Dan Skelton’s The New Lion won the Unibet Hurdle at Cheltenham on Saturday but the race was marred by an injury to Sir Gino.
The New Lion lands the International
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?? Our thoughts are with Sir Gino pic.twitter.com/LiBoIBpPwp
Billed as a match between potentially the two best two-mile hurdlers in Britain, both were biding their time in the four-runner race when Sir Gino appeared to land awkwardly at the flight at the top of the hill and Nico de Boinville pulled him up.
Harry Skelton was content to take a lead for as long as possible on The New Lion, a winner over two miles and five furlongs at the Festival in March, before he asked him to quicken approaching the last.
Nemean Lion and Brentford Hope proved tough adversaries, before The New Lion (9/4) eventually got on top to win by a length and a half.
Skelton said: “I’m a big fan of this sport and Sir Gino could be the best horse in training and we just didn’t need that. We’re all thinking it and we just hope he is okay, it’s important.
“The team at Seven Barrows have been through hell and back to get him back on track and hopefully he is okay.”
Of his winner he added: “We needed to get a clear round after Newcastle and Harry did exactly what I wanted him to do and held him into the bottom of all the jumps. He was a lot more respectful today and even down to the last Harry is wrestling him getting him into the bottom of them as he’ll need those jumps in a Champion Hurdle.
“The unanswered question with this horse is the speed angle and I thought he showed a lot of speed at Newcastle despite us ending up on the floor. He showed a lot of speed there as well from turning in to the last and then from the last to the line.
“It will be a totally different race in the Champion Hurdle and they’ve gone round there at a crawl and I’m not saying I could have layed up alongside them but there is some who could.”
Harry Skelton said: “I didn’t even know what happened to Sir Gino and the three of us said at the top of the hill ‘where is Nico?’ and you don’t want that to happen. Hopefully they are both okay.
“We just wanted to get a lead and Nico wanted a lead as well and it just shows you, that leading up to the Festival you want these horses coming through these trials well and I’m just delighted he’s got a clear round.
“We hacked round and sprinted and he’s not short of a gear and it just put a few manners on him a bit today. He’s only young, doesn’t have much experience and did what I wanted him to do and it will do his confidence good. Hopefully he will come back now in March.
“I’ve ridden in a Champion Hurdle and haven’t won one, but I would like to.”
Walked to ambulance
Nicky Henderson’s Sir Gino was able to walk into the horse ambulance having been forced to pull up just after halfway.
Henderson later reported that the horse suffered a suspected pelvic injury and did not appear to have suffered any lower limb fractures.
The six-year-old was the odds-on favourite in the Grade 2 event and had been the ante-post market leader for the Champion Hurdle.
He had returned to action in the Christmas Hurdle after a year off the track enforced by a nasty infection in his leg which at one point had threatened his career.
However, he showed his engine was still intact there when beating the current champion Golden Ace with plenty to spare.
Henderson said: “They were able to put him into the ambulance, it’s his right-hind, it appears to be high up so there’s no lower limb fractures – it would appear to be a pelvic injury at the moment.
“He has loaded and I’d rather they take him to Three Counties veterinary hospital without unloading here and then they can assess and scan and just see where we are. Everybody is fighting.
“Pelvic injuries can be little or big, so we’ve just got to keep everything crossed.
“We won’t know anymore tonight. They need a chance to assess him so it will be late on I expect.”
He added: “I’ve been lucky enough to have many good horses but I haven’t had many like him, I can tell you that.”
A statement issued by the Jockey Club read: “In our sixth race of the day, Sir Gino was quickly pulled up and was dismounted.
“He was immediately attended to by our expert veterinary team where he was assessed on course.
“Sir Gino has walked onto the horse ambulance to go back to the stables for further assessment.”