Cleeve Hurdle: 'It's a dream, my dream' - French trainer Gabriel Leenders wins with Gold Tweet
Emotional celebrations came thick and fast at Cheltenham on Trials day, but none was louder than the scream from Gabriel Leenders which welcomed his Gold Tweet back into the winner's enclosure after the Cleeve Hurdle.
Feelgood victories on the card for Editeur Du Gite and Ahoy Senor set the tone for Paisley Park, an emblem for much that is a positive about jump racing, to prevail, but in running his usual, solid race he could manage only third behind the 14-1 winner, who was three lengths too good for Dashel Drasher in second.
A son of On Est Bien, who might be as unfamiliar as Gold Tweet to British punters, the six-year-old was bred by the former's Prix de l'Arc de Triomphe-winning trainer Elie Lellouche and showed enough class to earn quotes of 8-1 from sponsors Paddy Power for the Stayers' Hurdle at March's Cheltenham Festival.
Based near Angers in north-west France, Leenders said in the race build-up his winner was not a champion, but in the aftermath of his success he was mulling a supplementary festival entry for his first runner at the course.
"We won at Cheltenham," he exclaimed. "It’s a dream, my dream, and I'm very happy."
Leenders, a top-level winner in his home country, had spells with Nicky Henderson and David Pipe before he set up on his own.
In Gold Tweet, who runs in the colours of AGV Karwin Stud, he had a useful gelding who promised to relish the three-mile trip in the Grade 2.
Before playfully teasing Willie Mullins to let him win a festival race in the spring, Leenders added: "We thought he had a good chance. He's a very fast horse, but distance is not a problem for him and his jumping suits the English hurdles.
"In my mind I thought he could run well – and he did. It's expensive to supplement him for the Stayers’ Hurdle and we are not rich, but I will talk with the owner and we'll see. If it’s possible we will go and it would be a dream to come here in March."
Johnny Charron did the steering on Gold Tweet and said: "It wasn't easy for me to ride as we were always in behind and pulling quite a lot, but hearing the crowd really made me want to win and push on."
That cue can be the prompt for Paisley Park, who won the Stayers' Hurdle in 2019, to get going but his customary late surge failed to materialise.
"He just didn't hit the line running," said Emma Lavelle. "It is hard to know and I would love to be able to say this is why. He seemed fine after that and wasn't blowing excessively or anything. I’d love to see the sectionals as I don’t know how quick they went, but I get the feeling on how easily he was travelling they didn’t go fast enough for us.
"We will absolutely come back in March all being well."
It would be no surprise if Gold Tweet does too.
Read more . . .
'It has been amazing' - magical Mullins reaches 4,000 winners at Fairyhouse
Ahoy Senor 10-1 from 50 for Gold Cup after Cotswold Chase success
Members' Club special offer: get exclusive tips and insight FREE for one month
Sign up to receive On The Nose, our essential daily newsletter, from the Racing Post. Your unmissable morning feed, direct to your email inbox every morning.
- Catterick: 'It's completely okay for them to withdraw' - slipping on bends leads to walkover winner for Olly Murphy
- Ascot: 'I was a little bit lost not racing everyday' - Charlie Deutsch fires in Ascot double on return from injury
- Tipperary: Only By Night makes a bright start to chasing by downing odds-on Mirazur West
- Chepstow: 'He's one to look forward to' - big-race hopes for Range after first win over fences
- Adam Wedge suspended for 14 days and Evan Williams fined £3,000 for schooling a horse on the racecourse
- Catterick: 'It's completely okay for them to withdraw' - slipping on bends leads to walkover winner for Olly Murphy
- Ascot: 'I was a little bit lost not racing everyday' - Charlie Deutsch fires in Ascot double on return from injury
- Tipperary: Only By Night makes a bright start to chasing by downing odds-on Mirazur West
- Chepstow: 'He's one to look forward to' - big-race hopes for Range after first win over fences
- Adam Wedge suspended for 14 days and Evan Williams fined £3,000 for schooling a horse on the racecourse