Geraghty and Swan hail JP McManus after landmark victory

Geraghty and Swan hail JP McManus after landmark victory

By Racing TV
Last Updated: Thu 21 Dec 2023
Buveur D
The “absolute love for the game”, the “attention to detail”, the “kindness” – those glowing words used by two former jockeys to describe the JP McManus are heartfelt.
McManus notched his 4,000th winner as an owner at Cheltenham on Saturday when Chantry House scored in the Cotswold Chase for trainer Nicky Henderson.
It was fitting that the green and gold hoop colours had passed the post in a big race at the home of jumps racing carried by a horse cared for by the Seven Barrows handler.
Henderson has played a significant role in McManus’s epic tally, with the likes of Binocular, Buveur D’Air and Epatante among the stars he has trained.
Barry Geraghty has shared some momentous days with the pair and was fulsome in his praise in reaching the remarkable tally.
Geraghty, who rode at least one winner at the Cheltenham Festival every year between 2002 and 2020 before retiring, said that McManus gets involved at every level, but it is his kindness that stands out.

cheltenham

14:30 Cheltenham - Saturday January 29
Chantry House gives McManus winner number 4,000
“I didn’t realise the figure was coming, but it is massive for an owner to have done it,” said Geraghty. “Not one horse goes past without him knowing about it.
“And the detail! He lives for the game. He just loves it – but at all levels, be it down the country during the week or at Cheltenham yesterday, it’s both things.
“He loves getting involved in the planning and he gets so much joy out of racing. He pays close attention at all levels and that’s how much he loves the game.”
Geraghty was leading jockey at the Cheltenham Festival twice, in 2003 and 2012, with five winners on both occasions.
Indeed, he went agonisingly close to becoming leading jockey again in 2020, when he rode five winners for McManus only to lose out on countback to Paul Townend.
“JP is a great man, a brilliant man,” added Geraghty.
McManus at his beloved Cheltenham (Pic: Focusonracing)
“I was probably about 19 or 20 when I first rode for him and first met him. It was brilliant. I was fortunate to meet him early in my career and my second Festival winner was for JP on Youlneverwalkalone (National Hunt Handicap Chase in 2003).
“I rode winners for JP when I was with Edward O’Grady as conditional. So, he has been very supportive all the way through my career.”
While McManus has made millions out of the money markets, which enables him to buy some of the best equines, it is his common touch and benevolence that strikes Geraghty most.
“He sent helicopters over to pick me up at Aintree when I had broken bits of my leg when I couldn’t fly back,” he added.
“It was the same when I punctured my lung at Kempton. People don’t get the see the kindness he shows.
“I mentioned in my book how I was in hospital at Kempton when I broke eight ribs and punctured my lung, JP arrived the following day with bags of pyjamas and all kinds of essentials, which no-one had thought of – but which he and Noreen had thought of – and chocolates for the nurses to keep me in favour.
_The green-and-gold colours have become part of the sport's fabric _
“There is no fanfare. He shows such kindness. He is just a very kind man.”
The highlights have been many for the 42-year-old, who is now a regular broadcaster and responsible for spotting talent such as Supreme Novices’ Hurdle favourite Constitution Hill.
Geraghty remembered: “We have had some great times. Buveur D’Air and Epatante both won Champion Hurdles and even going back to the early days I won good novice chases on Le Coudray and Youlneverwalkalone at Cheltenham.
“There was Mini Sensation for Jonjo O’Neill (who won a Welsh National) and horses in recent years like Champ and Defi Du Seuil were just brilliant horses.”
Geraghty replaced Sir Anthony McCoy as McManus’s retained jockey in 2015 and enjoyed plenty of halcyon days thereafter.
“He offered me a wonderful opportunity. I had done much of my racing in England and I’d longed to ride good horses in Ireland as well.
“I had brilliant days with Nicky in Ireland, with Sprinter Sacre at Punchestown and Bobs Worth at Leopardstown, but I wanted to get back to Ireland on Sundays and have good horses to ride here.
Flashback: Learn more about McManus with Donn McClean
“I was leading rider at Punchestown for the first time when I was riding in my first season for JP, which was brilliant.
“Carlingford Lough won the Gold Cup and came from the next parish – they were just brilliant days. We won good handicaps and Minella View won the Paddy Power, and it offered me something I was after and the timing was great. Not being away from the family so much was great for all of us.
“We have shared some wonderful days and it is brilliant to see JP reach such a massive total and landmark like this. I shall always be grateful to him.”
Charlie Swan, twice top jockey at the Cheltenham Festival, and champion jockey in Ireland for nine consecutive years, will forever be remembered for his partnership with the Aidan O’Brien-trained Istabraq, who landed three of McManus’s tally of nine Champion Hurdles.
Having retired from riding and training, Swan now buys horses in France for McManus.
He said: “I do a bit for him in France and I really enjoy it. It’s great to have that association and I’ve known him for a long time now. He is a great man.
McManus and his retired stars
“It is amazing to have 100 winners, let alone 4,000. JP’s love for the game is incredible. The whole family – his wife Noreen, his children – they are all involved and that’s what makes it so brilliant.”
Istabraq will always hold a place in his heart. Swan rode him in all 29 races over hurdles.
“Istabraq was so quick, he was just such a natural jumper. You don’t usually get that when they start out. He was like a motorbike going over a ramp and landing on the back wheel. Istabraq’s hindlegs would often touch down first, before his forelegs.
“He was just different. He just loved it, he would quicken up when he saw a hurdle.”
He was the fifth horse to win the Champion Hurdle three times, yet none had completed the four-timer and he was denied the chance of a fourth when foot and mouth disease prevented the Festival meeting from taking place in 2001.
A year later, he jumped two flights and pulled up with a tendon injury.
“He was a special horse,” said Swan. “I rode some other good horses for JP, like Time For a Run in the Coral Cup and Mucklemeg who won the Festival bumper (1994) – she was very, very good.
“It was just unfortunate that she got injured and broke her pelvis as a novice hurdler. She could have been one of the best I rode.
“JP really started to get going after that and got bigger and bigger. But most of all, while it is a great achievement, he is a very kind, down to earth man.”

Ten of JP's greatest winners

A plethora of top-class runners have sported the famous green and gold hoops of JP McManus in his 4,000 winners. The list of stars is long – and very much open to debate about who ranks where – but we have narrowed down our top 10 McManus-owned horses…
Istabraq
Bred to be a Derby winner but eventually a hurdling sensation, Istabraq won 14 Grade Ones for McManus, including three Champion Hurdles. He bossed the Cheltenham contest between 1998 and 2000 and would probably have been a four-time winner had the foot and mouth disease outbreak not intervened in 2001.
Baracouda
A dual Stayers’ Hurdle winner, Baracouda also took four Long Walk Hurdles at Ascot during a 34-race career that yielded 18 victories overall. The apple of trainer Francois Doumen’s eye, Baracouda was a key player in what was something of a golden age in the three-mile division.
Like-A-Butterfly
A Grade One winner on the level, over hurdles and fences, Like-A-Butterfly retired in 2005 having won 12 of her 17 races. She enjoyed a huge slice of luck when left in front in the 2002 Supreme Novices’ Hurdle, but her Irish Champion Hurdle victory the following year, added to Power Gold Cup success in 2005, showed there was plenty of class to go with her good fortune.
First Gold
A King George winner for the Marquesa De Moratalla in 2000, he was subsequently purchased by McManus with the help of the late, great Sir Peter O’Sullevan and while two further Kempton runs plus a couple of Cheltenham Gold Cup runs yielded little joy, First Gold did win a Punchestown Gold Cup and a couple of Martell Cups at Aintree to boot.
Don’t Push It
A famous first for AP McCoy, Don’t Push It was also an inaugural Grand National winner for McManus. Successful over the Mildmay course at the previous year’s National fixture, Don’t Push It was sent off the 10-1 joint-favourite to end his rider’s Aintree hoodoo and did so in style.
Binocular
Another Champion Hurdle hero in the green and gold, Binocular also counted two Christmas Hurdles and the 4YO Anniversary Novices’ Hurdle at Aintree in his Grade One haul. In four Champion Hurdle outings, he finished no worse than fifth.
Synchronised
McManus’ only Cheltenham Gold Cup winner to date, Synchronised graduated from Midlands and Welsh National victories to excel in the blue riband. Winner of the Lexus Chase on his prep run, Synchronised was not totally unfancied in the Cotswolds and duly galloped to glory. McManus was left “devastated” the following month though, when Synchronised sustained fatal injuries after falling in the Grand National.
Spot Thedifference
A Cheltenham cross-country legend, Spot Thedifference may not have had the highest rating, but he was a whizz around the unique obstacles. Seven times a winner at Prestbury Park, including one renewal of the Glenfarclas Chase at the Festival, Enda Bolger’s charge also bagged two La Touche Cups at the Punchestown Festival.
Buveur D’Air
The decision to abandon a chase career with Nicky Henderson’s charge reaped rich rewards. Buveur D’Air – a Grade One winner as a novice hurdler – started the 2016/17 season over fences, but then the Champion Hurdle field started to cut up a bit and the rest is history. Triumphant at Cheltenham in 2017 and 2018, his hat-trick bid got no further than the third hurdle in 2019, but McManus still won the prize with second string Espoir D’Allen.
Minella Times
Assured of a place in the record books by virtue of the fact he was ridden by Rachael Blackmore to become the first female jockey to lift the Grand National. Minella Times benefited from a peach of a ride to give McManus a second Aintree trophy.
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