Nicky Henderson reflects on Shishkin’s Ryanair Chase run and considers Aintree bid

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Nicky Henderson was left pondering whether he made the correct decision to run Shishkin in the Ryanair Chase instead of the Cheltenham Gold Cup after the horse finished second to Envoi Allen.

Shishkin, a former Supreme and Arkle winner, was odds-on for the previous season’s Queen Mother Champion Chase but was pulled up early due to not travelling well on soft ground. He was subsequently diagnosed with a rare bone condition and brought back slowly. After finishing 15 lengths behind Edwardstone in the Tingle Creek at Sandown, he won the Ascot Chase by 16 lengths after stepping up in trip.

However, over the same two miles and five furlongs of the Ryanair, he did not look himself, jumping left on occasions and making an error at a crucial stage which briefly halted momentum.

Although he stayed on well after the last fence, he was unable to catch Envoi Allen, whose two-and three-quarter-length victory was a third at the Festival after winning the 2019 Champion Bumper and the Ballymore Novices’ Hurdle a year later.

Henderson said: “He wasn’t really travelling like we hoped he would. Early on, he wasn’t looking that happy about it, but he’s done bloody well to finish where he has.

“Maybe I should have listened to those people who said we should have gone three and a quarter (mile, in the Gold Cup) — it looked as if that’s what he wanted.”

Asked to identify why Shishkin ran inconsistently, Henderson added: “I don’t know, it’s unlike him to go left like that — and he was going markedly left.

“He ran at Ascot last time and if you go left around Ascot, you finish up in Windsor Castle and that’s that!

“He schooled on Monday and you’ve never seen a horse jump five fences straighter and quicker, so we’ll have to take him apart and tighten a few nuts and bolts.

“He made one bad mistake coming down the hill, but look at how well he’s finished. I was a bit worried over the first two fences because he looked outpaced again, but he got back there — he’s determined if nothing else.

“Envoi Allen was going to be the next coming when he was young and they’ve done very well, they’ve got him back to his very best.

“You could say it came too soon after Ascot for us, it was a bit of a rush but I certainly want to run him in four weeks’ time over three miles at Aintree — that’s the obvious thing to do.”

De Boinville said Shishkin never gave him the same encouragement as he had felt when winning impressively at Ascot.

“It never really went right from when the tapes went up. Even down at the start he was curling up on me a bit and sitting back on his haunches a bit,” said the jockey.

“Over the first two fences he wasn’t taking me anywhere, whereas at Ascot I was able to travel and jump and dictate where I wanted to be. This time I was pushed here, there and everywhere.

“He was hanging a bit left and wasn’t the same horse that we saw at Ascot, but we know what he can do, so we’ll get him home and get him absolutely spot-on, and I’m sure he’ll be going three miles at Aintree.

“Over the first two fences it did feel a bit like last year and I was thinking, ‘Oh God’, but all credit to the horse — he’s very genuine, he made an error down the hill and has managed to get back for second when he had every right to be pulled up or tailed off.”

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