logo
Rachael Blackmore retires as a boundary pusher and racing great but it could have been so different if not for one phone call, writes DOMINIC KING

Rachael Blackmore retires as a boundary pusher and racing great but it could have been so different if not for one phone call, writes DOMINIC KING

Daily Mail​12-05-2025

Through it all, she never forgot the phone call. Rachael Blackmore never revealed who was on the other end of the line but their response, at a time of great need, was career defining.
There will be much time to discuss the days when she took the history books and cleared the pages to write her own chapters but, as this glorious journey ends, it is crucial to go back to the start and appreciate how the doors threatened to slide.
'When you start out, you try to make yourself known and get yourself seen,' she told Mail Sport December 2023. 'You want people to give you rides but there are always challenges. I remember ringing up a trainer — I won't say who it was — when I was an amateur.
'I was a 7lb claimer, looking to ride in a fillies' bumper; the weights were quite light. I just decided this day to chance it, to see if they needed someone. I got through. 'Hi, it's Rachael Blackmore here. Are you fixed up for the bumper on Sunday?'
'They said: 'Oh, hi Rachael, how are you? Who do you have again?'' They thought I was an agent. So I said: 'No, no. It's just me. I'm just trying to get a ride.' But they said: 'No, it's all ok. We're fixed up.' They were the knocks. I'd just put the phone down and know I'd have to start again.'
Thank heavens she did. Athletes make it when they are simply known by their first name and, though she may blush, 'Rachael' made it. Life, she realised, changed when she drove through her home village of Killenaule, Count Tipperary in April 2021 and saw giant posters of herself on walls but she made it change.
From that first winner in Thurles — Stowaway Pearl for Shark Hanlon — back in February 2011, Blackmore wouldn't let anyone tell her it couldn't be done and she went on a journey that took her from obscurity to wonderland, the zenith arriving in spring four years ago.
Cast your mind back to think how miserable that period was, as the pandemic raged. Through it all, racing kept going and nobody went better than Blackmore, who pushed boundaries and invited little girls to think anything was possible.
From Cheltenham in March, where six winners enabled her to become the first female to be crowned the Festival's leading rider, on she went to Liverpool and steered Minella Times to victory in the Randox Grand National. It was, in its own way, a tragedy nobody was there to cheer her home.
Instead, that success — the kind which puts racing on the front pages and leads TV news bulletins — was memorable to those on course for how her screams echoed off those cavernous empty stands, the realisation that something truly staggering was happening.
'God bless her, Rachael is wonderful,' JP McManus, the owner of Minella Times, told this correspondent a year later, when the pair returned to Aintree for their title defence and that is precisely what everyone who went to see her ride felt.
When crowds were allowed back through the gates, courses found that attendances were increasing, significantly so, if Blackmore had rides booked; bookmakers would always be wary of her mounts in big races as she had 'The Frankie Factor', the popularity to lead a horse's price to collapse.
Her weighing room colleagues had realised they had to have their wits about them if she went off in front — Blackmore had a beautiful way of playing rope-a-dope, stringing a field along then kicking away — but she could ride any type of race, the kind of jockey who retained everyone's confidence.
'Her first winner for us was Poker Party at Naas in January 2019,' said Brian Acheson, whose horses run under the banner of Robcour. 'She has been a constant with the team, right until the end. She has given our family so many highs, such as guiding Bob Olinger to win four times at Cheltenham.
'Rachael, as a jockey and a person, will always be remembered as one of a kind. Stylish and graceful yet determined and tenacious. She has been consistently one of the top talents in National Hunt racing in Ireland and Britain over the last five years and will be missed by us all.'
There is no question, for the sport in general, that losing Blackmore from the track is a blow. She was an ambassador in a helmet and a pair of breeches, someone who would never say 'no' if there was an engagement to visit a hospital or see schoolchildren before a major festival.
She loves engaging with the next generation and was once left speechless when fan mail addressed to 'Rachael Blackmore, Ireland' arrived at her home, the consequence of a youngster with dreams having seen her conquer Aintree.
This, arguably, is her greatest legacy. Winning 18 races at The Festival, striking up an alliance with the wonder mare Honeysuckle, lifting the Gold Cup on A Plus Tard in 2022 — it was all huge but that remarkable day at Aintree carried so much more.
Blackmore sent out the message to everyone young and old, as she bounded clear on Minella Times, that magic can happen if you are prepared to never give up. The easy thing to do would have been to pursue a career in equine science, which she has a degree in, but nothing good comes easy.
Instead, she took the blows and the rejections put her head down and formed an alliance with Henry de Bromhead that, in her words, 'changed her life' — how appropriate that her 574th and final success should be for him on Ma Belle Etoille at Cork last Saturday.
With good reason, she wanted to end her career on her terms and who could blame her, particularly after suffering a significant neck injury in a fall at Downpatrick last September, and now she has gone from the track. Just like that phone call, we won't forget her.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Mimi Webb announces October gig in Dublin's 3Olympia
Mimi Webb announces October gig in Dublin's 3Olympia

BreakingNews.ie

time30 minutes ago

  • BreakingNews.ie

Mimi Webb announces October gig in Dublin's 3Olympia

Mimi Webb has announced an October gig in Dublin's 3Olympia Theatre with tickets going on sale next Friday. After recently announcing her second album, Confessions, Mimi Webb has announced a headline UK and European tour this autumn. Advertisement Tickets will go on sale starting at €39.90 on Friday, June 20th at 9am from Written and produced between Los Angeles and London, Confessions represents a bold leap forward: a fearless, raw, and honest exploration of heartbreak, empowerment, and self-discovery. The record looks to provide the signature up-tempo pop anthems fans know and love. 'I dug deep and figured out what I want to say not just as an artist, but as a person,' Mimi Webb said. Advertisement 'I decided to be brutally honest. It's easy to be like, 'Everything is wonderful'—even when there's so much happening behind the curtain. I wanted to open up and scream, 'This is who I am!" Her new single 'Love Language', which she shared the Bradley&Pablo directed video for earlier this week, follows her acclaimed single 'Mind Reader' with chart-topping Grammy award-winning label mate Meghan Trainor. Mimi Webb has sold out headline gigs on multiple continents. She also supported Jonas Brothers, Tate McRae, and Benson Boone on tour. She has appeared at US festivals such as Lollapalooza, Governors Ball, ACL, and Outside Lands in addition to UK and European festivals a la Reading, Leeds, Isle of Wight, Electric Picnic, Mad Cool, and more.

Back-to-back matches to be introduced in revamped Women's Six Nations
Back-to-back matches to be introduced in revamped Women's Six Nations

STV News

time43 minutes ago

  • STV News

Back-to-back matches to be introduced in revamped Women's Six Nations

A revamped Guinness Women's Six Nations will feature back-to-back matches on a single day in each round during the 2026 tournament. The 'Super Saturday' style format has been introduced to 'deliver the best possible fan experience' and 'optimise the audience of fans tuning in around the world'. Reigning champions England will launch their title defence on Saturday, April 11 against Ireland at Allianz Stadium Twickenham. Perennial runners-up France will host Italy in the opening match earlier that day before Scotland travel to Wales in the third game. Competition will conclude with a 'Super Sunday' on May 17, with England scheduled to visit France for a potential title decider in the final fixture. The Red Roses, who have won seven Six Nations titles in a row and are preparing for this year's home World Cup, will take on Scotland in round two on April 18 at Scottish Gas Murrayfield. John Mitchell's side will then host Wales a week later before travelling to Italy in round four on May 9. The tournament will begin four weeks after the final weekend of the men's championship, having previously started a week later. 'The new approach to the schedule has been built to deliver the best possible fan experience for those attending fixtures, and through collaboration between unions and broadcasters to meet and optimise the audience of fans tuning in around the world,' read a statement from organisers. 'Following Rugby World Cup 2025 in England later this year, and with interest for the women's game anticipated to be at an all-time high, the opportunity in front of women's rugby is huge, and as the biggest annual event in the women's rugby calendar, the Guinness Women's Six Nations is in pole position to drive momentum.' STV News is now on WhatsApp Get all the latest news from around the country Follow STV News

Back-to-back matches to be introduced in revamped Women's Six Nations
Back-to-back matches to be introduced in revamped Women's Six Nations

The Herald Scotland

time43 minutes ago

  • The Herald Scotland

Back-to-back matches to be introduced in revamped Women's Six Nations

Reigning champions England will launch their title defence on Saturday, April 11 against Ireland at Allianz Stadium Twickenham. 🗓️ Dates for your diary 🤩 2026 Guinness Women's Six Nations fixtures 🏆#GuinnessW6N — Guinness Women's Six Nations (@Womens6Nations) June 12, 2025 Perennial runners-up France will host Italy in the opening match earlier that day before Scotland travel to Wales in the third game. Competition will conclude with a 'Super Sunday' on May 17, with England scheduled to visit France for a potential title decider in the final fixture. The Red Roses, who have won seven Six Nations titles in a row and are preparing for this year's home World Cup, will take on Scotland in round two on April 18 at Scottish Gas Murrayfield. John Mitchell's side will then host Wales a week later before travelling to Italy in round four on May 9. The final standings in the 2025 #GuinnessW6N 🏆 — Guinness Women's Six Nations (@Womens6Nations) April 27, 2025 The tournament will begin four weeks after the final weekend of the men's championship, having previously started a week later. 'The new approach to the schedule has been built to deliver the best possible fan experience for those attending fixtures, and through collaboration between unions and broadcasters to meet and optimise the audience of fans tuning in around the world,' read a statement from organisers. 'Following Rugby World Cup 2025 in England later this year, and with interest for the women's game anticipated to be at an all-time high, the opportunity in front of women's rugby is huge, and as the biggest annual event in the women's rugby calendar, the Guinness Women's Six Nations is in pole position to drive momentum.'

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