Eric Eldin

Eric Eldin

(1932 - 2021)

Eric Eldin was born at Newland, near Selby, Yorkshire, on July 31, 1932, the son of an agricultural labourer. At the age of 14 he was apprenticed to Newmarket trainer Ryan Jarvis, for whom, in 1966, he would ride Lombard to win the Ebor Handicap.

He finished unplaced on his first-ever mount in public at Newcastle in 1948. His first winner was Penfair in the Apprentice Plate at Leicester, May 2, 1950.

He won 11 races in 1951, spent the next six years in India, winning the local Derby on Rough Deal, and on his return in 1958 was able to hold his own against the top jockeys.

Eric achieved his first big race success in Britain on Panjandrum in the 1962 King George V Handicap at Royal Ascot. He scored his only placing in a British Classic when third on Solstice in the 1965 St Leger.

The best horse he ever rode was Lomond, on whom he won back-to-back renewals of Newmarket’s Princess of Wales’s Stakes in 1965 and 1966 and gamely defied top weight by a short head in the 1966 Ebor Handicap, in which Eric just got the better of a battle royal with Lester Piggott on Valoroso. 

Also that year he rode Lucasland to win the most valuable sprint of the season, the Senior Service Gold Cup Handicap at York. They then landed the July Cup and Diadem Stakes and came second to champion sprinter Caterina in the Nunthorpe. 

Lucasland was trained by Jack Waugh, for whom Eric rode as stable jockey. In addition to riding for Waugh and Ryan Jarvis, he also rode notable winners for Gavin Pritchard-Gordon (the Group 2 Grosser Hansa-Preis on Record Run at Hamburg), Jack Clayton and Harry Wragg, plus some of the early winners sent out by Waugh's successor at Heath House, Sir Mark Prescott.

The highest-profile winner of Eric’s career was the Ryan Jarvis-trained Front Row in the Irish 1,000 Guineas in 1968. Her first foal was Long Row, on whom he won the Horris Hill Stakes.

Eric enjoyed his best season numerically with 63 wins in 1972, including the St Simon Stakes on the talented but frustrating grey Knockroe. 

Trained by Peter Nelson, Knockroe then consistently refused to exert himself. He also disliked the company of other horses, but Eric produced the most memorable ride of his career when persuading him to win the Weetabix Wildlife Handicap at Epsom in June 1973, bringing him to challenge on the wide outside in the straight and scoring easily under top weight, beating the record time for Epsom’s mile and a half set by Mahmoud in the 1936 Derby. Ironically, Lester Piggott had turned the ride down saying that he was fed up with the horse pulling himself up. Eric rode 60 winners that season. 

Eric was stable jockey for three years to Doug Smith, riding Northern Gem to win the Pretty Polly Stakes at the Curragh in 1974 and finish second in the Irish 1,000 Guineas and the Champion Stakes. The pair’s other Pattern winners together included Derrylin (three times), Stubbs Gazette and Welsh Harmony.

He retired from the saddle at the end of 1979, bringing to an end a career that had lasted over 30 years, during which time he had ridden the winners of 879 races in Britain and more than 300 abroad, mostly in India but also in various countries in Europe and elsewhere.  He rode his last winner on Secateurs in the Fiskerton Maiden Stakes at Nottingham on October 1, 1979. 

He set up as a trainer at Loder Stables in Newmarket, from where he sent out Prowess Prince to win the 1981 Molecomb Stakes and Grand Unit to win the 1983 Bessborough Handicap. However, his seasonal scores gradually declined and, for financial reasons, he did not renew his licence after 1991.

He was an instructor at the apprentice school in Singapore for six years, and on his return to England became a tour guide in Newmarket, showing visitors round the town, the National Horseracing Museum, the gallops and the racecourse.

Eric and his wife Margaret – they married in 1958 – had two daughters, Lorraine and Michelle. Lorraine married jockey Allan Mackay, who rode some of his winners as a trainer, notably Grand Unit at Royal Ascot. Eric followed with pride the riding careers of his grandsons Jamie and Nicky Mackay.

Eric Eldin died at Newmarket on July 6, 2021, aged 88. 

Classic winner:

Irish One Thousand Guineas: Front Row (1968)


Other big winners:

1962: King George V Handicap – Panjandrum 

1965: Princess of Wales’s Stakes – Lomond 

1966: Princess of Wales’s Stakes – Lomond 

1966: Ebor Handicap – Lomond 

1966: Senior Service Gold Cup Handicap – Lucasland 

1966: July Cup – Lucasland 

1966: Diadem Stakes – Lucasland 

1967: Queen Elizabeth Cup – Sound Of Sleat 

1968: News of the World Stakes – Principal Boy 

1969: News of the World Stakes – Irish Mail II

1972: Fred Darling Stakes – Miss Paris 

1972: Coronation Stakes (Sandown) – Stubb’s Gazette 

1972: Horris Hill Stakes – Long Row 

1972: St Simon Stakes – Knockroe 

1973: Craven Stakes – My Drifter 

1973: Thirsk Hunt Cup – Pontam 

1973: Weetabix Wildlife Handicap – Knockroe 

1973: Horris Hill Stakes – Welsh Harmony 

1974: Fred Darling Stakes – Northern Gem 

1974: Norfolk Stakes – Overtown 

1975: Great St Wilfrid Handicap – Blue Star 

1976: Lingfield Oaks Trial – Heaven Knows 

1977: Lingfield Derby Trial – Caporello 

1977: Horris Hill Stakes – Derrylin 

1978: Ascot Two Thousand Guineas Trial – Derrylin 

1978: Greenham Stakes – Derrylin 

1979: Criterion Stakes – Alert


In Ireland

1974: Pretty Polly Stakes – Northern Gem


In Germany

1976: Grosser Hansa-Preis – Record Run