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Mont Tremblant (horse)

Mont Tremblant
Sire Gris Perle
Grandsire Brabant
Dam Paltoquette
Damsire Tom Pinch
Sex Gelding
Foaled 1946
Country France
Colour Chestnut
Breeder Francois Dupre
Owner Francois Dupre
Dorothy Paget
Trainer Fulke Walwyn
Major wins
Cheltenham Gold Cup (1952)
Stanley Chase (1952)

Mont Tremblant (foaled 1946) was a French-bred, British-trained Thoroughbred racehorse who won the 1952 Cheltenham Gold Cup. Originally trained in France, he was switched to a British stable and made an immediate impact, defeating a strong field to win the Gold Cup as a six-year-old. In the following season he finished third in the King George VI Chase and fourth in the Gold Cup before producing arguably his best performance by running second under top weight in the Grand National. His later career was repeatedly interrupted by injury.

Mont Tremblant was a chestnut gelding with a white blaze and three white socks bred in France by Francois Dupre. He was sired by the Prix du Cadran winner Gris Perle, a representative of the Byerley Turk sire-line. Mont Tremblant's dam Paltoquette was a great granddaughter of Lady Cynosure (a full-sister to Polymelus) whose other descendants have included Provoke and Right Royal. The horse was named by Dupre after a mountain in Quebec.

Mont Tremblant began his racing career in France where he won on the flat and over hurdles before being bought by Dorothy Paget and imported to England. The gelding was sent into training with Fulke Walwyn at his Saxon House stable in Lambourn, Berkshire.

In the 1951/52 National Hunt season Mont Tremblant was matched against more experienced competition. Walwyn had problems getting the horse to peak fitness as the gallops at Lambourn were frozen, and was greatly aided when his rival trainer Bill Wightman allowed him to use his training facilities at Upham, Hampshire. In February he won a valuable handicap chase at Kempton Park Racecourse, conceding weight to his rivals. On 6 March, the six-year-old, ridden by David Dick, contested the 25th running of the Cheltenham Gold Cup on 6 March and started at odds of 8/1 in a thirteen-runner field. Silver Fame and Greenogue returned after fighting out the finish in 1951 but the 7/2 favourite was Freebooter the winner of the 1950 Grand National. The other runners included the improving six-year-old E.S.B. and the Vincent O'Brien-trained Knock Hard. Greenogue went to the front and maintained his advantage until the final turn by which point Knock Hard, Mont Tremblant, E.S.B. and Shaef were his closest pursuers. Freebooter had already fallen, whilst Fred Winter on Shaef was holding on to his horse's head after his bridle became dislodged on the first circuit. Knock Hard fell at the penultimate fence when looking the likely winner and E.S.B was still going well when falling at the last. Mont Tremblant was left with a clear advantage and drew away up the run-in to win by ten lengths from Shaef, with the 66/1 outsider Galloway Braes four lengths back in third.


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