Billys 7/2 Coral 4/1
WILLIE MULLINS, who set a Cheltenham Festival record with eight winners last year, on Tuesday said another successful raid on jump racing's showpiece meeting in March could put him in the picture for a first British trainers' championship.
Mullins has sent out five winners and several placed horses in Britain for prize-money of £274,459 this season, which leaves him almost £806,000 behind championship leader Paul Nicholls, but with more than £3.9 million on offer at Cheltenham the race is far from over.
Ireland's champion trainer said: "I have thought about the British trainers' championship and it would be nice to win it one day but it certainly isn't something we've ever set out to do.
"I think you need to be up and running early in the season to be a serious contender for the title and that's not the way we operate. It's usually into November before our horses begin to come to themselves."
Cheltenham Festival the priority
However, he added: "If we had another successful festival then it might put us in touch and give us a shot at the championship. We'll just have to wait to see what happens and concentrate on getting our horses to Cheltenham in the best possible form. That's the priority.
"We can only hope we'll have a successful festival like we've had in the past. And even if we did then whoever trains the Crabbie's Grand National winner could also have a big say in who wins the title.
"You have to think positively and it would be a good year to win the National for the second time, wouldn't it?"
Mullins has enjoyed two Grade 1 victories in Britain this season with Faugheen's win in the williamhill.com Christmas Hurdle at Kempton being followed by Yorkhill's success in the Tolworth Novices' Hurdle at Sandown on Saturday.
However, the biggest contributor to the trainer's prize-money haul in Britain has been Vautour, whose win in the Stella Artois 1965 Chase at Ascot and narrow defeat by Cue Card in the King George VI Chase earned a total of £83,610.
'A serious contender'
Mullins said: "The trainers' championship isn't the reason we've made regular trips to Britain with horses this season. Far from it. We've a big team of horses and we try as much as possible to split up the better ones and divide our forces by finding suitable races for them at home and across the Irish Sea."
William Hill are shortest about Mullins winning the British trainers' title at 7-2 and spokesman Jon Ivan-Duke said: "The sheer ammunition Willie Mullins has to fire at the Cheltenham Festival means he is a serious contender for the trainers' title.
"It is entirely possible he could win half the races at the Cheltenham Festival and if that is the case then he could overhaul Nicholls."
Simon Clare of Coral, who are 4-1, added: "We wouldn't so much fear losing a fortune on Mullins in the trainers' championship, but if he does win it he's likely to have plenty of winners, and cost us plenty of money, along the way. We so nearly saw on the first day of the festival last year what damage the Mullins multiples can do."