The Scotsman

To remarkable year with Olympic gold

-

emerged from a bruising encounter with Puerto Rico’s Jose Gonzalez at the Emirates Arena.

If that was a tough defence, September brought Burns to the very brink of losing his crown at the SECC. Knocked down in the seventh round by Raymundo Beltran, the general consensus by the end of the 12th was that the Mexican visitor had done enough to become champion. Burns, nursing a broken jaw, was relieved to hear the announceme­nt of a splitdecis­ion draw that allows him to enter 2014 with the chance to put that scare behind him.

When Ryan Mania clocked in for work at Aintree on 6 April for the 2013 Grand National, he did so as a journeyman jockey who had only won nine per cent of his 1,322 races to date. Over 36 furlongs that day, he catapulted himself into the national conscience by winning aboard 66/1 shot Auroras Encore. The reward was a £50,000 payday, the acclaim of a packed paddock and the fame of being Scotland’s first National-winning jockey in 117 years, but a day later the 23-year-old from Galashiels was reunited with the reality of racing when he fell and was airlifted to hospital with neck and back injuries. Thankfully, he made a swift recovery.

Another coup engineered by a mounted Scot, less celebrated but perhaps even harderearn­ed, came in November. Showjumper Scott Brash, another Borderer, secured the Global Champions Tour title after winning the final leg in Doha on board Hello Sanctos, the horse he has ridden throughout his career.

The Peebles 28-year-old had already enjoyed a brush with mainstream fame by winning gold as a member of the British team at the London Olympics, but this marked him out as an individual star of considerab­le stature, too.

For some Scottish sportspeop­le, the Christmas break did not bring satisfacti­on with a job well done. What promised to be a year of rejuvenati­on for Scottish motorsport ended with Paul di Resta being dropped by Force India and left with no choice but to further his career on a different circuit, such as TCM touring cars.

Fifty years since Jim Clark won his first F1 world title, a sobering 2013 ended with Dario Franchitti’s injury-enforced retirement and with Di Resta being dragged through the courts by a claim for damages brought by his former manager, Anthony Hamilton.

It was also a sorry year for Scotland’s cricketers, and their only consolatio­n after failing to reach the first 16-team World Twenty20 finals is that the greater opportunit­y, to feature in a third World Cup, awaits them.

However, their form must improve if they are to secure one of two remaining places at the 2015 finals.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom