Western Morning News

Fairytale finale for Waley-Cohen

-

AMATEUR rider Sam Waley-Cohen enjoyed a fairytale finale to his career as he steered Noble Yeats to victory in the Randox Grand National at Aintree.

The 39-year-old announced his intention to retire on Thursday, nominating Emmet Mullins’ charge as his farewell ride in the world’s most famous steeplecha­se.

Sent off at 50-1, few would have expected Noble Yeats to strike in the extended fourand-a-quarter-mile showpiece – but he ran a magnificen­t race as he fended off the 15-2 favourite Any Second Now by two and a quarter lengths for a famous success.

A jubilant Waley-Cohen – who won the Cheltenham Gold Cup with Long Run in 2011 – said: “He ran for me, he couldn’t go the early pace and I just tried to find pockets to give him a bit of space to run into. I found myself on the inner and was going more forward than I wanted to.

“He loves seeing his fences, so I kept trying to find a spot where he could see them. When I asked him he came, but if I just half-asked him he wasn’t confident, so I was trying to sit against him – he likes the bit in his mouth and your legs against him.

“I was just trying to get him in that nice rhythm and as soon as I asked him, he went.

“I thought I’d gone too early (at the last). I really didn’t want to get there then, but as soon as he picked up I thought ‘he’s gone, he’s got this.’

“Dad has always supported me unwavering­ly, we’ve never had a cross word, it’s always been for fun. It’s been a love affair. To my wife, long-suffering, they aren’t all good days, there are bad days in this sport.

“We came here thinking the sun’s out, it’s your last ride – go and have a nice spin, no expectatio­ns. Just enjoy it.

“It’s a dream. I couldn’t believe it.” He added: “I have to thank so many people. People said he was too young at seven, but when you’re on a horse that age you can take chances and it paid off.

“He jumped neatly and I started to think he was really travelling, I started following Santini and then he just started to go forwards.

“He jumped the last well, but then I felt the other horse come to me and I thought he was going to get me. But when I really asked him he kept finding and galloped all the way to the line. I was overwhelme­d when I crossed the line, but then you have a responsibi­lity to the horse so I had to keep him walking and get some water on him and make sure he was fine.

“As a jockey your race isn’t run until your horse is safe so that was my main thought – then get weighed in and go and enjoy it!

“Every day you win a race for your family is an amazing day, it doesn’t matter if it’s a point-to-point or the Grand National. People might say ‘yeah, whatever’ to that but it’s true, it’s a family day out and I’m overjoyed to win. That’s definitely it now, I’m done. I always knew when I had second thoughts about getting out of bed to go and ride one it would be time to call it a day and I couldn’t think of anywhere better to go out than this. The reason I kept coming back here year after year is to have a feeling like that.”

Waley-Cohen senior was beaming with pride as he said: “I was shouting so hard. What could be more wonderful, we’ve had so many wonderful happy days together.

“He’s won big races from the Gold Cup to two King Georges and a lot of handicaps like the Whitbread, the Topham and the Becher – he’s the man over these fences, he’s extraordin­ary. If you could bottle it you would.

“He’s the only the amateur to have won the Gold Cup, the King George twice and the Grand National. It’s so extraordin­ary.”

 ?? ?? Noble Yeats ridden by jockey Sam Waley-Cohen wins the Randox Grand National at Aintree on Saturday
Noble Yeats ridden by jockey Sam Waley-Cohen wins the Randox Grand National at Aintree on Saturday

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom