There's strong Waterford representation across the board as the nominees have been revealed for the 2021 Horse Racing Ireland Awards.
Henry De Bromhead unsurprisingly features prominently in the award nominees following his fantastic Cheltenham Festival, which saw him train six winners, before going on to achieve a 1-2 in the Aintree Grand National courtesy of Minella Times and Balko Des Flos.
The Knockeen-based handler was the first trainer to ever achieve the Holy Trinity of landing the Champion Hurdle, Champion Chase and Gold Cup at Cheltenham as Honeysuckle, Put The Kettle On and Minella Indo took top honours.
The nominees have been selected across seven categories – Horse of the Year, National Hunt Award, National Hunt Achievement Award, Flat Award, Flat Achievement Award, Point-to-Point Award and the Emerging Talent Award - and the winners will be decided by a ballot of the Irish racing media.
A public vote will decide the outcome of the 2021 Ride of the Year with the contenders, as chosen by Fran Berry and Davy Russell, to be announced shortly.
De Bromhead is nominated for the National Hunt Award category alongside fellow trainer Willie Mullins, and jockeys Paul Townend and Darragh O'Keeffe.
Killenaule jockey Rachael Blackmore has been chosen as the Irish Racing Hero for her outstanding achievements, which included wins on the De Bromhead trained Honeysuckle, Tellmesomethinggirl and Quilixious at Cheltenham.
There are seven nominations for Horse of the Year, four from the National Hunt sphere - the unbeaten Champion hurdler Honeysuckle, Cheltenham Gold Cup winner Minella Indo, top-rated chaser Chacun Pour Soi and dual Grade 1 winner Flooring Porter; and three on the Flat - St Mark’s Basilica, the joint highest-rated horse in the world; Newmarket 2,000 Guineas and St James’s Palace Stakes winner Poetic Flare and the Epsom, Curragh and Yorkshire Oaks winner Snowfall.
The eight nominees for the National Hunt Achievement Award are: Dermot McLoughlin for his BoyleSports Irish Grand National success with the locally-bred Freewheelin Dylan; Gavin Cromwell for his Grade 1 double at the Cheltenham Festival with Flooring Porter and Vanillier; Jack Kennedy for his famous Cheltenham Gold Cup win on Minella Indo at just 21 years of age; John “Shark” Hanlon for his Fairyhouse Grade 1 victory with £600 purchase Skyace; Peter Fahey for his Cheltenham Festival and Aintree Grade 1 success with Belfast Banter; Paul Hennessy who enjoyed Dublin Racing Festival and Cheltenham Festival wins with Heaven Help Us; the Flynn Family for their success with Colreevy and perennial champion amateur Patrick Mullins who rode four Grade 1 winners and won the Guinness Galway Hurdle for the third time in four years.
There are five nominees for the Flat Award: Colin Keane, Jessica Harrington, Aidan O'Brien, Johnny Murtagh and Joseph O'Brien.
In the Flat Achievement Award category, there are seven nominees: Ado McGuinness for his Group 1 win in the Prix de l’Abbaye; Ben Coen who was just 19 years of age when partnering Sonnyboyliston to success in the Irish St Leger; Edward Lynam who won the Group 1 Flying Five Stakes with Romantic Proposal; Jim and Jackie Bolger for their Classic and Group 1 success with Poetic Flare and Mac Swiney; Noel Meade who enjoyed a first Group 1 success with Helvic Dream; Paddy Twomey who maintained a fine strike-rate throughout the year and Rory Cleary whose success on Mac Swiney in the Irish 2,000 Guineas was one of the best-received winners of the season.
The Point-to-Point category is made up of Colin Bowe, Barry O’Neill, John Nallen and Pat Doyle while the nominees for the Emerging Talent Award are all jockeys once again: conditional riders Jordan Gainford and Shane Fitzgerald and apprentices Dylan Browne McMonagle, Mikey Sheehy and Sam Ewing.