Those two seasons were all about Mullins v Elliott. This season has been about Willie Mullins. He enters the final festival with more than a million euro to spare over his rival after a season which may be the apogee of a magnificent career. It’s not just that Mullins looks set to break the prize money record he set last season, the €1.016m he needs to do so is eminently achievable for a trainer who won €492,875 on the Wednesday of last year’s Punchestown alone. It’s also that he’s broken new ground this year. The Cheltenham Gold Cup which had always eluded him arrived courtesy of Al Boum Photo and the other gap on his CV, the Irish Grand National, was filled on Easter Monday when Burrows Saint triumphed with two other Mullins horses behind him. Willie Mullins probably hasn’t been given enough credit for his achievements over the past couple of years. A lot of the coverage of the race for the trainers’ title focused on Elliott’s achievement in putting it up to the man who’d ruled supreme since wresting the crown from Noel Meade in 2008. That’s understandable. ‘Young revolutionary seeks to overthrow the ancien regime’ is one…