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- Livelovelaugh wins Topham for Team Mullins
Livelovelaugh wins Topham for Team Mullins
Livelovelaugh
© Photo Healy Racing
Livelovelaugh turned the Randox Topham Handicap Chase into a procession for Patrick and Willie Mullins.
Having set off at what seemed a particularly brisk pace in the early stages, Livelovelaugh had burned everything else off crossing the Melling Road.
Mullins had got his mount into a fantastic rhythm, but when the pursuers began to close up as the field raced back on to the racecourse proper, it was a question of how much was going to be left in the tank.
The 11-year-old briefly looked in trouble — but Mullins had saved plenty on the 15-2 shot and put the race to bed approaching the Elbow.
Livelovelaugh had run in the Grand National itself two years ago and looked a non-stayer in 11th behind Tiger Roll. Pink Eyed Pedro was second at 33-1, four and a half lengths away, with Senior Citizen third and Snugsborough Hall fourth.
Mullins, who replaced the injured Paul Townend, was emulating his father, who won over the fences aboard the Paddy Mullins-trained Atha Cliath in 1983 Foxhunters.
He steps in for Townend again in the Rich and Susannah Ricci colours on Burrows Saint in the big one on Saturday.
Mullins said: “Incredible. Every jockey wants to win over the Grand National fences. It’s something you’d like to do before you retire. My father did it on Atha Cliath in the Foxhunters’ in 1983. I got some spin there. If I could bottle that I’d take it home.
“It’s great to get one on the board the day before tomorrow. I wanted to get out, get away and over the first four fences near the font rank and get a break before the bend and let him jump and enjoy himself.
“I hadn’t asked him to go forward. He was just enjoying himself.
“When I jumped the third-last I had a look behind and was surprised how far clear I was. I wanted to get a little breather into him, but not give away my advantage altogether.
“The horse was very brave, but he’s a real example of the Aintree factor.”
He added: “It’s indescribable (to ride a winner over those fences). I feel very sorry for anyone who can’t experience it and I feel so lucky to have experienced it.
“As a kid you’re always watching and there is always a horse here every year that does that. You think ‘what must that feel like’.”