Andrew Gemmell swaps the Rod Laver Arena to pursue sporting dream with Paisley Park at Cheltenham

Andrew Gemmell swaps the Rod Laver Arena to pursue sporting dream with Paisley Park at Cheltenham

  • Andrew Gemmell should be in Melbourne ready to attend Australian Open Final
  • But Plan A has been scrapped and replaced by a Plan B which could be exciting
  • Paisley Park won at Aintree and Haydock followed by the Long Walk Hurdle

Andrew Gemmell should be in Melbourne getting ready to attend Sunday’s Australian Open Final between Novak Djokovic and Rafael Nadal.

But Plan A has been scrapped and replaced by a Plan B which could turn out even more exciting for the man who, despite being blind from birth, attends major sporting events around the globe.

Gemmell swaps the Rod Laver Arena watching two tennis greats to pursue his own sporting dream with his horse Paisley Park at Cheltenham.

Two years ago, the seven-year-old gelding was ‘at death’s door’ similar to Grass Sickness

Two years ago, the seven-year-old gelding was ‘at death’s door’ showing symptoms similar to the potentially fatal Grass Sickness. He was sidelined for 12 months.

But after initial wins at Aintree and Haydock followed by victory in the Long Walk Hurdle at Ascot before Christmas, Paisley Park has become Britain’s leading hope for the Stayers’ Hurdle at the Cheltenham Festival in March.

It’s a place he can cement in the galliardhomes.com Cleeve Hurdle on Saturday.

Sports mad Gemmell, an MCC member and West Ham United season-ticket holder, had to change his plans after trainer Emma Lavelle decided to run improving Paisley Park at Cheltenham Trial’s day rather than head direct to his big Spring target.

No-one at the track will get as animated as Gemmell if Paisley Park and jockey Aidan Coleman are in contention running to the final flight.

Paisley Park won at Aintree and Haydock followed by victory in the Long Walk Hurdle at Ascot

Paisley Park won at Aintree and Haydock followed by victory in the Long Walk Hurdle at Ascot

Gemmell, part of the syndicate which owned Ed Dunlop-trained 2015 Ascot Gold Cup winner Trip To Paris, said: ‘Racing is the one sport that you don’t need a commentary relayed to you. With cricket, I have my headphones for Test Match Special but on the racecourse, you can always hear the tannoy.

‘The atmosphere is great. It was brilliant when Paisley Park pulled the race out of the fire at Haydock. At Ascot, everyone around me was saying he was going to win but you never quite believe it until it actually happens.

‘I had tickets for the semi-final and final in Australia but I have given them to a mate. There are no regrets. The final will be fantastic but I can’t wait for Cheltenham. I get very nervous thinking about it.

‘It will be difficult – Paisley Park has to give weight to some horses. But we want to see if he handles the track and if we get to the Stayers Hurdle we will be then at level weights.’

The transformed Paisley Park’s two-length Ascot defeat of West Approach was a momentous first grade one win in the career of both Lavelle and Coleman.

The trainer said: ‘Last season he was a very straightforward horse, anyone could ride him. This season he is like a caged tiger. He must feel a very different horse in himself.’

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