
The second time was after yesterday’s King George, in which Gosden played a much bigger part than just that of winning trainer. Of course being the successful trainer would have been noteworthy enough, for in a glittering career this was the first time he had won the race, 51 years after his father Towser won it with Aggressor, when John was a nine-year-old boy. But in tragic circumstances, Gosden was hailed not just for a superb training performance in preparing the three-year-old Nathaniel for such a prestigious win, but for stepping in to assist the seriously injured Rewilding, staying with the horse and even ensuring he had a last mouthful of grass before the vet performed the sorriest task on the racecourse.
It would have been easy to assume that someone else would catch Rewilding and comfort him in his last moments, and understandable to want to enjoy a sweet victory with a colt supplemented for £75,000 who took the scalps of Workforce and St Nicholas Abbey and can now command pretty much any price as a stallion prospect.
But someone who cares as deeply about the sport that has made him famous as Gosden does understood instinctively the impact a sight as desperate as Frankie Dettori on the turf and a loose horse with a broken leg cantering before the packed stands could have on racing. Our sport, in the headlines again, for all the wrong reasons.
In saying that, his actions, and sensible description of events in post-race interviews, were not just about being seen to do the right thing. He did the right thing simply because nobody who is as successful a trainer as Gosden can have reached that place without an intuitive sympathy and sensitivity for the horses who helped get him there, even – and especially – in the darkest of hours.
For British horseracing, the afternoon of Saturday, 23 July was just about as dark as can be. The exquisite Rewilding, last seen in triumph overturning the hot favourite So You Think in the Prince Of Wales’s Stakes at Royal Ascot, laying down his life on the same stretch of turf, just 38 days later. Hard to bear for even the hardest of hearts.
Sad reversal though it was, it is pulled sharply into perspective by the senseless loss of so many lives in Norway 24 hours earlier (and it is certainly not my intention to be disrespectful to any of the families of the Norwegian victims in comparing their loss to something so relatively insignificant as horseracing).

Earlier in the week, I spent an afternoon listening in to the Hatchfield Farm appeal hearing. John Gosden gave up the whole of his day to give evidence on behalf of the Newmarket training fraternity. What he probably hadn’t bargained for was the vitriolic cross-questioning by Lord Derby’s QC and his colleague. Their claims, that the mass opposition from the entire local racing and breeding industry – and from many further afield – to Lord Derby’s plans to undermine the famous and historic training centre with a huge ‘urban extension’, was somehow a personal vendetta by John Gosden and his wife Rachel Hood would have been laughable had they not been so deeply offensive.

Throughout this now boringly long battle over Hatchfield Farm, Lord Derby has maintained his line that he would do nothing to harm Newmarket’s status as a training centre without equal. Anyone who believes this disingenuous statement should sit in the inquiry for an hour or so and listen to the way his legal representatives describe the town (“a sustainable settlement for development”) and so readily dismiss the experience and heartfelt concerns of those people who live in Newmarket and deal with its traffic issues on a daily basis.
It remains a source of bitter disappointment to me and to many other people who care about racing and Newmarket, that a man whose family name has been so intrinsically linked with the sport in this town for generations could care so little for its future. Thank goodness there are so many people prepared to stand up in opposition to these plans.
And in other news…

William has won several races on Kadouchski (right), and won a bumper recently with his half-brother Douchkirk, so it’s no surprise that he’s fond of the family. ‘Kadou’ is such a bold, willing and accurate jumper that he must be a gift to school and William had a big smile on his face after pulling up, declaring that he’d like to ride him in the Topham after he’s won a few novice chases. Here’s hoping.


This could be a big week for John’s apprentice, Hannah Nunn, who won ATR’s Ride of the Week last week for her first win on Kadouchski. She has an outside ride for Peter Salmon at Redcar on Wednesday, and will then partner Hotfoot on Thursday and Ethics Girl on Saturday. Before that we can look forward to Batgirl’s return to her favourite track Yarmouth on Monday, and Silken Thoughts will round off our racing week at Newbury on Sunday. Fingers crossed for them all.
3 comments:
I can only give you a "C" for this blog Emma. The "C"s are current,concise,correct and complete content. One knows an excellent blog when one reads it and you can not disagree or add to it. Keep up the good work.
Thanks Alan, really kind and lovely to hear from you. Hope you're keeping well.
Emma, so beautifully written, this had me in tears. xx
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