Lucinda Russell: Corach Rambler Wins Grand National

Did you know, since 2005 to 2024 there have been 6 favourites or joint favourites win the Aintree Grand National? That’s 19 races won and lost, not forgetting the cancellation of the 2020 race which didn’t take place because of the Covid 19 pandemic.

The winning favourites included:

2005 – Hedgehunter, trained by Willie Mullins (71/f)

2008 – Comply Or Die, trained by David Pipe (7/1jf)

2010 – Don’t Push It, trained by Jonjo O’Neill (10/1jf)

2019 – Tiger Roll, trained by Gordon Elliott (4/1f)

2023 – Corach Rambler, trained by Lucinda Russell (8/1f)

2024 – I Am Maximus, trained by Willie Mullins (7/1jf)

For all those punters who see this as a shift to the jolly, the last 20-years have seen a few giant-priced winners.

2009 – Mon Mome 100/1

2013 – Auroras Encore 66/1

2022 – Noble Yeats 50/1

Lucinda Russell is no stranger to winning. The Grand National didn’t escaped her Midas Touch for a second time (she won with One For Arthur in 2017) when tasting victory on the 15th April 2023. For those Aintree Grand National boffins, it was the 175th running of the most famous horse race in the world.

Corach Ramber, a son of Jeremy out of a dam named Heart And Hope, was purchased for the bargain price of just £17,000 by Michael Scudamore when a 6-year-old bay gelding going through the sales ring at Gofs UK Sale PTP (Point-To-Point) at Yorton Farm. His racing career had an inauspicious start when trained by John Martin Walsh as he was pulled up at Lisronagh, Ireland. In fact, this bay gelding was something of a late starter only making his debut at the age of five.

However, after four Irish point-to-point races, in the ownership of the Forge Syndicate, he tasted victory at Monksgrange in a 6yo+ Maiden over 3m on good going, keeping on strongly to win by two and a half lengths.

Less than two months later (27th Sept – 12th Nov, 2020) he was purchased for £17,000 and in the ownership of The Ramblers, in training with Lucinda Russell at Arlary House Stables, Milnathort, Kinross.

The Scottish trainer wasted little time with Corach Rambler heading to Ayr on the 18th January 2021. He won a 5-runner Novices’ Hurdle over 3m 1/2f on Heavy going by 3-lenghts at the odds of 14/1.

This was the start to a great partnership with jockey Derek Fox.

Corach Rambler proved to be a progressive horse winning:

27th September 2020 – Moksgrange (IRE) PTP

18th January 2021 – Ayr 14/1

11th March 2021 – Carlsile 12/1

24th October 2021 – Aintree 5/2

10th December 2021 – Cheltenham 2/1

15th March 2022 – Cheltneham 10/1

14th March 2023 – Chelthenham 6/1

15th April 2023 – Grand National 8/1

His partnership with Lucinda Russell, Derek Fox & The Ramblers was coming together nicely with a battling head success at Cheltenham and the focus on the Aintree Grand National, Liverpool just one month later (15th April 2023).

There had been much uncertainty leading up to the big day. Derek Fox had a whip ban delayed so he could ride in the Grand National.

The gelding was priced 8/1f (backed from 10/1). He led at the final fence going clear but idled in front but did enough to win by 2 ¼ lengths, from Vanillier 20/1, trained by Gavin Cromwell, with Gaillard Du Mesnil 10/1, trained by Willie Mullins in third. Nobel Yeats (2022 Grand National Winner) showed his class with a sterling fourth place.

Winning jockey, Derek Fox, said: ‘’Corach Rambler is just a phenomenal horse, he’s been so lucky for me. He normally gets held up a wee bit, today he just jumped out and travelled everywhere, so I just let him bowl away. He’s electric to jump, he’s the cleverest horse, he is so intelligent. My only concern would be if he was in front for a long time. But he won so easy, all I do is do the steering.’’

There were high hopes Corach Rambler would make a bold show in the 2024 Grand National. He returned to take 3rd place in the Cheltenham Gold Cup Chase at odds of 14/1. His owners stating: ‘His Gold Cup third shows he’s not just a handicapper!’

That was an impressive display.

Next stop – Grand National 2024

Corach Rambler (15/2) had no luck when stumbling and unseating his rider at the 1st fence. The well-backed I Am Maximus, trained by Willie Mullins in the familiar silks of J P McManus won in some style.

Bookmakers detailing the unseating of jockey Derek Fox saved them an estimated £5M.

On the 1st May Corach Rambler headed to the Punchestown Gold Cup where the 18/1 shot didn’t jump with fluency, never going well, and pulled up before two out.

The Ramblers had to make the decision to race or not to race? They found the right answer to the question and the gelding was retired at the age of ten.

Lucinda Russell said: ‘He is a horse of a lifetime.’

‘We owe him so much.’

A winner of seven of his eighteen start, he won £776,459 in total earnings. Beyond his point-to-point career he was partnered by Derek Fox on every start.

Which jockey won the Grand National, at the fifteenth attempt, in 2010?

Sir Anthony McCoy began his riding career in low-key fashion when, as a 17-year-old, claiming 10lb, he finished unplaced on favourite Nordic Touch, trained by Jim Bolger, in a 6-furlong handicap at Phoenix Park on September 1, 1990. At that early embryonic stage, few could have predicted that, the best part of a quarter of century later, on April 25, 2015, a day like no other at Sandown Park, McCoy would bid a tearful farewell to National Hunt racing after one of the most incredible careers in that sport or any other.

 

However, for all his success elsewhere, McCoy seemed destined, for much of his career, to join the likes of Jonjo O’Neill, John Francome and Peter Scudamore, among others, on the list of multiple champion jockeys never to have won the Grand National. His first foray into the celebrated steeplechase, in 1995, lasted less than a circuit, with his mount, Chatham, trained by Martin Pipe, coming a cropper at the twelfth fence, immediately before the Anchor Bridge Crossing of the Melling Road. Indeed, that initial non-completion was followed by four more, on Deep Bramble, trained by Paul Nicholls, in 1996, and three more Pipe-trained runners, Challenger Du Luc, Eudipe and Dark Stranger, in 1996, 1998, 1999 and 2000, respectively.

 

McCoy also failed to complete the course, at least at the first time of asking, on Blowing Wind, also trained by Pipe, in the 2001 Grand National. However, in an eventful renewal, following a refusal early on the second circuit, he remounted (at a time when the practice was still allowed) to eventually finish third, albeit beaten a distance and the same by the only two horses to jump all 30 fences without mishap, Red Marauder and Smarty.

 

Over the next seven years, McCoy completed the Grand National Course three times, but never finished better than third. That placing came aboard Clan Royal, owned by John Patrick ‘J.P.’ McManus and trained by Jonjo O’Neill, in 2006. Sent off joint-favourite, after finishing second in 2004 and being carried out by a loose horse, when in the lead, in 2005, Clan Royal challenged at the third-last fence, but ultimately had to give best to the Irish-trained pair, Numbersixvalverde and Hedgehunter.

 

Of course, it was on another horse in the famous gold and green hoops of J.P. McManus, Don’t Push It, also trained by O’Neill, that would finally provide McCoy with a Grand National winner, in 2010. The subject of a late gamble, into 10/1 joint-favourite, the Old Vic gelding took closer order early on the second circuit, led over the final fence and forged clear on the run-in to win by 5 lengths.

 

Born in County Antrim on May 4, 1974, McCoy became Champion Conditional Jockey in 1994/95, his first season in Britain, and subsequently became Champion Jockey every year until his retirement, at the end of the 2014/15 season. He was still only 27 when, in April 2002, he beat Sir Gordon Richards’ long-standing record of 269 winners in a single season and went on to amass an astonishing 289 in the 2001/02 season as a whole.

 

The following August, McCoy became the most successful National Hunt jockey in British history, beating the previous record of 1,699 winners, set by Richard Dunwoody. By the end of his career, he had racked up and eye-watering 4,348 winners under National Hunt rules, plus another 10 on the Flat, thereby setting a record that may never be broken. McCoy was awarded a knighthood for his services to horseracing in the 2016 New Year Honours, but nonetheless later singled out breaking Richards’ record as his ‘greatest achievement’, adding, ‘nothing else comes close’.

In which year did most horses complete the Grand National course?

Ironically, the year in which most horses completed the Grand National course was 1984, when a safety limit of 40 runners, which has remained in place ever since, was imposed for the first time. On March 31, 1984, on good going, the well-backed ten-year-old Hallo Dandy, trained by Gordon W. Richards and ridden by Neale Doughty, led home a total of 23 finishers, thereby setting a record which has yet to be beaten. In so doing, Hallo Dandy, who had finished fourth behind Corbiere, Greasepaint and Yer Man in the 1983 renewal of the Grand National, reversed the previous form with that trio, who finished third, second and seventeenth, respectively.

 

For the record, the horse who finished twenty-third, and last, of the finishers was the nine-year-old Canford Ginger, a 100/1 shot trained by David Elsworth and ridden by Colin Brown. Of the nine casualties on the first circuit, four horses fell at Becher’s Brook and two more at The Chair but, remarkably, 31 of the 40 starters headed out onto the second circuit. That said, the first open ditch put paid to the chances of Fortune Seeker, Kumbi and Pilot Officer, as it had to those of Golden Trix on the first circuit. Thereafter, though, the only faller was Imperial Black at Becher’s Brook and, while Burnt Oak and Silent Valley were pulled up late on, a record number of finishers was assured.

 

By contrast, the fewest number of finishers in the Grand National came in 1928, when 42 runners went to post but, on bottomless ground, all bar the eventual winner, the unconsidered 100/1 shot Tipperary Tim, failed to complete the course unscathed. The eventual second, Billy Barton, took a tired fall at the final fence, but was remounted – remounting horses after the start was not banned until November, 2009 – to complete the course, tailed off, but only two finished.

What are some facts I didn’t know about Red Rum?

Most horse racing fans remember Red Rum. A name synonymous with the most famous steeplechase in the world: The Grand National. In fact, its history dates back to 1839. The race is held annually at Aintree Racecourse, Liverpool. This handicap steeplechase covers a distance of 4 miles 2 ½ furlongs. Two laps are run, 30 jumps, many with famous stories behind them including the infamous Chair.

The winning horse pockets over £500,000 in prize money.

Red Rum, trained by Ginger McCain, is the only horse to win this prestigious race three times in 1973, 1974 & 1976.

Being such a famous thoroughbred horse there a few facts we don’t know about this incredible horse. However, here are 5 things you may not know about Red Rum to add to his illustrious story.

1) He Never Fell Once

It’s a feat very few horses can proclaim. Red Rum, running on both the Flat and National Hunt, never fell in a 100-race career.

2) Debut Dead Heat – Over 5f

It seems remarkable that a horse which won over a distance of 4 mile 2 ½ furlong could win on the Flat over the minimum trip. That’s what Red Rum did on his debut, at Aintree, when they had both codes of racing, in a dead heat. Later, Aintree was dedicated to National Hunt racing. Red Rum continued his story with spectacular results, writing his name in the history books.

3) The Ultimate Double Act

You may be thinking I’m talking about Red Rum and his trainer Ginger McCain or jockeys Brian Fletcher or Tommy Stack. His owner Noel Le Mare deserves a mention too. However, we are talking about those early years on the Flat when Red Rum was twice ridden by Lester Piggott. In something that is akin to the Law of Attraction, his stable lad was comedian Lee Mack.

4) The Most Famous Horse in the World

There have been lots of famous horses but there is little doubt Red Rum is one of the best known and become a household name. While preparing for his sixth Grand National, he was retired following a canter at the course the day before, after suffering a hairline fracture while training for the big race. That evening, his retirement was the lead story on BBC 1 and made front-page news the following day. Red Rum became a celebrity in his own right opening supermarkets, selling merchandise, leading the Grand National Parade for many years. He appeared as a guest on BBC Sports Personality of the Year. He even switched on the Blackpool illuminations and had a roller coaster named after him.

5) He Transcended Life

Red Rum transcended life. His racing feats made him a name synonymous with the Grand National. He ran in the National on five occasions, with three wins and two runner-up positions. A life size sculpture of him can be seen at Aintree Racecourse. A true legend of horse racing, his story lives on in all who love the sport of kings.

In fact, Red Rum was buried at the winning post at Aintree Racecourse. He died at the age of 30.

How are steeplechase fences constructed?

The term ‘steeplechase’ was first recorded in the late eighteenth century and was derived from the fact that participants kept a course, over open countryside and natural obstacles, by sighting a church steeple as a finishing point. Nowadays, the term refers to a horse race run on a turf course furnished with fabricated obstacles – albeit that they are constructed, in part, with natural materials – which horses must negotiate.

 

Steeplechase fences are the higher, more rigid and less forgiving type of obstacle that horses encounter in National Hunt racing. With the exception of the optional water jump, which need only be a minimum of 3′ high – but is, as the name suggests, followed by an expanse of water at least 9′ wide – steeplechase fences must officially be at least 4’6″ high, measured from the take-off side. By way of comparison, the tallest fence on the Grand National course, The Chair, measures 5’2″ high.

 

Steeplechase fences are essentially of two types, known as plain fences and open ditches, although the construction of the upright portion of the fence is the same in both cases. Each fence is built on a base measuring between 6′ and 6’6″ deep, from the front of the take-off board – the white-painted board at the foot of the fence, intended to increase its visibility – and consists of a rigid frame, made of steel or wood.

 

Fence construction must be consistent throughout any one course, but the frame may be filled entirely with birch, natural or plastic, or birch and spruce or other material approved by the British Horseracing Authority (BHA). Either way, the density of the compacted material determines how forgiving the fence is if a horse makes a jumping error. As the name suggests, an open ditch is simply a plain fence with a ditch on the take-off side, thereby creating an obstacle with a significantly wider spread.