Skelton fired up for strong Cheltenham Festival challenge
Gold Cup hope Protektorat headlines “nice team”.
To head to the Cheltenham Festival with genuine chances in the headline events is what Dan Skelton has worked long and hard for. The 36-year-old could hardly have prepared better, serving a nine-year apprenticeship with Paul Nicholls before branching out on his own at Lodge Hill Stables in Alcester. Like his mentor before him, a relentless attention to detail and insatiable appetite for winners is paying handsome dividends – and he has already had the huge satisfaction of seeing his brother, Harry, crowned champion jockey. “It’s now got to the point where you’ve got a nice team and your horses are worth talking about, which is a good position to be in. “There’s nothing worse than going there with a 66-1 shot thinking ‘we’re going to be walking into the unsaddling enclosure in a minute’.
“This is significantly the best team we’ve had in terms of quality. To have players in the three big chases I think almost highlights where we’ve got to and where we are continuing to aim at. I’d love to have a couple more novice hurdlers going, but you can only run the horses that are going to go there and stand up to the fire. “With 60,000 people cheering and a hard race to come, it’s a physical and mental test. If you take a horse there that won’t come through that test positively, you’re going to come out of it negatively. “Throughout a year you look forward to Christmas, you look forward to your holidays, birthdays, anniversaries and whatever. Within this industry, as a professional, you’ve got things you get a little more excited about as well. Otherwise it’s just a mill pot and life ain’t a mill pot. “You’re allowed to get a bit worked up, but don’t make daft decisions because of it.” Looking forward to it and excited he might be, but Skelton is also a realist and does not attempt to rewrite history – he knows how dominant Ireland were last year and are likely to be again. “The fallout of the Cheltenham Festival last year after the Irish drubbing made me realise that you have to look at it very unselfishly. “What everyone wants to see is the top 20 two-mile novice hurdlers run in the Supreme, but some wait for Aintree and some wait for Punchestown and the fact is you have to be cautious with a particular type of horse.


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