Darley recalls ‘brilliant day’ Bollin Eric struck St Leger gold
2002 hero provided a Yorkshire-trained victory in the region’s Classic.
It is 20 years since Kevin Darley enjoyed one of the best days of his career when Tim Easterby’s Bollin Eric galloped to St Leger success. The strapping son of Shaamit was the last Yorkshire-trained winner of the county’s only Classic, primed for victory in the historic racing town of Malton and the only St Leger winner trained in the region since Peleid in 1973. Bollin Eric first entered the racing public’s consciousness when following up a Beverley maiden win by striking on Town Moor in his final start as a two-year-old. Always held in the highest regard by Easterby, connections then began to plot a Pattern-race campaign for his three-year-old season. However, he had drawn a blank in his Classic term right up to the point he renewed his love affair with DN2, with his next start at the South Yorkshire track a winning one in the September Classic.
Although the man in the saddle had already tasted big-race glory overseas, Bollin Eric was the Wolverhampton-born pilot’s first British Classic winner and he recalls a special day in Yorkshire. “It was a massive day,” said Darley. “I know it was for Lord and Lady Westbrook, but I said afterwards it was nice to win the race for real people. It was a time when the likes of Godolphin and the Maktoums were ruling the roost, so to do it for Tim, Yorkshire and the Westbrooks was great. “I think it would sit pretty high up in my career, simply because he was my first English Classic winner and I didn’t have many, I only had two. But also for the circumstances surrounding it – a winner in Yorkshire, for a Yorkshire trainer and owners who I would consider real people – they supported Tim and had a few horses in training, but weren’t your flamboyant owners who spent fortunes. “It was a brilliant day, absolutely brilliant, bang up there.” Prior to the St Leger, Darley had ridden Bollin Eric in three of his nine racecourse outings, but had never won the horse. He was a key part of the horse’s early education, aboard for the bay’s first two appearances as a juvenile and then returned to the plate during his three-year-old season at Royal Ascot, when the duo had to settle for a silver medal in the King Edward VII Stakes.

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