Sunday Independent (Ireland)

A Wyse gal: Rachel looks to a golden age

Thirteen years after she first met Tim Gredley, Rachel Wyse finally fell for the man who shares her passion. She spoke to Donal Lynch about TV success, criticism and finding happiness

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WHAT If they say literally anything is it which sounds like an opinion, it will about be a subject of threats and debate Rachel about whether they were just hired Wyse? for their looks. Rachel Wyse has Not run the gauntlet of some of this, since and handled it with serene dignity. Craig Perhaps to the average Irish person, Doyle has a sports anchor held quite she has a faintly aristocrat­ic whiff — this kind of cross-party fascinatio­n. a horsey-set girl done good — but to She seems to live an aspiration­al be Irish in the British media world is dream of meeting the biggest sports to be curiously classless, an unthreatst­ars in the world while enjoying the ening advantage. This is, perhaps, high life in London. For someone also why her range of sports runs so crisply profession­al, so carefully the spectrum from cricket to GAA. above the fray in her opinions, she They don’t pigeonhole her. She’s has endured enormous scrutiny and equal parts Ladies’ Day and Hill 16. comment. Her love life has been covered “It’s important to be versatile in as though she were Taylor Swift. terms of what you can cover,” she She hardly makes a move out of explains. “In the beginning, my boss place through any of it; no comment, was like ‘what’s your knowledge of and a big smile. It just seems cricket?’ and I had to say ‘honestly, to blow like a storm around her not much’. But then again, I think — she has that perfect newsreader most of the country was unaware quality; sphinx-like and inscrutabl­e. we even had a cricket team until It has helped her endure — she has they beat England in the World Cup. been at Sky Sports News for seven I got to know people who loved it years now — and has establishe­d and went to games and just sat on herself as one of the broadcaste­r’s cricinfo.com all day. I think you can brightest stars which is no mean learn to love a sport. When you follow feat considerin­g its roster of former a person’s career, you become a sporting greats. She fronts the channel’s bit invested in it.” widely praised GAA coverage She is an image of an Irish person over the summer and has won warm in London that gives comfort amid reviews for her work. all the Brexit paranoia. She refers to

“It’s been an incredible journey, the last seven years,” the 32-year-old presenter says. “I’ve been so lucky to do something I love — that’s what I focus on. It’s been such an amazing learning experience. People are entitled to their opinions. I have my opinion, I’ll watch someone on TV and go ‘I just don’t like them really’. It’s not personal, it’s just an opinion. Or I might say: she’s not necessaril­y the person I would have put in that role. Would I go online and vent that thought? Probably not.”

Maybe she knows it’s not her, it’s us. Female sports anchors have turned out to be a curious barometer for sexism in the social media age. The overblown nature of the reactions to them — witness Rachel Riley recently resigning over the uproar at her innocuous comment that Tottenham’s unsuccessf­ul league effort was “a bottle job” — is underscore­d by the unspoken sense that to some people, their very presence as women — in an until-recently exclusivel­y male field — is still controvers­ial. the city as a home from home. Her brother and sister live there. She can’t imagine moving “home, home” in the foreseeabl­e future. London is at the heart of everything that’s going on for her. But that doesn’t mean it hasn’t been a strange and terrible few months there. She was on her way home from her boyfriend’s house the day after the Grenfell Tower fire and saw the blaze on the skyline. “I came back from Tim’s house the morning after the fire, where I live in Battersea is by the river and then you’ve got Chelsea, Fulham and over to Kensington, and you see the smoke rising right in front of you. I could see it there on the skyline. It was just horrific, it was the morning after so we understood by then what had happened. It doesn’t look like enough has been done. Theresa May doesn’t seem to have, what’s the word, empathy.”

The crises that engulf London sit in stark relief to her own life, which seems to be in a golden age. Aside from the career, she is more settled in her personal life. Tim is Tim Gredley — multimilli­onaire developer and showjumper. They’ve been together for a year now. They knew each other slightly years ago but it was only when they met up again in the middle of last year that they began a relationsh­ip.

“I met Tim 13 years ago at a horse show in Cavan. I was jumping and he had horses. But then nothing happened and all these years later, we met again. We weren’t in each other’s orbits at all through the intervenin­g years. We just met up last year and it went from there. We’ve been together a year now. It’s going great, I’m very happy.”

In the spring, Rachel and Tim took a trip to Hong Kong together to watch his horse Big Orange take part in races at Sha Tin. They also dressed up for a date to the Racehorse Owners Associatio­n Awards in December. And the couple have shared pictures of them together in the past few weeks, with Rachel posting an Instagram snap of Gredley hugging her.

Aside from being sporty, Gredley has been called one of the most eligible bachelors in Britain and is one of the richest young men in the country — his fortune tops €224m. To say he is a catch might be understati­ng it. Did any of her girlfriend­s tease her about how minted he was?

“No, that has never come up in conversati­on at all,” she responds.

Is managing the distance a problem — she is travelling every week for the four months of the GAA championsh­ips? “If you want to make something work in life, there’s always time to fit somebody in. It works for us. We just click and get on well. Of course, he’s met my friends and we’ve lots of mutual friends. It’s nice to have similar interests.”

Growing up in Blackrock, Co Dublin, Rachel was mad about horses — her father was a judge in the Dublin Horse Show. She went to St Andrew’s College and competed internatio­nally at show jumping. She was a hard-working student who left with what she describes as a “decent” Leaving Certificat­e, and went on to complete a degree in business studies. But she still hankered for horses and only took a job at the local Dublin City Channel because she presumed it would leave her with

Irish women who forged media careers abroad

plenty of time for equestrian matters.

It turned out to be a good apprentice­ship. She did everything that went into making each broadcast, including “moving the autocue with my foot”. While on a trip to Aintree, a friend of hers called to say that Sky Sports News was looking for a presenter and she should apply. “So I fired off the email and lo and behold, they emailed me back and said when will you be in London. I lied and said I’d be there next week. I went and did the interview and a month later I was moving over. At that stage, I still had it in my mind to do something with horses. But I still thought I’d do this for a while to pay the bills.”

She had no real inkling of the enormous reach of Sky Sports. “Then all of a sudden, my brother’s friends were on to him going ‘can your sister get us tickets to this and that’ and it was sort of an insight into the huge audience it has. You read comments online and it’s the one negative one about your accent or your presentati­on and it’ll stick in your mind, but as the years go on, it has become easier to block that out. There are people in my life who I’ve learned from and who have given me constructi­ve criticism. I’ve a degree in journalism and a diploma, yes, I’ve been given opportunit­ies but I’ve worked my way up as well.”

She reportedly receives a huge amount of fan mail from Sky Sports’ overwhelmi­ngly male viewership, but she seems to take it all in the right spirit. “The fan stuff is all fun. You would get things like someone had sent a picture of his teddy bears with his address on it. It was sweet, I wasn’t entirely sure of their age, so I didn’t know how to take it. There are a few things that get sent in and you realise that what’s written is a bit vile and you just quickly move on. On Valentine’s Day, they send cards.”

Given her trial by fire in the Irish media, it’s easy to see why she might be a bit guarded. She is unfailingl­y polite but it’s clear she doesn’t relish being interviewe­d, particular­ly if the conversati­on veers away from her career. Many will remember her Late Late Show appearance where she and Ryan Tubridy had the chemistry of frost meeting dry ice. Twitter exploded and The Daily Edge ran an article about the “10 most awkward moments” from it, including a meme-ified side-eye from Ryan.

She smiles glacially when I bring it up but expresses puzzlement that anyone saw tension onset. “I remember working in a PR company doing rehearsals and I acted as a guinea pig for him then, so I would have liked to have thought he was nice in return.

“I mean, I can only say it was a good experience. I thought it was probably friendly banter. He came up after the show and we had a drink in the green room, so there was no problem, but maybe others saw it differentl­y.”

She says she wants to start a family at some point, “but it’s definitely not on the agenda at the moment, I’m more focused on getting through the next four months of travelling and doing a good job at work. There are only about eight or nine women working at Sky Sports News and I think all bar three of us are mothers. So, as far as I’m concerned, there would be no problem with working and being a mother.”

Given that she is one of the very few Irish female television journalist­s to make it in the UK, there has been some speculatio­n that sooner or later, there would be offers for her to come home and work here. She says that at the moment she can’t imagine coming back, however.

“Would I move home in the foreseeabl­e future — no! I live with my best friend. My parents were just over, we see a lot of each other. A lot of my good friends from here left during the crash and there’s a nice little group of us now. I am very lucky.” Rachel Wyse presents live GAA on Sky Sports throughout the summer. Coverage on Sky continues next Saturday

‘As far as I am concerned, there would be no problem with working and being a mother’

LAURA WHITMORE: Laura (inset below) rose through the ranks at blinding speed, from a Newstalk internship to MTV, to ITV, all in a few short years.

Bray-born Laura studied at the Leinster School of Music and Drama as a teenager and landed in MTV in 2008, after winning an open competitio­n for a presenting role.

She carried the Olympic Torch in London in 2012 and last year was a celebrity contestant on the BBC’s 2016 series of Strictly Come Dancing.

She’s been linked to Game Of Thrones star Richard Madden and Danny O’Reilly from The Coronas. She lives in Camden, London.

ORLA GUERIN: After starting out in print journalism, Orla, from Dublin, made a career as RTE’s youngest-ever foreign correspond­ent — she was sent to Eastern Europe when she was just 23.

She left RTE to run for the Labour party but did not win a seat.

She then joined the BBC and forged an internatio­nal reputation with her incredibly evocative war pieces. A decade after arriving in London, she was awarded an MBE. RUTH O’NEILL: Castleknoc­k woman Ruth worked in Los Angeles from 2010 to 2015, where she gained experience as an associate producer for ABC News and as a reporter for E! News and E! Online. In 2015, she moved back to Ireland, but after nothing really took off for her here, she decided to make the move to New York city. The blonde beauty was about to leave for New York when she got a call from Xpose asking to cover maternity leave for six months — she rejected the offer and moved to New York. But, while she was over there, TV3 came knocking again and she decided it was too good of an opportunit­y to turn down, so she returned home to host TV3’s Xpose. She most recently said that this was a mistake, as she missed her friends in the States so much. She now has her sights set on working in London.

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 ??  ?? TOGETHER: Rachel is loved-up with showjumper boyfriend Tim Gredley
TOGETHER: Rachel is loved-up with showjumper boyfriend Tim Gredley
 ??  ?? Dublin-born Rachel Wyse says the last seven years as a Sky Sports News presenter has been ‘an amazing learning experience and an incredible journey’
Dublin-born Rachel Wyse says the last seven years as a Sky Sports News presenter has been ‘an amazing learning experience and an incredible journey’
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