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Gone but not forgotten

Discussion in 'Horse Racing' started by Reebok, Nov 2, 2011.

  1. Reebok

    Reebok YTS Mod
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    Following on from a quiz question of yesterday, I found the following interesting article, and with permission of Burnsey, The Apprentice Jockey, I have posted it below.
    In an age where the great and good are lauded to the heavens, it's easy to forget that once racing was a sport that everyone could partake in as a trainer, provided they had a horse! It concerns one such character, John Meacock. Please read on :)

    +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
    The Apprentice Jockey
    SUNDAY, 24 JULY 2011
    John Meacock - Still making us smile today

    Whilst searching the web this week I came across an article from “Ask the Anorak” in which David Hewett-Emmett of Houston, Texas asked the following question… “While a teenager in Britain in the 1960s, I was fascinated by John Meacock's runners, including Vakil-ul-Mulk and Qalibashi, who was bought by Julian Wilson. In Horses in Training, C Wall was listed as one of his apprentices - was that the current Newmarket trainer?

    The Anorak replied: To judge from the number of letters and emails from readers, Hampshire trainer John Meacock still has a healthy international fan club, 34 years after he retired from racing and five years after his death. His eccentricities, including giving his horses unpronounceable Persian names, transcended his lack of success and made him one of racing's great characters. His apprentice was Christopher Wall, not the trainer Christian Wall, who was still a schoolboy at the time, but there are plenty of other people with unforgettable memories of him. In his memoirs “Some You Win”, Julian Wilson wrote of Meacock: “He wore a battered trilby hat, smoked incessantly through a cigarette-holder, scattering ash indiscriminately, wrote unintelligible poetry and was quite the dottiest man that I had ever met!”

    I can recall encountering John Meacock myself a couple of times at the races in the late sixties. On the first occasion I was a young 15 year old apprentice not long in racing, we were at Bath races where we had some runners that day. I went to the stable-lads canteen with another of the lads and as we sat having a drink this guy walked in who just looked totally out of place, he didn’t look like a stable lad, didn’t dress like a stable lad and he wasn’t the right size for a stable lad either. There was certainly something about him that transfixed me; I watched intently as he sat down… he wasn’t alone, as there were three or four young lads with him who were obviously racing lads, apprentices looking at their size and age. The stable lad who was with me gave me a nudge and a wink and said "you watch this kid"… I asked who the bloke was and he said “it’s that John Meacock, a complete Hat-stand he is”, I said who’s John Meacock and he replied he’s a trainer but he hardly ever has a winner, all his horses have foreign names, he’s more of an expert at training losers! Meacock sent one of the young kids up to the counter to get some cups of tea for them all, then a little while later he sidled up to the counter himself and perused what was available and when he came away from the counter he had a whole cooked chicken on a plate. I thought he’s bought a chicken to share with the young lads, however when he seated himself back down it was reminiscent of something like a Victorian scene, say from a Dickens novel… he did no more than ate most of the chicken himself whilst the young apprentices sat all around him in silence looking as though they wanted a bite of it too… he left the young apprentices with about as much between all of them them as he had for himself then with a “come on boys” he upped and left the canteen with the kids trailing behind him!




    The second time I encountered John Meacock was at Newbury races when one of our horses went head to head with one of his, the ground had dried out to very firm and by the day before the race it had cut up badly to a match, a no betting affair due to the wide gulf in class between the two competing horses.



    Willipeg
    Willipeg was a very useful sprinter with a fine turn of foot who had won many races whilst John Meacock’s runner Biyaban Shah was still a maiden and in fact up to that day had not managed to finish in the first three in any race. It was usual for Meacock to have Charlie Patton, Frank Morby, or a young apprentice riding his horses and on this day he had a 7lb claimer A. G. Hall from Arthur Budgetts stable on Biyaban Shah. The gulf between the two horses was illustrated by the ratings and comments for both horses in Timeform Racehorses of 1968. The young apprentice Hall entered the paddock and approached Meacock twirling his whip with expertise just like you might expect from a budding Lester Piggott. Meacock didn’t appear to be quite as impressed as Hall may have been hoping for, with his usual eccentricity he glared at the young apprentice and did no more than snatched the whip from him saying “give me that bloody thing you won’t be needing it to win this one son”… upon legging Hall up into the saddle he must have then had second thoughts and decided to return his whip.



    Result
    Willipeg was the sort of horse who was best left waiting till the last 150yards to use his excellent turn of foot to snatch the race in the dying strides however on this occasion he was going so well that he joined the lightly weighted Biyaban Shah two furlongs out and then pulled his way to the front hard held a furlong from home to win going away in a canter by four lengths. On his return to the unsaddling enclosure young Hall was greeted by an annoyed John Meacock who chastised Hall with a second helping of his eccentricity saying to the kid “ What the hell were you playing at… I told you in the paddock not to go haring off and make the running but to sit in behind him until just inside the final furlong and then pull him out and come with a late run and pip him on the post… You've cost me a bloody fortune today, I had a very big bet on the forecast you stupid little fool”.

    John Meacock, who trained under both codes from 1960 to 1971, died in hospital in Southampton at the age of 85 in October 1999. He was a larger than life and very colourful owner-trainer who, after his wartime experiences in the Middle East, named his horses in relation to Shakespearian quotations translated into Persian. He was also an enthusiastic yachtsman, ran an estate agency and even wrote a book of poems... Meacock was an innovator too in laying down and training on an artificial track at his stables near Alresford, Hampshire. – R.I.P John Meacock, even today you’re still making us smile at your eccentricity.

    A summary of some of Meacock’s horses – (shortened by Reebok to fit forum limitations)

    Kouli-Kuh – Bay Mare, 1956.
    Bought in 1959 as a three yr old by John Meacock she won a five furlong handicap at Lewes carrying seven stone seven pounds at the age of 5 yrs. Winning at odds of 20-1 and paying 56-1 on the tote this was her only glimmer of form from 22 Starts winning just the one race and being unplaced in her other 21 starts. Kouli-Kuh was unraced at 2yrs or 3yrs while named Trixodix, the mare who was Meacock's first winner ever winner as an owner/trainer was a half-sister to the good stayer and decent hurdler Curry's Kin (1957) and their dam was a half-sister to the excellent stayer Curry (1951).

    Vakil-Ul-Mulk – Grey Colt, 1960 (sold on in 1966 to R. Johnston).
    Won two 16f handicaps on flat (Warwick & Birmingham) at 5yrs and two more at 6yrs (both at Warwick) for new owner; earlier, in January 1965, won 20f novice hurdle (Worcester) and won five Handicap hurdles (20f-21f75y 1966-68) for new owner. Probably owner-breeder-trainer-poet-Persia expert John Meacock's least untalented horse (35-2-3-1 flat; 9-1-1-1 hurdles); rank outsider & trailed at the back as a maiden in 1963 Epsom Derby.


    Khoja Hafiz - Bay Colt, 1960.
    In 38 flat races Khoja Hafiz managed to win just once, his only win came in a seven furlong handicap at Warwick at 3yrs old. Was placed at 2yrs, 4yrs and 5yrs. Tried over hurdles but was unplaced in 4 hurdle races. Full record read as 42 races, 1 win, and 5 places.



    Karkeh Rud – Bay Mare, 1962.
    The bay mare managed to win three races on the flat, a 2 mile handicap at Brighton as a 3 year old, a 1 mile handicap at Warwick as a 4 yr old, and a 1 mile and half a furlong handicap at Windsor also at 4 yrs old. Karkeh Rud was also placed 11 times on the flat and when tried over hurdles she made the frame once. From a total of 66 races flat and jumps her record stood at 3 wins, 12 places, and 51 unplaced runs.


    In 25 flat races from the age of 2 yrs to 5 yrs Asad-Ul-Mulk never managed to make the frame. However, he did fare a little better over hurdles but that wouldn’t have been very hard given his dismal record on the flat. Over hurdles Asad-Ul-Mulk although a little improved it still wasn’t exactly groundbreaking stuff… He managed to gain 2 wins but one of those was walkover in a lowly selling hurdle. He also managed 2nd place on one occasion and once finishing 3rd. His record overall was 53 races, his only 2 wins and 2 places coming from his 28 hurdle races
     
    #1
  2. Ron

    Ron Well-Known Member
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    What about Qalibashi?
     
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  3. Cyclonic

    Cyclonic Well Hung Member

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    Words Enough. (So be it.)


    Better the lie -- Benevolent,

    Than the truth -- Malevolent,

    O' - Silence -- Omnipotent.

    John Meacock.
     
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  4. Cyclonic

    Cyclonic Well Hung Member

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    Reasoning.


    Isolate your doubts,

    To prove them,

    Then honour them,

    Or kill them.


    John Meacock.
     
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  5. Reebok

    Reebok YTS Mod
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    Hi Ron - I was only allowed 10,000 words so I had to do a fast edit (faster than Qalibashi!!)
    I add the relevant section in full here if anyone is interested :)

    A summary of some of Meacock’s horses –

    Kouli-Kuh – Bay Mare, 1956.
    Bought in 1959 as a three yr old by John Meacock she won a five furlong handicap at Lewes carrying seven stone seven pounds at the age of 5 yrs. Winning at odds of 20-1 and paying 56-1 on the tote this was her only glimmer of form from 22 Starts winning just the one race and being unplaced in her other 21 starts. Kouli-Kuh was unraced at 2yrs or 3yrs while named Trixodix, the mare who was Meacock's first winner ever winner as an owner/trainer was a half-sister to the good stayer and decent hurdler Curry's Kin (1957) and their dam was a half-sister to the excellent stayer Curry (1951).

    Vakil-Ul-Mulk – Grey Colt, 1960 (sold on in 1966 to R. Johnston).
    Won two 16f handicaps on flat (Warwick & Birmingham) at 5yrs and two more at 6yrs (both at Warwick) for new owner; earlier, in January 1965, won 20f novice hurdle (Worcester) and won five Handicap hurdles (20f-21f75y 1966-68) for new owner. Probably owner-breeder-trainer-poet-Persia expert John Meacock's least untalented horse (35-2-3-1 flat; 9-1-1-1 hurdles); rank outsider & trailed at the back as a maiden in 1963 Epsom Derby.


    Khoja Hafiz - Bay Colt, 1960.
    In 38 flat races Khoja Hafiz managed to win just once, his only win came in a seven furlong handicap at Warwick at 3yrs old. Was placed at 2yrs, 4yrs and 5yrs. Tried over hurdles but was unplaced in 4 hurdle races. Full record read as 42 races, 1 win, and 5 places.


    Kavar-Ul-Mulk - Bay Colt, 1960. (Sold on to the Peter Chesmore stable in 1966)
    He managed to reach a place on just one occasion when finishing third in 21 races on the flat. However, Kavar-Ul-Mulk did manage to finish second on four occasions in 19 races over hurdles for John Meacock. Later on under his new stable Kavar-Ul-Mulk failed to gain a win but finished second four times and third five times. The overall record for Kavar-Ul-Mulk reads as 72 races, no wins, eight seconds, and six thirds… sad really that the horse managed to gain quite a few places yet was still a maiden after running 72 times.


    Qebir Kuh – Bay Mare, 1960.
    In 21 flat races Qebir Kuh, won just the once in a 2mile handicap at Warwick when 5 yrs old. She was also placed 2nd at 3 years old and again at 5 yrs old. In 6 jump races she managed to win once in a 2mile selling hurdle at Plumpton when aged 4yrs and was also 3rd once. Qebir Kuh was the dam of hurdle race winner Mr. Stubbs.


    Zardarkuh - Bay Mare, 1960.
    In 22 flat races from 2yrs old to 5yrs old Zardarkuh managed to win just the once when aged 5yrs in a 1mile 5 furlong handicap at Alexandra Park. She was also tried over hurdles running 11 times and managing to gain a place on three occasions.


    QARAZAN – Bay Mare, 1961
    In 32 flat races Khoja Hafiz managed to win just once, she won a 6 furlong handicap at Warwick when aged 3yrs old. She managed to gain two other places finishing third at 3rd yrs and 3rd again at 4yrs old. Full record read as 32 races, 1 win and 2 places, she was exported to Argentina.


    Karkeh Rud – Bay Mare, 1962.
    The bay mare managed to win three races on the flat, a 2 mile handicap at Brighton as a 3 year old, a 1 mile handicap at Warwick as a 4 yr old, and a 1 mile and half a furlong handicap at Windsor also at 4 yrs old. Karkeh Rud was also placed 11 times on the flat and when tried over hurdles she made the frame once. From a total of 66 races flat and jumps her record stood at 3 wins, 12 places, and 51 unplaced runs.


    Qasr I Zar – Chestnut Mare, 1962
    The Mare proved to be of little account on the flat managing just one place from 22 races but she did manage to gain a win over hurdles.


    QALIBASHI - Bay Mare, 1964 (sold on to BBC journalist Julian Wilson).
    She won her only 2 races over a 3 day spell at Brighton in August 1968, a 7 furlong handicap in which she dead heated for 1st place and a 6 furlong handicap two days later. Qalibashi managed a total of two wins and four places in 32 starts before being sold. She was also placed four times in over hurdles after being sold on.
    Asad-Ul-Mulk – Chestnut Gelding, 1964.
    In 25 flat races from the age of 2 yrs to 5 yrs Asad-Ul-Mulk never managed to make the frame. However, he did fare a little better over hurdles but that wouldn’t have been very hard given his dismal record on the flat. Over hurdles Asad-Ul-Mulk although a little improved it still wasn’t exactly groundbreaking stuff… He managed to gain 2 wins but one of those was walkover in a lowly selling hurdle. He also managed 2nd place on one occasion and once finishing 3rd. His record overall was 53 races, his only 2 wins and 2 places coming from his 28 hurdle races
     
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