
Mouse Rules The World
The 33-1 shot Rule The World, ridden by 19-year-old David Mullins and trained by Mouse Morris, has won the 2016 Grand National at Aintree
The 33-1 shot Rule The World, ridden by 19-year-old David Mullins and trained by Mouse Morris, has won the 2016 Grand National at Aintree
Topweight Many Clouds, victorious 12 months ago, attempts to become the first since the legendary Red Rum to win the race more than once
“Hand on my heart I thought it was a year too early to run. I thought he’d be a National horse but I thought it was a year too soon, especially after running in a Gold Cup.” That was what the trainer thought. But as usual, the owner knew better…
The 33-1 shot Many Clouds, ridden by Leighton Aspell and trained by Oliver Sherwood, triumphed to give the jockey back-to-back Grand National wins
The McCoy factor is expected to drive turnover to new heights, with an anticipated £300 million wagered across the industry
The whole world enjoys a bet on the spectacle of the Grand National. Sky Bet keeps you up to the jump on all the numbers. Have a look – it’s novel!
Forty runners have accepted for Saturday’s Crabbie’s Grand National. Will you be punting on the race – and what is your selection?
A total of 74 horses made the most recent deadline on 24 March – though four have since been withdrawn – with declarations on Monday and the final field being confirmed today.
He could be the subject of one of the biggest plunges in betting history and would be on the shortest-priced favourite since Red Rum was sent off at 7-2 in 1975
Was the last galloper to win a race on SA soil with a seriously hefty impost Buddy Maroun’s champion Golden Loom, aka ‘Goofy’, who lumbered 65 kgs under Anton Marcus to beat Fov’s Favourite 26 years ago?
In the late 80s, South African breeders were highly skeptical of sons of Mr Prospector. The main criticism was that he was ‘a dirt stallion’ and we race on turf
The businessman was served with an interim suspension of his Assistant Trainer licence on Friday afternoon and has spoken out about what appears to be mostly a misunderstanding based on a potential lack of communication and bureaucratic red-tape challenges