The 70-year-old Cheltenham Gold Cup-winning trainer talks to Helen Sharp about Sizing John’s quirks and how her eventing background gives her the edge.
“IT’s fantastic,” Jessica Harrington quietly admits, after taking this year’s Cheltenham Gold Cup with Sizing John. “I’m kind of walking on air — I suppose it’s just sinking in now that we’ve actually won. It’s the sort of thing you dream about and you don’t actually think will ever happen.”
Jessica was already one of the most exceptional female trainers in the history of the Cheltenham Festival, winning the Champion Chase with Moscow Flyer (2003, 2005) and the Champion Hurdle with Jezki (2014) when, in her first ever entry, she was triumphant in the biggest contest of them all.
Greeted by two excited dogs, I am invited into the living room of Jessica’s on-site house in Co. Kildare, Ireland. “They’ve told me I have to sit down for two days, as I have bronchitis,” she says, reluctantly accepting the advice. I join her on the sofa to talk thoroughbreds.
The Gold Cup shines down from the mantelpiece, surrounded by images of a lifetime in racing. On the TV, the horses continuously race by, and the racing papers are all close to hand — this is clearly a trainer dedicated to her sport.
Following his epic win, Sizing John was back in his own stable by 7.30am the next morning. Jessica says he’s in excellent health.
“He’s doing great,” she says. “He’s back cantering now and the idea is to get him ready to go to the Punchestown Gold Cup. He’s only had four runs this year, so we’ll be heading there hopefully for his last run of the year.”
JESSICA, 70, started out as an international event rider, competing for Ireland in two Olympic Games before switching to National Hunt and Flat training in 1989.
Denne historien er fra April 20 2017-utgaven av Horse & Hound.
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Denne historien er fra April 20 2017-utgaven av Horse & Hound.
Start din 7-dagers gratis prøveperiode på Magzter GOLD for å få tilgang til tusenvis av utvalgte premiumhistorier og 9000+ magasiner og aviser.
Allerede abonnent? Logg på
Household Cavalry Sculptor-in-Residence - After years in a city job, Zoë Carmichael was destined to devote herself to the antique discipline of sculpture and immortalise her favourite subjects - horses - in bronze
I’ve hunted all my life. Growing up, I hunted with the Cotswold and VWH and I’m lucky to have been out with lots of packs, from the Teme Valley in Wales where I learnt the name of almost every hound, to days out with the Beaufort with a field of 200-plus. My greatest moments have been following my best friends over Ledbury hedges. Eventually, I focused on eventing – I did juniors and under-21s. Then I got a four-year-old, Bertie, and took him up to what would be four-star today.
Understanding What Affects Acceptance of Equestrian Sport - New large-scale research is aimed at digging deeper into what goes into forming public opinion.
New World Horse Welfare research involving more than 5,000 people has aimed to distil what drives public acceptance in horse sports.The project, supported by The Racing Foundation, moves the conversation around public acceptance forward.World Horse Welfare CEO Roly Owers presented the project at The Racing Foundation conference at Ascot racecourse on 2 October.
Mental Health Professional - Mike Delaney helped to introduce equine facilitated psychotherapy to the UK in 2004 and describes how this work feeds his soul besides benefiting people suffering following severe trauma
Mike Delaney helped to introduce equine facilitated psychotherapy to the UK in 2004 and describes how this work feeds his soul besides benefiting people suffering following severe trauma
Moonshine on best behaviour
The county of Cornwall fields a clutch of champions, while a veteran horse earns his 11th title
'My bone was shattered'
A working rider bouncing back from serious injury and a busy farmer are among those securing coveted Badminton tickets
Home-bred takes two
From Star Wars to Harry Styles, riders celebrate music victories, while one amateur has to move her office for the week - but the effort pays off
Genetic susceptibility
A certain number of inherited disorders are limited to specific breeds. Rebecca Hamilton-Fletcher MRCVS explains the what and why of such cases
'The change was refreshing to watch'
H&H's showing editor on the new judging format at HOYS 2024
Actions rather than words are needed for horse sport's future
The 2024 Racing Foundation conference considered how to help maintain public support
We must change worming habits before it is too late
New guidelines on worm control have been published to try to fight the growing threat of anthelmintic resistance