Ruby Walsh

Ruby Walsh

Ruby Walsh, Cheltenham 2005
Occupation Jockey
Born (1979-05-14) 14 May 1979
Kill, County Kildare, Ireland
Career wins 2000+
Racing awards

Irish National Hunt champion jockey in 1998/99, 2000/01, 2004/05, 2005/06, 2006/07, 2007/08, 2008/09, 2009/10, 2013/14, 2014/15, 2015/16 & 2016/17

Leading jockey at the Cheltenham Festival in 2004, 2006, 2008, 2009, 2010, 2011, 2013, 2014, 2015, 2016 & 2017

Recipient of the Horse Racing Ireland National Hunt award in 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007 & 2008

Recipient of the International Jockey of the Year Lester Award in 2007, 2008 & 2010
Significant horses
Big Buck's, Hurricane Fly, Kauto Star, Annie Power, Douvan,Commanche Court,Papillon Vautour Faugheen

Rupert "Ruby" Walsh (born 14 May 1979 in Kill, County Kildare, Ireland) is an Irish jockey. He is the second child, and eldest son, of former champion amateur jockey Ted Walsh and his wife Helen.[1]

Career

Showing talent from an early age, Walsh won the Irish amateur title twice, in 1996/97 (aged 18) and 1997/98, before turning professional.[1] He won the English Grand National in 2000 at his first attempt, aged 20, on Papillon,[2] a horse trained by his father and owned by Mrs J Maxwell Moran.[1] Father and son then went on to win the Irish Grand National with Commanche Court the same year. In the 2004/05 season Walsh won three of the four Nationals: the Irish on the 2006 Grand National winner, Numbersixvalverde, the Welsh on subsequent 2007 Grand National winner Silver Birch, and the English on Hedgehunter. He rode Cornish Rebel in the Scottish, but was beaten a short head by Joe's Edge. However, he had earlier success in that race on Take Control in 2002 and following the retirement in 2015 of Tony McCoy, became the only jockey currently riding to have won all four Nationals. Walsh has one of the best Grand National records amongst current jockeys having won the race twice (2000, 2005), finished second once (2006), third once (2009) and fourth twice (2001, 2002).

To date Walsh has ridden over 2000 winners including 56 winners at the Cheltenham Festival since his first win in 1998 on Alexander Banquet. These include the 2004 Queen Mother Champion Chase on Azertyuiop, the 2007 and 2009 Cheltenham Gold Cup on the favourite, Kauto Star[1] and two subsequent Queen Mother successes in 2008 and 2009 on the brilliant Master Minded. He also won both the 2006 Tingle Creek Chase and the King George VI Chase on Kauto Star. He repeated the King George feat, again on Kauto Star, in 2007 (just days after returning from injury), 2008 and 2009 when Kauto Star won impressively by 36 lengths. He reclaimed the King George VI Chase in 2011 on board Kauto Star after Long Run won the race in 2010. He won the Hennessy Gold Cup twice, in 2003 on Strong Flow, and in more recent times, 2009 with Denman. He also won the Whitbread Gold Cup twice, in 2001 and 2003 (the latter when it was run as the Attheraces Gold Cup), both times on Ad Hoc. In 2007, Walsh won the inaugural British Horseracing Board Jockeys' Order of Merit award.

To date Walsh has been Irish jump jockey champion twelve times – 1998/99, 2000/01, 2004/05, 2005/06, 2006/07, 2007/08, 2008/09, 2009/10, 2013/14, 2014/15, 2015/16 and 2016/17. Walsh's recent dominance of the jockeys' championship in Ireland is all the more remarkable given that for more than ten years he had a unique riding arrangement with two powerful stables, one on either side of the Irish Sea. Based in Calverstown, County Kildare, where he lives with his wife Gillian, he rides predominantly for Willie Mullins in Ireland. Formerly he also spent a substantial proportion of his time riding in England for Somerset-based champion trainer Paul Nicholls, the former trainer of Kauto Star.[1] Walsh also takes the occasional ride for his father, Ted, and a variety of other Irish trainers.

In January 2007, Walsh achieved the fastest ever century of winners in Irish jumps racing history aboard Bluestone Lad at Gowran Park. He ended the 2006/07 season with a combined total in Ireland and the UK of 198 winners, higher than any other jockey from either country that year. (This total was later increased to 200 on the disqualification of two horses for positive tests to banned substances. In both instances, Walsh had ridden the subsequently-promoted runners-up.) He repeated this feat in 2007/08, riding his 200th winner on Andreas at Sandown on his penultimate ride of the season. He rode his 1,000th Irish winner, Rare Article, at Sligo in May 2008.

At the 2009 Cheltenham Festival Walsh rode a record-breaking seven winners over the four days. He equalled that record at the 2016 Cheltenham Festival. On the second day of the 2010 festival he rode Sanctuaire to victory in the Fred Winter Juvenile Novices Handicap Hurdle and therefore became the jockey with the most wins in the history of the Cheltenham festival.

In March 2011, Walsh rode Hurricane Fly to victory in the Champion Hurdle at Cheltenham, finishing ahead of Peddlers Cross and Oscar Whisky. It was Walsh's first victory in the feature race of the opening day at the Cheltenham Festival.[3]

As of 2017, Walsh is the Festival's most successful rider with 56 wins and has won the leading rider's award eleven times within the last fourteen years.[4] In August 2015 Walsh won the Australian Grand National on Bashboy.[5]

Statistics

Cheltenham Festival winners (56)[6]
YearRaceMount
1998Champion BumperAlexander Banquet
2002Mildmay of Flete Handicap ChaseBlowing Wind
2003Arkle Challenge TrophyAzertyuiop
2004Queen Mother Champion ChaseAzertyuiop
Grand Annual ChaseSt Pirran
County HurdleSporazene
2005Champion BumperMissed That
Daily Telegraph ChaseThisthatandtother
2006Supreme Novices' HurdleNoland
William Hill TrophyDun Doire
County HurdleDesert Quest
2007Royal & SunAlliance ChaseDenman
Ryanair ChaseTaranis
Cheltenham Gold CupKauto Star
2008Queen Mother Champion ChaseMaster Minded
Ballymore Properties Novices' HurdleFiveforthree
Triumph HurdleCelestial Halo
2009David Nicholson Mares' HurdleQuevega
Queen Mother Champion ChaseMaster Minded
World HurdleBig Buck's
Ballymore Properties Novices' HurdleMikael d'Haguenet
RSA ChaseCooldine
Vincent O'Brien County Handicap HurdleAmerican Trilogy
Cheltenham Gold CupKauto Star
2010David Nicholson Mares' HurdleQuevega
Fred Winter Juvenile Novices' Handicap HurdleSanctuaire
World HurdleBig Buck's
2011Stan James Supreme Novices' HurdleAl Ferof
Stan James Champion HurdleHurricane Fly
David Nicholson Mares' HurdleQuevega
World HurdleBig Buck's
Vincent O'Brien County Handicap HurdleFinal Approach
2012World HurdleBig Buck's
David Nicholson Mares' HurdleQuevega
2013Stan James Supreme Novices' HurdleChampagne Fever
Stan James Champion HurdleHurricane Fly
David Nicholson Mares' HurdleQuevega
Champion BumperBriar Hill
2014Supreme Novices' HurdleVautour
David Nicholson Mares' HurdleQuevega
Neptune Investment Management Novices' HurdleFaugheen
2015Supreme Novices' HurdleDouvan
Arkle Challenge TrophyUn de Sceaux
Champion HurdleFaugheen
JLT Novices' ChaseVautour
2016Arkle Challenge TrophyDouvan
Champion HurdleAnnie Power
David Nicholson Mares' HurdleVroum Vroum Mag
Baring Bingham Novices' HurdleYorkhill
JLT Novices' ChaseBlack Hercules
Ryanair ChaseVautour
Dawn Run Mares' Novices' HurdleLimini
2017JLT Novices' ChaseYorkhill
Ryanair ChaseUn de Sceaux
Stayers' HurdleNichols Canyon
Dawn Run Mares' Novices' HurdleLet's Dance

He was the leading jockey at the Festival in 2004, 2006, 2008, 2009, 2010, 2011, 2013, 2014, 2015, 2016 and 2017.

Irish Jump Racing wins season by season[7]

Season Runs Wins Win %
1994/95 3 0 0
1995/96 77 8 10
1996/97 184 30 16
1997/98 230 41 18
1998/99 503 95 19
1999/00 239 33 14
2000/01 480 84 18
2001/02 444 84 19
2002/03 488 78 16
2003/04 360 70 19
2004/05 527 111 21
2005/06 422 90 21
2006/07 562 125 22
2007/08 547 131 24
2008/09 512 121 24
2009/10 424 128 25
2010/11 192 45 23
2011/12 358 85 24
2012/13 340 101 30
2013/14 403 122 30
2014/15 253 79 31
2015/16 350 105 30
2016/17 371 131 35

GB Jump Racing wins season by season[7]

Season Runs Wins Win %
1997/98 14 2 14
1998/99 13 1 8
1999/00 8 1 13
2000/01 18 5 28
2001/02 68 13 19
2002/03 295 76 26
2003/04 294 62 29
2004/05 311 81 26
2005/06 236 69 29
2006/07 291 75 26
2007/08 229 69 30
2008/09 252 69 27
2009/10 234 69 29
2010/11 106 26 25
2011/12 221 55 25
2012/13 211 57 27
2013/14 25 7 28
2014/15 56 13 23
2015/16 45 14 31
2016/17 24 6 25

Injuries

Like many jump jockeys, Walsh has suffered a number of serious injuries, the worst of which was a broken leg sustained in 1999 at Pardubice in the Czech Republic, a course he was visiting to compete in the famous Great Pardubice Steeplechase. He later broke the same leg while schooling a horse and was out of action for a total of five months that season, but recovered in time to partner Papillon to win his first Grand National.

Walsh has also fractured his wrist twice, dislocated one hip and fractured the other, cracked his elbow, dislocated both shoulders and suffered cracked and badly bruised vertebrae. A fall at the Paddy Power meeting at Cheltenham in November 2008 resulted in Walsh having his spleen removed in an emergency operation.[8] He returned to the saddle merely 27 days later.

Walsh fractured his left ankle during a fall from the ill-fated Imperial Hills, trained by Willie Mullins at Killarney in May 2009. During his time off he was present to saddle Sesenta for Willie Mullins in the Ascot Stakes at Royal Ascot.

During the run-up to the 2010 Grand National he broke his left arm after a fall from Celestial Halo. His horse fell and they both seemed to have got away unscathed, but a horse racing behind them landed on his arm while he was on the floor, breaking it in two places. Walsh suffered an injury in the same race in 2012 after a fall from Zarkander which ruled him out of the 2012 Grand National.

On the last day of the 2014 Cheltenham Festival Walsh sustained a compound fracture of the humerus in a fall in the Triumph Hurdle.[9]

On the day before the 2016 Grand National Walsh fractured his wrist after falling in the Topham chase on Blood Cotil.[10]

Trainer Split

In May 2013 it was announced that Walsh and Paul Nicholls were to split following Walsh's decision to spend more time in Ireland with his young family. However they parted on good terms and Walsh has continued to ride the occasional Nicholls horse, including winning on Al Ferof in the Grade 2 Amlin Chase at Ascot in November 2014.[11]

Personal life

Walsh married Gillian Doran in July 2006. Their first child, Isabelle, was born in October 2009. The couple have gone on to have two more daughters, Elsa and Gemma.

Walsh is mentioned in a song by the famous singer/songwriter Christy Moore called "The Ballad of Ruby Walsh," which appears on his album "Listen." The song is based on Christy's real life experience of watching the jockey at the Galway races.

TV

Walsh featured in a TG4 documentary called "Jump Boys". It followed the journeys of Walsh, Barry Geraghty and Davy Russell over the course of the 2011/12 season. It aired on 28th November 2012.[12] He has also occasionally worked as a racing pundit for RTÉ while injured and has appeared on the Channel 4 Racing Saturday morning programme The Morning Line on a number of occasions. Walsh has also featured in a number of well received commericials for the bookmaker Paddy Power, in particular a recent commercial prior to the Cheltenham Festival 2016 where he confronts an angry Twitter Troll and allegations that jockeys intentionally throw themselves off their horses.[13][14]

Major Wins

Republic of Ireland Ireland


United Kingdom Great Britain


France France


Australia Australia


United States United States


Japan Japan

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 "goracing profile Ruby Walsh". Goracing.ie. 14 October 2013. Retrieved 15 March 2014.
  2. "'National: Quote ... unquote'". BBC News. 8 April 2000. Retrieved 15 March 2014.
  3. "Cheltenham Festival: Hurricane Fly wins Champion Hurdle". BBC Sport. 15 March 2011. Retrieved 15 March 2011.
  4. "Fly in fine fettle as Ruby looks to open Festival with a bang". Irish Independent. 11 March 2014. Retrieved 11 March 2014.
  5. "Ruby Walsh wins Australian Grand National". BBC. Retrieved 10 August 2015.
  6. "Horse Racing – Cheltenham Festival: Walsh and Jacob face lengthy injury lay-offs – Yahoo Eurosport UK". Uk.eurosport.yahoo.com. 20 April 2011. Retrieved 15 March 2014.
  7. 1 2 "Jockey R Walsh Record By Race Type". Racing Post. 2 June 2011. Retrieved 15 March 2014.
  8. Horse Racing (26 December 2008). "Irreplaceable Ruby Walsh takes it all in his stride". Daily Telegraph. Retrieved 15 March 2014.
  9. "Ruby Walsh suffers compound fracture in horror fall at Cheltenham". Irish Independent. 18 March 2013. Retrieved 15 March 2014.
  10. "Ruby Walsh suffers fractured wrist and misses Grand National". Sky Sports. Retrieved 9 April 2016.
  11. Chris Cook. "Jump-racing power shift leads to Ruby Walsh and Paul Nicholls split | Sport". The Guardian. Retrieved 15 March 2014.
  12. "Ruby Walsh, Barry Geraghty & Davy Russell TG4 Doc Nears Completion | The Irish Film & Television Network". Iftn.ie. Retrieved 15 March 2014.
  13. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XQClFD5hr6I
  14. http://www.mirror.co.uk/sport/row-zed/ruby-walsh-teaches-twitter-troll-10006761
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