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Monday Musings: Top Jockeys

Much has been made in recent days about the 21st Century record that Billy Loughnane snatched from the grasp of Kieren Fallon on the final day of 2025, writes Tony Stafford. His single winner, the classy Enemy from the Ian Williams stable, won a £15k first prize at Southwell on Thursday which put Loughnane on 222 for the calendar year, exceeding Fallon’s best, set in 2003.

Fallon won the jockeys’ title six times, the final one in that year when 207 of the wins came in the prescribed period of the championship. The sextet was interrupted midway through in 2000 by Kevin Darley.

Billy would have had a more arduous task to secure the record at the tender age of 19 had Oisin Murphy bothered to stay in the UK for the conclusion of the 2024 season. Murphy and I had a chat at York’s Ebor meeting that August when I suggested that at his then rate of progress, he could even have bettered the record of Sir Gordon Richards, who collected 269 wins in 1947. That was the 20th of Gordon’s 26 championships.

Oisin decided not to stay in the UK, instead chasing the big prizes available to the top riders around the world. He still ended the year with 217. His best to date is 220 in 2019.

Richards missed out on the title three times, to Tommy Weston 100 years ago, Freddie Fox in 1930 and Harry Wragg in 1941. He achieved a lifetime ambition by finally ending his Derby hoodoo in that Coronation year on Pinza. He then broke his pelvis in a fall in the Sandown Park paddock the following summer and retired with 4,870 career wins to his credit. He subsequently enjoyed solid success as a trainer when Lady Beaverbrook was his most important client.

In more recent times, only AP McCoy, of course over jumps, has managed anything comparable, with 20 consecutive titles. His first was as a conditional rider in 1995/96 when based with Toby Balding, whose brother Ian, trainer of Mill Reef, sadly died last week.

AP’s last title came in 2014/15. He habitually broke the 200-winner mark each season, with a peak of 289, thereby considerably exceeding Richards’ best, in 2001/02. The latest champion, Sean Bowen, seems to have been made in McCoy’s single-minded mould. Riding for the prolific and upwardly mobile Olly Murphy, he looks to have a winner-providing source to match McCoy’s supply-line from Martin Pipe.

Bowen apparently sees “no reason why I couldn’t get to 300.” A little boastful maybe, but he won last season’s championship with ease with 180 wins and is already on 170 with almost a full four months to go – that’s 30-odd per month. He won’t want many cold spells to hinder that aim though.



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Not an instant success, unlike McCoy and Loughnane, Sean Bowen has been developing his skills for around a decade, initially on now-retired father Peter’s horses. Peter has been succeeded with the licence by another son, Mickey, but is also the first port of call for many other top trainers, in addition to Olly Murphy.

Loughnane also got his riding education with a training father, Mark Loughnane, who normally sends out around 40 winners a year. Billy’s progress has been meteoric, going from six when first allowed to ride as as a 16-year-old in 2022, to 130, 162 and now 222.

Kieren Fallon has been able to watch the young man at close quarters as the former champion is a regular rider at Charlie Appleby’s yard, as is Loughnane. The teenager is the jockey of choice when Appleby needs an alternative when William Buick is otherwise engaged, usually at the main meeting of the day.

It’s a numbers game of course. To get to 222, Loughnane leant heavily on his boss George Boughey – 100 wins in 2025 – and gives great credit for his progress. In all he had 1,321 rides in 2025. Only twice did Kieren Fallon have more than 1,000 rides: 1,055 in his last title winning year and 1,109 for 200 in the following season.

Fallon describes Loughnane as “a guaranteed future champion that does all the right things.” Since the BHA restricted jockeys to riding at a single meeting in 2020 – I had thought it was longer ago than that – to help curb the spread of Covid 19, jockeys might have a quieter life, but the big numbers are less easy to be achieved.

Luke (have saddle will travel) Morris five times rode more than 1,500 horses in a year and despite the one-meeting restriction, he has still maintained at least 1,000 every campaign since 2010.

Fallon is also delighted his son Cieren is developing nicely, helped by a connection with William Haggas. He rode 136 winners despite having not much more than half of Loughnane’s rides (721 last year). Haggas has given him a Group 1 winner in Montassib and the other two victories for him at the top level have been for Roger Teal with his stable star, the sprinter Oxted.

I had a nice day out on Saturday, leaving at an unconscionable hour to make the first race at Lingfield, and I wasn’t the only one. The owners’ room has around 25 big round tables, each with eight chairs and for the entire afternoon most were fully occupied, alongside some very decent food and a well-stocked and easily accessible bar.

Multiple ownership and friends thereof made for a terrific buzz and young Fallon had rides for both his previous Group 1 providers. I was there to represent the owners of recent Southwell winner Florida Suite, only allowed to take her chance after a good deal of agonising by her trainer.

“I think the track might be too sharp – she looked more of a stayer when she won at Southwell – and I’m not sure if the blinkers will work again.” Cieren was more hopeful, but as she toiled home last of six having drifted like a barge, as they say, Fallon reckons Newcastle would be more to her liking. A winning Starman filly, would you want to risk another poor run when a convenient sale is close at hand?



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Fallon partnered the Roger Teal newcomer Pangbourne later and that youngster showed some promise for the future. The always-cheerful Roger had already won the opener with All Too Beautiful, completing a hat-trick under Jack Mitchell. That followed a dead-heat for first time handicapper Three Socks On at Chelmsford the previous day.

With so much ice to clear from my car windows before setting off for Lingfield, I was more than a little surprised when Sandown survived the winter snap to provide jumps action that same day. Those frost sheets do pay their way, although Wincanton and already cancelled Newcastle confirm them to be fallible.

Back in the owners’ room at Lingfield, the atmosphere was great. As was mentioned last week, crowds at the race meetings around Christmas and the New Year were very good. To some extent the rather idiosyncratic scheduling of Premier League matches probably didn’t hurt in that regard.

I’m now going to speak a foreign language where the Editor is concerned. [Qué? – Ed.] I stayed awake until late listening to our much-maligned cricketers making a bold riposte in Sydney, only condescending to close my eyes when an accursed thunderstorm ended play early.

Matt no doubt had been annoyed when Arsenal beat Bournemouth on Saturday night. Bournemouth could have scored at least five if things had gone their way. They didn’t. Sorry boss!

 - TS

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