East Kilbride News

WHEN HARRY MET SAVVY

Star jockey thriving on and off the racecourse

- BY CRAIG SWAN

HARRY COBDEN is building. He’s building his profile into one of the elite performers in racing.

He’s building his winners tally. He’s also building his knowledge, nous and burgeoning reputation and

when it’s all done, he’ll still be building. With bricks and hay bales.

Cobden is a class act on and off the track.

Settled smoothly into the high-octane job as No.1 rider to champion trainer Paul Nicholls, he has the temperamen­t and on-course skills to succeed.

Off it, it’s equally impressive. At the age of just 22, he has the world at his feet.

The trappings of fame, lucrative prize money in the bank, the pitfalls of success at a tender age for a major sportsman are dotted everywhere across Cobden’s fields. A landscape of landmines.

But rather than risk walking through it, he’d rather build or farm on it.

As level headed as he is talented, Cobden doesn’t court the high life. It’s not that he doesn’t like enjoying himself, it’s just he’s bright enough to see danger around corners.

Cobden might be fit and healthy. He might be at the top of the game. He might be able to swan around like he owns a place, drive fast cars and wear a £500 pair of trainers if he wants. However, it’s not an option.

Instead, he’d rather get his hands dirty, drive a tractor and wear wellies when he’s not gracing the track.

He revealed: “I’m always looking ahead. Racing is something you might not do forever. Jockey might be a short career, so I’m planning ahead already at home. I wouldn’t think about racing very often when I get home. My family have a farm and I want to get into farming and do a bit of constructi­on work and things like that. I’ve got a few little things going on.

“Yes, I’ve seen Grand Designs! I watched a show on TV recently where they buy a house, do it up and sell it on. I’m not really sure that would be my thing but I am planning ahead.

“I don’t waste money. I’ve stuck it all away. It’s certainly not all about the fast cars and brand new clothes and style for me.

“So many jockeys in the past have come from nothing, earned loads of money but then it was gone. They enjoyed life and I’m all about that as well but you need to get yourself set up.

“At the end of the day you are only one fall away from it being finished. You have to be sensible in some aspects in terms of sticking a bit by.

“Get a house bought, or buy a bit of land. Do something. I think a few people might have wasted a fair bit of money and, if they had their time again, then they might do it differentl­y.”

Cobden’s not paying lip service when he says that.

When Betfair Hurdle Day was postponed at Newbury a fortnight ago, he got the working togs on. He explained: “We’d just put a new building up, so I spent the morning laying concrete. It needed done and I just did it. It takes your mind off the racing.”

It’s a modest and hard-working approach that is serving him well.

He faced the usual issues as a teenager wanting to be a sportsman of seeing his mates head out on the lash while he had to stay home.

Cobden said: “From the age of 16 to 19, your friends are partying and you are missing out.

“I suppose it was thanks to my mum that she kept me under control when I wanted to go out.

“It’s something that was on your mind and even the other jockeys in the yard were doing the same things – going out and having a great time.

“They’d come in on the Monday morning, you’d hear all their stories and wish you were out there with them.

“But it was a good thing I stayed in and concentrat­ed on riding. It has paid off.”

Much of this grounded outlook may explain why Cobden has eased so seamlessly into the role with Nicholls because it’s no job for the faint hearted.

The trainer is fiercely loyal but he’s also an out-and-out winner.

Demands are high on his riders. Some, such as Ruby Walsh in the past, can cope. Others cannot.

Cobden can handle it and his persona makes him gold dust for the game. He’s young, talented, articulate and as impressive with the public side of racing as he is when he’s sat on the horse flesh.

He said: “When I get home and know I’ve done my best and haven’t done anything seriously wrong, I sleep well at night.

“If it does go wrong you try to get it right the next time, having held your hands up.

“You can’t dwell on things. I’m sure many people have for too long and it’s probably shown up in their riding the next day.

“When I got the No.1 job I was probably quite green at the time but in the past couple of years, I have improved and I don’t feel pressure on the big days.

“From a jockey’s point of view, when they are getting a lot of pressure from the trainer and they can’t quite handle it, you freeze. You are not yourself then you make wrong decisions and it’s a downhill curve.

“King George Day at Kempton on Cyrname was an example. I was frustrated for about five seconds crossing the line but then it’s on to the next one.

“When I started out, the cameras and press were not something I was used to. No one wanted to hear my opinion but you have some success on the track and people want to hear.

“You have to be careful what you say in case you shoot yourself in the foot but you also have to give the press time because people want to know what you think about the horses.

“Five minutes of your day goes a long way.”

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 ??  ?? CYR ONE Cobden, below, has tasted great success aboard the likes of Cyrname, main, but experience­d the sound of silence when he won on 33/1 shot Kilbricken Storm, left, in the 2018
Albert Bartlett
CYR ONE Cobden, below, has tasted great success aboard the likes of Cyrname, main, but experience­d the sound of silence when he won on 33/1 shot Kilbricken Storm, left, in the 2018 Albert Bartlett
 ??  ?? JUST THE JOB Harry, seen onboard McFabulous, won’t let the pressure of riding for Nicholls, above, ever get to him
JUST THE JOB Harry, seen onboard McFabulous, won’t let the pressure of riding for Nicholls, above, ever get to him

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