- Ex-president of Bolivia blames government as shots fired at him
- Beaten Man Utd only lacking good fortune, claims Ten Hag
- Postecoglou says Spurs out-battled in Crystal Palace loss
- EU urges Georgia vote probe as ex-president calls for mass protests
- Malinin wins Skate Canada for North American Grand Prix double
- Mpetshi Perricard powers to 'amazing' first ATP 500 title in Basel
- Bayern thump Bochum to retake top spot
- West Ham pile more pressure on Ten Hag, Palmer fires Chelsea to victory
- Balotelli set for Italy return with injury-hit strugglers Genoa
- Japan ruling coalition projected to miss majority in election
- Netanyahu declares Iran strike a success as Israel pounds Lebanon, Gaza
- Draper holds off Khachanov for first ATP 500 title in Vienna
- Left seeks to unseat conservative in Uruguay president vote
- 'Failing' Judge vows to dig Yankees out of World Series hole
- Leon Marchand savours break from post-Olympics glare
- Ex-president of Bolivia says 14 shots fired at his car
- Netanyahu hails 'precise' strike on Iran as Israel pounds Lebanon, Gaza
- Steen Olsen wins World Cup opener as Hirscher wows on comeback
- Georgia thrown into political turmoil after disputed vote
- Japan ruling party projected to miss majority in election
- Philippines death toll from Tropical Storm Trami rises to 110
- Syria Kurd force denies links to Ankara attack as Turkey strikes
- Thousands turn out for Thai royal barge pageantry
- Mbappe and Real Madrid shaken by Clasico thrashing
- An Byeong-hun triumphs after all-Korean playoff at Genesis Championship
- Real Madrid condemn racist abuse of Barca players in Clasico
- Centre-left tipped to take power as Lithuanians vote
- Israel pounds Gaza and Lebanon after Iran strikes
- Left-field thought and patio heaters: How Pakistan turned series on head
- Bagnaia wins wet Thai MotoGP to close gap on title rival Martin
- 'Olympus has fallen': India fears end of an era after New Zealand loss
- Bagnaia wins wet Thai MotoGP ahead of title rival Martin
- Olympic champion Zheng hails consistency after Pan Pacific Open win
- Red-hot Yin Ruoning secures LPGA Malaysia title with flawless 65
- Echavarria birdies final hole to win PGA Tour's Zozo Championship
- Lithuanians vote in runoff as centre-left tipped to take power
- Trump takes election pitch to storied New York arena
- James triple-double helps Lakers hold off Kings, Clippers down Nuggets
- Olympic champion Zheng wins in Tokyo for third title of year
- Death toll in Philippine storm rises to 100
- Ohtani suffers shoulder injury in Dodgers win
- Ohtani injury scare as Dodgers down Yankees to take 2-0 World Series lead
- Ohtani suffers partial shoulder dislocation in Dodgers win: team
- Rare Sahara floods bring Morocco's dried-up south back to life
- Dodgers down Yankees 4-2 to take 2-0 World Series lead
- Far right tipped to gain ground as jaded Bulgarians vote again
- Dodgers' Ohtani injured in World Series win
- China's second-generation factory owners go digital to combat challenges
- Indonesia bets on SE Asia's first battery plant to become EV hub
- Israel's Netanyahu hoping for Trump triumph
'Game on' says Mullins after National glory as he targets title
Irish trainer Willie Mullins's win in the Grand National sets him up nicely to be crowned British champion jumps trainer and emulate legendary compatriot Vincent O'Brien 70 years ago.
I Am Maximus's impressive victory on Saturday at Aintree resulted in Mullins rising to the top of the standings, over £50,000 ($62,000) ahead of Dan Skelton with three-time defending champion Paul Nicholls close behind.
The British season reaches its climax with Finals Day at Sandown on Saturday week.
Whilst Mullins views I Am Maximus as good enough to win him a third successive Cheltenham Gold Cup next year -- though his two-time champion Galopin des Champs might have other ideas -- his immediate goal is more modest fare as he seeks to tick another box in his lengthening list of achievements.
"It's game on I think, isn't it?" said a hoarse-voiced Mullins, who added he needed "some celebratory lubrication" to put it right.
"Sandown, Ayr, Perth, wherever we can see a prize -- I think we have to go for it now.
"I'm getting as much fun out of having a go at it now as anyone."
The 67-year-old is in the box seat for an 18th Irish trainers title -- he leads perennial runner-up Gordon Elliott by over 1.5 million euros ($1.6 million) -- but he said the British crown had not been a target.
However, nine winners at the Cheltenham Festival -- including the Gold Cup and Champion Hurdle -- and the National puts him on course to become only the second foreign-based trainer to land the coveted prize.
O'Brien, who was to go on to become one of the greatest trainers of all time on the flat, won back to back titles in 1953 and 1954.
Mullins also broke a career century of winners landmark at the Cheltenham Festival
"Fantastic. We never set out to have 100 winners at the festival," he said.
"No one thought it was possible. We're gobsmacked it happened.
"I would love to win the trainers' championship.
"I didn't set out at the start of the season to win the championship.
"Vincent O'Brien did it in the 50s, and it's something different to do, and I would like to win it."
- 'Would be mad' -
Mullins, who remains humble and is prone to praising his "wonderful staff for the success", said he had been encouraged by I Am Maximus's owner JP McManus to go for the title in the past three years.
However, he said ensuring he did not take the eye off the ball back in Ireland had been his priority.
"I always think, just mind how things go on at home rather than spread yourself too thin and come to England every second weekend, and maybe leaving yourself wide open to have a bad season.
"Playing away games, as I call them, takes a lot out of a horse, especially early in the season, and I don't do much travelling then, because I think you might leave bigger prizes behind.
"I'm going to have to look at some of the smaller races in Britain now as well, and that's more difficult.
"I find the English programme very hard to navigate, a lot of it is about handicaps in England and that's tough on horses."
Mullins, whose operation is very much a family affair with son Patrick his assistant, says if someone had suggested he would win the Champion Hurdle, Gold Cup and National in the same season "they would be mad."
"You might have favourites for all three of those races, but you never win all three.
"We can't believe at home, at night time, myself and Jackie (his wife) going through the horses, we're gobsmacked looking at the talent we have in the yard.
"When I was a younger, smaller trainer I would've been proud to have one of my barns. It's just extraordinary."
For the moment Mullins hopes to feel the same sensation of being on "cloud nine" for a year after Hedgehunter won in 2005.
"That's the way the Grand National makes you feel," he said.
"That you're the Grand National winning trainer.
"I hope to have the same feeling again this year."
A.Jones--AMWN