The Champion Hurdle is the feature race on the opening day of the Cheltenham Festival and it is usually one of the biggest betting races of the meeting.

The traditional roar ahead of the Supreme Novices’ Hurdle earlier in the day will no doubt be emulated ahead of Tuesday’s showpiece race.

Espoir D’Allen claimed victory in 2019 but the defending champion suffered a fatal injury after a tragic accident back in August.

Scroll down for our top Champion Hurdle trends and statistics to follow ahead of the 2020 Cheltenham Festival.

We looked at the last 20 renewals to bring the best Champion Hurdle betting trends and tips for punters. Here are some of our top trends to follow ahead of March’s meeting:

  • 20 out of 20 winners had won at least once in the 180 days prior to the Festival.
  • 20/20 had won five or more races before winning the Champion Hurdle.
  • All 20 had been paired up with winning jockey prior to Cheltenham.
  • 20/20 had between two and seven runs in the year before the Festival.
  • All 20 winners had run in a Grade 1 prior to Cheltenham.
  • 19 out of 20 winners had won at least one of their last three races.
  • 19/20 winners had raced over 16 furlongs last time out.
  • 19 out of 20 had won with Champion Hurdle jockey on board.
  • 19/20 winners competed against fewer than 10 rivals last time out.
  • 18 of the last 20 winners were 16/1 or shorter in the horse racing betting odds.

Top Trainers For The Champion Hurdle

With four wins apiece, Willie Mullins and Nicky Henderson have dominated the Champion Hurdle over the years.

Irish trainers have got the better of the British in modern times, with six of the last 10 winners coming from the other side of the Irish Sea.

Perhaps the most telling Champion Hurdle statistic of all is that Mullins and Henderson have been responsible for 18 of the 30 ‘placed’ horses over the last 10 years.

Without a doubt, these are definitely the two trainers to follow ahead of the 2020 Champion Hurdle.

Champion Hurdle Prize Money

The Champion Hurdle is one of the Cheltenham Festival’s more lucrative races, with a grand total of £450,000 on offer in 2019.

Winning connections were rewarded with £253,215 for emerging victorious last year – a lofty figure compared to the £365 for winning the race back in 1927.


*Credit for the photo in this article belongs to Alamy*

Steven is a sports and horse racing enthusiast and is a member of the Horseracing Writers and Photographers Association (HWPA) in the United Kingdom.

He is a regular visitor to Paris Longchamp for the Prix de l'Arc de Triomphe and a lifelong fan of the Aintree Grand National, a subject he writes about 52 weeks of the year. Last year he reached the impressive milestone of attending the last 30 renewals of the Grand National.