That moment - a touch before 4.30 on 5 April 2014 – will, surely, forever be seared into his memory. But if Dr Richard Newland ever needs to reassure himself that his 25-1 shot Pineau De Re’s mastery of Aintree’s Grand National fences, and the celebrations that ensued as he was hoisted aloft by his nephew Rupert and his companions was indeed reality and not fantasy, he only has to glance at a wall of his home at his Worcestershire stables.
It’s there in all its glory. Not a Bansky, maybe. But a unique piece of wall-art.
He recalls: “The day after the National, I went into a service station and bought all the newspapers with all the photos and reports. My wife (Laura) very cleverly turned all the cuttings into wallpaper.
Newland, 57 this month, and the father of three daughters, is rightly unashamedly proud of his feat and adds: “I’ll be quite honest with you, I do enjoy looking at it sometimes. It was a magical time, an amazing day.”
Yet, the stories within those newspaper cuttings suggested that a character who had run GP surgeries until the previous year, and was chief executive of CHS Healthcare, a business which helps the NHS discharge patients, was content for training to remain a hobby. At the time, he stabled 12 horses; his patrons primarily family and friends.
Yet, even as he protested that he trained horses “just for the fun of it”, and “I have no real plans to change because if I had more than 12 horses I wouldn’t really be able to cope” many will have harboured their doubts – scepticism that was more than justified by what confronts you today.
Denne historien er fra November 2020-utgaven av Racing Ahead.
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Denne historien er fra November 2020-utgaven av Racing Ahead.
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
JANGO GOES SAILING BAIE
John Anthony keeps pace with the quickies in the race against the clock
HOPING FOR CLAR SKIES
Andy Newton crunches the numbers ahead of the Clarence House Chase
ROCKING THE COTS
Andy Newton reviews the betting and trends ahead of the Cotswold Chase
ODDS-ON TO TOP THEIR CLASS
Racing to School charity on the march to reach its 250,000th participant
FIBRE'S FIRST FOR FITNESS
Flbre-Beet from British Horse Feeds is the ideal support for horses suffering or recovering from gastric ulcers
COMMAND PAD
Ben Hastie talks to jockey Paddy Brennan about his brilliant career in the saddle and what lies ahead
TAKE HIGH FIVE
Helen Edwards was in Tokyo to see Do Deuce and Yutaka Take nick thriller
JUMPBACK TO FUTURE
reports on jumps return at Windsor after almost two decades
LUMP ON STORMIN' GORMAN
Graham Buddry looks back on twomile ace with no fear of handicapper
PAROL HEADS UP BEN'S TEN
Ben Morgan casts a shrewd eye over his key punting hopes for the month