Royal Rendezvous battled to a hard-fought victory in the Grade 2 PWC Champion Chase at Gowran Park on Saturday.

Willie Mullins’ nine-year-old was last seen winning the Galway Plate in July, and followed up that success as he and Danny Mullins just denied Gordon Elliott’s Hardline by half a length.

The jockey returned from an injury-enforced lay-off only on Friday, and this victory was therefore his first since fracturing several vertebrae in a heavy fall three months ago.

The race was intended to be the scene of Henry de Bromhead’s Champion Chase winner Put The Kettle On’s seasonal comeback, but the mare was declared a late non-runner because of unsuitable going – leaving Royal Rendezvous as the 10/11 favourite.

The winning jockey said: “He’s a good tough horse, and I’ve been lucky enough to win on him a couple of times before.

“Once I jumped the second last I was gaining on Jack (Kennedy, on Hardline) but not quite quick enough to go through on the inside, so that’s why I switched.

“I was always happy that he was going to get there. He has his own way of jumping. But he jumps forward and fast, which is what you need in a racehorse – it’s not a show jumping contest.”

David Casey, representing the winning trainer, added: “He has a habit of jumping a bit right, but that’s why the track and the race suited him.

“He got hampered at the first but jumped quite well and battled well after the last.

“Maybe something like the Clonmel Oil Chase could suit him next. He seems to handle this nice ground.”

ABSENCE

De Bromhead explained the reasons for Put The Kettle On’s absence.

“The ground was a bit better than ideal for her, and we thought it was the safer thing to do. It’s the owners’ local track, and they always wanted to run her here.

“She will probably go back again for the Shloer Chase (at Cheltenham) in November.”