horses. All the winners came for Britain and Ireland, but the Cross Country Chase, scheduled as the fourth race on day two, a.k.a. 'Style Wednesday', was cancelled, due to waterlogging, after over four inches of rain fell on the course the previous day.


Cheltenham Festival 2023

 The 2023 Cheltenham Festival represented what had become business as usual for Irish-trained runners, with the visitors winning the Prestbury Cup 18-10, exactly the same scoreline as in 2022. Willie Mullins, with six winners, including Energumene in the Queen Mother Champion Chase and Galopin Des Champs in the Cheltenham Gold Cup, was leading trainer for the fifth year running and his stable jockey, Paul Townend, with five winners, was leading jockey for the second year running.


Galopin Des Champs had looked a desperately unlucky loser when falling at the final fence in the Turner Novices' Chase in 2022, when holding an unassailable 12-length lead, but justified favouritism in the Cheltenham Gold Cup in taking style, coming home seven lengths ahead of his nearest pursuer, Bravemansgame.


The connections of Honeysuckle, who won the Champion Hurdle in both 2021 and 2022, decluned a hat-trick in the two-mile hurdling championship and ran the mare, by then a nine-year-old, in the Close Brothers Mares' Hurdle over half a mile further. Honeysuckle had won that race on her Cheltenham Festival debut back in 2020 and, what proved to be a fitting swansong, did so again under regular jockey Rachael Blackmore.


In the absence of Honeysuckle, Constitution Hill – the impressive winner of the Supreme Novices' Hurdle at the 2022 Cheltenham Festival and 5-5 under Rules at that stage – appeared to have a relatively straightforward task in the Champion Hurdle, as reflected by his prohibitive 4/11 starting price. He never gave his supporters and anxious moment, travelling strongly throughout, crusing into the lead at the third-last flight and drawing clear in the closing stages for another impressive, 9-length win from his only serious market rival, State Man.


The other 'feature' races, that is, the Ryanair Chase and the Stayers' Hurdle, both went the way of Irish-trained horses. Envoi Allen, trained by Henry de Bromhead and ridden by Rachael Blackmore, kept on well to oust even-money favourite in the former, while Sire Du Berlais, trained by Gordon Elliott and ridden by Mark Walsh, rediscovered his best form to spring a 33/1 surprise in the latter.



Cheltenham Festival 2022

With all remaining legal Covid restrictions lifted in England on February 24, 2022, spectators returned to the Cheltenham Festival with a bang, leading to a record aggregate attendance of 280,627 across the four days and a daily record attendance of 73,875 on Gold Cup Day alone. Pioneering female jockey Rachael Blackmore made headlines, as she had the previous year, winning the Champion Hurdle on Honeysuckle, trained by Henry de Bromhead, for the second year running and completing the Champion Hurdle/Cheltenham Gold Cup on A Plus Tard, also trained by de Bromhead. After becoming the first woman to win the most prestigious steeplechase on either side of the Irish Sea, Blackmore said, "You can never dream too big; this is something I never thought would be possible."


Elsewhere, Irish dominance continued, although not quite on the same scale as the 23-5 domination of the Prestbury Cup standings in 2021. Irish-trained horses won 18 of the 28 races during the week, the indefatigable Willie Mullins leading the way with a record 10 winners, including Energumene in the Queen Mother Champion Chase and Allaho in the Ryanair Chase. Navan trainer Gavin Cromwell saddled Flooring Porter to win the Stayers' Hurdle for the second year running, thereby completing a clean sweep for the Irish in the 'feature'.


Not altogether surprisingly, Mullins was leading trainer for the fourth year running, and the ninth time in all, while his stable jockey, Paul Townend, with five winners, was top jockey for the second time in three years. Indeed, both trainer and jockey were unlucky not to add another one to their respective winning tallies when odds-on favourite Galopin Des Champs suffered an agonising last-fence fall in the Turners Novices' Chase when 12 lengths ahead with the race at his mercy. Philosophically – and prophetically, with the benefit of hindsight – Mullins said afterwards, "It's disappointing, but we have a sound jockey and a sound horse and we live to fight another day."


For the home team, Constitution Hill, trained by Nicky Henderson, made an impressive Cheltenham Festival debut, winning the Supreme Novices' Hurdle by 22 lengths, eased down, from stable companion Jonbon. Subsequent Grand National hero Corach Rambler, trained by Lucinda Russell, won the Ultima Handicap Chase for the second year running, albeit only just, by a head.


Cheltenham Festival 2021

With a nationwide lockdown still in place, due to the ongoing Covid-19 pandemic, the 2021 Cheltenham Festival took place behind closed doors, with no owners or spectators in attendance. Covid-19 restrictions also meant that amateur jockeys were not permitted to compete, such that the three traditional amateur riders' races, the National Hunt Chase, the Fulke Walwyn Kim Muir Challenge Cup and the Festival Hunters' Chase, were contested by professional jockeys instead.


In what became known as a "greenwash", British trainers saddled just five winners. Seven Barrows trainer Nicky Henderson fared best of the home contigent with two winners, Shiskin in the Arkle Challenge Trophy and Chantry House in the Marsh Novices' Chase. Elsewhere, Sue Smith, Jonjo O'Neill and Will Biddick chipped in withVintage Clouds in the Ultima Handicap Chase, Sky Pirate in the Grand Annual Challenge Cup and Porlock in the Festival Hunters' Chase, respectively.


The remaining 23 races all went the way of Irish-trained horses, leaving the final scoreline in the Prestbury Cup a chastening 23-5 in favour of Ireland. Closutton maestro Willie Mullins, with six winners, was leading trainer for the third year running, and the eighth time in all, staging a late rally to pip compatriot Henry de Bromhead to the title on countback of placed horses after winning the last two races of the week.


De Bromhead, nonetheless, enjoyed a highly memorable week, as did his stable jockey, Rachael Blackmore. The Knockeen handler had the distinction of becoming the first trainer in history to win the Champion Hurdle, Queen Mother Champion Chase and Cheltenham Gold Cup at the same Cheltenham Festival, while his winning tally also included Bob Olinger in the Ballymore Novices' Hurdle, Telmesomethinggirl in the Parnell Properties Mares' Novices' Hurdle and Quilixios in the Triumph Hurdle.


Blackmore won the Champion Hurdle on Honeysuckle, thereby becoming the first female jockey to win the two-mile hurdling championship, and finished the week with six winners, likewise becoming the first woman to secure the top jockeys' award at the Cheltenham Festival. Reflecting on her success, Blackmore said later, "It's phenomenal. I can’t even comprehend being leading jockey at Cheltenham. That’s crazy."

Cheltenham Festival 2020

The 2020 Cheltenham Festival was staged, as usual, between Tuesday, March 10 and Friday, March 13 and, according to a Jockey Club spokesperson, "...went ahead under the clear and ongoing guidance from the government and its science experts throughout...". Nevertheless, with extensive nationwide lockdown measures announced shortly afterwards, intended to curb the spread of Covid-19, the Jockey Club and the government were subsequently criticised for failing to act quickly enough.

On the racecourse, Irish-trained horses won 17 of the 28 races, including the Ryanair Chase and the Cheltenham Gold Cup, both of which went the way of Willie Mullins and his stable jockey Paul Townend, courtesy of Min and Al Boum Photo, respectively. Defending champion Al Boum Photo, who justified favouritism, albeit narrowly, in the 'Blue Riband' event, was a seventh winner of the week for Mullins, who thus retained his leading trainer title, and a fifth for Townend, who became leading jockey for the first time.


Despite defeat in the Prestbury Cup for the fourth time in five seasons, the home team had plenty to cheer about. Epatante, trained by Nicky Henderson and ridden by Barry Geraghty, justified favouritism in the Champion Hurdle, Politologue, trained by Paul Nicholls and ridden by Harry Skelton, made virtually all to win the Queen Mother Champion Chase unchallenged and Lisnagar Oscar, trained by Rebecca Curtis and ridden by Adam Wedge, belied odds of 50/1 to win the Stayers' Hurdle, in which the defending champion, and odds-on favourite, Paisley Park, ran well below expectations.


Lisnagar Oscar was not, in fact, the longest-priced winner of the week. That distinction belonged to

It Came To Pass, trained by Eugene O'Sullivan, in Lombardstown, County Cork, and ridden by his daughter, Maxine, who stormed up the hill to win the Foxhunter Challenge Cup by 10 lengths at odds of 66/1. Unarguably the unluckiest loser of the week was Goshen, trained by Gary Moore and ridden by his son, Jamie, who was sent off 5/2 favourite for the Triumph Hurdle and looked to have the race in the bag when stumbling and unseating rider after the final flight.



Thursday, 5 February 2026

Countdown to the 2026 Cheltenham Festival

If you're a follower of the sport of kings (that's surely a given since you're here), then there's few racing festivals that you'll be looking forward to that match the excitement of the Cheltenham Festival. Bundled up with so much history, rivalry and determination, it's both cemented and created a number of horses, jockeys and horse trainers into 'household name' territory. The likes of Badsworth Boy as a three time Champion Chase winner, Istabraq winning the Champion Hurdle three times and Pearlyman with two Queen Mother Champion Chase wins in the 1980s. With a focus on the Cheltenham Gold Cup we have the likes on Arkle and Best Mate as three time winners of this jewel in the crown race, and of course Galopin Des Champs had back to back wins in 2023 and 2024 and is in the running again in 2026 (currently at odds of 7-1). Current favourite is Fact to File at 4-1.

That's the beauty of the Cheltenham Festival really, each year this unmissable spectacle writes new stories that become part of the fabric of this four day event. This year the Festival takes place between Tuesday 10th March to Friday 13th March 2026. The Cheltenham Festival 2026 schedule can be found here and covers all four days of the event, along with race times, distance and details about each and every race at Cheltenham, to give you a feel of both what to expect on the day and some amazing moments from past years. 

Some greats of the Cheltenham Festival include the likes of Ruby Walsh with 59 Cheltenham wins, Rachael Blackmore, winning the Cheltenham Gold Cup on A Plus Tard along with other festival races, and trainer Willie Mullins with over 100 Festival wins. Be sure to tune in come 10th March and see where spellbinding moments the 2026 has in store for us!