logo
Malachy Clerkin: In Rachael Blackmore, horse racing had maybe its greatest ever asset

Malachy Clerkin: In Rachael Blackmore, horse racing had maybe its greatest ever asset

Irish Times17-05-2025

The hardest thing about writing about horse racing is writing about horse racing. To most people, one horse is no different to the next. They run in circles around big open fields, sometimes jumping over things and sometimes not, with little lads on their backs waving sticks. The commentator's voice rises through the race, and when it's over, there's a brief pause to talk about how rich the bookmakers got.
Some of us love it. We're suckers for the thrill of a close one, for the mental calculations everyone's making as they jump the last, for the bottomless courage of the jockeys. Sometimes there's money down, sometimes there isn't. The race is run, the result is called, and a few minutes later, another one goes off somewhere else.
Out in the world, though, horse racing leaves virtually no footprint. It is an incorrigibly niche sport, a small slice of a small slice of life. Stop 100 people in the street and ask them to tell you the difference between a hurdle and a fence. Between Leopardstown and Punchestown. Between Paul Townend and Jack Kennedy. Whatever number you think will give you three correct answers, you can probably halve it.
So that's the battle. Here's this great sport, full of nuance and intrigue and derring-do and it's completely lost on vast swathes of the sporting public. If they think about it at all, they think in terms of gambling and, let's be honest, who wants to write about that world any more than they have to? Finding a way to make horse racing accessible and interesting to a broad audience is just a tough sell.
READ MORE
Rachael Blackmore was the first professional female jumps rider in Ireland for almost 30 years. Photograph:Into that world walked
Rachael Blackmore
a decade ago. A godsend. A jockey who didn't look like the rest of them. Who didn't sound like the rest of them. Who didn't have a famous family name. The first professional female jumps rider in Ireland for almost 30 years. She was a once-in-a-generation story, whether she liked it or not.
Famously, she did not. Very much did not, in fact. The first time I interviewed her, we met at Griffith College – she was coming up to Dublin one night a week to do a business degree. This was November 2015, a couple of months after she had ridden her first winner as a pro. She was polite and careful and wary and, despite all her efforts to the contrary, completely fascinating.
'It won't be that big, will it?' she asked a few minutes into the chat. 'Just a small little thing? I don't want it too big. It's not that big a story. Just leave it as a little column at the side. Neat and tidy.'
Rachael Blackmore's office was the weigh room and her co-workers were a rolling cast of a few dozen young men chasing the same dream. Photograph:Even then, you got the overwhelming sense of her discomfort in the spotlight. She was borderline aggressive in her modesty. She was no fool and she understood why you were interested. But when it came right down to it, she had four winners in a professional career that was eight months old at that point. No other jockey in the weigh room with those sort of numbers had the outside world asking after them.
That was always part of her leeriness with the press. Her office was the weigh room and her co-workers were a rolling cast of a few dozen young men chasing the same dream. She had to face them every day in the hothouse of cut-throat sport. The only way she could feel comfortable was to rise through the ranks without getting special treatment from anyone. From the media most of all.
My father-in-law was an avid racing man. He died in early 2019, at the ripe old age of 85. Right up to the end, he would happily pass most afternoons with his paper open at the racing page and a 10-cent yankee scribbled on a betting slip beside it, just for the interest. He had seen everyone come and go in the game for decades.
Despite Rachael Blackmore's misgivings and protestations, she was something special. Photograph:It might have been 2017 or thereabouts when we were watching the racing one afternoon and a Blackmore horse beat one of his selections to the line. 'A good jock,' he said in defeat, which was always his seal of approval. If you got a 'good jock' out of Pat Doyle, then a good jock you were.
A few years later, on the morning of the 2021 Grand National, my then six-year-old daughter was handed the newspaper and asked did she wanted to pick a horse for the big race later that day. 'Is Rachael Blackmore in this?' she asked. When told that she was, she looked through the card and found her name and we put €1 each way on Minella Times.
Somewhere in there is the story of one of the greatest assets horse racing will ever have. Someone who, despite her misgivings and protestations, was actually special. Who offered a way into the sport that was common to everyone from primary school kids to pensioners. And who did it all in her own careful, self-contained way in civilian life before unleashing a ferocious competitor when the tapes went up.
Rachael Blackmore on Allaho comes home to win the Ryanair Chase at Cheltenham. Photograph: Francesca Altoft/Inpho
My favourite Blackmore ride wasn't the
Grand National
or the Gold Cup or all those gorgeous days on Honeysuckle. It was on Allaho in the 2021 Ryanair Chase, where she bucked out and made all the running from the front. She set such a relentless gallop that six horses in behind her had to be pulled up. That was one more than the previous four Ryanairs combined.
The glorious swagger of that ride, the sheer unapologetic confidence Blackmore showed in dominating the race, was such a contrast to the person she presents to the world. To watch her express that side of her on the biggest stage and leave everyone in her dust was something genuinely moving to behold.
Her retirement this week is a happy story, sad as the sport is to see her go. She got to call her own way out, unscathed and unbowed, in her own time and on her own terms.
Nobody deserves it more.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Cork make two changes as Cahalane and Healy come into the starting side
Cork make two changes as Cahalane and Healy come into the starting side

Irish Examiner

time32 minutes ago

  • Irish Examiner

Cork make two changes as Cahalane and Healy come into the starting side

Damien Cahalane and Diarmuid Healy are the two changes in the announced Cork team to face Limerick in Saturday's Munster SHC final in TUS Gaelic Grounds. St Finbarrs man Cahalane comes in for injured Ger Millerick (hand) and Lisgoold's Healy replaces Brian Roche having both come on for them in last Sunday week's final round win over Waterford. Captain Robert Downey and fellow defender Niall O'Leary, who missed that game in SuperValu Páirc Uí Chaoimh with knee and groin injuries respectively, are named on the bench. However, Declan Dalton (hamstring) is not included in the match-day 26. Going out of the squad along with Millerick is Eoin Roche. Fifteen years from his first Munster SHC final, Patrick Horgan is set to feature in his sixth final. For all but him and Seamus Harnedy, it will be a first provincial decider for the Cork attack. From the team that began the 16-point defeat to Limerick last month, there are four named changes, three of them that are injury-related. Twelve of the 15 started last year's All-Ireland semi-final win over Limerick. Like Limerick, Cork have four stand-by players to choose from should they wish to make any 11th hour changes. CORK (SHC v Limerick): P. Collins (Ballinhassig); D. Cahalane (St Finbarrs), E. Downey (Glen Rovers), S. O'Donoghue (Inniscarra); C. O'Brien (Newtownshandrum) C. Joyce (Castlemartyr) M. Coleman (Blarney); T. O'Mahony (Newtownshandrum) D. Fitzgibbon (Charleville); D. Healy (Lisgood), S. Barrett (c, Blarney), S. Harnedy (St Ita's); P. Horgan (Glen Rovers), A. Connolly (Blackrock), B. Hayes (St Finbarrs). Subs: B. Saunderson (Midleton), N. O'Leary (Castlelyons), R. Downey (Glen Rovers), T. O'Connell (Midleton) E. Twomey (St Finbarrs), L. Meade (Newcestown) C. Lehane (Midleton) S. Kingston (Douglas), J. O'Connor (Sarsfields), R. O'Flynn (Erin's Own), B. Roche (Bride Rovers).

Galway consider appeal for Fahy after GAA's hearings body uphold Leinster final ban
Galway consider appeal for Fahy after GAA's hearings body uphold Leinster final ban

Irish Examiner

time2 hours ago

  • Irish Examiner

Galway consider appeal for Fahy after GAA's hearings body uphold Leinster final ban

Galway are weighing up the possibility of appealing Darach Fahy's retrospective one-match ban after a hearing found in favour of the recommendation of a penalty. It is understood the county are awaiting a written decision on the case put in front of Tuesday's Central Hearings Committee (CHC) meeting. However, Fahy is to be suspended for Sunday's Leinster SHC final against Kilkenny for making contact with Dublin's Andrew Jamieson-Murphy in last Sunday week's provincial final round win in Parnell Park. Galway have the option of making an application to the GAA's Central Appeals Committee and the Disputes Resolution Authority. However, time is of the essence ahead of the provincial decider in Croke Park and while they feel they have a case they are keen for it not to become a distraction ahead of the game. In what was believed to be an extremely technical hearing, the CHC have had to meet again since on the matter before making a judgement backing the decision of the Central Competitions Control Committee. Arising from the same game in Donnycarney, Conor Donohoe also received a retrospective one-game suspension and is set to miss the county's All-Ireland preliminary quarter-final against Kildare or Laois on Saturday or Sunday week.

Athlete who died shortly after finishing Cork marathon ‘led with open arms', says father
Athlete who died shortly after finishing Cork marathon ‘led with open arms', says father

Irish Times

time3 hours ago

  • Irish Times

Athlete who died shortly after finishing Cork marathon ‘led with open arms', says father

A woman who died not long after reaching the finish line at the Cork City Marathon was generous with her 'attention, energy, love and affection', her requiem Mass has heard. Ellen Cassidy (24), of Carhoo, Old Mallow Road, Co Cork, became ill just after completing the race last Sunday. She died shortly afterwards in Cork University Hospital. Ms Cassidy's father, Tom Cassidy, told mourners at the Church of the Annunciation in Blackpool that his daughter acquired pockets of friends wherever she went. He said Ellen's wake in the family home lasted for nine hours, with friends arriving in large numbers to share their memories. READ MORE Ellen 'didn't lead with elbows, she led with open arms', he said. 'That made her stand out. That made her special. That made everyone that came in contact with her feel special.' Mr Cassidy said that he and his wife Vi, had found their daughter's diary in the days after her death. He said an entry on her 20th birthday summed up her approach to life. 'The entry for March 11th, 2021, her 20th birthday, reads: 'I am not a child anymore ... step out of your comfort zone. Don't follow the crowd. You never know the person you could be if you don't step up. You will never know what life will throw at you, but you must embrace it. Make choices and decisions – but don't look back. Follow your gut. Small things make a huge difference'.' Mr Cassidy said his daughter achieved so much in the fields of music, sport, academia and in her personal life. He asked that her friends continue to call to the family home as they embark on the long and painful road to 'some sort of normality'. Canon John O'Donovan noted that Ms Cassidy had written in her diary that she wanted her family to be happy. She had achieved a lot in her life, but her greatest legacy was the love she had for her family and friends, he added. Offertory gifts included a medal Ellen received when she completed the Milan marathon, swimming hats, sheet music and her music book, a seashell representing her favourite place (Alvor in Portugal) and a heart symbolising friendship. Ms Cassidy is survived by her parents, her siblings Mary and Charlie, her boyfriend Rob, her grandparents Joan, Billy and Tom, her extended family and her many friends.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store