Grand National | |
| |
Location | Aintree |
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Date | 15 April 2023 |
Winning horse | Corach Rambler |
Starting price | 8/1 F |
Jockey | Derek Fox |
Trainer | Lucinda Russell |
Owner | The Ramblers |
Conditions | Good to soft |
External videos | |
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Full replay of the 2023 Grand National Racing TV, YouTube | |
Full replay of the 2023 Grand National ITV Racing , YouTube |
The 2023 Grand National (officially known as the Randox 2023 Grand National for sponsorship reasons) was the 175th annual running of the Grand National horse race. It took place on Saturday 15 April 2023, at Aintree Racecourse near Liverpool, England. [1] The event was sponsored by Randox Health with Natasha Jonas acting as ambassador. [2]
The race was won by Corach Rambler who was trained by Lucinda Russell in Scotland and ridden by Irish jockey Derek Fox, who had both previously won the Grand National in 2017 with One For Arthur. [3]
The race start was delayed by 14 minutes, following protests by campaign group Animal Rising, the first such disruptions since the cancellation of the 1993 Grand National due to a series of false starts and the 1997 Grand National due to the IRA bomb threat. 118 arrests were made by Merseyside Police, for both "criminal damage and public nuisance offences". [4]
The initial entry of 85 horses was published on 7 February 2023. Only 31 of the horses entered were trained in Great Britain, compared to 54 in the initial entry for the 2022 race. Of the Irish-trained runners, 21 were trained by Gordon Elliott, who was seeking a fourth Grand National victory as a trainer. Bookmakers made 2022 winner Noble Yeats 10-1 favourite at the time of the entries. [5]
Weight for the race were announced on 21 February 2023. Three horses were given the top weight of 11 stones and 12 pounds; Any Second Now (the 2022 runner-up), Conflated and Hewick. Galvin and Noble Yeats were just behind on 11 stone 11, [6] and Noble Yeats remained the betting favourite at a best price of 11-1. Publication of the weights opened up the possibility that the final field would be dominated by Irish-trained runners, with 41 of the top 60 in the weights trained in Ireland. [7]
Nine horses were withdrawn at the acceptance stage on 7 March. Amongst the withdrawals were the 2021 winner Minella Times, who had been retired, and the fourth-placed horse from 2021 Burrows Saint. Iwilldoit was withdrawn having failed to meet the requirements of running in six steeplechases before 19 February. The withdrawals left 73 possible runners remaining with the next acceptance stage due on 28 March. [8]
A further sixteen horses were withdrawn at the 28 March acceptance stage to leave 57 possible runners. The fifth-placed horse from 2021, Farclas, was amongst the withdrawals and other notable scratchings included Becher Chase winner Ashtown Lad and the 2022 Irish Grand National winner Lord Lariat. The betting at this stage was headed by 6-1 chance Corach Rambler, who had won the Ultima Handicap Chase for a second consecutive year, followed by Noble Yeats at 8-1. Only Any Second Now remained from the three top-weighted horses as Conflated and Hewick were withdrawn. [9]
Final confirmations were made on 10 April and seven more horses were withdrawn, leaving 50 possible runners. Corach Rambler reimained as the general 6-1 betting favourite with Noble Yeats at 8-1 and Delta Work at 10-1. [10]
The 40 runners were finalised on Thursday 13 April. There were no withdrawals at Thursday's declaration stage. [11] In a change from previous years, no reserves were declared. [12] Escaria Ten, who finished ninth in the 2022 race, was declared a non-runner on the day. [13]
No | Horse | Age | Handicap | Odds [13] | Jockey | Trainer |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Any Second Now | 11 | 11-12 | 14/1 | Mark Walsh | Ted Walsh |
2 | Noble Yeats | 8 | 11-11 | 10/1 | Sean Bowen | Emmet Mullins |
3 | Galvin | 9 | 11-11 | 22/1 | Davy Russell | Gordon Elliott |
4 | Fury Road | 9 | 11-6 | 33/1 | Jonjo O'Neill Jr | Gordon Elliott |
5 | The Big Dog | 10 | 11-5 | 12/1 | Aidan Coleman | Peter Fahey |
6 | Capodanno | 7 | 11-5 | 22/1 | Danny Mullins | Willie Mullins |
7 | Delta Work | 10 | 11-4 | 11/1 | Keith Donoghue | Gordon Elliott |
8 | Sam Brown | 10 | 11-4 | 66/1 | Johnny Burke | Anthony Honeyball |
9 | Lifetime Ambition | 8 | 11-3 | 33/1 | Sean O'Keefe | Jessica Harrington |
10 | Carefully Selected | 11 | 11-1 | 33/1 | Michael O'Sullivan | Willie Mullins |
11 | Coko Beach | 8 | 11-0 | 28/1 | Harry Cobden | Gordon Elliott |
12 | Longhouse Poet | 9 | 11-0 | 20/1 | JJ Slevin | Martin Brassil |
13 | Gaillard Du Mesnil | 7 | 11-0 | 10/1 | Paul Townend | Willie Mullins |
14 | Darasso | 10 | 11-1 | 100/1 | Luke Dempsey | Joseph O'Brien |
15 | Le Milos | 8 | 10-11 | 12/1 | Harry Skelton | Dan Skelton |
17 | The Big Breakaway | 8 | 10-10 | 40/1 | Brendan Powell | Joe Tizzard |
18 | Cape Gentleman | 7 | 10-8 | 100/1 | Jody McGarvey | John Hanlon |
19 | Roi Mage | 11 | 10-8 | 33/1 | Felix de Giles | Patrick Griffin |
20 | Diol Ker | 9 | 10-8 | 100/1 | Kieren Buckley | Noel Meade |
21 | A Wave Of The Sea | 7 | 10-6 | 66/1 | Shane Fitzgerald | Joseph O'Brien |
22 | Minella Trump | 9 | 10-6 | 50/1 | Theo Gillard | Donald McCain |
23 | Vanillier | 8 | 10-6 | 20/1 | Sean Flanagan | Gavin Cromwell |
24 | Velvet Elvis | 7 | 10-6 | 25/1 | Darragh O'Keeffe | Thomas Gibney |
25 | Ain't That A Shame | 9 | 10-5 | 10/1 | Rachael Blackmore | Henry de Bromhead |
26 | Corach Rambler | 9 | 10-5 | 8/1 | Derek Fox | Lucinda Russell |
27 | Enjoy D'allen | 9 | 10-5 | 50/1 | Simon Torrens | Ciaran Murphy |
28 | Mr Incredible | 7 | 10-4 | 14/1 | Brian Hayes | Willie Mullins |
29 | Mister Coffey | 8 | 10-4 | 33/1 | Nico de Boinville | Nicky Henderson |
30 | Cloudy Glen | 10 | 10-4 | 80/1 | Charlie Deutsch | Venetia Williams |
31 | Hill Sixteen | 10 | 10-2 | 80/1 | Ryan Mania | Sandy Thomson |
32 | Gabby's Cross | 8 | 10-2 | 50/1 | Peter Carberry | Henry de Bromhead |
33 | Recite A Prayer | 8 | 10-1 | 80/1 | Jack Foley | Willie Mullins |
34 | Eva's Oscar | 9 | 10-1 | 50/1 | Alan Johns | Tim Vaughan |
35 | Our Power | 8 | 10-0 | 25/1 | Sam Twiston-Davies | Sam Thomas |
36 | Dunboyne | 8 | 10-0 | 50/1 | Jack Tudor | Gordon Elliott |
37 | Francky Du Berlais | 8 | 9-8 | 125/1 | Ben Jones | Peter Bowen |
38 | Fortescue | 9 | 9-13 | 100/1 | Hugh Nugent | Henry Daly |
39 | Back On The Lash | 9 | 9-13 | 22/1 | Adam Wedge | Martin Keighley |
40 | Born By The Sea | 9 | 9-10 | 50/1 | Philip Enright | Paul Gilligan |
Position | Name | Age | Handicap | SP | Distance | Jockey | Trainer | Prize money |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Corach Rambler | 9 | 10–5 | 8/1 Fav | Derek Fox | Lucinda Russell | £561,300 | |
2 | Vanillier | 8 | 10–6 | 20/1 | 2¼ lengths | Sean Flanagan | Gavin Cromwell | £211,100 |
3 | Gaillard Du Mesnil | 7 | 11–0 | 10/1 | 4¾ lengths | Paul Townend | Willie Mullins | £105,500 |
4 | Noble Yeats | 8 | 11–11 | 10/1 | 1½ lengths | Sean Bowen | Emmet Mullins | £52,700 |
5 | The Big Dog | 10 | 11–5 | 12/1 | Neck | Aidan Coleman | Peter Fahey | £26,500 |
6 | Born By The Sea | 9 | 10–2 | 50/1 | 1¼ lengths | Philip Enright | Paul Gilligan | £13,200 |
7 | Roi Mage | 11 | 10–8 | 33/1 | 3¾ lengths | Felix de Giles | Patrick Griffin | £6,800 |
8 | Mister Coffey | 8 | 10–4 | 33/1 | 12 lengths | Nico de Boinville | Nicky Henderson | £3,600 |
9 | A Wave Of The Sea | 7 | 10–6 | 66/1 | 2¾ lengths | Shane Fitzgerald | Joseph O'Brien | £2,000 |
10 | Le Milos | 8 | 10–11 | 12/1 | 7 lengths | Harry Skelton | Dan Skelton | £1,000 |
11 | Our Power | 8 | 10–2 | 25/1 | 19 lengths | Sam Twiston-Davies | Sam Thomas | |
12 | Enjoy D'allen | 9 | 10–5 | 50/1 | 3¼ lengths | Simon Torrens | Ciaran Murphy | |
13 | Fortescue | 9 | 10–2 | 100/1 | 7 lengths | Hugh Nugent | Henry Daly | |
14 | Carefully Selected | 11 | 11–1 | 50/1 | 20 lengths | Michael O'Sullivan | Willie Mullins | |
15 | Minella Trump | 9 | 10–6 | 50/1 | ½ lengths | Theo Gillard | Donald McCain Jnr | |
16 | Francky Du Berlais | 10 | 10–2 | 125/1 | 20 lengths | Ben Jones | Paul Bowen | |
17 | Ain't That A Shame | 9 | 10–5 | 10/1 | ¾ lengths | Rachael Blackmore | Henry De Bromhead |
Source [13]
Fence | Name | Jockey | Fate |
---|---|---|---|
1 | Cloudy Glen | Charlie Deutsch | Unseated rider |
1 | Diol Ker | Kieren Buckley | Unseated rider |
1 | Galvin | Davy Russell | Unseated rider |
1 | Hill Sixteen | Ryan Mania | Fell |
1 | Recite A Prayer | Jack Foley | Unseated rider |
2 | Darasso | Luke Dempsey | Unseated rider |
2 | Fury Road | Jonjo O'Neill Jr | Fell |
2 | The Big Breakaway | Brendan Powell | Fell |
8(Canal Turn) | Longhouse Poet | JJ Slevin | Unseated rider |
9(Valentine's Brook) | Lifetime Ambition | Sean O'Keefe | Brought down |
13 | Cape Gentleman | Jody McGarvey | Pulled up |
15(The Chair) | Gabby's Cross | Peter Carvery | Fell |
15(The Chair) | Sam Brown | Johnny Burke | Fell |
18 | Any Second Now | Mark Walsh | Pulled up |
18 | Dunboyne | Jack Tudor | Pulled up |
18 | Velvet Elvis | Darragh O'Keeffe | Pulled up |
21 | Delta Work | Keith Donoghue | Unseated rider |
21 | Eva's Oscar | Alan Johns | Unseated rider |
24(Canal Turn) | Mr Incredible | Brian Hayes | Unseated rider |
27 | Back On The Lash | Adam Wedge | Pulled up |
29 | Coko Beach | Harry Cobden | Pulled up |
30 | Capodanno | Danny Mullins | Pulled up |
"Corach Rambler soars into the lead in the National, Mister Coffey in second place, The Big Dog, Gaillard Du Mesnil, behind these Roi Mage, Born By The Sea, last year's winner Noble Yates, Vanillier, and Le Milos. They're heading towards the Elbow, they're all chasing Corach Rambler who is clear by a wide margin. The greys Vanillier and Gaillard Du Mesnil, with Noble Yates and The Big Dog are next. Getting lonely out in front, Corach Rambler just hanging, but surely has a big enough lead. It's six lengths to Vanillier and Gaillard Du Mesnil. Lucinda Russell, Derek Fox, and again Scotland take the National with Corach Rambler,"
ITV lead commentator Richard Hoiles describes the climax of the race. [14]
As the Grand National is accorded the status of an event of national interest in the United Kingdom and is listed on the Ofcom Code on Sports and Other Listed and Designated Events, it must be shown on free-to-air terrestrial television in the UK. The race was broadcast live on TV by ITV for the sixth time, and the final year in its current three year deal with the British Horseracing Authority. [15]
The ITV coverage was presented by Ed Chamberlin and Adele Mulrennan. Analysis was provided by former jockeys Sir Anthony McCoy, Mick Fitzgerald, Tom Scudamore, Harry Cobden and Ruby Walsh. Reports were provided by Alice Plunkett, Luke Harvey, Rishi Persad and Matt Chapman, and betting updates were provided by Brian Gleeson. Oli Bell and Chris Hughes covered viewers' comments on social media, while Mark Heyes and Charlotte Hawkins were chatting to the crowd on Ladies Day. The commentary team was Mark Johnson, Stewart Machin and Richard Hoiles, who called the finish for the sixth time. Following the race, Bell and Walsh guided viewers on a fence-by-fence re-run of the race. [16]
Hill Sixteen fell and was mortally injured at the first fence, killing him almost instantly. [17] The trainer of Hill Sixteen, Sandy Thomson, claimed that the horse became "hyper" because of the protests, which led to him not taking off at the first fence. Thomson was adamant that the actions of the protesters were behind his horse falling for the first time in his career. Hill Sixteen had previously ridden 27 races on 15 different tracks, and had previously jumped the Grand National fences at Aintree while competing twice in the Becher Chase . [18]
Earlier at the Aintree meeting Envoye Special had been euthanised, following an injury after a fall in the Foxhunters' Open Hunters' Chase and Dark Raven had been euthanised after a fall at the Turners Mersey Novice Hurdle. [19]
Animal rights campaign group Animal Rising had threatened to disrupt the race and were protesting from early on the day of the race. [20] 118 people were arrested over protests that delayed the start of race by 14 minutes. Merseyside Police held nine people who had been able to enter the track and later said arrests had been made for both "criminal damage and public nuisance offences", including arrests made before the race and connected to a protest that had blocked the M57. [19]
This was the third Grand National to be disrupted in post-war history since the 1993 Grand National which led to a series of false starts and the 1997 Grand National was postponed to Monday because of an IRA bomb threat.
The Grand National is a National Hunt horse race held annually at Aintree Racecourse in Aintree, Merseyside, England. First run in 1839, it is a handicap steeplechase over an official distance of about 4 miles and 2½ furlongs, with horses jumping 30 fences over two laps. It is the most valuable jump race in Europe, with a prize fund of £1 million in 2017. An event that is prominent in British culture, the race is popular amongst many people who do not normally watch or bet on horse racing at other times of the year.
Aintree Racecourse is a racecourse in Aintree, Metropolitan Borough of Sefton, Merseyside, England, bordering the city of Liverpool. The racecourse is the venue for the Grand National steeplechase, which takes place annually in April over three days. Aintree also holds meetings in May, October (Sunday), November and December.
The 2002 Grand National was the 155th official renewal of the Grand National steeplechase that took place at Aintree Racecourse near Liverpool, England, on 6 April 2002.
The 1998 Grand National was the 151st official renewal of the world-famous Grand National steeplechase that took place at Aintree near Liverpool, England, on 4 April 1998.
The 1997 Grand National was the 150th official running of the Grand National steeplechase held at Aintree near Liverpool. The race was scheduled to be run on Saturday 5 April 1997, but was postponed by two days to Monday 7 April after a Provisional Irish Republican Army (IRA) bomb threat forced the evacuation of the course.
The 2013 Grand National was the 166th annual running of the Grand National horse race at Aintree Racecourse near Liverpool, England. The showpiece steeplechase, which concluded a three-day meeting, took place on 6 April 2013. The maximum permitted field of 40 runners competed for a share of the £975,000 prize fund, which made the National the most valuable jump race in Europe.
The 2016 Grand National was the 169th annual running of the Grand National horse race at Aintree Racecourse near Liverpool, England. The showpiece steeplechase took place on 9 April 2016, the final day of a three-day meeting. A field of 39 runners competed for a share of a prize fund of £1 million.
The 2017 Grand National was the 170th official running of the Grand National horse race at Aintree Racecourse near Liverpool, England. The showpiece steeplechase over a distance of 4 miles 514 yards (6.907 km) took place on 8 April 2017, the final day of a three-day meeting. A maximum field of 40 runners competed for a share of a prize fund of £1 million.
One For Arthur was an Irish-bred Thoroughbred racehorse who competed in National Hunt racing. In 2017 he became the second horse trained in Scotland to win the Grand National.
Derek Fox is an Irish jockey. He won the 2017 Grand National on One For Arthur. He also won the Grand National a second time in 2023 on Corach Rambler.
Lucinda RussellOBE is a Scottish horse trainer. She trained 2017 Grand National winner One For Arthur and the 2023 Grand National winner Corach Rambler.
The 2018 Grand National was the 171st annual running of the Grand National horse race at Aintree Racecourse near Liverpool, England. The showpiece steeplechase was the pinnacle of a three-day festival which commenced on 12 April 2018. The event was sponsored by Randox Health for the second time.
The 2019 Grand National was the 172nd annual running of the Grand National horse race at Aintree Racecourse near Liverpool, England. The showpiece steeplechase was held on 6 April and is the pinnacle of a three-day festival.
The 2021 Grand National was the 173rd annual running of the Grand National horse race, held at Aintree Racecourse in Liverpool, England, on 10 April 2021. The event was once again sponsored by Randox Health, although the name on the race from this year onwards was shortened to simply "Randox". The total prize fund for the race was £750,000, down by £250,000 from the last meeting in 2019.
The 2022 Grand National was the 174th annual running of the Grand National horse race. It took place on Saturday, 9 April 2022, at Aintree Racecourse in Liverpool, England. The event was sponsored by Randox Health.
Noble Yeats is an Irish-bred Thoroughbred racehorse who competes in National Hunt racing. In 2022 he won the Grand National under Sam Waley-Cohen, becoming the first seven year old horse to win the race since Bogskar in 1940.
Corach Rambler is a former Irish-bred thoroughbred racehorse who competed in National Hunt racing and won the 2023 Grand National, as well as consecutive runnings of the Ultima Handicap at the Cheltenham Festival in 2022 and 2023. He was trained by Lucinda Russell at Kinross in Scotland and ridden in by Derek Fox in all his races under rules.
Kitty's Light is a British Thoroughbred racehorse who competes in National Hunt races. In 2023 he completed a rare double in winning the Scottish Grand National and, a week later, the Bet365 Gold Cup. He is trained by Christian Williams and ridden in most of his races by Jack Tudor.
The 2024 Grand National was the 176th annual running of the Grand National horse race. It took place on Saturday 13 April 2024, at Aintree Racecourse near Liverpool, England. The event was sponsored by Randox Health. Changes from previous races were the reduction of horses from 40 to 34 and an earlier start time of 4pm, compared to 5.15pm in 2023. It was won by bookies' favourite I Am Maximus, who was trained by Willie Mullins and ridden by Paul Townend.