Irish jockey Queally says he was abused by De Boinville before Cheltenham race start
Irish jockey Declan Queally said he was abused by Nico de Boinville before the start of the Turner's Novices Hurdle on Day 2 at Cheltenham. Pics: ITV
Irish amateur jockey Declan Queally claimed he was abused by fellow rider Nico de Boinville before the start of the Turner's Novices' Hurdle, the opening race on Day 2 of the Cheltenham Festival.
Queally, who operates a small yard in Waterford with his father Declan Queally Snr, finished fifth on I'll Sort That while De Boinville came home second on Nicky Henderson's Act Of Innocence.
The start of the race, which featured a busy 21 runners, was delayed by a false start.Ā
"The start was a bit of a mess," Queally told ITV during their post-mortems with the losing jockeys. "Got tracked back further than I wanted to, but it's all right."
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Asked by Matt Chapman how frustrating those false starts can be for riders, Queally revealed more than expected: "Being abused by an English rider, Nico de Boinville, not very nice. I'm an amateur coming over here, riding in front of my kids - horrific."
"Being abused by an English rider, Nico de Boinville is not very nice" š
— ITV Racing (@itvracing) March 11, 2026
"I'm an amateur, I'm coming over riding in front of my kids. HORRIFIC" šÆ
Declan Queally is NOT HAPPY with Nico de Boinville š£ļø pic.twitter.com/ZooWaL1PDI
De Boinville followed shortly towards the weighing room door.Ā
"A bit frustrated. A few things went against us, but I'm happy in the main," he said.
Chapman informed De Boinville that Queally thought the start had been a bit "iffy".
"Maybe he should look in the mirror," said De Boinville.
In footage shown after the race, De Boinville appeared to take issue with Queally taking up a position near the rail at the start.Ā
"One person has as much right to be there as someone else," said AP McCoy. "Just because whoever you are doesnāt mean to say you should be in there. I donāt think Declanās done much wrong. I donāt think one person is any more entitled to be there than another.ā
Asked about the situation, Ruby Walsh said: "Thatās the same Nico de Boinville who rode Jonbon last year and put his head on the tape. Maybe he needs to look in the mirror, too. You need a rolling start.
āIāve said it for a long time. If they walk in front of a tape and then it moves in front of the horses, youād have none of this drama.ā
The race was won by the Paul Townend-ridden and Willie Mullins-trained King Rasko Grey.






