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Nottingham Racecourse

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Nottingham Racecourse
View of the racecourse from Colwick Woods Park
LocationNottingham, Nottinghamshire, England
Coordinates52°56′53.12″N 1°06′24.51″W / 52.9480889°N 1.1068083°W / 52.9480889; -1.1068083
Owned byJockey Club Racecourses
Date opened1892
Screened onRacing UK
Course typeFlat
Official website

Nottingham Racecourse is a thoroughbred horse racing venue located in Nottingham, Nottinghamshire, England.[1] It is situated at Colwick Park, close to the River Trent and about 3 km east of the city centre.

Characteristics

There are actually two courses at Nottingham, one inside the other. They are both approximately 1 1/2 miles round and are left-handed. The inner is used during spring and autumn, and has a 5 furlong straight, the outer is used during summer and has a 6 furlong straight. The course generally has easy turns and minor gradients, but the home turn is fairly sharp.[2] Nottingham suits well-balanced horses rather than long-striding ones.[3]

History

The racecourse from the south-east

The racecourse was in operation ante 1773 [1] at Nottingham Forest when it was one of the earliest racecourses to be granted a Royal Plate race by the monarch. It was run in 4 mile heats by 6 year olds carrying 12 stone.[4]

The course moved to its present site in Colwick Park in 1892.[5] In 1965 the local corporation bought the 293 acre site for £500,000 and for a short time the future of the course looked in doubt. However, the Levy Board funded improvements to the site and the corporation agreed to lease the course to the Racecourse Holdings Trust (predecessor of Jockey Club Racecourses) for a nominal sum.[5]

It staged both forms of racing until February 1996, after which it abandoned National Hunt racing to become a flat-only course. The racecourse was served by its own station up until the late 1960s when the line was shut down. There are still remnants of the station wall on what is now Colwick loop road.

The course hosts two early season Listed races - the Kilvington Stakes for fillies over 6 furlongs and the Further Flight Stakes over 1 mile 6 furlongs, named after the horse of that name.[6] Other than these the course hosts "no race of more than a passing significance."[3] In total, it hosted 16 race meetings in 2012, at an average of £38,387 prize money per meeting.[7] Mr John Barnett is the courses longest serving employee, for over 25 years Mr Barnett served the course as a groundsman. On the 9th June 2013, Mr Barnett's 65th birthday, he enjoyed his final raceday as a full-time employee of the racecourse, which was celebrated with a race named in his honour "Happy Retirement John Barnett handicap". The 8f race consisted of 14 runners and the winner Woody Bay trained by James Given and ridden by Graham Lee finished the race in 1m 46.78s.

Memorable events

The view from the outer straight start

In April 2013, there was a triple dead-heat in a race at Nottingham, only the second time it had happened for over a decade. Horses Thorpe Bay, Majestic Manannan and My Time tied for fourth place in the Lodge Farm Stud Chris And May Mullin Handicap over 5 furlongs.[8]

Facts and figures

  • Number of fixtures (2012) - 16[7]
  • Prize money (2012) - £614,184[7]
  • Top trainer (2007 - 2011 inc.) - Saeed Bin Suroor, 24 from 56 runs[2]

Notable races

Month DOW Race Name Type Grade Distance Age/Sex
April Wednesday Further Flight Stakes Flat Listed 1m 6f 15y 4yo +
May Saturday Kilvington Fillies' Stakes Flat Listed 6f 3yo + f
June Wednesday Nottinghamshire Oaks Flat Listed 1m 2f 50y 4yo + f

References

  1. ^ a b Halpenny 1971, p. 193.
  2. ^ a b Timeform. Racecourse Maps Flat (Report). Portman Press. p. 10.
  3. ^ a b Wright 1986, p. 202.
  4. ^ Whyte 1840, p. 402.
  5. ^ a b Mortimer, Onslow & Willett 1978, p. 422.
  6. ^ "British Flat Pattern and Listed Races 2010" (PDF). British Horseracing Authority. Retrieved 21 May 2013.
  7. ^ a b c "Racecourse League Tables". Racehorse Owners Association. 2013. Retrieved 21 May 2013.
  8. ^ "Course renowned for dead heats". Nottingham Post. 26 April 2013. Retrieved 21 May 2013.

Bibliography