Showing posts with label Horse Racing. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Horse Racing. Show all posts

Saturday, 2 July 2011

Lewes Racecourse

  

Happy days at Lewes
Lewes racecourse was situated in what's known locally as Cuckoo Bottom, the track was surrounded by the rolling countryside of the Sussex downs and was some 50 miles or so from London close to the ancient town of Lewes. Lewes fell pray in 1963 to a cessation of finance by the British Racing Board and despite the track administration making gallant attempts to weather the storm following the BRB decision it transpired to be merely a stay of execution. Perhaps predictably the tracks stay of execution was merely a brief respite, the track wobbled along for a further year and one can’t help drawing a parallel with a hangman’s noose being tightened around its neck in the form of insufficient gate receipts and inadequate facilities.


Result of the final race
The fate was finally sealed for Lewes racecourse when the barrier tapes of the starting gate rose at precisely 4.31pm on Monday the 14th of September 1964 for the 5 furlong "Eridge Park 2 yr old Maiden Plate". When the starter pulled the handle releasing the barrier tapes to spring up it simultaneously released a trapdoor that swung open beneath the feet of the old racecourse. Whilst eight runners went to post to start the race only seven actually jumped off to sprint up the five furlong course as Cariad a 33/1 shot ridden by Brian Taylor, decided to take the moral high ground and presumably wanted no part of being one of the executioners of Lewes by whipping round at the start and taking no further part in the proceedings. The execution was swift… It took just 56.5 seconds for the 2 yr old filly Miss Rhondda a 7/1 shot and her jockey Bobby “RP” Elliott to dash up the home straight and get to the winning post first. Only one last act was required now, once Elliott had weighed in it was down to the lucky winning punters to pick up their cash and make for the exit for the very last time whilst the old racecourse desperately and pitifully gasped its final dying breath... as the punters disappeared from view for the last time ever Lewes racecourse finally died and the curtain came down on 200 years of racing at Cuckoo Bottom.

Elliotts first winner ever winner
Dante's Inferno at Lewes
There's an unusual coincidence and a certain irony that Bobby Elliott rode the very last winner at Lewes... some six years earlier the racecourse became a very large part of Elliott's racing career. On the 18th of August 1958  as a young 17 year old apprentice trying to make his way in racing Elliott rode the first winner of his career on Dante's Inferno who was an eight length winner of the Ashdown Handicap at Lewes. One wonders how he felt when he passed the winning post on that final day in September 1964 compared to the sheer elation he must have felt in August 1958 after that first win of his career... one thing for sure it was certainly a fitting way for Elliott to say farewell forever to Lewes Racecourse.


Bobby "RP" Elliott as an Apprentice and in 2011 aged 70 years


Thursday, 30 June 2011

Déjà Vu for Sky Diver

Sky Diver winning in 1967
In 1967 the lightly weighted Sky Diver carrying 7st 5lbs won the 6f Stewards Cup at Goodwood. With lightweight jockey Des Cullen up the blinkered Sky Diver trained by Colonel Peter Payne-Gallwey at Upper Lambourn fairly scooted home to win by one and a half lengths from Welshman (Frankie Durr) with More Money (Derek Morris) a further length back in third.


1968 Racecard


Following his win in the big race in '67 Sky Diver went on to run an excellent race next time out in the Ayr Gold Cup finishing fourth behind Be Friendly, however, the bay horse failed to win again in the intervening 12 months that passed to the Stewards Cup in July 1968. No horse had won the Cup outright two years running in its history and it was considered a momentous task to expect a horse to win in back to back years in such an open cavalry charge of a race. Payne-Gallwey made a shrewd decision leading up to the 1968 race to have the horse ridden by an apprentice to benefit from the riders claim and Terry Sturrock a 5lb claimer from Doug Marks stable was booked to ride the horse. On the day of the race a picture of Sky Diver was featured on the front of the race card so was it to be a case of Déjà Vu?



Sky Diver winning in 1968
In the 1968 race Sky Diver carrying 7st 6lbs this time made headway two furlongs out and hit the front just inside the final furlong... then for some inexplicable reason Sturrock eased down the horse and almost gave the race away. However, Sky Diver held on in a nail biting blanket finish to win by a short head from Spaniards Inn (Richard Dicey) with Gold Pollen (Freddie Murtagh) a neck further back in third place. However, Sky Diver held on in a nail biting blanket finish to win by a short head from Spaniards Inn (Richard Dicey) with Gold Pollen (Freddie Murtagh) a neck further back in third place.




Full result 1967
Full result 1968

Tuesday, 28 June 2011

A Medley of Jockeys


Jimmy Lindley - Sandy Barclay - Ron Hutchinson
  
  

David Maitland - Tony Murray




Clive Eccleston - Geoff Baxter - Pat Eddery
 
Brian Lee    -   Terry Cain 


 
Lester Piggott - Josh Gifford





Colin Moss - Bobby "RP" Elliott

   Alec Russell - Geordie Ramshaw





David East   -   Keith Temple-Nidd









Greville Starkey - Alan Cousins
 

   Paul Tulk    -   John "Kipper" Lynch



  Peter Robinson    -    Bruce Raymond