Amy Ryan | |
---|---|
Occupation | Jockey and TV presenter |
Racing awards | |
British flat racing Lady Amateur Champion Jockey (2008) British flat racing Champion Apprentice (2012) Lester Awards Apprentice Jockey of the Year (2012) |
Amy Ryan is a former flat racing jockey and current TV pundit, who was the 2012 British flat racing Champion Apprentice.
She is from Hambleton, North Yorkshire and is the daughter of trainer Kevin Ryan. She started out as an amateur jockey, riding 15 winners and becoming 2008 lady amateur champion. [1]
She turned professional in 2009 [2] and her first win came at Wolverhampton in a Class 6, 5 furlong sprint on Harry Up on 26 February, winning by 3 and a 1/4 lengths. [1] Harry Up had also been her first winner as an amateur, aged 16. A week later she won on Grimes Faith at Southwell, but saved the rest of her seven pound claim for the turf season. At the time, she said that riding "is all I have ever wanted to do”, but her Dad "wasn't too keen on the idea" of her becoming an apprentice before she had more experience. [1] She spoke of her ambition to become Champion Apprentice of 2010. [1] While still a 5lb claimer, she won the biggest prize pot of her career - the £93,000 totesport.com Challenge Cup Heritage Handicap at Ascot in September 2009, on the 33/1 Advanced, trained by her father. [3]
She finally rode out her apprentice claim in May 2012 [4] and ended the year as Champion Apprentice, the first woman to win it outright. Throughout the season, Darren Egan had been the leading apprentice, but Ryan caught him up while he was under a ban [2] and after he broke his collarbone in a fall at Wolverhampton, she was able to forge ahead. [4] She was presented with the award by Hayley Turner, herself a former Champion Apprentice. Turner had just beaten her to the inaugural Female Jockeys' Championship. [2] One of the highlights of her year had been winning for her father on Laffan on Oaks day at Epsom [2] Turner commented on how "she's a very good rider, she can read a race well. She can go to plan B if plan A doesn't work, she's a quick thinker. And I think in particular this year, she's strengthened up in a finish and become tidier." [4] This assessment of her performance was backed up by computer analysis by John Whitley of Racing Research, which since January 2011 had her rated as about halfway between their top jockey Ryan Moore and an average flat jockey, which Whitley called "an impressive figure for a young rider". [4]
She had a bad fall at York on her first ride back on 27 July. She rode fewer races after this. [3] In 2013, she raced 149 times, around a third of the amount of rides she had had the previous year, winning 12. In 2014, she won 4 from 46 and had her final professional rides to date in 2015, winning 3 from 21. [3] A horse flipped over on her and snapped the ligaments of her ankle, which took a long time to heal and led to surgery at the beginning of 2017. At that point, she decided to quit riding while she "was in one piece" and even stopped riding out as she missed race riding so much. [5]
She is now a pundit on Racing TV, among other media work. She is also raceday presenter at Redcar Racecourse [6] and rides out for her father, [7] and in occasional "legends" races. [8]
Horse racing is the second largest spectator sport in Great Britain, and one of the longest established, with a history dating back many centuries. According to a report by the British Horseracing Authority it generates £3.39 billion total direct and indirect expenditure in the British economy, of which £1.05 Billion is from core racing industry expenditure and the major horse racing events such as Royal Ascot and Cheltenham Festival are important dates in the British and international sporting and society calendar.
A jockey is someone who rides horses in horse racing or steeplechase racing, primarily as a profession. The word also applies to camel riders in camel racing. The word "jockey" originated from England and was used to describe the individual who rode horses in racing. They must be light, typically around a weight of 100–120 lb., and physically fit. They are typically self-employed and are paid a small fee from the horse trainer and a percentage of the horse's winnings.
Steve Donoghue was a leading English flat-race jockey in the 1910s and 1920s. He was Champion Jockey 10 times between 1914 and 1923 and was one of the most celebrated horse racing sportsmen after Fred Archer, with only Sir Gordon Richards and Sir Tony McCoy eclipsing him.
Ascot Racecourse is a dual-purpose British racecourse, located in Ascot, Berkshire, England, about 25 miles west of London. Ascot is used for thoroughbred horse racing, and it hosts 13 of Britain's 36 annual Flat Group 1 horse races and three Grade 1 Jumps races.
Ryan Lee Moore is an English flat racing jockey, who was Champion Jockey in 2006, 2008 and 2009. He is currently the first choice jockey for Aidan O'Brien's Ballydoyle operation, a role in which he mainly rides horses owned by Coolmore Stud. He also sometimes rides horses for Juddmonte and The Royal Family. As of 2023, Moore has ridden over 170 Group or Grade 1 winners internationally. He has the most British Group & Listed wins of any active jockey.
Jamie Spencer is an Irish flat racing jockey currently riding in the UK. He has been champion jockey in both Ireland and Britain and has won seven classics, five in Ireland and two in England. Spencer is an advocate for the art of holding up horses late into the races, and then making use of their natural dash of speed.
Tom Scudamore is a retired third-generation British flat and steeplechase jockey. He is the son of eight-time champion jockey Peter Scudamore; his grandfather Michael won the Grand National on Oxo in 1959.
Hayley Turner is an English jockey who competes in flat racing. Originally from Nottingham, she is based in Newmarket.
William Buick is a Norwegian-British flat jockey. He shared the champion apprentice jockey title in 2008 with David Probert and won the Lester Award for Apprentice Jockey of the Year in 2007 and 2008. From 2010 to 2014 he was stable jockey to John Gosden. In 2015 he signed with Godolphin. Buick won his first Group1 race in Canada in 2010 and since then has won Group 1 races in England, France, Germany, Hong Kong, Ireland, Italy, Japan, the United Arab Emirates and the United States. He has won four British Classic Races: the St Leger in 2010, 2011 and 2021 and the Derby in 2018.
Charles James William Smirke (1906–1993), was a British flat-race jockey. In a career that lasted from 1920 until 1959, he rode the winners of eleven British Classic Races. As a rider, he was known for his skill, strength and tactical intelligence, together with his self-confident and outspoken personality. Although he never won the Championship, he was regarded as one of the best jockeys of his era. The Racing Post ranked him as the fifth greatest jockey of the 20th Century and the greatest never to have been champion.
Silvestre de Sousa is a Brazilian flat racing jockey who is based in Britain and was three times champion jockey.
Paul Hanagan is a Classic-winning British flat racing jockey. Hanagan was twice been crowned champion jockey on the flat in Britain, riding 165 winners in 2011 to defend his title, having won his first title with 191 winners in 2010. Over a career spanning 25 years, he won a total of ten Group 1 races including the Epsom Oaks. From 1999 to 2022 he rode for the Malton-based trainer Richard Fahey, except for a four-and-a-half year break when he was retained by owner Sheikh Hamdan. He announced his retirement from race riding in August 2023.
Katie Walsh is a retired Irish jockey who, in 2012, came third in that year's Grand National on Seabass, giving her the highest finish to that date for a female competitor. Walsh is the daughter of amateur jump jockey, trainer and television pundit, Ted Walsh and the sister of top class jump jockey, Ruby Walsh. She rode three winners at the Cheltenham Festival.
Tom Cannon Sr. was a British flat racing jockey and trainer. He won 13 British classics as a jockey, becoming champion in 1872. As a trainer, he trained classic winners, as well as winners over jumps, including the 1888 Grand National. He was the father of four jockey sons, including the six-times champion, Morny Cannon, and the great-grandfather of eleven-times champion, Lester Piggott.
Josephine Gordon is a British jockey who competes in Flat racing. In 2016 Gordon won the British flat racing Champion Apprentice title, becoming only the third female jockey to win that title after Hayley Turner and Amy Ryan.
Joseph Kevin Fanning is a Group 1 winning Irish jockey. He has won races at every flat racecourse in Great Britain and has twice been All-Weather Champion Jockey. Since the 1990s, he has been stable jockey to Mark Johnston, for whom he has won most of his races. He is the 7th winningmost jockey in British flat racing history and has the most winners of any jockey not to have won the Jockeys' Championship.
Hollie Doyle is a British jockey who competes in flat racing. She set a new record for winners ridden in a British season by a female jockey in 2019. She came third in the BBC Sports Personality of the Year Award 2020, and was also named The Sunday Times sportswoman of the year. In June 2022 she became the first female jockey to win a French Classic and the first female jockey to win a European Group 1 Classic when she rode Nashwa to victory in the Prix de Diane at Chantilly. In 2022, she came joint second in the Flat Jockeys' Championship, the highest result for a woman to date.
Richard Kingscote is a British jockey who competes in flat racing. He won the 2022 Epsom Derby on Desert Crown.
Billy Loughnane is an Irish jockey who is based in Britain and competes in flat racing. He is the current British flat racing Champion Apprentice.
Saleem Golam is a former flat racing jockey, who was joint British flat racing Champion Apprentice in 2005 along with Hayley Turner. They won 44 races each.