Paul Hanagan

Paul Hanagan (born 8 September 1980 in Warrington, Cheshire) is a leading British flat horse racing jockey. Hanagan has 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.

Paul Hanagan
Paul Hanagan winning UAE 2,000 Guineas on Soft Falling Rain
OccupationJockey
Born (1980-09-08) 8 September 1980
Warrington, Cheshire
Major racing wins
British Classic Race wins:
Epsom Oaks (1)
Racing awards
British flat racing Champion Jockey 2010, 2011
Significant horses
Mayson, Soft Falling Rain, Wootton Bassett, Taghrooda

Childhood and early career

A graduate of the British Racing School, Hanagan sat on a horse for the first time aged 14, having previously harboured ambitions of playing football professionally, only to be told he was too small and light.[1] His introduction to horse racing came through his father, Geoff, who had hoped to be a jockey and, having failed to make the grade in Newmarket, later rode out on weekends for local Warrington-based trainer Terry Caldwell. In a BBC interview in 2003, Hanagan recalls the moment he realised he wanted to be a jockey:

"My dad used to ride out at Terry Caldwell's yard and I followed him down one weekend…that was how it all started. Straight away I thought this is something totally different…I thought: 'This is what I want to do'. I was still only about 11, but it was kind of like a bug."[2]

Hanagan went on to help out at Caldwell's yard in Warrington, Cheshire, riding out for the first time aged 14 and continuing his work experience there until leaving school to start a 9-week course at the British Racing School in 1997.[3]

Hanagan's first job in racing came with the Norton-based trainer Malcolm Jefferson, who despite being better known as a trainer of National Hunt horses, gave Hanagan his first racecourse ride on Stone Beck at Haydock Park on 4 September 1998, finishing 4th.[4]

A year later and on the recommendation from Jefferson that he should join a flat yard, Hanagan joined the growing yard of Malton-based handler Richard Fahey as an apprentice jockey.[5]

Champion apprentice

Four years into a burgeoning career that had seen Hanagan register scores of 6, 23, and 29 in 1999, 2000 and 2001 respectively, Hanagan became British flat racing Champion Apprentice in 2002, recording an impressive tally of 81 winners, the second-highest total for a champion apprentice in the post-war era behind Lee Newman, the 2000 champion with 87 winners.[6]

In an interview immediately after winning the apprentice championship, Hanagan was quick to praise his boss Richard Fahey:

"The title was my aim at the start of the year…I’m very grateful for all the help and support I’ve received from everyone, especially from Richard Fahey. Without him, I wouldn’t be where I am today."[7]

The 2002 season also saw Hanagan record the biggest win of his career at the time on Vintage Premium in the John Smith's Cup at York, leading trainer Richard Fahey to comment "If this boy is not champion jockey one day I will give up the game."[5]

Maiden century

In 2004, Hanagan recorded his maiden century of winners, which had been one of his career ambitions when setting out as a young apprentice.[8] His wins that year included victory in the historic Northumberland Plate at Newcastle on Mirjan, which came as a massive boost to Hanagan, who days earlier had incurred a 28-day ban at the Jockey Club for repeatedly not riding to his draw in races.[9] 2004 represented another milestone for Hanagan, as he broke through the £1 million barrier for the first time.[10]

Champion jockey

Though his main patron Richard Fahey had predicted big things for Paul Hanagan following his champion apprentice title in 2002, the challenge of becoming champion jockey for a northern-based jockey was a significant one, with just two other northern-based riders picking up the title in over a century (Elijah Wheatley in 1905 and Kevin Darley in 2000). However, benefiting from the increasing strength of the Fahey stable, Hanagan started the 2010 campaign with four winners on the opening day and was never headed in the race to the title, finishing with 191 winners from over 1,100 rides. In an interview with the Daily Telegraph shortly after being crowned champion jockey on 6 November 2010, Hanagan, who had been cheered on his return to the weighing room by both his colleagues and members of the public, said: “I’m gobsmacked to be honest. I owe the boss [Richard Fahey] so much, I've been with him for 14 years and I owe him a lot. It sounds great being champion jockey, I think it will take a while to sink in."[11]

Hanagan's Championship season was enhanced by the top-class two-year-old Wootton Bassett, who finished the season unbeaten in five starts, the last four of those under Hanagan. These victories included major sales races at York and Doncaster, but most importantly a win in the Group 1 Prix Jean-Luc Lagardere at Longchamp, providing Hanagan with the first top-level success of his career. Though Wootton Bassett was unable to add to those successes at three and was retired to stud at the end of the 2011 campaign, he had played an important part in Hanagan's career.

2011

A year after defeating Richard Hughes in the 2010 flat jockeys championship, Hanagan was successful in his defence of the title, beating the Brazilian jockey Silvestre De Sousa in a title race that once again went down to the very last day of the season.

Hanagan finished the season with 165 winners, 4 clear of De Sousa, and described the feeling of retaining the title as "a big relief".

However, after winning two titles in a row, Hanagan hinted in a Channel 4 interview that he would not be challenging for the title in 2012, claiming "I've got to take a step back. I can't keep going on like this or I won't last long."[12]

Hanagan became the first northern-based jockey ever to win the flat championship more than once,[13] and having initially suggested he would not go all out for a third title in a row in 2012, he suggested in late November 2011 that, while he wanted to focus on riding a better quality of horse, he may try to retain the championship, saying "If I can recharge the batteries and have a good rest then I might think 'well I might give it a good go... I say [I won't go for it again] every time but they ask you the question straight after you get off the horse – it's the worst possible time to ask."[14]

2012 onwards

His hopes of a third title did not materialise, and he finished fifth in the jockeys' championships of both 2012 and 2013, dropping out of the top 5 completely in 2014. [15]

Major wins

Great Britain

France

UAE

gollark: > , yes.<|endoftext|>It's a shame that many languages have weird implicit typing.<|endoftext|>The only thing I can do is use C, but it's not like Rust is particularly excellent and amazing.<|endoftext|>The language is very hostile to abstraction and stuff, as far as I know.<|endoftext|>I think it's a good way to write C.<|endoftext|>It was a good job of some kind to push the language to write C.<|endoftext|>We had that one yesterday, yes.<|endoftext|>It is not a good reason to write C.<|endoftext|>Apparently the actual language is now overcrowded because of its 900-letter TLDs.<|endoftext|>It's a shame that the platform doesn't match the original definition you want to use the actual *C*.<|endoftext|>No, it's a *c*.<|endoftext|>It would be better if it used actual definition of `set shell.<|endoftext|>What?<|endoftext|>https://github.com/dangr/fastcNONE are safe from gollarious emulation.
gollark: This is a flawless method of comparing information density, yes, before you ask.
gollark: Emojis are encoded in 3-4ish bytes. I analyzed average word length in my notes and found that it was about 5.
gollark: No, they're about 0.8 words.
gollark: Phone keyboards do not offer sufficient information throughput for my mobile typing needs.

References

  1. "Workdays:Paul Hanagan, jockey". bbc.co.uk.
  2. Keogh, Frank (2 September 2010). "Paul Hanagan on the race to be champion jockey". BBC News. Retrieved 22 July 2012.
  3. "Hanagan Heads Leaderboard". Retrieved 22 July 2012.
  4. "'I'm still pinching myself to make sure it's not a dream' Paul Hanagan stands three weeks away from a first jockeys' title. Brough Scott talks to "an absolute gentleman" and traces his unpromising beginnings in the sport". The Racing Post (London). 17 October 2010. Retrieved 22 July 2012.
  5. "Racing Post Features". Retrieved 22 July 2012.
  6. Hattenstone, Simon (28 July 2007). "Could've been a contender (part two)". Guardian (London). Retrieved 22 July 2012.
  7. O'Ryan, Tom (11 November 2002). "Hanagan celebrates with family at the end of a dream season". The Racing Post (London). Retrieved 22 July 2012.
  8. "Workdays: Paul Hanagan, Jockey". Retrieved 22 July 2012.
  9. "Lungo has it on a Plate with Mirjan". The Daily Telegraph. London. 27 June 2004. Retrieved 22 July 2012.
  10. "Statistical Summary". Retrieved 22 July 2012.
  11. "Paul Hanagan crowned champion jockey ahead of Richard Hughes". The Daily Telegraph. London. Retrieved 22 July 2012.
  12. Cook, Chris (5 November 2011). "Paul Hanagan considers a break after second consecutive jockeys' title". The Guardian. London. Retrieved 22 July 2012.
  13. O'Ryan, Tom. "Paul Hanagan on the verge of historic second title". Gazette & Herald. Retrieved 22 July 2012.
  14. Scargill, Peter. "Hanagan not ruling out shot at third jockeys' title". RacingPost.com. Retrieved 22 July 2012.
  15. Rowlands, Simon (16 March 2015). "Jockeys' Championship: Will the changes make a difference?". timeform.com. Timeform. Retrieved 20 October 2017.
Sporting positions
Preceded by
Richard Hills
Hamdan Al Maktoum retained jockey
2012-2016
Succeeded by
Jim Crowley
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.