TopSpec Trainer of the Quarter - Gavin Cromwell

The TopSpec Trainer of the Quarter award has been won by Gavin Cromwell. Cromwell will recieve £1000 worth of TopSpec feed, supplements, and additives as well as a consultant with one of their senior nutritionists

By Lissa Oliver


Like many a trainer who has started life via the veterinary college route, County Meath-based Gavin Cromwell was a farrier prior to taking out his licence in 2005. His superb training operation at Danestown, Balrath, includes a 500m round sand and fibre gallop, a 700m circle sand gallop, a schooling strip with both hurdles and fences, a sand ring, schooling ring, horse spa, walkers and plenty of turnout space all year round in both grass and rubber paddocks. The peaceful location provides a relaxing atmosphere for the horses, yet is central for all of Ireland’s racecourses and within easy travelling distance for his frequent British and French raids.

Cromwell’s big race wins include back-to-back Grade 1 wins with Jer’s Girl, in the Mares Novice Hurdle Final and Champion Novice Hurdle; Welsh Grand National with the veteran Raz De Maree; Gr1 Champion Hurdle at Cheltenham with Espoir D’Allen; and on the Flat, the Gr2 Queen Mary Stakes with Quick Suzy, Gr2 Prix De Royallieu with Princess Yaiza and the Irish Cambridgeshire with Sretaw. 

It is for his achievements at this year’s Cheltenham Festival, however, that he has been awarded Trainer of the Quarter, successfully bringing back the far from straightforward Flooring Porter to retain his crown in the Gr.1 Stayers Hurdle and only just missing out on a Festival Grade 1 double when Gabynako ran second to Edwardstone in the Gr.1 Arkle Challenge Trophy.

Speaking of the successful plan for the repeat Stayers Hurdle win, Cromwell tells us of Flooring Porter, “Rewind to last year, he had run in a Class B handicap hurdle at Navan in early December and not by design he made all the running, which turned out to suit him. He had his own ideas about things and tried to break the start and ended up going to the front and he won quite impressively by 12 lengths. 

“He went up quite a bit in the ratings as a result, so we decided to let him take his chance in the Gr.1 Christmas Hurdle at Leopardstown and he romped home again. From there he went straight to Cheltenham, where he did the same. 

“After that we went to Punchestown, but it didn’t work out for him, he got very lit up pre-race and again at the start, and he doesn’t go right-handed quite as well as he goes left-handed, so he just didn’t run his race.

“Going forward, we tried to keep him left-handed and the whole plan was to go for Cheltenham again, so he was trained accordingly. He went to Navan for the Gr.2 Lismullen Hurdle and was unfortunate there, as he was going well when he fell. Then on to Leopardstown for the Christmas Hurdle again and he got left at the start and could never get on terms after that, but he was only beaten a couple of lengths in second. The plan was to go straight to Cheltenham after that and the plan came off.”

Returning to Cheltenham with a previous Festival winner brings with it its own problems, as Cromwell reveals. “There was a little bit more pressure, with him being the reigning champion, but knowing that he hasn’t been straightforward in the past, in the past few months I’ve seen him maturing a lot and I have a lot more confidence in him.

“The immediate future, all being well, he’ll go to Aintree, then he has the option of Auteuil for the French Champion Hurdle 21 May, which we’ll review after Aintree. He won’t go to Punchestown.

I’m also quite excited about Gabynako. After he ran second in the Gr1 Drinmore Novice Chase and third in the Gr1 Faugheen Novice Chase at Limerick I took the decision to supplement him for the Arkle Trophy. He finished second and now he’s in the Gr.1 Gold Cup at Fairyhouse, but the Gr.1 Novice Chase at Punchestown is more likely.”