The 2025 Weatherbys Champion Bumper: stats, trends and replays
By Racing TV
Last Updated: Sat 4 Jan 2025
All you need to know about the Weatherbys Champion Bumper at Cheltenham racecourse on Wednesday March 12.
Where and when can I watch it?: 4.50pm on Wednesday March 12, live on Racing TV.
Grade: Grade One. Course: Old Course
What distance? 2m 1/2f
Prize-money?: £55,000
Ages and restrictions: Open to four, five and six-year-olds which have not run under any recognised Rules of Racing, except National Hunt Flat races, Irish National Hunt Flat races or French AQPS races. Horses are not to have run in more than four National Hunt Flat races and, before February 27, must have been placed first, second, third or fourth in such a race.
Weights: 4-y-o: 10st 11lb, 5-y-o and 6-y-o: 11st 5lb, fillies and mares allowance 7lb. Maximum 24 runners.
Key statistics and trends
The Mullins Factor:
Willie Mullins is the most successful trainer in Cheltenham Festival history and has won the Champion Bumper a remarkable 13 times since the first running in 1992. He's also had plenty of near-misses.
He often runs more than one contender and the market can get it wrong - for instance, five of his past eight winners have been returned at 12-1 (Cousin Vinny), 16-1 (Champagne Fever), 25-1 (Briar Hill), 25-1 (Relegate) and 11-1 (Ferny Hollow).
Sir Gerhard (85-40) beat better-fancied stablemate Kilcruit (10-11F) three years ago but Facile Vega, one of his seven runners three years ago, justified favouritism along with Jasmin De Vaux last year.
In 2018, Mullins had four of the first five home with his shortest-priced runner being fifth. He saddled the second in 2019 with his only runner in the race.
In 2020, Mullins had the first and second home from just three runners and the champion trainer had the first two home in 2021 from five runners. In 2022, he had the first, third and fourth home. In 2023, he had five of the first seven home and last year three of the first five home.
Mullins usually holds the key in the Weatherbys Champion Bumper (PA)
Irish dominance:
Irish-trained horses have won 25 of the 32 runnings, with Mullins responsible for the majority. The first seven home last year were trained in Ireland, and only four British-trained runners have been placed (all third) since Ballyandy won for the home team in 2015. Captain Teague took bronze in 2023.
Experience:
None of the runners are allowed to have run more than four times beforehand, but it generally pays to stick with more experienced horses in the line-up. In the last 18 runnings, only four winners had raced just once before - Cousin Vinny (2008), Cue Card (2010), Briar Hill (2013) and Jasmin De Vaux (2024). Nine of the last 19 winners had at least three runs in bumpers beforehand, including A Dream To Share and Facile Vega in recent years. Four winners between 2020-24 had also won point-to-point races.
Recent form:
The last 21 winners all scored on their previous start.Eight of the last 14 winners were unbeaten. Seven of the past nine had won at Listed or Graded level. Only four winners have made their debut in a UK bumper.
Age:
The majority of the winners have been five or six. Only two four-year-olds - Dato Star (1995) and Cue Card (2010) - have broken their dominance. Four-year-olds boast a record of one win from 89 runners.
Betting:
In the past 17 years, only three favourites have won - Moon Racer (2015), Envoi Allen (2019) and Facile Vega (2022). However, five of the last six runners returned at 9-2 or shorter.
Amateur jockeys:
They have won 10 of the past 16 runnings. Patrick Mullins is among their number and usually gets the choice of runners trained by his father Willie. Amateur riders were not allowed to compete at the 2021 Festival because of restrictions relating to the coronavirus pandemic.
Course Form:
Not essential. Only three of the last 19 winners had run at Cheltenham in the past.
Race history
The Weatherbys Champion Bumper was first run in 1992 and was initially known as the Festival Bumper. The Tote and Guinness were early sponsors.
The race has been sponsored by Weatherbys since 1997 and the contest has been known by its present title ever since.
The Champion Bumper is the most prestigious flat race, or "bumper", in the jumps calendar and often features horses which go on to become leading performers over jumps such as Florida Pearl, Cue Card and Envoi Allen.
Occasionally, leading jockeys from the Flat ride in the race. The 2002 winner Pizarro was ridden by Jamie Spencer.
Nineteen-year-old amateur jockey John Gleeson and 85-year-old-trainer John Kiely combined for a famous victory with A Dream To Share.
Gleeson said: “I can’t believe how smoothly it went to be honest! That just happened - I can’t believe it! I kind of set out to keep it simple, the ground has been poached everywhere but we thought that perhaps the outside was slightly better and we decided to take our time as the ground was slightly holding. I can’t believe he did that, he did it so smooth and so well.
“To be honest I didn’t see (any of the interference), as I was just smooth sailing the whole way. I followed Patrick (Mullins, riding the 16-5 Favourite Fact To File) and it just worked out so perfectly. It’s like a dream and I can’t believe it. Even being at the Festival is just unreal.
He added: “It’s very special as we’re a small team at home, but we try our best to get to the next stage and to win. I can’t believe it. I’ve been going to John’s with dad for as long as I can remember really, he’s 10 minutes up the road from us and I ride out this horse every day before going to school. He’s very special.
“My mum named the horse on Christmas Day a couple of years ago. It’s very special as they’re all here today and it’s great to be here."
Kiely said: “I’m 86 in May and I only gave up riding three years ago. It is brilliant to achieve this in the hallowed spot. We take every horse the same until they prove themselves. He seemed to do things easy. I think there is more to come and he seems a nice horse.”
2022 - Facile Vega
Willie Mullins had concerns about the heavy ground for Facile Vega, yet he need not have worried as his rising star quickened up smartly to give him a twelfth success in the race.
The son of Walk In The Park, out of six-time Festival winner Quevaga is bred to be a champion, and while it is early days in his career, he has passed every test thus far.
Facile Vega (13-8 favourite) was ridden patiently by Patrick Mullins, who tracked Jamie Codd aboard American Mike and gained the inside berth running down the hill, as long-time leader, the free-going Houlanbatordechais, faded.
Mullins quickly asserted turning in and soon had his rivals in trouble, powering clear to score by three and three-quarter lengths from the Gordon Elliott-trained American Mike, with James’s Gate filling third for the Closutton handler, who was recording a treble on the day following earlier victories of Sir Gerhard and Energumene.
The race had been delayed after the rain that hit the track from late morning and never stopped left standing water on certain areas of the track where hurdles were removed. Ground staff teams sectioned off the areas where the rain water pooled and jockeys were shown a map of the course to aid them in avoiding the most testing points.
Mullins said: “I don’t know how good he is and what his best trip is. He covers an awful lot of ground when he is galloping but he has plenty of speed. We will see how he jumps but he jumps well enough at home with what we have done but let’s answer those questions (which route to take) when he goes over jumps.
“I was comparing him to Florida Pearl who was a very good bumper horse at the time. He would be in the top percentage of bumpers winners I’ve had. The fact we had the dam and she was so good and that he has come through and looks he looks to be as good as her is fantastic. He is very easy to train and we just keep a lid on him all the time. The only pressure I had with him was the pressure I put on myself."
The stable second-string according to the betting, the six-year-old was sent into an early lead and was left unhurried at the head of affairs before kicking on in the straight and prevailing by half a length from Kilcruit (10-11F) in second with Elle Est Belle a further six and half lengths back in third.
“I have to say well done to the Cullentra (Elliott) team. He came in great condition," said Mullins.
“The first night he came, we didn’t have any of the feed he’d been eating at Cullentra, so we just gave him our usual feed – and he didn’t miss an oat.
"He looks to be a natural – he has a huge stride. Rachael let him bowl along, and he was lugging out with her – he’s still a bit green.
“He obviously has a lot of natural ability. He’s a fine, big horse who will be made for jumping fences at some stage.
“We were fortunate enough to get him. When he came to us he was very fit, and I just wanted to get him settled in, and I was surprised how well he settled in."
2020 - Ferny Hollow
Ante-post favourite for this race in the autumn, the keen-going Ferny Hollow pulled his chances away early in the campaign but came good on the big day under an outstanding ride from Paul Townend for owners Cheveley Park Stud. This was a remarkable 10th success in the Weatherbys Champion Bumper for Irish champion trainer Willie Mullins.
Anchored right out the back from an early stage, Townend began to creep closer at the highest point of the course and down the hill but still had plenty in front of him on the turn for home. The jockey bided his time and hit the front approaching the final half-furlong to collar stablemate and hot favourite Appreciate It (15-8F) by two and a half lengths with Queens Brook (6-1) next in a 1-2-3 for Ireland. Third Time Lucki (16-1) finished fourth.
"I thought Patrick had it won (on Appreciate It) just after turning for home, but we could see Paul coming and he won quite easy in the end," said Mullins. This horse just ran too free on his first two runs and putting a hood on him has changed him, as have more drastic tactics in holding him up.
“He is lovely at home, but he takes a pull. In a race he gets a little bit upset, so I think jumping will suit him a lot better."
Given a wide, safety-first ride throughout, Envoi Allen kicked for home turning in and was not headed, newspapers flung to the air as the five-year-old prevailed by three quarters of a length from Blue Sari (7-2) in second with Thyme Hill (20-1) back in third.
“He’s going to be a three-mile chaser,” said Elliott. “He’s the real thing.”
Brilliant amateur Codd was celebrating a ninth Festival success, with his mother and father at Cheltenham after a difficult time for the family.
“I lost my brother last year, it’s been a tough year,” said an emotional Codd. “William was a big supporter of mine and I wish he was here. He’s up there looking down on us today. I hope he’s very proud.”
It was a ninth win in the event for the champion trainer but a first for Katie Walsh, who delivered the mare right on the line.
Danny Mullins stole a march at the start on Carefully Selected and right until the dying moments it looked as if it would prove crucial, only for Relegate (25-1), making it three wins from as many starts, to fly up the hill.
"She's not over-big and I knew she wanted a bit of room," Walsh said. "Down the back I was struggling, but the further I was going, the better I was going. When she hit the rising ground, she took off. She's as hard as nails."
2017 - Fayonagh
Fayonagh (7-1) looked to have lost all chance at the start, jumping off late and spending most of the race at the back of the field, but came charging through from last to first up the hill to beat Debuchet by a length and a quarter.
Jockey Jamie Codd had won the Cross Country Chase on Cause Of Causes 80 minutes earlier. Like Cause Of Causes, Fayonagh was trained by Gordon Elliott, for whom it was a fifth win of the week.
“We had a false start, then she got a fright and just halted for about two and a half seconds,” Codd said. “I thought I had lost all chance. It’s pure ability that has got me there in the end. She’s a great mare.”
Sadly, Fayonagh was fatally injured in an accident at home at the start of the 2017-18 season.
2016 - Ballyandy
Nigel Twiston-Davies chalked up a 17th Festival success via Ballyandy (5-1), who took the spoils under his son, Sam by outgunning Battleford by a nose.
“It is lovely when your boys are riding – it is double the excitement,” the trainer said afterwards.
He added: “It was close at the finish, but I was confident during the race. Sam got into a bit of trouble coming down the hill, but said the leading horses were dropping back and knocked him back. Despite that the horse gutsed it out.
“He is better than Imperial Commander was on the Flat, so maybe he will be better over jumps. He will go hurdling next season.
Battleford (25-1) and Bacardys (16-1), both trained by Willie Mullins, chased Ballyandy home.
2015 - Moon Racer
The well backed Moon Racer (9-2 fav) got the job done by a length and a half, despite fluffing the start.
David Pipe’s gelding, owned by Caroline Tisdall and Bryan Drew, kept on strongly up the hill to score from 33-1 shot Modus. “It didn’t really go according to plan,” said the trainer. “It wasn’t the idea to come from where he came from.
Tom (Scudamore – jockey) sat where he had to sit – he had to really – and took the brave man’s route down the inside. The gaps appeared and then he quickened well.” Scudamore admitted: “The tactics were forced upon me because of what happened at the start.”
2014 - Silver Concorde
Dermot Weld’s patient approach with Silver Concorde paid off as the six-year-old led home a clean sweep for Irish runners.
The 16-1 winner scored by one and a half lengths from favourite Shaneshill, becoming a first Festival success for amateur Robbie McNamara.
Silver Concorde carried the purple colours of Dr Ronan Lambe and was bred for the job - being by top Flat sire Dansili out of a daughter of exceptional miler Ridgewood Pearl.
The winning trainer, who also saddled the strongly-fancied fifth horse Vigil, said of Silver Concorde: “The first time we ran him in a bumper he was third to yesterday's Stan James Champion Hurdle winner (Jezki).
“It’s taken time and he loves dry ground. On dry ground we always believed in this horse.”
2013 - Briar Hill
Ruby Walsh admitted that Briar Hill’s emphatic last-to-first 25-1 success, at the main expense of Regal Encore, had come as a welcome surprise.
“It’s a bit of a shock as I had a couple of good rides earlier in the day and I wasn’t really counting on this guy,” he said. “It didn’t go to plan because I missed the break and had to change plan but it worked out and when I gave him a smack he took off. He was very impressive.”
It was Willie Mullins’s eighth winner of the race but owner Graham Wylie said: “I’m so surprised because it was only yesterday that I realised he’d be running.
“I knew he was entered but Willie rang yesterday and said he’d put him in the box to come over and that Ruby would be riding, which I thought was interesting. He came from last to first, it was a great effort.”
2012 - Champagne Fever
A seventh win in the race for Willie Mullins courtesy of 16-1 Champagne Fever, ridden by his son, Patrick, who picked up a two-day whip ban.
“The horse just gallops and has a huge cruising speed,” Mullins said after the grey had beaten John Ferguson's New Year’s Eve. “He seemed to go even better when he hit the rising ground.
“I’m delighted for connections because Susannah Ricci has a lot of horses with me and a winner here is always fantastic but it’s even more special when it’s ridden by your son. He’s a big light-framed horse and I hope he will remain like that all of his life because that type of horse is easier to keep sound.”
Champagne Fever returned a year later to win the Supreme Novices’ Hurdle but missed the 2015 Champion Chase after being bitten by a stablemate on the journey.
2011 - Cheltenian
Irish-trained horses had won the first six races on the card but Philip Hobbs and Richard Johnson prevented a whitewash with 14-1 shot Cheltenian, who scored by five lengths from the Welsh-trained Destroyer Deployed.
“He’s always impressed me and we were delighted when he won at Kempton.
“I certainly think there’s more to come. He’s definitely going to want a trip. He’s a real tough horse. If he ends up here next March I’d say it’s almost certain he would go for either the Neptune [Investment Management Novices’ Hurdle, 2m5f] or the Albert Bartlett [Novices’ Hurdle, 3m].”
Winning jockey Richard Johnson said: “He was very strong and galloped right to the line. There are very few form lines coming into a race like this and they can all look like superstars as most of the runners have won or finished second in decent bumpers.”
Unfortunately, Cheltenian was subsequently troubled by injury problems and won only twice over hurdles.
2010 - Cue Card
Cue Card now needs no introduction but he was on very few radars when lining up at 40-1 for Colin and jockey Joe Tizzard, having previously won on his debut at Fontwell.
Only a four-year-old, he travelled strongly throughout and thumped Al Ferof by eight lengths. “He has always done everything so easily at home and he is such an easy horse to train,” Tizzard Sr said. “Nothing has gone wrong since the day we broke him in and it has been easy - I suppose the good ones are.
“I said in my local paper that I am sure that this horse would have been third or fourth favourite if he was trained by Willie Mullins.”
Joe Tizzard added: "We absolutely love the horse. He is very exciting.”
Cue Card added eight more Grade One triumphs to his glittering CV before being retired. Sadly, he died after suffered a heart attack in late December, 2022.
2009 - Dunguib
The well fancied Dunguib, sent off at 9-2, was a breathtaking 10-length under amateur Brian O’Connell. All of the first eight horses home were trained in Ireland.
Dunguib, trained by Philip Fenton, won at the main expense of Some Present with 5-2 favourite Rite Of Passage back in third.
The trainer said: “This horse is not a cool customer. Mainly because he is a box walker and gets excited about small things. We thought he was a beautiful horse the Christmas before last.”
O’Connell said: "To be honest, I would have been disappointed if he had been beaten.”
Dunguib continued to carry all before him but he could finish only third in the Supreme Novices' Hurdle a year later, when 4-5.
2008 - Cousin Vinny
The Mullins family had long been synonymous with success at Cheltenham and there was a new name on the roll of honour after this renewal as 18-year-old Patrick Mullins partnered Cousin Vinny, trained by his father Willie, to an emphatic success.
“I think I’ve ridden 39 winners but I’d swap them all for this one,” said the successful rider, who was still at school at the time. “I didn’t have a choice about which of Dad’s I would ride, he picked which ones we would all be on but I was happy to be aboard Cousin Vinny.”
Mullins Sr was saddling his sixth winner of the race and also rode one of those horses to victory - Wither Or Which in 1996.
“Patrick is not going to ride for too long because he’s tall and will probably get too heavy,” said the winning trainer. “I thought this might be his only chance ever of getting a win here and I was just hoping that I’d got him on the right one, but we managed it.”