
Veteran star on why he still has what it takes to be in the mix at North West 200
Three-time North West 200 Supertwins race winner Jeremy McWilliams marked his 61st birthday in early April, but the former MotoGP rider has no notion of stepping away from the north coast road race while he remains competitive.
McWilliams made his Irish road racing debut around the 8.9-mile course in 2012 and finished as the runner-up in the Supertwin race behind class specialist Ryan Farquhar, whose KMR Kawasaki team famously completed a clean sweep of the podium with Michael Rutter joining them on the rostrum in third.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

Rhyl Journal
2 hours ago
- Rhyl Journal
Power Blue on National mission for Adrian Murray
The son of Space Blues followed in the footsteps of Murray's other Group One scorer Bucanero Fuerte when downing Aidan O'Brien's True Love at the Curragh, proving his top-class potential after a string of fine runs in defeat since winning the opening race of the Irish turf season in March. His handler has been delighted with his progress and even has half an eye on next year's Classics as he looks forward to an appearance on day two of the Irish Champions Festival. 'I'm looking forward to the National Stakes with Power Blue and stepping up a furlong might even suit him better,' said Murray, who confirmed the aforementioned Bucanero Fuerte will run on the same card in the Flying Five Stakes after his win in the Group Three Phoenix Sprint. 'You would have to be looking at him being a possible Guineas horse and he would be entitled to be entered for those races. 'It will all depend on how he progresses from two to three but he's done nothing but improve and he's always been competitive, even when he has been beaten. Win or lose, he always shows up on the day and he ran a blinder the other day. 'His form is top-drawer stuff and he's proving he's a top-drawer horse.'


South Wales Guardian
2 hours ago
- South Wales Guardian
Power Blue on National mission for Adrian Murray
The son of Space Blues followed in the footsteps of Murray's other Group One scorer Bucanero Fuerte when downing Aidan O'Brien's True Love at the Curragh, proving his top-class potential after a string of fine runs in defeat since winning the opening race of the Irish turf season in March. His handler has been delighted with his progress and even has half an eye on next year's Classics as he looks forward to an appearance on day two of the Irish Champions Festival. 'I'm looking forward to the National Stakes with Power Blue and stepping up a furlong might even suit him better,' said Murray, who confirmed the aforementioned Bucanero Fuerte will run on the same card in the Flying Five Stakes after his win in the Group Three Phoenix Sprint. 'You would have to be looking at him being a possible Guineas horse and he would be entitled to be entered for those races. 'It will all depend on how he progresses from two to three but he's done nothing but improve and he's always been competitive, even when he has been beaten. Win or lose, he always shows up on the day and he ran a blinder the other day. 'His form is top-drawer stuff and he's proving he's a top-drawer horse.'

Leader Live
5 hours ago
- Leader Live
Power Blue on National mission for Adrian Murray
The son of Space Blues followed in the footsteps of Murray's other Group One scorer Bucanero Fuerte when downing Aidan O'Brien's True Love at the Curragh, proving his top-class potential after a string of fine runs in defeat since winning the opening race of the Irish turf season in March. His handler has been delighted with his progress and even has half an eye on next year's Classics as he looks forward to an appearance on day two of the Irish Champions Festival. 'I'm looking forward to the National Stakes with Power Blue and stepping up a furlong might even suit him better,' said Murray, who confirmed the aforementioned Bucanero Fuerte will run on the same card in the Flying Five Stakes after his win in the Group Three Phoenix Sprint. 'You would have to be looking at him being a possible Guineas horse and he would be entitled to be entered for those races. 'It will all depend on how he progresses from two to three but he's done nothing but improve and he's always been competitive, even when he has been beaten. Win or lose, he always shows up on the day and he ran a blinder the other day. 'His form is top-drawer stuff and he's proving he's a top-drawer horse.'