One of the leading lights in the latter
part of the 20th century Pat Eddery was a flat racing jockey who
still holds the joint most champion titles, three years after his sad
death. With a magnificent total of 4,632 wins on the flat, Eddery had
racing in his blood from an early age.
He began as an apprentice in Ireland under the guidance of Seamus McGrath and would move to England in 1967, switching to Frenchie Nicholson’s stable. His first victory in England was at Epsom Downs on Alvaro in the Spring of 1969, which was a welcome experience for the jockey, as it came after an entire season without a win.
Alvaro was something of a talisman for Pat Eddery, as 1969 saw him win 5 more races in a row on the horse and whilst still operating as an apprentice, he claimed the Wokingham Handicap, the Northumberland Plate and the Goodwood Stakes in 1971. All this happened in the year the jockey won the Apprentice Champion title.
He began as an apprentice in Ireland under the guidance of Seamus McGrath and would move to England in 1967, switching to Frenchie Nicholson’s stable. His first victory in England was at Epsom Downs on Alvaro in the Spring of 1969, which was a welcome experience for the jockey, as it came after an entire season without a win.
Alvaro was something of a talisman for Pat Eddery, as 1969 saw him win 5 more races in a row on the horse and whilst still operating as an apprentice, he claimed the Wokingham Handicap, the Northumberland Plate and the Goodwood Stakes in 1971. All this happened in the year the jockey won the Apprentice Champion title.
Impressive
Eddery won the senior Champion Jockey
title an impressive 11 times during a long and distinguished career,
claiming his last in 1996. Over his 36 years in the saddle, Pat won
countless major races that included the 1,000 Guineas, the 2,000
Guineas and the Ascot Gold Cup. There wasn’t much in the flat
racing world that he didn’t win in his time.
English flat racing’s switch to multi
purpose tracks at the beginning of the 1990s hit Eddery hard and he
found the new tracks tough to navigate. His ‘96 championship win
was something of an achievement in itself, proving to the man himself
that he could still do the business on the new surface.
Later in life, Pat Eddery was to
struggle with alcoholism and it would eventually cost him his life at
the age of just 63 from an associated heart problem. It was a sad day
for racing when the South Dubliner passed and the contribution to
horse racing made by this giant of the sport, will never be
forgotten.
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