John Enright

John Joseph Enright was born in County Galway on February 7, 1947. He served a five-year apprenticeship with Charles Chute at the Curragh from January 1961 to 1966. He rode his first winner on Mrs Ann Biddle’s three-year-old filly Missa, who carried just 6st 7lb to victory in the September Sprint Handicap at the Curragh on September 20, 1962.

He went on to ride 12 winners on the Flat plus four over jumps in Ireland before making the journey to England in 1967 to ride for Bishop Auckland trainer Arthur Stephenson. He had his first Grand National ride on Stephenson’s Kirtle-Lad in 1968, falling at the 26th fence.

John rode 32 winners in the 1969/70 season, rounded off by a four-timer, all for Stephenson, at a Newcastle evening meeting on May 30, 1970. The quartet comprised Supermaster, who beat his stable companion Pawnbroker in the Longstone Handicap Chase; Kingzog in the Inner Farne Handicap Hurdle; Battledore in the Crumstone Handicap Chase; and Hilbirio in division two of the Cambo Novices’ Hurdle. All four started warm favourites, at evens, 11-10, 13-8 and evens respectively.

He achieved a career-best tally of 42 wins for the 1970/71 season, including Irish Rain in Newcastle’s John Eustace Smith Trophy, Rigton Prince in the Topham Trophy and Fanackapan in the Welsh Champion Novice Chase. He rode Battledore in that season’s Grand National but was badly hampered when five horses came down at the first and was tailed off when refusing three fences later.

The following season he rode a total of 38 winners, the highlights including his victories on Fanackapan in Newcastle’s Northumbria Handicap Chase and Celtic Gold in Wetherby’s Castleford Chase. He had his third (and last) Grand National ride on Rigton Prince in 1972, pulling up before the 23rd fence after being prominent on the first circuit.

John was going well the next season with 13 winners on the board when his career was ended in a schooling incident after racing at Sedgefield on November 22, 1972. A clod of mud struck him in the face, resulting in him losing the sight in his right eye.

He was forced to retire, having ridden a total of 153 winners (137 in Britain, 16 in Ireland). Sadly, he was not able to stay in racing and ended up working in a shoe factory in Middleham, Yorkshire.

John’s elder brother Thomas (born 1945) and younger brother Gerard (born 1951) were both jockeys and rode winners on the Flat and over jumps.

John Enright’s big winners were:

1970: John Eustace Smith Trophy Chase on Irish Rain

1971: Topham Trophy Chase on Rigton Prince

1971: Welsh Champion Novice Chase on Fanackapan

1971: Northumbria Handicap Chase on Fanackapan

1971: Castleford Chase on Celtic Gold