Search
Cheltenham 2024
- Main Site
- Cheltenham Home
- Cheltenham Cards
- Cheltenham Results
- Cheltenham Offers
- Cheltenham Odds
- Cheltenham Tips
- Cheltenham News
- Prestbury Cup
- Cheltenham Videos
-
Cheltenham Statistics
- Leading Trainer
- Leading Jockeys
- Leading Owners
- Previous Years
- Previous Appearances
- Breeding Profile of Winners
- Lady Jockeys at The Festival
- Leading Jockey Award Winners
- Most Successful Jockeys of All Time
- Current Jockeys Competing at Cheltenham
- Most Successful Jockey In..
- Leading Trainer Award Winners
- Most Successfull Trainer All Time
- Current Trainers Competing at Cheltenham
- Most Successful Trainer In..
- Cheltenham Trainer/Runner Index
- Desktop Site
Cheltenham 2024
- irishracing.com
- Cheltenham
- News
- Bercasa a cosy winner for Tom Mullins
Mark Nunan
Bercasa a cosy winner for Tom Mullins
BERCASA (purple cap) took the Mares' Handicap Hurdle under David Mullins
© Photo Healy Racing
Bercasa (10/1) for the father-and-son team of Tom and David Mullins was always close to the pace in the Sign Up For A Tote Account Irish EBF Mares’ Handicap Hurdle, and she asserted off the home turn to run out a comfortable three and-a-half length winner.
Iamastartoo (14/1) took second with a length and three-quarters and the same back to Like An Open Book (11/1) and the slow-starting Ena Baie (8/1) in third and fourth respectively.
The winning filly, a daughter of Casamento, has found the winning thread this year, breaking her maiden over hurdles at Ballinrobe and scoring on the level for the first time at Leopardstown.
The winning trainer Tom Mullins said: “We won a couple of races with her this year but both handicappers gave her a nice slap.
"I tried her over hurdles and the Flat since and couldn’t win with her so I gave her a break before Galway.
“They were telling me she’d improved at home, and it looked like a race that nobody had anything up their sleeve.
“He (David) said they were going no gallop and he had to go on but I was calling him names at halfway.
“She’s in the Sales next week. She’s only a four-year-old filly and still a novice so I’m not sure what we will do.
“We were hoping to get into the Galway Hurdle and she would have been only 3lb out (of the handicap). She has Flat speed and that’s what you need to win a Galway Hurdle.”
Additional reporting by Alan Magee