Dandy Nicholls

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PNkt

Well-Known Member
Jul 25, 2011
8,106
2,033
113
Newmarket
Another article this time from yesterday's Racing Post, which I have scanned in. I have to say, I had no idea he had been ill and, once again, send him all the best for his recovery:




I DON’T know which is more shocking: the point Dandy Nicholls is making or the fact he’s just lifted up his shirt to make it, revealing a torso the like of which you’ll rarely see without a banana and a voiceover from David Attenborough.

“I’m a hairy bastard at the best of times,” he confirms, superfluously, by way of illustrating his story of a hospital visit that was very neatly the last we saw of this most inappropriately engaging of men. Far from donkeying around, however, the six-time Ayr Gold Cup-winning trainer is deadly serious as he recalls the diagnosis that dragged him into four years of stomach-churning, blood-spilling treatment, hidden from the view of the racing public, the likely alternative to which was a premature appearance on the list of eternal scratchings, under the heading ‘all engagements (dead)’.

Of course, this being Nicholls, the grim tale is peppered with black humour and blue language in gruff Yorkshire tones that bring to mind a comic turn in a working men’s club; but don’t let that fool you. This is an ordeal that has left its psychological mark, even if it was eventually sent packing with a four-lettered farewell and a boot mark on its backside.

“I had a disease called haemochromatosis,’ explains the robust-looking 56-year-old, “I didn’t know I had the ****er, but one day I got up and I couldn’t walk, couldn’t breathe, couldn’t go for a pee. I thought ‘I’ll be all right’, but next day it was the same thing. I couldn’t move.

“I had no idea, no Scooby Don what was wrong with me, so I went to the Alexandra Hospital in Manchester, went straight in and the nurse shaved all my chest off and stuck all these things on me.

“I said: ‘What are you doing?’ She said: ‘We’re checking your heart,’ I said: ‘There’s nothing wrong with my heart? She said: ‘Well there must be something wrong with it or you wouldn’t he in here.’

“So they connected me up to this machine and it started making a lot of noises end I thought that meant my heart was working fine, but the doctor said: ‘I hope you’ve brought some overnight gear, because you’re not going home - you’ve got a problem?’”

Haemochromatosis is a condition that allows the sufferer to absorb an excess of iron from food, which is then stored around various internal organs, especially the heart said liver, with potentially fatal consequences. ‘Iron overload’ was the cause of both the-patient’s chronic fatigue and the doctor’s consternation.

Nicholls still isn’t quite sure what the figures mean, but he knew it wasn’t good news when he was told he should have a reading of 45 and be actually bad a reading of 7.000. It meant that doing nothing wasn’t an option, so he went on to a regime of tablets that would choke a rhino, and which still fills large Tupperware box in a drawer in the kitchen at Tall Tree Stables.

He was subjected to month after month of venesection, having his blood drained off, pint after pint, to reduce the iron concentration; and then there was the warfarin, to thin the blood.

“I lost all my hair, but the warfarin was the worst thing,” he remembers, “It used to kill me like nothing’s ever hurt me before. I’d be puking all day, I’d go en the toilet ten times in a morning. I told them I wasn’t taking it anymore, but they said ‘it’s keeping you alive’.”

Even Nicholls’ worst enemy could spare an ounce of pity for his plight, but there were times when the nurses as the Alexandra may have struggled to sympathise. Unused to hospitalisation and its rational constraints, the cooped-up trainer found himself champing at the bit, eager to get back into the routine of his job, frustrated especially by the shift patterns of the porter that meant he didn’t get his Racing Post until 10.30 in the morning. Something had to be done and hospital protocol wasn’t going to deter our man from his mission.

“I asked the porter where you could get the Post and he-said from the garage at the end of the road,” the trainer recalls, “Anyway, I’m all computered up, sticky things all over way body and a big box hanging off me, so l took them all off, went down the road and got myself a Racing Post and a big jug of Lucozade.

‘When I came back I thought the place was on fire, alarms going off everywhere. I walked in and said: ‘What’s happening?’ They said: ‘We’ve lost somebody.’ ‘Oh, yeah,’ I said, and I went up to my room.

When I got there, stood in front of me was a staff nurse, and she nearly killed me, ‘Where the ****have you been?’ she said. ‘Me? I’ve been for my paper, love.’

“She said: ‘You barmy bastard, we thought you were dead, Go back in there and don’t do it again?’”

Whether that’s really the kind of language that has infiltrated the private nursing sector, or whether that’s just Nicholls’ translation, is anybody’s guess, but the reluctant patient credits his carers with dragging him through two and a half weeks during which he’d rather have been almost anywhere else. Four years on, he can take stock of an ordeal that finally seems to have come to an end.

‘If I hadn’t have gone into the hospital, I’d he dead,’ he sums up. ‘They knew I wanted to leave but the only way they can help you is by making sure you don’t. The -treatment’s only just finished but I kept going all the time.’

Oblivious to his condition, the racing public was not surprised to see Nicholls’ seasonal stats retain a healthy glow — unlike the man himself. This year, however, a slow start at the normally resilient yard in the well-hidden outpost of Sessay caused a few observers to mutter under their breath. Several owners had departed the scene, the usual deluge of winners was reduced to a disappointing trickle — even a recent revival leaves him with figures of just 39 wins from 373 runs, as opposed to last year’s 93 from 944 — and there was talk of a trainer in decline.


NICHOLLS could be excused for having weightier concerns than wins-to-runs ratios and trainers’ tables, but the former stable lads’ champion boxer Is nothing if not a fighter and he won’t take talk of his imminent demise lying down.

“Obviously I’ve had other things on my mind,’ he says, “and what’s happened is down to me because I’m the boss, and we’re down on numbers because of me, but we had a slow start to the year because the horses weren’t right, like me. They just weren’t firing, for whatever reason, but it wasn’t because of my ill health,

“Some people lost faith and it’s hard to train a ****ing racehorse when you’re in bed, but the staff have just kicked on and I’m not dead yet. You’ll see in the next few weeks and months that we’ll be back on top of the tree.

“A lot of people think I’m going to retire or run away but that’s totally untrue. We’re not digging a hole and trying to die. We’ll creep back up the ladder, but I don’t really want to train horses that run in £1,600 races. I don’t want to watch people, including myself, lose money”​


Continues...
 
Stable strength at Sessay is down to around 65 from speak of 150, but there’s no sign of shrivelling morale among a team that includes Nicholls’ wife Alex Greaves— ‘the boss’ —and his son and stable jockey Adrian, When the couple arrived at Tall Trees it was, as Nicholls puts it, “nothing but tater field” and they lived in a caravan until the former jockey had put into practise enough of the tricks learned in the saddle, from the likes of David Barron, Mick Easterby, David Chapman and Will Pearce, to start making the training game pay.

Taking out his licence in 1992 with just eight horses, he established himself immediately, out of necessity, as a rejuvenator of equine has-beens and gradually as a master trainer of good sprinters like the Group I heroes Continent and Bahamian Pirate, both of whom also feature in his roll call of six winners of the Ayr Gold Cup.

Saturdays renewal won’t feature the usual army of Nicholls raiders, but that’s not to say the trophy won’t he going back to Tall Trees for a seventh time, His resurgence has already yielded a big Ascot handicap with Don’t Call Me, and the Western meeting has long been a favourite place for replenishing the family coffers, so those creatures currently trotting round the lunge pits at home can be guaranteed to reach Scotland in the pink of condition.

“The Scottish are wonderful people who know their racing and it’s a real favourite race of mine,” says the trainer, “but you’ve got to have a Listed horse just to get in the Gold Cup these days, and that’s not a bad thing —you want the good horses there to make it a good contest.

“Then you’ve got to get a draw, then you’ve got to go on the ground, and you’re sitting there asking me what’s going to win. I don’t know what’s going to win but I know ours will be fighting fit, and I know two years ago, when Redford won the Ayr Gold Cup I didn’t even have him in the yard at this stage, so the phone might ring and we might get another Redford. Who knows?

“I know what would win if I had the ****er, though. I know what would win it, but he won’t give it to me: Frankel. Wouldn’t come off the ****ing bridle. An incredible horse trained by an incredible person.’

Nicholls wouldn’t even begin to compare himself to his racing hero Sir Henry Cecil, in terms of either his suffering or his talent, and he probably doesn’t hold out much hope of being sent Frankel for a tilt at next year’s Ayr Gold Cup, either, but as he trundles around Tall Trees on his little blue tractor, harrowing the aIl-weather gallop and plotting his return to rude health and good ratios, he gives silent thanks for the good fortune that has taken him from humble beginnings to a place at rating’s top table. As he lounges in the conservatory, in his tracksuit trousers and polo shirt, surrounded by mementoes of his great days, the lad from Leeds can’t help but feel satisfied.

“I ran away from home when I was 14 years of age," he says. "I was a ****ing lunatic. My mum gave me a brown ten bob note and I went to Deryck Bastiman’s in Linton, and I lived in a chicken hut. No way would I ever have thought I’d end up where I am now. I suppose I got lucky, but I think you have to make your own lock at some stage.

“All I know is you just have to keep going and, although the drugs I was on took it out of me for a while, never lost the fire in my belly.

“I know a lot of people think I’m down and out and gone, but that’s a load of b******s, In fact, the more l think about It, the more revved up l get about it. I’m like a tiger in a cage. The more they push me down, the more l want to jump up, and I’ve got plans for the future, big plans.

“It’s been hard for everybody here, hard for the staff, but we’ve got through the difficult part and I think they’re all happy I’m back bouncing like a ball.”

That’s Dandy Nicholls: man of iron, just the right amount of iron these days, taking the hard road back to the top, via Ayr.​
 
Another exotic illness, no doubt caused by all the crap in the food chain.

Sounds like a great bloke to have a few jars with of an evening <ok>