Barton Snow, ridden by Henry Crow (centre), coming home to win the Randox Foxhunters' Open Hunters' Chase
Barton Snow, ridden by Henry Crow (centre), coming home to win the Randox Foxhunters' Open Hunters' Chase

Aintree review and free video replays from the Randox Grand National Festival


A round-up of the rest of the action from the opening day of the Randox Grand National Festival.


Stylish Snow delivers at Aintree

Joe O'Shea exuded confidence before the Randox Foxhunters' Open Hunters' Chase saying Barton Snow (7/4 favourite) only needed to jump round to win and the trainer was proved on the money as Henry Crow again exuded the utmost confidence in the saddle.

The winner of the Princess Royal Challenge Cup at Cheltenham last month, Barton Snow was dropping back significantly in trip for this two mile five furlong contest but had no trouble going the early gallop set by last year's winner Grachhus De Balme.

Crow bided his time and dropped back to fifth as those around him went for home before the second last and observers couldn't help but wonder if his epic victory had taken the edge off him but as the others fell by the wayside, Barton Snow readily made his ground on Take All and a confident Crow was still sitting still and checking his wing mirrors for dangers.

There were none in sight and Barton Snow eased clear as he liked, winning by seven lengths from Lets Go Champ with Take It All a further length and a quarter back in third.

Barton Snow was the first to complete the Cheltenham / Aintree double since On The Fringe in 2016 and provided O'Shea with his third win of the Aintree contest and Crow revealed on Racing TV that it was just as easy as it looked.

"It was fantastic, he won it very, very well," Crow said.

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"We went a good gallop. The ground was probably soft but he did it well. There wasn't an error, he probably wasn't as fluent over these fences as he was over the regulation fences but he still jumped well. The race went perfectly as planned and I was happy all the way and he just cruised into it.

"He won it very well, I just had to sit there really. I just know the horse and when to keep a hold of him and when to let him roll a little bit but when you've got a horse like that, it makes it so much easier. We know off the gallops how good he is and Joe has got some very, very good horses at home."

Darragh O'Keeffe celebrates Koktail Divin at Aintree

Divin delivers Manifesto

The poor run of favourites in the William Hill Manifesto Novices' Chase - no winner in 11 runnings - continued as Lulamba unseated Nico de Boinville at the tenth fence in the Grade 1.

There appeared to be a frenetic race for the early lead with Koktail Divin (3/1), Mambonumberfive and Blueking d'Oroux seemingly keen to take them along and both Lulamba and Jax Junior seemed to be out of their comfort zone.

It wasn't long until the pace settled down though with Blueking d'Oroux allowed the lead and there weren't too many changes to the order until they entered the back straight and Lulamba unseated. There was a palpable shift in the body language of the three principal jockeys with the crown up for grabs.

Blueking d'Oroux looked to have blundered away his chance at the top of the straight but he showed a good attitude to rally as Mambonumberfive ran out of gas in a matter of strides but Koktail Divin was away and gone, crossing the line with two and a quarter lengths in hand.

Trained by Henry de Bromhead and ridden by Darragh O'Keeffe, Koktail Divin had run well for a long way in the Brown Advisory Novices' Chase at Cheltenham - rather than contest the Jack Richards Novices' Handicap - and proved well suited to returning to this intermediate trip although Paddy Power left Koktail Divin unchanged at 16/1 for next season's Ryanair Chase.

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O'Keeffe told Racing TV: "We always felt he was up to Grade 1 standard and it just took a couple of runs to figure him out; he was very impressive at Leopardstown and we wanted to give the Grade 1 a go at Cheltenham and I think we learned plenty about him that day. A huge credit to the horse to come back here today after having a grueller.

"A good performance and his jumping was superb again today. I was nice and handy today and wherever I was, I just wanted to get into a nice rhythm. I couldn't really hear a whole lot coming down the back straight but I could hear the commentator gasp or something so I knew Lulamba had disappeared from my inside; I just wanted to keep my horse in a rhythm.

"He's still a bit raw but as soon as he heard the other horse coming I felt him picking up.

"Definitely at Cheltenham this year we didn't get it [three miles]. I think over this trip you can really use his jumping and use his stride whereas at Cheltenham I jumped really well but I was always taking him back; today, if I gained a length I could keep it. Maybe in time he will, he's only a six-year-old but it's great to get a Grade 1 winner."

De Bromhead explained the rationale behind taking in the three mile contest last month, saying: "We wanted to go and try and see because we didn't know whether he stayed or not. He obviously looked a little bit outstayed at Punchestown and we hoped on better ground he would stay, he didn't - he looked the winner to my eye turning in - and so we said we'd drop back in trip and give this a go.

"Delighted for him. Darragh was brilliant on him and delighted for the Maloney family, massive supporters of ours. He's tough and he jumped brilliant."

That was in contrast to Lulamba whose trainer Nicky Henderson said: “It was just one of those things and he is like a lunatic up there. We are all frustrated and that goes without saying. He was thoroughly enjoying himself out there.

“He was travelling great and I thought he had the jumped the fence, and I was looking onto the next fence, and then all of a sudden that happened. If they fall you have to take that, but when you do something like that it drives you mad and unfortunately that is the end of the season.

“There wasn’t a race for him at Punchestown so he is not in one there. There is a two mile race and a three mile race, and I don’t want to go three miles at the moment, and I certainly wouldn’t want to come back down to two miles. Something like the two mile five furlong Grade Two at Ascot where Jango Baie started this year would be the sort of idea next season. It was just frustrating."

Mange Tout got the 2026 Grand National Festival off to a flying start for Gordon Elliott and Jack Kennedy

Mange Tout dishes out defeat

Mange Tout got the better of a good tussle with Selma De Vary in the Boodles Anniversary 4-Y-O Juvenile Hurdle.

Fairly strong in the market for the Grade 1, Mange Tout settled better than had been the case earlier in her career for Gordon Elliott and raced kindly in the middle of the pack as Lord and Ammes took them along.

The 9/4 favourite Selma De Vary was anchored in rear by Paul Townend with Maestro Conti and Minella Study - second and third in the Triumph Hurdle - buried in the field initially but Maestro Conti was over-racing as they passed the winning post for the first time. The pace did quicken on entering the back straight and Selma De Vary made smooth progress onto the quarters of Maestro Conti, ensuring her rivals were covered.

Jack Kennedy was alive to the danger, giving Selma De Vary a bump as he moved Mange Tout towards the outside to make sure they had racing room and the two Irish trained fillies eased to the head of affairs on the stands' side.

Indian River came through the field but could never quite lay down a challenge to the front pair who had the race between them from the last. Selma De Vary kept finding but Mange Tout always looked to be keeping her at bay, winning by three parts of a length as they pulled three and a half lengths clear of the remainder.

Minella Study was one of the first beaten, looking flat after his exertions last month, while another that showed up prominently at Cheltenham, Winston Junior, also dropped out quickly.

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Elliott said: "Jack gave her a beautiful ride. We said we'd drop her out completely and see how she settled, she was too keen at Leopardstown the last day, put a hood on her, put a sheepskin on and try something different; it was a good performance.

"She's actually put on a lot of weight. We were thinking of going to Cheltenham but we felt the week before she was very light.

"I thought Jack won the race from the fourth last to the third last and you could see Paul trying to hold him in and he just got out and got his position, that's race riding. It's great to come here and get another Grade 1 winner."

Kennedy added: "We rode her a little bit more patiently today as she can over-race a bit. She settled better today but still wasn't fully relaxed. Jumped great, she's not the quickest in the world and I was conscious not to get caught in a pocket and ended up there a bit soon on her and she didn't do much up the straight but she was good.

"I knew Paul would be coming around me if he was coming anywhere so I just wanted to get out and get a clear run. My one wasn't doing a whole pile in front and Paul was on my outside and I wanted to keep her close to him so she'd get pushed along and wouldn't idle too much. I was there [in front] a long time and she was only doing what she had to do."

Townend said of Selma De Vary: “She ran a cracker. We were probably just beaten by a fresher one on the day. There was very little between them the last time they met too."

Adrian Keatley, trainer of the third Indian River, said: "It was a good run but we didn't bring him down for the sake of it and we didn't run him at Cheltenham for the sake of it, we thought we had a fair horse. He had a lot to find with the first two and he had to give them 7lb. It was a good run.

"He's had a hard enough campaign for a horse who'd only had two runs coming from Ireland and he's not the easiest on himself."


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