The Daily Telegraph

John Hanmer

Deeply knowledgea­ble linchpin of the Grand National commentary team for more than 30 years

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JOHN HANMER, who has died aged 82, was an admirably unflappabl­e racing commentato­r whose distinctiv­e gravelly tones reached their widest audience when he picked up the commentary as the runners crossed the Melling Road during the Grand National at Aintree, which he commentate­d on for more than three decades.

Hanmer’s principal role at the BBC was to act as a “spotter” for Peter O’sullevan and later Jim Mcgrath, and his asthmatic whispers could often be heard in the background of their commentari­es, picking up the fallers or horses that seemed to be making significan­t progress from the rear or middle of the field.

He was a consummate profession­al, and the depth of knowledge he acquired of racing colours and horses was second to none. He also did the job of paddock commentato­r for the BBC, alongside Jimmy Lindley.

After the televised races had been shown on Grandstand, Hanmer would generally pick up the microphone for the remaining races, most memorably when he ended up calling the last three races at Ascot in 1996 on the day that Frankie Dettori pulled off the incredible feat of riding all seven winners in the card.

After Peter O’sullevan had done the first four races live, he went off for a drink in the BBC box, whereupon Julian Wilson suggested Hanmer take his place calling the races, which were to be recorded until Dettori got beaten.

“I had seen Fujiyama Crest [Dettori’s seventh ride] run many times,” recalled Hanmer, “and he looked a very reluctant beast with just glimpses of form. Dettori, though, was on fire, filled it with confidence and rode it to make it think it was a good horse. He was always like that, brilliant if he was hot, useless if he was cold.

“He is a bit more mature now but in those days he was either one or the other. He had them well strung out coming out of Swinley Bottom and only then did people start to think he might win. Pat Eddery gave the second a very hard race, he did not like being beaten. Up in the commentary box, I was very remote from everything, I was not really conscious of the crowd.”

At the Grand National, because of the unusual size of the course, there was always a danger, even in the mid-afternoon light, that the jockeys’ colours would become an

indistingu­ishable blur as they jumped the fences on the far side of the course from the commentary box in the grandstand.

Consequent­ly it became standard practice for various television and radio commentato­rs to be strategica­lly placed around the course to give the millions of worldwide viewers the best possible coverage. Hanmer was generally positioned in a high tower in the centre of the course, and on both circuits he would pick up the

commentary as the runners came back over the Melling Road and take them over the next few fences before crossing to Peter O’sullevan in the grandstand.

However, in 2001 bad weather caused the power to fail suddenly at Becher’s just before the race, so Hanmer had to do Tony O’hehir’s legs as well as his own, which essentiall­y meant calling the bulk of the race, eventually won by Red Marauder.

“It was a heroic performanc­e,” recalled his BBC colleague Jim Mcgrath. “It was a very difficult commentary to pull off and he did it in terrific style. He was unflustere­d and remained calm in what was one of the most eventful Nationals ever run.”

John Richard Lyon Hanmer was born on July 12 1940. His father was away for much of the war serving in the Royal Welch Fusiliers, and John and his elder sister spent their early years at Vaynor Park in North Wales, his mother’s family home. His mother was passionate about racing, which is where his love of the sport came from. He did not even ride as a child because of his asthma.

He was sent to Eton, where his mother took him to the Derby instead of the school’s 4th of June festivitie­s, and afterwards he taught a number of subjects for a few years at Cothill prep school in Oxfordshir­e, which he had attended as a boy, while commentati­ng at point-to-points at weekends.

In 1960 he relocated to North Yorkshire, lodging at the Fairfax Arms at Gilling East, working as a race reader for Raceform, before joining the BBC in 1972.

Besides his work as a commentato­r, Hanmer was also a jockey’s agent, principall­y for Steve Cauthen, three times champion jockey after his arrival in Britain in 1979, Cash Asmussen and Mick Kinane. Hanmer was given the President’s Award at last year’s Horserace Writers and Photograph­ers Awards.

A gentleman in every sense of the word, John Hanmer was a convivial and much loved character in racing circles with a dry sense of humour and a taste for the good things in life – although he had to give up his beloved Havana cigars because of his asthma.

Away from racing, he was a keen bridge player, canny on the tennis court and passionate about cricket, both playing and watching. He also owned several racehorses over the years and like many of his colleagues enjoyed the odd flutter. He was also very keen on point-to-pointing and owned a number of point-to-pointers. His car was never the tidiest, to the extent that he was once contacted by a policeman who was sorry to report that it appeared to have been ransacked.

He married, in 1979, Gillie Smith, who survives him. There were no children.

John Hanmer, born July 12 1940, died November 27 2022

 ?? ?? Hanmer: as a ‘spotter’ he whispered to colleagues about fallers or horses moving up from the rear
Hanmer: as a ‘spotter’ he whispered to colleagues about fallers or horses moving up from the rear

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