2003 Grand National
Grand National | |
Location | Aintree Racecourse |
---|---|
Date | 5 April 2003 |
Winning horse | Monty's Pass |
Jockey | Barry Geraghty |
Trainer | Jimmy Mangan |
Owner | Dee Racing Syndicate |
Conditions | Good |
External videos | |
---|---|
Replay of the 2003 Grand National in full Racing UK, YouTube |
The 2003 Grand National (known as the Martell Grand National for sponsorship reasons) was the 156th official renewal of the world-famous Grand National steeplechase that took place at Aintree at 3:45pm BST, on 5 April 2003.
The ten-year-old 16/1 shot Monty's Pass, ridden by Barry Geraghty and trained by Jimmy Mangan in Cork, Ireland, won the race by 12 lengths from the 2001 Welsh National winner Supreme Glory (40/1) in a time of 9 minutes 21.7 seconds.[1]
The field was limited to a maximum of 40 competitors, and 14 completed the 4 mile 4 furlong course. There was one equine fatality during the race.
Leading contenders
Shotgun Willy became the favourite for the race after winning the Red Square Vodka Gold Cup at Haydock on 1 March and remained the most popular entrant with the public, going off as the 7/1 clear favourite, ridden by Ruby Walsh who had previously won the race in 2000. Shotgun Willy was always towards the rear of the field and began to lose touch with the leaders early on the second circuit, pulling up after making a mistake at the 21st fence.
Youllneverwalkalone won the Leopardstown Chase in January and then the William Hill Handicap Chase at Cheltenham in March and was sent off as the 8/1 joint-second favourite in partnership with rider Conor O'Dwyer. The horse was naturally popular with punters on the Liverpool course due to links with Liverpool Football Club whose anthem is the song of the same name, however the horse was at the back of the field when he suffered a leg injury at the 11th fence and was instantly pulled up. He was found to have broken a leg and, although he recovered, was never raced again.[2]
Iris Bleu had fallen in the 2002 National but had won the Thomas Pink Handicap Chase at Cheltenham in December and the Agfa Diamond Chase at Sandown in January to be backed to 8/1 on race day. Ridden by champion jockey Tony McCoy, Iris Bleu made a series of mistakes and was pulled up lame before taking the water jump at the end of the first circuit.
Ad Hoc had been travelling well when brought down in the 2002 race, and was partnered by 1999 winning jockey Paul Carberry; the pair went off at a price of 9/1 and almost fell at the first fence. Having recovered, they were making progress when Carberry was unseated at the 19th.
Chives had run prominently in several major races, including finishing second in the 2002 Welsh National and seventh in the Cheltenham Gold Cup and was sent off at 10/1 in company with 1998 winning rider Richard Guest but also disappointed with mistakes before suffering injury at the 11th fence where he was pulled up.
At 16/1, Monty's Pass was considered among the good each-way chances for the race and had been backed heavily on race day from 40/1 the day before after being tipped by several leading tipsters. Among those who predicted his victory were John Francome in The Sun, Eddie Freemantle in The Observer, Marten Julian in The Sunday Telegraph and Thunderer in The Times while Pricewise in the Racing Post tipped the horse to win two months before the race.[3]
Finishing order
Position | Number | Name | Rider | Age | Weight (st, lb) | Starting price | Distance |
1st | 19 | Monty's Pass | Barry Geraghty | 10 | 10-7 | 16/1 | Won by 12 lengths |
2nd | 32 | Supreme Glory | Leighton Aspell | 10 | 10-2 | 40/1 | 2 lengths |
3rd | 21 | Amberleigh House | Graham Lee | 11 | 10-4 | 33/1 | 14 lengths |
4th | 30 | Gunner Welburn | Barry Fenton | 11 | 10-2 | 16/1 | 11 lengths |
5th | 23 | Montifault | Joe Tizzard | 8 | 10-4 | 33/1 | 1 length |
6th | 11 | Bindaree | Carl Llewellyn | 9 | 10-11 | 25/1 | 18 lengths |
7th | 10 | Carberry Cross | Liam Cooper | 9 | 10-12 | 25/1 | 6 lengths |
8th | 14 | Blowing Wind | Tom Scudamore | 10 | 10-9 | 20/1 | 7 lengths |
9th | 33 | Tremallt | Jason Maguire | 12 | 10-2 | 200/1 | 7 lengths |
10th | 1 | Behrajan | Richard Johnson | 8 | 11-12 | 22/1 | 9 lengths |
11th | 35 | Djeddah | Thiery Doumen | 12 | 10-1 | 66/1 | 8 lengths |
12th | 20 | Majed | Rodi Greene | 7 | 10-5 | 200/1 | A distance |
13th | 31 | Royal Predica | Jamie Moore | 9 | 10-2 | 33/1 | 26 lengths |
14th | 16 | Southern Star | Dominic Elsworth | 8 | 10-8 | 66/1 | Last to complete |
Non-finishers
Fence | Number | Name | Rider | Age | Weight (st, lb) | Starting price | Fate |
26th | 25 | Cregg House | David Casey | 8 | 10-3 | 50/1 | Tailed off, refused |
17 | Red Striker | Larry McGrath | 9 | 10-8 | 50/1 | Unseated rider | |
28 | Torduff Express | Timmy Murphy | 12 | 10-3 | 33/1 | Unseated rider | |
25th (Valentine's) | 27 | Mantle's Prince | Ollie McPhail | 9 | 10-3 | 200/1 | Unseated rider |
37 | Red Ark | Kenny Johnson | 10 | 10-0 | 100/1 | Pulled up | |
24th (Canal Turn) | 3 | Gingembre | Andrew Thornton | 9 | 11-9 | 14/1 | Tailed off, pulled up |
22nd (Becher's Brook) | 40 | Empereur River | Mr. Patrick Paihes | 10 | 10-2 | 250/1 | Tailed off, pulled up |
4 | Shotgun Willy | Ruby Walsh | 9 | 11-9 | 7/1 F | Tailed off, pulled up | |
36 | Burlu | Gerry Supple | 9 | 10-0 | 200/1 | Fell | |
39 | Killusty | Tony Dobbin | 9 | 10-4 | 12/1 | Fell | |
19th (open ditch) | 26 | Good Shuil | Noel Fehily | 8 | 10-3 | 200/1 | Tailed off, pulled up |
29 | Goguenard | Warren Marston | 9 | 10-2 | 28/1 | Unseated rider | |
38 | Robbo | Alan Dempsey | 9 | 10-1 | 100/1 | Hampered by fallen horses, unseated rider | |
8 | Ad Hoc | Paul Carberry | 9 | 11-1 | 9/1 | Unseated rider | |
22 | Maximize | Jim Culloty | 9 | 10-4 | 16/1 | Fell | |
15 | You're Agoodun | Robert Thornton | 11 | 10-9 | 50/1 | Hampered, unseated rider | |
16th (water jump) | 7 | Iris Bleu | Tony McCoy | 7 | 11-3 | 8/1 | Pulled up |
15th (The Chair) | 16 | Katarino | Mick Fitzgerald | 8 | 10-8 | 50/1 | Unseated rider |
9 | Ballinclay King | Davy Russell | 9 | 10-12 | 50/1 | Pulled up | |
13th | 12 | Youllneverwalkalone | Conor O'Dwyer | 9 | 10-11 | 8/1 | Pulled up |
12th (open ditch) | 5 | Chives | Richard Guest | 8 | 11-5 | 10/1 | Pulled up |
8th (Canal Turn) | 24 | Polar Champ | Daniel Howard | 10 | 10-4 | 200/1 | Unseated rider |
6th (Becher's Brook) | 5 | Fadalko | Seamus Durack | 10 | 11-7 | 100/1 | Unseated rider |
3rd (open ditch) | 34 | Wonder Weasel | John McNamara | 10 | 10-5 | 50/1 | Fell |
2nd | 41 | Bramblehill Duke | Brian Crowley | 11 | 10-2 | 200/1 | Fell |
1st | 13 | The Bunny Boiler | John Cullen | 9 | 10-10 | 50/1 | Unseated rider |
Aftermath
Winner Monty's Pass claimed a prize of £348,000, with £132,000 awarded to Supreme Glory in second, £66,000 for Amberleigh House in third, £30,000 for Gunner Welburn in fourth, £15,000 for Montifault in fifth, and £9,000 for sixth-placed Bindaree.
Some bookmakers offered stakes refunds to customers who backed the first fence faller The Bunny Boiler. William Hill reported that they had to pay out £400,000 on two winning bets alone, claiming it was their worst hit in Grand National history.[4]
In post-race interviews, winning trainer Jimmy Mangan said: "It's a thing you dream about. To have a winner is unreal." Jockey Barry Geraghty said of his ride: "He was like a cat. He jumped unbelieveable."[4]
Both the vets and the doctors were busy after the race. Goguenard had to be euthanised when he was caught in a melee at the 19th fence. Youllneverwalkalone was taken to the Liverpool horse hospital when it was found he had broken a leg in running. The injury was repaired and the horse retired from racing. Iris Bleu pulled up lame, while Ballinclay King and Chives both broke blood vessels. All three horses made a full recovery. Four riders also required hospital treatment after the race. Gerry Supple suffered a broken leg, Alan Dempsey a broken wrist, Alan Crowley a broken collarbone and Timmy Murphy suffered concussion and a broken nose.[4]
Coverage
The BBC retained the rights to broadcast the race on television and radio for the 44th consecutive year, in accordance with the Ofcom Code on Sports and Other Listed and Designated Events. The race was broadcast as a Grand National special edition of the regular Saturday television show Grandstand, and involved three hours of build-up to the race through features on the principal contestants and the history of the race. The race itself was broadcast live and was followed by a detailed re-run using slow motion footage and additional camera angles not used in the original broadcast.
The show was presented by Clare Balding and Sue Barker while the commentary team was John Hanmer, Tony O'Heir and Jim McGrath who called the winner home for the sixth year. It was the last time that Hanmer commentated on a Grand National, having covered the portion from the Melling Road to the fourth and from the Canal Turn to the Anchor Bridge crossing for thirty years.
In total 52 cameras were used to cover the event including three cameras placed inside jockeys' caps and four inside selected fences. Former Grand National riders Richard Pitman and Peter Scudamore also talked the viewers through an in-depth re-run of the race in slow motion.
In a new innovation the BBC introduced interactive services, which enabled UK viewers to access features such as a statistical predictor, archive footage of previous Nationals and a split-screen view of the race itself to enable viewers to watch the race from the air as well as the normal tracking cameras.[5]
Racing UK broadcast the race live into bookmakers' outlets throughout the country, though its camera angles were limited in comparison to the close-up coverage provided to BBC viewers.
BBC Radio also broadcast commentary of the race live for the 71st time on its Sport on Five programme, presented by Mark Pougatch and with Lee McKenzie calling the runners home. Also among the commentary team was Ian Bartlett, who was to replace John Hanmer in the television commentary team the next year.
Jockeys
Two-time winner Carl Llewellyn was the most experienced rider in the race, weighing out for a Grand National for the thirteenth time, while eleven riders made their debut. Leighton Aspell fared best of those, finishing second, with Graham Lee finishing third while Liam Cooper, Jamie Moore and Dominic Elsworth also completed the course. John Cullen's debut ended at the first fence while Daniel Howard, Davy Russell, Alan Dempsey, Patrick Paihes and Larry McGrath also failed to get round.
References
- ^ "Full 2003 Grand National result". Racing Post. Racing Post. 5 April 2003. Retrieved 5 April 2003.
- ^ Scientists reveal secrets of Grand National success The Guardian, 25 March 2004
- ^ What the tipsters said BBC Sport, 1 April 2003
- ^ a b c Monty's Pass wins Grand National BBC Sport, 5 April 2003
- ^ National goes interactive BBC Sport, 2 April 2003