Born on the 7th August in 1961, Walter
Swinburn was a flat racing jockey of some note, as well as a
internationally renowned trainer of racehorses. Hailing from Oxford,
Swinburn became Champion Jockey in 1976 and 1977 and was the very
first to win more than 100 races in a single Irish season on the
flat.
Dubbed “Choirboy” by those who
loved the affable jockey, which was and still is a very
well populated club, Swinburn was once described as “one the
biggest talents in the Sport” by Sir Michael Stoute. He will be
most remembered for riding the ill fated Shergar to victory in the
1981 Derby.
He would win the Derby twice more in a
star studded career that saw him win countless major domestic and
international races including the Prix de l’Arc de Triomphe in
1983, the Grosser Preis von Baden in 1996, the 1981 King George VI
and Queen Elizabeth Stakes and the Ascot Gold Cup in 1991. It would
simply take too long to list all of the 66 major wins in his personal
scrapbook, suffice to say that he was a major figure in the sport for
many years.
Tragedy
Disaster struck on December 12th 2016,
when Walter Swinburn fell to his death in a freak accident at his
Central London Home. He was taken far too young at the age 55 and
there was standing room only at his funeral, with ex England Football
Captain Bryan Robson amongst those paying their respects. It is
believed that the ex jockey’s long standing battle with epilepsy
may have played its part in the accident.
It’s fair to say that Walter
“Choirboy” Swinburn will be missed. In his prime he was coolness
personified and was perhaps the best ‘big race’ rider of his
generation.
He was survived by his wife and two
daughters.
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