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Wednesday, 10 January 2018

Cheltenham Festival - Johnny Henderson Grand Annual Chase


The Jordan Henderson Grand Annual chase is another one of the popular races that mark the final day of the annual Cheltenham festival. It is a grade three competition that is held on the left-handed, turf surface New Course.

Horses of age five years and above go head to head, hoof to hoof in a bid to come out tops over the 3,319 metres (2mi  furlong) 14-fence dotted track. Handicaps are given to the participating
horses as a way of evening out the race. It boasts the honour of bringing down the curtains on the four-day festival.

This race prides itself as the oldest event at the festival, having been first run in 1834. The initial editions were held in the neighbouring Andoversford course across three miles of an unrestricted track.

The race has undergone a lot of evolution since then, including the standardization of the track and the inclusion of handicaps. It has also had several interruptions due to war and natural calamities, especially in the first century.

The Grand Annual was prefixed with the Johnny Anderson in 2005 in honour of the horseracing enthusiast by the same name. Johnny is credited with saving the Cheltenham course from encroaching developers and therefore preserving a highly regarded culture. His son, Nicky
Henderson, has been a seasoned trainer and a popular figure at the festival.

For a grade three race, the purse for the Johnny Henderson Chase is pretty handsome. The 2015 event saw competitors share a purse of around £100, 000. The winner took the lion’s share of close to
£51,000.

Horses of age eight, nine and ten years appear to flourish best in the Grand Annual. Since the turn of the 21st century, horses in this age bracket have won 12 of the 17 editions held (The race was also a casualty of the 2001 foot and mouth scare). Only one five-year-old horse (Hipparchus in 1954) has won the race since 1946.

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