National still casts a spell on Aintree legend Champion
Rider entered racing folklore with victory on Aldaniti 40 years ago.
Bob Champion is predicting more Grand National magic, 40 years on from his heroic victory in the world’s most-watched steeplechase. Champion became the author of one of racing’s greatest fairytales when Aldaniti triumphed in the 1981 renewal – with both the horse and his jockey having overcome great adversity on their path to Aintree fame. For Champion that adversity was a testicular cancer diagnosis in 1979, after which it was discovered the disease was spreading throughout his body and chemotherapy was his only chance of survival. Aldaniti’s life hung in the balance too, with two serious tendon injuries halting his racing career and causing vets to advise the gelding was euthanised rather than rehabilitated. Nick Embiricos, the horse’s owner, knew the chestnut was essential to Champion’s recovery and would not allow it, thus leaving one of the most endearing partnerships in the sport intact when Champion was eventually given the all-clear.
What happened next captured the imagination of the world, a four-length victory in the most famous race of all – an emotive triumph over misfortune that was later immortalised both in print and on screen. Aldaniti was a 10-1 chance for the race, his chief rival being the great hunter chaser Spartan Missile, ridden by John Thorne, but Champion retained complete faith in his horse and had not even considered the possibility of defeat. “I was so confident of winning it was unbelievable,” he said. “You’ll think I must be mad for saying it, but going there I thought it was a formality. “Then I made a mistake at the first and second fences, but things started to pan out really well after that. I couldn’t see myself getting beaten and I was right for once in my life!” Aldaniti took up the lead over the 11th obstacle and was not passed from then onwards, jumping and travelling with complete fluency, but his passage through the race varied greatly from the one envisaged by trainer Josh Gifford. “My orders were to hold him up until the last fence,” Champion explained. “But I had the best run down the Canal Turn that anybody could have had in the race, ever, and everything went so smoothly.





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