Devon Loch

Devon Loch
Sire Devonian
Grandsire Hyperion
Dam Coolaleen
Damsire Loch Lomond
Sex Gelding
Foaled 1946
Country Great Britain
Colour Bay
Owner Queen Elizabeth The Queen Mother
Last updated on 19 January 2008

Devon Loch (1946 – 1963) was a racehorse, which fell on the final straight while leading the 1956 Grand National.

Owned by Queen Elizabeth The Queen Mother and ridden by Dick Francis, Devon Loch had won two races already that season and finished third in the National Hunt Handicap Chase at Cheltenham.[1] His progress was helped when the favourite, Must, and a previous winner, Early Mist, fell early on.[2]

He went to the front of the race with three jumps remaining, cleared the last half a length ahead of E.S.B., and took a commanding lead on the final stretch.[1] Then, in front of the royal box just 40 yards from the winning post and five lengths ahead, he suddenly inexplicably jumped into the air and landed on his stomach, allowing E.S.B. to overtake and win. Although jockey Dick Francis tried to cajole the horse, it was unable to continue. Afterwards, the Queen Mother said: "Oh, that's racing."[3][4]

It is still uncertain and debated to this day as to why Devon Loch jumped; some reports claimed he suffered a cramp in his hindquarters causing the collapse. Another report asserted that a shadow thrown by the adjacent water-jump fence (which horses only traverse on the first circuit of the Aintree course) may have baffled Devon Loch into thinking a jump was required and  confused as to whether he should jump or not  he half-jumped and collapsed. Jockey Dick Francis later stated that a loud cheer from the crowd, for an expected royal winner, distracting the horse is a more likely explanation.

Reports that the horse had suffered a heart attack were dismissed, as Devon Loch recovered far too quickly for this to have been the case. He lived another six years, being put down during or shortly after the cold winter of 1962–3.

Modern use

"To do a Devon Loch" is a modern metaphor now sometimes used in sports and otherwise to explain a sudden, last-minute failure of teams or a sportsperson to complete an expected victory, for example: "Manchester United won't do a Devon Loch and lose the title after beating Chelsea"[5] or "Lewis Hamilton surrendering the championship having led Kimi Räikkönen by 17 points with just two races remaining was a Devon Loch calamity".[6] Another example occurred ahead of the 2011 Irish presidential election when Seán Gallagher's campaign came undone in the final television debate, his fall from grace was compared to Devon Loch's fall just before the winning post in the 1956 Grand National.[7]

In an article in The Times on 4 August 2012, Rick Broadbent wrote about the final day of the 2012 Olympics heptathlon competition: "Jessica Ennis is almost there. It would take a Devon Loch-style collapse to deny her the gold medal now."[8] Referencing Leicester City F.C.'s position atop the Premier League table into the second half of the season, on January 23, 2016 Stuart James for The Guardian wrote, "Without wishing to put any extra pressure on Ranieri and his players, it is starting to look as though it would take a Devon Loch-style collapse for Leicester to miss out on a place in the top four."[9]

References

  1. 1 2 Randall, John (14 February 2010). "Francis scaled the peaks as both rider and writer". Racing Post. Retrieved 22 March 2016.
  2. "Grand National 2016". Grand-national-world.co.uk. Archived from the original on 9 April 2006. Retrieved 2015-12-21.
  3. The Guardian (March 24, 1956). "Devon Loch joins the great failures".
  4. Armytage, Marcus (2004-04-06). "Francis was victim of a great sporting calamity". Telegraph.
  5. MirrorFootball (2011-05-08). "Fergie: United won't do a Devon Loch and lose it now".
  6. PlanetF1.com (2007-10-22). "A Final Conclusion From The Season's Finale".
  7. "Surprises still possible in Irish presidential election". BBC News. 27 October 2011.
  8. Rick Broadbent (2012-08-04). "Ennis on last lap as gold beckons". The Times. Retrieved 2015-12-21.
  9. James, Stuart. "Jamie Vardy scores to help Leicester beat Stoke and reclaim top spot", The Guardian, London, 23 January 2016. Retrieved on 24 January 2016.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.