The BoyleSports Irish Grand National is one of the great staying handicaps of the jumps season and the race that brings the Easter Festival at Fairyhouse to a thrilling conclusion. It has all the ingredients punters love in a major spring handicap: a big field, a proper stamina test, unexposed chasers and a profile that often rewards careful trends work.
Fairyhouse itself is one of Ireland’s most important National Hunt tracks and has long been associated with major festivals, top-class novice races and deep, competitive handicaps. The course is right-handed and galloping, and the Irish National asks just as many questions about stamina, rhythm and jumping as it does about class.
First run in 1870, the Irish Grand National has built a rich history of its own and has regularly produced horses capable of going on to bigger staying prizes. It is a race where future stars can emerge, but it also remains one of the best puzzles of the year for punters who like to dig deeper than the obvious market leaders.
For Turf Talk followers, it is exactly the type of contest where profiling, ratings and recent form can come together to produce a very strong shortlist.





