Silvestre De Sousa

 

Silvestre De Sousa was born on 31st December 1980, within São Francisco do Maranhão in Brazil. He’s a widely feted Brazilian jockey who lives in the United Kingdom. Silvestre De Sousa has had much success in racing despite it being a belated career choice. The influential jockey didn’t sit on a horse until the age of 17. Although he joined the racing world as a young adult, he surpassed the achievements of many long-trained contemporaries.

As a young rider, the trailblazer spent a perid of time as an apprentice at Cidade Jardim horse training sporting facility. It is here that Fausto Dursohelped De Sousa to his present racing glory. Initially, it only took Durso’s casual remark that the would-be protege had an excellent build for a jockey, to spur him on.

According to details from his tutelage days, De Sousa has been quoted as saying that his initial training as a jockey was riddled with numerous and significant challenges. For example, it took the champion about six months to achieve the milestone of a successful maiden ride. Nonetheless, all this admirable determination would soon pay off a little over a year later.

Ever since that breakthrough, De Sousa has gone frrom strength to strength, and is talked of in many quarters as among the century’s most exemplary horse handlers and jockeys. The South American racetrack luminary has ridden well over 160 winners so far. While not as award-decorated as some other established predecessors and contemporaries, De Sousa has cemented a lasting imprint in the annals of racing history as one of the seasoned riders the world has ever seen.

Kieren Fallon

Virtually any keen racing enthusiast will know of Kieren Francis Fallon and his auspicious achievements in the horse racing world. Born on 22nd February 1965 in Crusheen – Ireland, the retired flat racing supremo is an unmistakable memory etched in the annals of horse racing history. A British Champion Jockey on six occasions, very few names in the racing world can outstrip that of Kieren Fallon.

Kieren Fallon apprenticed himself to a renowned stable jockey called Henry Cecil – one of the foremost British trainers at the time. Riding his trainer’s horse Sleepytime, Fallon attained a classic victory taking the 1000 Guineas in 1997, thus launching a triumphant foray into the highly competitive racing arena.

After the spectacular 1997 classic triumph, Kieren Fallon retained the Jockey’s Championship for two consecutive years. In each of these prosperous years, he rode well over hundred times. Indeed, and as Henry Cecil had previously said of him, Fallon was a winner at heart before he even set foot on the race course.

Steadily building success upon success, Kieren Fallon won his first Derby title riding the Cecil trained Oath, before later clinching going for a repeat at the Oaks on Ramruma – also belong to the apparently fortunate Henry Cecil stable. Eventually Fallon left Cecil parted ways, with rumours of a fallout, that sports publications failed to ever get to the bottom of.

Walter Swinburn

Introduction

If ever a person was made to be a well known /  famous jockey, it was Oxford-born Walter Swinburn. Although sadly no longer with us, Swinburn was a jockey of some style and incredible performance. With major racing wins that many riders could only have dreamed of, the irrepressible Oxfordshire resident was one of the most impressive riders of the 70s and the 80s. with major wins starting at the Epsom Derby in 1981, he kept winning trophies right up to the end of the 1990s, with wins at the Piddle Park Stakes and the Phoenix Stakes being some of his last.

 

Career Summary

 

With so many victories that it’s hard to pick a major highlight, his rise to fame was made possible by riding the famous Shergar to success at the 1981 Epsom Derby. From there, he went on to become a trophy machine, winning numerous trophies right up his final return, the Phoenix Stakes in 1998.

 

Sadly, Walter died after falling out of a window in his bathroom. His surprise and accidental death was mourned by the racing community, aware they had lost one of the most impressive riders of a golden era for racing.

 

Achievements & Highlights

 

Major Wins – Epsom Derby (1981, 1986, 1995), July Cup (1981, 1986, 1987), King George VI and Queen Elizabeth Stakes (1981), Irish Derby (1983, 1986), Prix de l’Arc de Triomphe (1983), Queen Elizabeth II Stakes (1985, 1989), Coronation Stakes (1986, 1987, 1992, 1998), Dewhurst Stakes (1986), International Stakes (1986, 1993, 1994, 1995), Sussex Stakes (1986, 1989), Epsom Oaks (1987), Irish Oaks (1987, 1988), Nassau Stakes (1987), Phoenix Stakes (1988, 1998), 2,000 Guineas (1988), 1,000 Guineas (1989, 1992, 1993), St. James’s Palace Stakes (1989), Lockinge Stakes (1990, 1995), Nassau Stakes (1990, 1994), Ascot Gold Cup (1991), Cheveley Park Stakes (1991, 1992), Coronation Cup (1992), Irish 1,000 Guineas (1992), Champion Stakes (1993), Eclipse Stakes (1994, 1995), Middle Park Stakes (1995)

 

Associations – Shergar.

 

Ruby Walsh

Rupert Walsh was born on 14th May 1979 in County Kildare – Ireland. Walsh is the second child of Ted Walsh, another legendary Irish jockey. Like several of his contemporaries,Walsh was primarily inspired by his father’s interest in horses.

As a result of his father’s excellent performance in competitive races, Ruby Walsh showed encouraging talent from a very tender age. As a notable example of his early involvement in horse racing, the determined youth attained two distinct amateur wins in 1997/97 and 1997/8. After these significant breakthroughs which came as the jockey marked his 18th birthday, Walsh immediately joined professional riding – emboldened and with a renewed sense of optimism off the back of these early wins.

At the age of 20, Ruby Walsh won a maiden victory in the Grand National in 2000, marking the beginning of an unforgettable racing career. He achieved the remarkable feat riding Papillon, a horse coincidentally trained by his own father and owned by a certain Mrs. J Maxwell Moran. On top of that, both son and father triumphed in the Irish Grand National with Commanche Court that same year.

After the revered Tony McCoy took a permanent break from competitive racing in 2015, Ruby became the only active rider to have clinched all four Nationals. This has led to the longstanding winner becoming a popular and respected professional rider in Ireland and across the world.

Ruby Walsh enjoys a colorful career record featuring 2000 winners – 52 of them at the Cheltenham Festival. His favorites horses include Alexander Banquet (1998), Kauto Star (2007), Azertyuiop (2004) and Master Minded (2009).