logo
Angela Jones creates Queensland racing history as first female to win metro jockeys' premiership

Angela Jones creates Queensland racing history as first female to win metro jockeys' premiership

News.com.au30-07-2025
Angela Jones has created racing history, becoming the first female to win the Brisbane metro jockeys' premiership at Doomben on Wednesday.
Jones went into the meeting on 66 victories, two ahead of her nearest rival Emily Lang (64), in a thrilling battle that went right down to the last metropolitan meeting of the 2025-26 season.
But Rockhampton-raised Lang was unable to bridge the gap on Wednesday, handing the coveted crown to her good mate Jones, with none of the pair saluting going into the final race of the day.
Lang has picked up the consolation prize of emphatically securing the Brisbane apprentice jockeys' crown, with Bailey Wheeler a distant second on 46 victories.
It was always going to be a monumental task for Lang to snatch the metro trophy from Jones given she needed to salute three times and hope that Jones finished the day with doughnut.
Even if Lang managed to tie the premiership race, Jones would have still won the title, in a quirky Racing Queensland rule, based on the number of her runner-up results.
Women's jockey pioneer Linda Jones was watching the racing at her Caloundra home on Wednesday when she suddenly realised 'I needed to be there' at Doomben to see history created.
'I've always been a huge supporter of the girls (Lang and Jones),' said Jones, who was the first woman to be granted a race licence in New Zealand in 1977.
'I just think it's fantastic. I was sitting there on the couch watching the races and I said to my husband Alan 'you know what, I'm going to go to the track because this is history'.
'They're going to win the jockeys' premiership and the apprentice premiership so that is amazing.'
Lang said Linda Jones and fellow women's jockey trailblazer Pam O'Neill had paved the way for women like her and Angela Jones to succeed.
'What Linda and Pam have done for riders like us in this day and age is incredible,' Lang said.
'They've cut all the red tape for us to do the job that we love. We wouldn't be in this position we are now without people like them.'
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

‘You've won nothing': How World Cup-winning Wallabies silenced South Africa in 1992
‘You've won nothing': How World Cup-winning Wallabies silenced South Africa in 1992

Sydney Morning Herald

timean hour ago

  • Sydney Morning Herald

‘You've won nothing': How World Cup-winning Wallabies silenced South Africa in 1992

The last time the Wallabies won at Cape Town, in 1992, captain Nick Farr-Jones and his World Cup-winning squad played in a country filled with tension. The Springboks had been officially isolated from Test rugby for eight years due to the nation's apartheid regime, and the arrival of teams from New Zealand and Australia for two Tests was a tentative gesture of support for a country grappling with the transition to democracy. One year before Farr-Jones had lifted the World Cup in front of Queen Elizabeth, but according to many Afrikaners, it was a phoney prize. 'We went up to Pretoria [for a tour match],' Farr-Jones said. 'You've got a lot of Afrikaners up there and, of course, they [South Africa] weren't part of the 1991 World Cup, and my long-lasting memory is the Afrikaners coming up to me, recognising me, knowing who I was and basically to summarise, they would say, 'Congratulations on winning what you perceive to be the World Cup, and until you've beaten us, you've won nothing'.' In 1992, South Africa was stumbling on its first tentative steps to democracy as it attempted to transition from the institutionalised racial segregation of apartheid. Nelson Mandela had been released from prison two years earlier after 27 years behind bars, and talks between his party, the African National Congress, and the government were difficult. The invitation to New Zealand and Australia to play the Springboks in South Africa only came with the express blessing of the ANC. 'When I was a young fella, in the mid-80s, I always thought that sport and politics shouldn't cross over,' Farr-Jones said. 'But when I saw the pressure that isolation [in sport] brought on South Africa to change, I turned 180 degrees. 'I believe that that isolation was very important in getting rid of apartheid, that abhorrent culture, and so I went from someone who [believed] sport and politics shouldn't interfere, to someone that felt this was the right thing to do in isolating South Africa, economically and sport.' In the lead up to the game, Farr-Jones had the opportunity to spent time with Mandela, a man who he bonded with as a fellow lawyer and admired greatly for his courageous stance against apartheid. The Wallabies almost did not take to the field in Newlands, as the ANC and its supporters were unhappy after their requests for the apartheid-era national anthem and flag not to be used before the game against New Zealand were ignored.

‘You've won nothing': How World Cup-winning Wallabies silenced South Africa in 1992
‘You've won nothing': How World Cup-winning Wallabies silenced South Africa in 1992

The Age

timean hour ago

  • The Age

‘You've won nothing': How World Cup-winning Wallabies silenced South Africa in 1992

The last time the Wallabies won at Cape Town, in 1992, captain Nick Farr-Jones and his World Cup-winning squad played in a country filled with tension. The Springboks had been officially isolated from Test rugby for eight years due to the nation's apartheid regime, and the arrival of teams from New Zealand and Australia for two Tests was a tentative gesture of support for a country grappling with the transition to democracy. One year before Farr-Jones had lifted the World Cup in front of Queen Elizabeth, but according to many Afrikaners, it was a phoney prize. 'We went up to Pretoria [for a tour match],' Farr-Jones said. 'You've got a lot of Afrikaners up there and, of course, they [South Africa] weren't part of the 1991 World Cup, and my long-lasting memory is the Afrikaners coming up to me, recognising me, knowing who I was and basically to summarise, they would say, 'Congratulations on winning what you perceive to be the World Cup, and until you've beaten us, you've won nothing'.' In 1992, South Africa was stumbling on its first tentative steps to democracy as it attempted to transition from the institutionalised racial segregation of apartheid. Nelson Mandela had been released from prison two years earlier after 27 years behind bars, and talks between his party, the African National Congress, and the government were difficult. The invitation to New Zealand and Australia to play the Springboks in South Africa only came with the express blessing of the ANC. 'When I was a young fella, in the mid-80s, I always thought that sport and politics shouldn't cross over,' Farr-Jones said. 'But when I saw the pressure that isolation [in sport] brought on South Africa to change, I turned 180 degrees. 'I believe that that isolation was very important in getting rid of apartheid, that abhorrent culture, and so I went from someone who [believed] sport and politics shouldn't interfere, to someone that felt this was the right thing to do in isolating South Africa, economically and sport.' In the lead up to the game, Farr-Jones had the opportunity to spent time with Mandela, a man who he bonded with as a fellow lawyer and admired greatly for his courageous stance against apartheid. The Wallabies almost did not take to the field in Newlands, as the ANC and its supporters were unhappy after their requests for the apartheid-era national anthem and flag not to be used before the game against New Zealand were ignored.

Jones booked in for spring fling with Zarastro
Jones booked in for spring fling with Zarastro

The Australian

time15 hours ago

  • The Australian

Jones booked in for spring fling with Zarastro

Brisbane's top trainer Tony Gollan has placed his confidence in jockey Angela Jones to break through for her first Group 1 victory, indicating she will likely retain the ride on Zarastro for the star gelding's entire spring campaign. Jones went within a whisker of winning her first Group 1 on Zarastro in the Kingsford Smith Cup (1300m) in June, only to be denied by the brilliance of superstar hoop James McDonald on the Chris Waller-trained mare Joliestar. Brisbane's premiership-winning jockey Jones put Zarastro through his paces on Monday, easily winning a jumpout at Cranbourne as the six-year-old prepares for the $200,000 Group 3 The Heath (1100m) at Caulfield on Saturday week. • PUNT LIKE A PRO: Become a Racenet iQ member and get expert tips – with fully transparent return on investment statistics – from Racenet's team of professional punters at our Pro Tips section. SUBSCRIBE NOW! Read: Callow pleads guilty to charges over racially-fuelled videos The seven-year-old gelding will then likely head to the $2m Group 1 Manikato Stakes (1200m) at The Valley on September 26 before contesting the $2m Group 3 Sydney Stakes (1200m) on The Everest Day in October at Randwick, although Gollan said there was 'wiggle room' to that plan. And in a sign of how far Jones has improved in the past 12 months, Gollan said the 24-year-old Queenslander would likely stay on Zarastro for his spring campaign, despite the availability of several champion Group 1-winning jockeys. 'Yeah, well there's no reason to take her off,' Gollan said on Monday before boarding a plane from Melbourne back to Brisbane. 'She's got a good association and a good record with the horse so provided the prep is going well and she's going well with him then there's no reason to change. 'She was always booked to come down and ride him.' Angela Jones and Zarastro return to scale after winning the Magic Millions Snippets in January. Picture: Grant Peters - Trackside Photography Gollan could have easily sought the services of champion jockey Blake Shinn, who rode his Cox Plate-bound stable star Antino to memorable victories in the Toorak Handicap last spring and the Doomben Cup in the Queensland winter carnival. Shinn is currently serving a nine-meeting suspension for careless riding but will return to the saddle at Ballarat on August 26. However, Jones has proved she has the right temperament, hunger, work ethic and class to break through for a Group 1 victory after going so close in the Kingsford Smith Cup. 'I think it's a really good move to bring her down and ride him (Zarastro),' said Gollan, who also watched Antino run around in Monday's Cranbourne jumpouts. 'He's always been a quirky little bugger and she gets along with him really well. 'She came down and gave him a jumpout and had a bit of a feel for Victoria, what it's like going this way around.' Read: Memsie mayhem: Racing's rumour mill at its best with Shenandoah shenanigans Jones' Brisbane jockeys' premiership defence got off to a rocky start when she was forced to serve a 13-day suspension at the start of the 2025-26 season. She has two metro victories from 12 starts but has plenty of time to catch early leader Ben Thompson (seven wins from 37 rides). Since former Waller-trained Zarastro came to Gollan's stable in mid 2023, Jones has ridden the gelding in most of his trials and races, including his victory in the $1m Magic Millions Snippets (1200m) on the Gold Coast in January. In-form jockey Ryan Maloney will ride stablemate Golden Boom in the $175,000 Carlyon Stakes at The Valley (1000m) on Saturday. Golden Boom finished runner-up in that Listed race last year to Mornington Glory, which went on to win the Group 1 Moir Stakes (1000m) just two weeks later.

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