Beshabar

Beshabar: leading Grand National fancy is ruled out of Aintree

  PICTURE: John Grossick (racingpost.com/photos)  

Tendon strain rules Beshabar out of National

LEADING fancy Beshabar will miss the John Smith's Grand National.

The Scottish Grand National winner was a general 20-1 chance for the Aintree marathon but will not run again this season due to a small strain to his nearside tendon.

The setback emerged after Middleham Park Racing's chaser had finished fifth in the Hennessy Gold Cup in December and has now scuppered hopes for Aintree.

"He is not going to be entered," trainer Tim Vaughan said on Monday.

"It is a heartbreaking scenario. After his run in the Hennessy we were obviously exceptionally excited as it was the perfect prep run.

"But he had a little problem afterwards, I spoke to Middleham Park Racing and in the best interests of the horse we felt we would leave it now.

"We are going to give him a complete rest until the autumn, bring him back in and probably go straight for a tilt at the National."

My Betting Account

As sporting sights go, few match the sheer excitement of 40 horses thundering towards the first fence at Aintree for the John Smith's Grand National.

A race steeped in history that always provides a story, the Grand National is the ultimate test of endurance and skill for both horse and jockey, as the pairing must navigate 30 treacherous fences, and then still have enough stamina to make a challenge on the run-in.

To manage a clear round in the 4m4f epic is no mean achievement, with the fences notoriously difficult and offering unique challenges.

Over the years, there have been countless memorable moments, Devon Loch's phantom leap in the 1956 contest, Foinavon's shock 100-1 win in 1967and the brilliance of Red Rum, who took the chase on three occasions in 1973, 74 and 77.

In 1981 Aldaniti and Bob Champion completed a heartwarming tale when winning the race, as Aldaniti had recovered from a career-threatening injurywhile jockey Champion had battled back from cancer.

Last season the race provided another fairytale story as Donald McCain emulated his father and Aintree legend Ginger when winning with Ballabriggs - and that came just a year after champion jockey Tony McCoy finally gained victory in the race at the 15th time of asking. 

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