McConville rides Longtymegone to his first victory as a trainer
For the second year in succession local rider Daire McConville made his way into the winner’s enclosure after the Mullan Family confined hunt winner race.
This year he took the honours on Longtymegone, following up his 2018 success on subsequent hunter chase winner He Knows My Name.
The victory was all the more special because the nine-year-old winner carried the jockey’s own colours and was his first winner as a trainer, after the pair got the better of the Marshall Watson-trained Our Bonus by a head in a thrilling finish.
Read the full story
Read award-winning journalism from the best writers in racing, with exclusive news, interviews, columns, investigations, stable tours and subscriber-only emails.
Subscribe to unlock
- Racing Post digital newspaper (worth over £100 per month)
- Award-winning journalism from the best writers in racing
- Expert tips from the likes of Tom Segal and Paul Kealy
- Replays and results analysis from all UK and Irish racecourses
- Form study tools including the Pro Card and Horse Tracker
- Extensive archive of statistics covering horses, trainers, jockeys, owners, pedigree and sales data
Already a subscriber?Log in
Published on inRegulars
Last updated
- 'This is something I said I would never do' - Alice Haynes's racing manager takes on second job as agent to David Egan
- 'We have superb facilities and it's a fantastic place to train horses' - former greyhound trainer arrives in Lambourn
- No 11th title for Gina Andrews as Izzie Marshall makes mission impossible a reality with a bit to spare
- Irish pointing graduates take centre stage at Aintree looking for a fourth successive Grand National win
- Tower Of London was more impressive than the bare result, but will he come back or go up in distance for future targets?
- 'This is something I said I would never do' - Alice Haynes's racing manager takes on second job as agent to David Egan
- 'We have superb facilities and it's a fantastic place to train horses' - former greyhound trainer arrives in Lambourn
- No 11th title for Gina Andrews as Izzie Marshall makes mission impossible a reality with a bit to spare
- Irish pointing graduates take centre stage at Aintree looking for a fourth successive Grand National win
- Tower Of London was more impressive than the bare result, but will he come back or go up in distance for future targets?