
Katie Walsh salutes ‘absolutely brilliant' Rachael Blackmore
Blessed with supreme talent, Walsh believes every highlight of Blackmore's glittering career has been thoroughly deserved after she brought the curtain down with one final winner for long-time ally Henry de Bromhead at Cork on Saturday.
Walsh told the PA news agency: 'Every opportunity she was given, she grabbed with two hands and she had a marvellous career.
'She would do very little wrong and all she would do is get better and better and better. She always had her homework done and knew exactly what she was doing.
'Her Cheltenham Festival winners were provided by Willie Mullins and Henry de Bromhead and to think she had the support of the champion trainer and another right at the top of the game was testament to her ability – and she also had an association with plenty of the big owners like Gigginstown.
'She had a great way of reading races, she was strong both physically and mentally and would line up there with the best of them every day of the week and she was just an inspiration as a human being, she was just absolutely brilliant.'
It was once Walsh herself and contemporary Nina Carberry who were seen as the trailblazers for women in the weighing room, but Blackmore's achievements have rewritten the record books and surpassed the stellar accomplishments of her predecessors.
The 35-year-old bows out with 18 Cheltenham Festival victories and as well as her historic Gold Cup triumph aboard A Plus Tard in 2022, is amongst a select number of riders to have held aloft all four trophies of jump racing's blue riband, the Queen Mother Champion Chase, Champion Hurdle and Stayers' Hurdle.
Katie Walsh finished third in the Grand National aboard Seabass (David Davies/PA)
Blackmore also eclipsed Walsh's then third-placed record finish by a female in the Grand National when becoming the first woman jockey in the 182-year history of the Aintree marathon to win the race aboard Minella Times in 2021, with Walsh highlighting a supreme dedication to her craft which allowed glass ceilings to be shattered.
Walsh continued: 'It's been great to witness some of those great days and she's a star person and a perfect example to any young jockey starting out in the game – if you do what Rachael Blackmore does and you are good enough, success will come.
'She was extremely dedicated and worked very, very hard and you don't get anywhere in this industry without working hard – and that's what she did.
'She is a lovely person and she never changed a bit from the moment she started to the moment she finished and I'm delighted she gets to retire on her own terms.'
Blackmore was once the Pony Club protege who became an unintentional superstar of sport, but despite somewhat humble beginnings, her record is backed to stand the test of time, with Walsh – whose brother Ruby is one of the most decorated riders of all time – feeling her name is more than worthy of being mentioned amongst the greats of racing.
Rachael Blackmore celebrates on A Plus Tard after winning the Boodles Cheltenham Gold Cup (David Davies/PA)
'I can't see anyone in my lifetime that might surpass Rachael's achievements,' added Walsh.
'At this moment in time, there is nobody, but that's not to say that someone won't come through – you would not have predicted this would happen 10 or 15 years ago.
'Who knows and that's the beauty of it, but I'm just glad I was there for it and saw it all from the start to the finish – and in years to come, if no one else does come along, I can say I remember Rachael Blackmore and I know how her story started and how it finished.'
There have also been tributes paid from the world of Flat racing, where Hollie Doyle – fresh from passing Hayley Turner to become the most successful British female jockey at Ascot on Saturday – assessed the incomparable legacy Blackmore leaves and the impact she has had on the sport as a whole.
Leading Flat jockey Hollie Doyle has praised Rachael Blackmore (Mike Egerton/PA)
'She's obviously been a huge trailblazer and she's just a great jockey,' said Doyle.
'What she's done for everyone in racing really has been great and it's been a great lift really over the last few years to have someone like her do what she's done.
'She's done it all, hasn't she? She's ticked every box and I suppose shut down any questions that were asked. I think it's even harder in National Hunt racing and she has done it all.
'Henry de Bromhead has obviously been a great supporter and gave her the ammunition, but she's been a great jockey and I think she's proved a lot of people wrong.'
Hashtags

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


Metro
2 hours ago
- Metro
Eagles and Seagulls fear bigger predators in this summer's transfer window
Crystal Palace and Brighton may be fierce rivals on the football pitch but they are kindred spirits, if not best buddies, when it comes to transfer-window dealings. Both the Seagulls and Eagles are among the best at identifying raw talent and nurturing it into highly sought-after commodities which attract the rich. Brighton are especially adapt at selling their best players for a whopping profit and already having the perfect replacement ready to step up to the plate and make a telling first-team contribution. Albion owner Tony Bloom is exceptionally sharp at this and is just as successful in buying racehorses which become winners at high-profile meetings like the Cheltenham Festival and Royal Ascot. Brighton and Palace are joined by Brentford, Bournemouth, Fulham and others in selling fan favourites for big figures which are then reinvested in fresh faces who keep around the top half in the top flight. But clubs like this rarely sell more than one or two players in a window as they can't afford big turnovers which threaten to destabilise the dressing-room. The Eagles are constantly linked with moves for their star performers but Michael Olise was the only significant exit last summer when he moved to Bayern Munich for a hefty fee. This window, Eberechi Eze, Marc Guehi and Adam Wharton are among the players reportedly up for grabs from the FA Cup winners but they will be reluctant to sell too many with their first venture into Europe on the horizon. Guehi, who has interested Liverpool, Chelsea, Newcastle and Tottenham in the past 12 months, is now reported to be happy to see out the final year of his contract if the right club fails to make the right offer so Eze could be the one to go. Spurs are 3/1 with Unibet to buy him with a switch to any German club 6/1 with Bet Victor. A move to any French club is 12/1 with the same firm while Manchester City are 14/1 with Unibet to snap him up. Paddy Power, Betfair and Sky Bet have priced up 22/1 for a move to old Trafford but it's 4/6 with bet365 he stays where he is and Oliver Glasner is allowed to keep the jewel in his team's crown. Newcastle are 10/11 with the same firm to buy striker Joao Pedro from Brighton but Chelsea, who can't resist a shopping trip to the south coast, are 5/2 with bet365 to hijack the signing. Scotland's Jacob Fearnley has climbed into the top 50 in the world rankings and his confidence will be further boosted after reaching the quarter-finals at Queen's last week. More Trending The Edinburgh-born British No.2 progressed to the second round at Wimbledon on his debut last year and is 11/10 with William Hill to beat fifth seed Flavio Cobolli in the first round at Eastbourne. It was a decent Royal Ascot for us with True Love, American Affair, Field Of Gold and Trawlerman all successfully tipped to win in this column. But the best advice was Cercene to win Friday's Coronation Stakes at 33/1 which was given on X. Don't miss out at future festivals like Glorious Goodwood, follow @tipstermetro. MORE: Kevin De Bruyne tells Antonio Conte to sign England star in blow to Manchester United MORE: I flew 6,000 miles to meet a stranger for a date MORE: Man Utd make fresh transfer move for £44.5m star 'in the last few hours'


Daily Mirror
3 hours ago
- Daily Mirror
Inside the UK's most-gruelling, brutal, 115km race
Japan's biggest sporting event is looking to embed itself in the UK with second edition of 10-person relay bringing drama at the finish line of a difficult challenge For almost seven hours, 10 of Oxford University's best runners, including the 2016 US Olympic marathoner Jared Ward, led a 114.8km path from Windsor to Reading and back. Then, moments after celebrating, the bad news was broken to them. They had been disqualified for an illegal sash handover during the second UK Ekiden and the trophy was being handed to Japan's Ritzumeikan University, who had flown in to compete at a gruelling event that flips the loneliness of a long distance runner on its head. In Japan, Ekiden is the biggest of deals - think along the lines of the Grand National or Super Bowl, an event where folk not ordinarily in the sport gather around the TV and everyone is suddenly an expert. Its concept is simple - a relay where instead of batons runners hand over sashes, known as tasuki. And now a group spearheaded by Anna Dingley and with support from a handful of high-profile sponsors is looking to embed the concept in Britain. READ MORE: Strict life of Great Britain's most dedicated athlete - 'Flavour doesn't make you faster' Last Friday's event brought 16 universities and 15 corporate teams together on a punishing course that veered through all sorts of terrain and stunning scenery, nominally following the Thames path. Trailing in the wake of Oxford, Ritzumeikan and the other serious competitors up front was MirrorSport, part of a media team that ended up doing OK - finishing sixth among the corporate teams and ahead of an Asics collective that featured Eilish McColgan and triathlon star Beth Potter - Bragging rights were dimmed by both being there for a bit of fun on behalf of their sponsor and their team also featuring the company's 68-year-old chief executive. And even for a seasoned runner the 12.8km fourth leg through woodlands and rugged countryside just south of Henley-on-Thames was an almighty challenge. From the burn of running up a steep hill at Harpsden woods, to plodding through firmed up cow poo via a field where the trail disappears among four-foot high grass – it is rather different to the tarmac of East London. The 29c heat didn't make things easier either. Yet veering from loving it to hating it, this will remain memorable for a long time to come. In a sport where almost always your own performance stands in isolation, to work as a team is not just novel but a possible pointer of things to come. And with the country - indeed much of the world - in the middle of a boom fuelled by younger people joining run clubs (in south west London they are the 2025 version of speed dating, apparently) there may be no better time for Ekiden to take off.


Daily Record
4 hours ago
- Daily Record
Celtic star stunned by Rangers legend in red-faced return to action against minnows
Alistair Johnston has back on the grass for Canada after missing his crucial spot kick at Hampden against Aberdeen Alistair Johnston had another nightmare on his return to action as 77-year-old former Rangers boss Dick Advocaat pulled off a shock against Canada. The Hoops defender missed the crucial final penalty in the Scottish Cup Final which meant Aberdeen won the trophy at Hampden last month. He was nursing a minor back injury and recently tied the knot with new wife Peyton before heading off on honeymoon to St Lucia. But it was on another Caribbean he returned to action this weekend at the Gold Cup against minnows Curacao, who are now managed by Advocaat, after he came out of retirement for the fifth time to take charge of his eighth international country earlier this year. But after coming on as a late sub, he gave the ball away to former PSV Eindhoven striker Jeremy Antonisse deep into injury time who netted to claim a remarkable 1-1 draw in Houston and kick off off scenes of celebration for the tiny nation. Advocaat - who has now managed the Netherlands three times, Belgium, Russia, Serbia, South Korea, Iraq, UAE and now Curacao - said: "That was a great achievement for us to get a draw against a huge country like Canada. But it was the least we deserved and credit to the players." Canada had gone ahead inside the opening 10 minutes thanks to Nathan Saliba's early strike but Antonisse grabbed a goal in the fouth minute of added time to spark wild scenes. The result leaves Canada top of the section with four points from two games and Curacao currently sit third with two points on the board. They trail Honduras in second spot in the section by a point. You can get all the news you need on our dedicated Rangers and Celtic pages, and sign up to our newsletters to make sure you never miss a beat throughout the season. We're also WhatsApp where we bring all the latest breaking news and transfer gossip directly to you phone. Join our Rangers community here and our Celtic community here.