logo
Second tragic loss for girlfriend of Oulton Park superbikes rider

Second tragic loss for girlfriend of Oulton Park superbikes rider

Daily Record07-05-2025
A 11-bike crash claimed the lives of British Supersport riders Shane Richardson and Owen Jenner—marking a second heartbreaking tragedy for Richardson's partner, Hannah James, who lost a previous boyfriend in a similar accident nine years ago.
The partner of British Superbikes rider Shane Richardson, who died in a collision at Oulton Park, lost her previous boyfriend also in a motorcycling crash nine years ago, it has emerged.
Tragedy struck the British motorcycle racing world on Monday when a horrific 11-bike crash at Oulton Park claimed the lives of two riders, including Shane Richardson, 29, of the Astro-JJR Hippo Suzuki team.

The collision occurred during the opening lap of the British Supersport Championship at the Cheshire circuit, after one rider lost control at Turn One and was thrown into the path of other competitors, reports the Mirror.

The resulting pile-up led to chaos on the track, with at least one bike catching fire. Emergency responders were quick to act, but the crash proved fatal for two competitors: Owen Jenner, 21, and Richardson, a New Zealand native and father of two.
Jenner, a recently crowned 2024 British GP2 champion and Rapid Honda rider, was taken to the circuit's medical centre, where attempts to resuscitate him failed. He succumbed to what organisers described as a "catastrophic head injury."
Richardson suffered severe chest injuries and was treated trackside before being transported to Royal Stoke University Hospital. He died en route.
Richardson's partner, Hannah James—a former grid girl—has now endured a heartbreaking second loss. In a cruel twist of fate, she had previously lost another boyfriend, racer Billy Redmayne, in a separate incident in 2016. Redmayne, 25, was critically injured during the Oliver's Mount Spring Cup in North Yorkshire and later died in hospital with James and loved ones at his side.
On Monday, a third rider, Tom Tunstall, 47, sustained serious back and abdominal injuries and was also transported to Royal Stoke University Hospital. Five others—Morgan McLaren-Wood, Carl Harris, Max Morgan, Cameron Hall, and Freddie Barnes—escaped with minor injuries.

In a heartfelt message posted online, McLaren-Wood expressed the pain felt by many in the racing community: "Struggling to find the words for what happened today. Rest in peace, Shane and Owen. My heart goes out to both of their families during this heartbreaking time."
Following the incident, the Motorcycle Circuit Racing Control Board (MCRCB) and MotorSport Vision Racing (MSVR) released a joint statement: "At the start of this afternoon's Quattro Group British Supersport Championship race at Oulton Park, a chain-reaction crash involving 11 riders occurred exiting Turn One. The race was immediately stopped, and medical personnel were deployed. Due to the severity of the incident and ongoing medical intervention, the remainder of the Bennetts British Superbike Championship event was cancelled."

Join the Daily Record WhatsApp community!
Get the latest news sent straight to your messages by joining our WhatsApp community today.
You'll receive daily updates on breaking news as well as the top headlines across Scotland.
No one will be able to see who is signed up and no one can send messages except the Daily Record team.
All you have to do is click here if you're on mobile, select 'Join Community' and you're in!
If you're on a desktop, simply scan the QR code above with your phone and click 'Join Community'.
We also treat our community members to special offers, promotions, and adverts from us and our partners. If you don't like our community, you can check out any time you like.
To leave our community click on the name at the top of your screen and choose 'exit group'.
If you're curious, you can read our Privacy Notice.
"This catastrophic accident has tragically resulted in two riders being fatally injured and another sustaining significant injuries. An investigation is underway in collaboration with the Coroner and Cheshire Constabulary."
Cheshire Police also confirmed they are investigating the deaths on behalf of the coroner. A spokesperson stated: "Emergency services responded to a serious collision involving multiple riders at Oulton Park on Monday 5 May. Two riders sadly died, and one sustained serious injuries. The two deceased have been named as Owen Jenner and Shane Richardson. In light of the incident, the rest of the event was cancelled."
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Keely Hodgkinson eases to victory in Lausanne
Keely Hodgkinson eases to victory in Lausanne

Powys County Times

timean hour ago

  • Powys County Times

Keely Hodgkinson eases to victory in Lausanne

Olympic champion Keely Hodgkinson produced a dominant display to win the women's 800 metres at the Diamond League meet in Lausanne, with British team-mate Georgia Hunter Bell finishing third. Hodgkinson, who has been recovering from a hamstring injury, returned after a 376-day absence in Silesia last weekend to set a world-leading run of one minute and 54.74 seconds, just behind her own national record. With the World Championships in Tokyo coming up next month, Hodgkinson laid down another marker as she made a strong finish in wet conditions to set a new meeting record of 1:55.69. Meeting record for @keelyhodgkinson! The 🇬🇧 star continues her comeback with an impressive 1:55.69 in the rain at #LausanneDL 🇨🇭 #DiamondLeague 📷 @chiaramontesan2 — Wanda Diamond League (@Diamond_League) August 20, 2025 Hunter Bell had been in second place down the home straight but faded in the closing metres as Switzerland's Audrey Werro ran her down to clock 1:57.55. Hodgkinson, 23, had looked in control from the opening part of the race, sitting second behind the pacemaker at the bell, which she took in 56.04 seconds. With only Prudence Sekgodiso for company heading into the final 300m, Hodgkinson soon pulled clear of the South African to coast towards another impressive victory. '(I feel) a little bit relieved,' Hodgkinson told BBC World Service Sport. 'I felt like this race was definitely going to be more of a challenge, but taking on a pace like that you've just got to run and forget about everybody else. 'I'm glad it paid off. I feel like I've really backed up my 1:54 with a solid 1:55. We are seeing improvements all the time, so I'm happy.' Just try and stop them 👊 Keely Hodgkinson clocks in a time of 1:55.69 in the women's 800m for a new meeting record 👏 With Georgia Hunter Bell following closely behind in a time of 1:57.55 🙌 #LausanneDL — British Athletics (@BritAthletics) August 20, 2025 Hodgkinson added: 'I couldn't have asked for a better start – I'm a bit in shock myself. I train well, I train really hard for moments like this, but when it all comes together it makes it extra special. '(My coach) Trevor (Painter) said to me a few weeks ago 'you are actually ahead of schedule. I wanted you to be here by the time we are in Tokyo', so to be here now is amazing. 'Hopefully we can stay healthy and build on top of what we've got, and let's see what can happen.' Hodgkinson's training partner Hunter Bell, meanwhile, must now decide whether to have another crack at the 800m in Tokyo or focus on the 1,500m where she would be looking to add to her Olympic bronze medal from Paris. 'I wanted a bit quicker but it was hard today, hard to recover from the race a few days ago,' she said. 'I don't know (what distance), I'm going to decide this week. I'm running out of time to make a decision. Every day I change my mind.' Conditions worsened as the events went on, with Elise Thorner (9:21.74) finishing fifth in the women's 3,000m steeplechase, which was run through a downpour. Morgan Lake placed fifth in the women's high jump following three failures at 1.91 metres. With the run-up so wet, Ukraine's Olympic champion Yaroslava Mahuchikh decided to retire after two missed attempts. In the women's 200m, Dina Asher-Smith (22.64) was fifth and Daryll Neita (22.73) seventh, with American Brittany Brown winning in 22.23 secs. A first ever #DiamondLeague win for Josh Hoey! A rare defeat for @Olympics champion Emmanuel Wanyonyi in the 800m as Hoey kicks past him to clock 1:42.82. #LausanneDL 🇨🇭 📷 @chiaramontesan2 — Wanda Diamond League (@Diamond_League) August 20, 2025 In the men's 800m, Max Burgin attacked around the final bend but then faded over the closing stages as he finish fourth in 1.43.44. Olympic champion Emmanuel Wanyonyi lost out to American Josh Hoey. Alastair Chalmers ran 49.92secs as he was fifth in the men's 400m hurdles. Men's 100m Olympic champion Noah Lyles came second as Jamaica's Oblique Seville clocked 9.87secs, with Britain's Zharnel Hughes fifth in 10.09.

Rachel Reeves's self-defeating attack on British racing
Rachel Reeves's self-defeating attack on British racing

Spectator

time2 hours ago

  • Spectator

Rachel Reeves's self-defeating attack on British racing

Few British traditions can claim as long a history as racing. The first races thought to have taken place in these islands were organised by Roman soldiers encamped in Yorkshire, pitting English horses against Arabian. By the 900s, King Athelstan was placing an export ban on English horses due to their superiority over their continental equivalents. The first recorded race meeting took place under Henry II in Smithfield as part of the annual Bartholomew Fair. Nearly 1,000 years later, racing remains the nation's second most popular spectator sport. Five million people attend more than 1,400 meets throughout the year. The industry is estimated to be worth more than £4 billion, contributing around £300 million to the Exchequer, and supports some 80,000 jobs. No activity better unites Benjamin Disraeli's 'two nations'. Royal Ascot, the Derby and the Grand National are cornerstones of the sporting calendar. Britain still produces many of the world's finest horses, jockeys and races. More than 600 million people across 140 countries tune in to the National each year; in this country alone, around 13 million people, a quarter of adults, bet on it. Britain's racing success is something to be proud of, which naturally means that Rachel Reeves has decided to go after it. The Treasury is proposing to increase the 15 per cent tax on bookmaker profits to 21 per cent – the same levy faced by online slot games and casinos. The British Horseracing Authority predicts the rate hike would cause a £330 million loss of revenue in its first five years, and put more than 2,500 jobs at risk in the first year alone. In response to the proposal, the BHA has called a strike for 10 September – the first in the industry's history. Rather than racing, jockeys, owners and trainers will decamp to Westminster to lobby MPs. The industrial action is expected to cost around £700,000. Many senior figures in the world of racing fear that increased costs for operators would mean less money available for promoting the sport. Worse odds would be offered to customers, making bookmakers less competitive compared with black market sites, which are now more easily accessible than ever thanks to the large increase in Virtual Private Network downloads by people trying to circumvent the Online Safety Act. Reduced turnover means reduced profits for bookmakers, 10 per cent of which are paid to a levy designed to support the sport through prize money, veterinary research and equine welfare. Even before the Treasury's planned hike, the recent introduction of more stringent affordability checks on online gambling means that turnover is down and fewer thoroughbreds are being bred. British racing is falling behind as owners, riders and horses decamp abroad to wealthier competitions. This leaves the long-term sustainability of British racing under threat. The Chancellor's latest attempt to find a few pennies down the back of the Treasury sofa would repeat the error of last year's inheritance tax raid on farmers and the imposition of VAT on private schools. It is a mean-spirited and self-defeating assault on a part of the country's history and way of life that the Labour party does not seek to understand. If racing unites the upper and lower classes, it is uniquely vulnerable to stigmatisation by the middle-class prudes found so dis-proportionately among our governing lanyard class. Of course, many Labour MPs are enthusiastic supporters of racing – 23 represent racecourse constituencies. But any attempt to squeeze the industry until the pips squeak is representative of a Treasury mentality that knows the cost of everything but the value of nothing. Taxing bookmaking at the same rate as online gambling draws a false equivalence between the two that ignores their fundamental differences. A punter at a race might enjoy six or seven bets in a day at most; an enthusiastic online gambler could place that number in a minute. Betting on racing requires research and skill (incidentally, The Spectator's own racing tipster, Penworthy, has had an excellent year). In contrast, online casinos are the gambling equivalent of Pac-Man, colourful distractions designed to be played on a loop. That is why online gambling and gaming make up the overwhelming majority of gambling addiction cases. In its zeal for protecting the vulnerable, the Gambling Commission, supported by the Treasury, could strangle the life out of the industry it regulates. In her quest to make her sums add up, Reeves may embark on another experiment which costs more than it raises. Reeves and the Treasury should recognise that next month's strike is an extraordinary protest from an industry facing an existential threat. Rather than breaking with the tradition of treating bookmaking differently to online gambling, the government should extend the industry support, through direct grants or a reformed betting levy. Yet with each day bringing rumours of the Treasury eyeing potential targets, the odds of the Chancellor putting the turf's future before her spreadsheets seem slim. Who would be willing to bet on it?

US Open set to be terrorised by sex-crazed invasive BUGS as fans are warned to alert the authorities
US Open set to be terrorised by sex-crazed invasive BUGS as fans are warned to alert the authorities

Scottish Sun

time4 hours ago

  • Scottish Sun

US Open set to be terrorised by sex-crazed invasive BUGS as fans are warned to alert the authorities

The pesky critters have been spotted in 29 of New York State's 62 counties BEING A PEST US Open set to be terrorised by sex-crazed invasive BUGS as fans are warned to alert the authorities Click to share on X/Twitter (Opens in new window) Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window) THE US OPEN is braced for an invasion of sex-crazed, crop-hungry BUGS. British hopes Emma Raducanu and Jack Draper might have to take evasive action when they start their singles campaign next week as they chase the record $5million champions' pot. Sign up for Scottish Sun newsletter Sign up 2 The US Open is braced for an invasion of sex-crazed, crop-hungry bugs Credit: Volkan Furuncu/2 Lanternflies recklessly munch everything and frantically mate in August Credit:The three-week tennis Major may be marred by a swarm of spotted lanternflies, currently enjoying a population explosion. The pesky critters have been spotted in 29 of New York State's 62 counties during a red-hot summer. Flushing Meadows, the Slam's venue, is the fourth-largest public park in the State, with a total area of 897 acres. Should any bugs appear at the venue, fans and players have been advised to report them to local authorities — then STOMP them to death. Read More on Tennis DOUBLES TROUBLE Tennis' original badboy was US Open finalist & partnered Hollywood royalty Lanternflies recklessly munch everything from vegetable gardens to fruit trees and generally hatch in late May. With people tending to notice them while they are frantically mating in August. Kelli Hoover, professor of entomology at Pennsylvania State University, fears they will spread like wildfire across the States. She said: 'They're hopping on trains, planes and ships. CASINO SPECIAL - BEST CASINO BONUSES FROM £10 DEPOSITS "These guys are brave hitch-hikers.' And Brian Eshenaur, an invasive species specialist at Cornell University, said: 'When somebody sees an insect, we ask them to take a picture first. US Open Suspended as Hurricane Erin Floods Flushing Meadows "And then stomp on it.'

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store