Author: Oakley, Robin
c 1945 to c 2000 (Post-war period)
Published on 9 March 2017 by Bloomsbury Publishing PLC (Bloomsbury Sport) in the United Kingdom.
Hardback | 288 pages, Packed with colour photographs
253 x 197 x 25 | 1104g
Robin Oakley brings alive the colourful world of those who ride and train jumping horses.
With elegant production and gripping images, Sixty Years of Jump Racing chronicles the social and economic changes which have brought the sports ups and downslike the development of sponsorships and syndicate ownership, the near loss of the Grand National, the growing domination of the Cheltenham Festival and the growth of all-weather racing to meet the bookies demands for betting shop fodder.
Pace and colour is provided by stories of the horses who have been taken to the heart of racing crowds, like the Irish-trained hurdler Istabraq and Best Mate, the three-times winner of the Cheltenham Gold Cup for England. Famous rivalries and memorable races are re-lived and key victories revisited in portraits of and interviews with the owners, jockeys and trainers who have dominated the sport.
The emphasis will be largely on the past fifty yearsfrom Arkle to Tony McCoybut a significant introduction by Edward Gillespie encapsulates the past history of what was previously known as National Hunt Racing and sets the stories in context.