#UK RACING: Horse with odds of 300-1 makes history with win in Ireland

2013 Leopardstown Christmas Festival Day 1, Leopardstown, Dublin 26/12/2013
The Racing Post Novice Steeplechase
Mark Walsh onboard Defy Logic comes home to win the sixth race of the day
Mandatory Credit ©INPHO/James Crombie
2013 Leopardstown Christmas Festival Day 1, Leopardstown, Dublin 26/12/2013 The Racing Post Novice Steeplechase Mark Walsh onboard Defy Logic comes home to win the sixth race of the day Mandatory Credit ©INPHO/James Crombie

DUBLIN (AP) — A horse running at odds of 300-1 became the longest-priced winner in the history of racing in Britain and Ireland on Thursday.

He Knows No Fear won the Irish Stallion Farms EBF Maiden at Leopardstown, prompting bookmakers to express their astonishment that many people tipped the three-year-old horse for victory.

The longest-priced winner in Britain had previously been Equinoctial, a 250-1 shot, at Kelso in November 1990. In Ireland, the biggest outsider to win a race was Killahara Castle at 200-1 in December 2017.

Trained by Luke Comer, He Knows No Fear was 12th of 14 on his debut at Limerick last month -- at odds of 250-1.

Despite his huge odds at Leopardstown, British bookmaker William Hill took 86 bets on He Knows No Fear while another bookmaker, Paddy Power, said "almost 100 plucky punters lived up to their horse's name and somehow managed to pinpoint the winner," said.

"These punting heroes," Paddy Power spokesman Paul Binfield said, "have either been struck by divine inspiration or are extremely shrewd form judges who managed to see the positives from the winner's debut at Limerick — where he was slowly away and made no impression from two furlongs out before trailing home a distant 18 lengths behind Comfort Line."

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