Sir Gordon Richards (5 May
1904 – 10 November 1986) was an English
jockey, and is often considered the world's greatest
ever jockey. He remains the only jockey to have been
knighted.
Gordon
Richards was raised in the Shropshire
village of Donnington
Wood (now part of Telford
). His
father reared several pit ponies at their home, and it was in this
environment that Sir Gordon fostered his love of the equestrian.
He rode
the ponies bareback from an early age, then from the age of seven,
drove the pony and trap passenger service his family ran between
Wrockwardine
Wood
and Oakengates station
. It was at that age no doubt that he
developed his unique riding style, using a long rein and an upright
stance.
After
leaving school he took the first step towards becoming a jockey,
becoming a stable boy aged 15 at Fox Hollies Stable in Wiltshire
, owned by Jimmy White.
It wasn't long before his riding skills were noticed by his new
employer, who gave him his first ride in a race at Lincoln. Not
long after his debut he won his first race at Leicester in March
1921. With the determination and single-mindedness that was his
trademark, he achieved his dream of becoming a fully-fledged jockey
in 1925, and went on to become
Champion Jockey in his
first year, notching up 118 wins.
Early in 1926, five years after Richards' racing debut, disaster
struck the Shropshire jockey. He contracted
tuberculosis and had to take time out from
racing. But it was while he recuperated from the debilitating
disease in a
Norfolk sanatorium he met Bill
Rowell, a fellow patient who was to have a major influence on his
life. Rowell proved to be something of a mentor, teaching the young
jockey how to cope with the riches that would come his way, as well
as his popularity with high society in the class-ridden system that
prevailed in Britain between the wars. The two became firm
friends.
By December 1926, Richards was back in the saddle, and returned to
winning ways in the 1927 racing season. In 1932 he became stable
jockey to
Fred Darling, and that
season, with 259 victories under his belt, he broke the record for
the greatest number of wins in a year, a record which had stood for
nearly 50 years. The following year he set a world record winning
twelve consecutive races including riding all six winners at
Chepstow on 4 October.
Achievement followed achievement, with
Richards winning the 1947 2,000
Guineas at Newmarket Racecourse
aboard Tudor Minstrel
by 8 lengths, the largest winning margin in the race since
1900.
Despite these huge successes, there was still one race where a win
had always eluded him: The
Epsom Derby.
In 1942 he won 4 of the 5 '
Classics' on horses, but still the big
Derby win he craved remained out of his grasp. The 1953 Derby
occurred on a week of great national, and personal celebration for
Richards himself, as he became the first, and so far only, jockey
to receive a knighthood.
This time Sir Gordon rode
Pinza, a huge horse
for a flat-thoroughbread at 16 hands high, and he rode a terrific
race. Pinza was in second position through much of the one and half
mile (2414 m) course, competing against the Queen's own horse
Aureole, and sweeping past the
Aga Khan
III's horse, Shikampur, into first place with just two furlongs
(402 m) remaining. The long-awaited win was accompanied by
thunderous cheers from the frenzied crowd. Winning The Derby was
undoubtedly Sir Gordon's crowning victory, and he was promptly
summoned from the winners' enclosure to be congratulated by the
Queen.
Sir Gordon's riding career ended in 1954 following a pelvis injury,
but he continued to indulge his passion for racing, by becoming a
horse trainer and advisor.
His legacy
lives on in Shropshire today, with the Champion Jockey pub (currently closed) in Donnington named in
his honour, and the 'Pinza Suite' in Oakengates
Theatre, named after his winning
horse.
Not until 2002 was his record number of victories in a season
exceeded, by jump jockey
Tony McCoy.
However, McCoy was able to utilise modern technology by flying
between tracks and therefore compete in more races than Sir Gordon
was able to.
Richards' total of 4,870 winners is still a British Record. He also
holds the record for the most consecutive winners ridden; 12 (half
at a night meeting). He was
British flat racing Champion
Jockey a record 26 times.
See also
References