The main feature in my calendar so far this week, though, has not been watching racing (or even enjoying the lovely weather) but attending Brian Procter's funeral and wake yesterday afternoon/evening. In one sense it is silly to refer to such a thing as 'a good funeral' but in another sense it isn't. If it is acceptable to use such a phrase, then yesterday was a time to do so. Sadness prompted the occasion, but basically the occasion was an opportunity to spend time with good people sharing memories of a good person.
Marcus Tregoning gave a lovely eulogy revolving around reflections from West Ilsley, and one came away reflecting that Brian had lived a good life and had earned respect and affection from all whose paths he crossed. And, really, no man can ask for more than that. I used my column in 'Al Adiyat' (the weekly racing magazine in the UAE) last week to pay tribute to him and to John Powney, and I reproduce it below. Hence the title of this chapter, prompted by the fact that we've been watching a lovely 'Classic Albums' series on the TV, and the last one which we watched focused on Fleetwood Mac's 'Rumours'. As previously, not all the photographs are mine: the last two are stolen from an old Sporting Life, so I hope that the photographers don't mind.
TWO GOOD
MEN GONE
This column
has been spending too much time in the past recently. At the start of last week I made a resolution
that this time we would discuss something current. The Cheltenham Festival, perhaps. (And, why not? Everyone else does, until the cows come home). But then two of the nicest people in my home
town (Newmarket) died. And when the bell
tolls for people like these, it tolls for all of us.
The world
keeps turning. Today’s big stories
become yesterday’s news, until eventually they get lost in the mists of
time. It’s the same with people. One doesn’t have to put it quite as bluntly
as Robin Williams’ character John Keating in ‘Dead Poets Society’, whose advice
to his pupils was “Carpe Diem” (‘Seize the day!’) because eventually we shall
all be “food for worms”. Instead, one
can merely reflect on Bart Cummings’ wry observation that a man could be “an
institution one minute, and the next he’d fallen off the face of the earth.”
In
retrospect and viewed from a distance of nearly half a century, that could be
case with David Robinson, England’s biggest racehorse owner in the late 1960s
and early ‘70s but rarely mentioned nowadays.
David Robinson was one of Britain’s commercial titans of the post-war
era, riding the wave of the popularisation of television with his company
Robinson Rentals (which he eventually sold, in 1968, to Granada for £8,000,000). Nowadays televisions are relatively inexpensive,
but until the 1970s they were very dear.
Consequently, many people preferred to hire, rather than buy, them. Many of those who took that option did so
through Robinson Rentals, and the company’s founder consequently made a
fortune.
What set
David Robinson apart from many tycoons was that, having made his money, he
chose to put it to good use, rather than to hoard it. He hailed from Cambridge and he loved
racing. And he used his money
locally. He donated £18,000,000 (and
those were in the days when a million was a million, rather than a down-payment
on a flat in the East End) to Cambridge University to found its newest college,
Robinson College. He gave £3,000,000 to found
the Rosie Maternity Hospital in Cambridge (named after his mother) which is now
part of Addenbrooke’s Hospital, as anyone from Newmarket who has become a
parent knows.
David
Robinson (who became Sir David Robinson in 1985, two years before his death)
also devoted his attention to racing, buying both Clarehaven and Carlburg,
adjacent properties in Newmarket’s Bury Road which are now occupied by John
Gosden and Roger Varian respectively. He
employed Michael Jarvis (who had been head lad to Gordon Smyth in Sussex and
who had led up the 1966 Derby winner Charlottown) and Paul Davey (whose father
Ernie trained in Yorkshire) as his principal private trainers. For a few years he was the country’s most
successful owner. His best horse was My
Swallow, an outstanding colt who had the misfortune to be born in the same year
as both Brigadier Gerard and Mill Reef; while his other stars included the
top-class sprinters So Blessed, Deep Diver and Green God, as well as
Meadowville, runner-up in 1970 to Nijinsky in both the Irish Derby and the St
Leger.
David
Robinson’s trainers also included at various times Bruce Hobbs (who
subsequently became very successful as a public trainer), Bob Smart (who had
previously trained in a small way in Yorkshire) and John Powney. The latter had preceded his appointment by
working as head lad for both Sam Armstrong and Tom Jones. During the two years that he trained for
David Robinson, John Powney tended to be sent the lesser lights; and it was a
similar case subsequently when he became a public trainer in Saville House
Stables in St Mary’s Square.
After
finishing training, John Powney worked on studs; and in retirement he was a
regular fixture at both the National Horseracing Museum and Tattersalls. In the museum, he guided visitors with his special
blend of friendliness, courtesy, knowledge, experience and enthusiasm. If you ever visited the museum in recent
years in its site in the High Street (from which it moved last year to its new
National Heritage Centre premises in Palace House) you may well have met John -
or you may have seen cycling into town from his cottage in the Bury Road. You would also have met him if you had bought
a horse in Tattersalls and collected the horse yourself. For years John manned the control office at
Park Paddocks during sales weeks, his blend of efficiency and amiability ensuring
that the potentially fraught process of making sure the right horses went in
the right directions ran like a well-oiled machine.
Sadly John
Powney died two weeks ago, aged 87.
Newmarket thus lost one of its senior figures and most loved and
respected characters. Additionally, we have
also lost a link to the David Robinson era, a special chapter in the town’s
(and British racing’s) rich and varied story.
Last week
we lost another great racing man when Brian Procter passed away aged 75. While John Powney was a Newmarket man from
the cradle to the grave, Brian Procter only spent his final couple of decades
here. However, that was long enough for
him to become part of the town’s furniture.
Brian
Procter’s working life lasted a good 55 years, but he only ever had three
employers. In fact, one could almost say
that he only ever had two jobs as his first flowed seamlessly into his second. He joined Sir Gordon Richards from school, served
his apprenticeship in the stable of the former multiple champion jockey, and
stayed on until that legend retired from the training ranks in 1970. Lady Beaverbrook’s horses and the Ballymacoll
Stud horses owned by Sir Michael Sobell and his son-in-law Arnold Weinstock
moved to Dick Hern’s stable at West Ilsley; and Procter went with them, staying
there until Hern eventually retired in the early ‘90s.
During his
years working for Dick Hern, Brian Procter became a living legend. He served as second jockey behind firstly Joe
Mercer and then Willie Carson, achieving a status far more exalted than his
totals of winners might suggest.
Although that was not long ago, it seems like another era. Major Hern could be viewed as one of the last
great ‘old-school’ trainers, concentrating on quality rather than quantity,
running his stable along strict military lines, insisting on the highest of
standards at all times. He did not
suffer fools at all, gladly or otherwise – so the fact that he clearly held
Brian Procter in the highest regard speaks volumes. The jockey became a byword for horsemanship,
courage, loyalty and reliability.
So
synonymous was Brian Procter with West Ilsley, and so much of an anachronism
had Major Hern’s painstaking professionalism and attention to detail become,
that it was hard to think of a stable where the jockey, by now in his 50s,
could work without feeling that he had come down in the world. Happily, a solution presented itself: Sheikh
Mohammed offered him a job as a work-rider for the Godolphin string in Saeed bin
Suroor’s stable. This was a match made
in heaven: he was perfect for Godolphin, and Godolphin was perfect for him.
Thus Brian
Procter, having been synonymous with the Berkshire Downs, became a Newmarket
man during his final couple of decades.
For those of us who like to think that we can ride adequately, he
unwittingly provided a salutary reality check: riding out daily until the age
of 70, he was plainly not only the oldest rider on the Heath, but also the
best. When you passed the Godolphin
string on the Heath, it was like, if you fancy yourself as a bit of a runner,
having Sir Roger Bannister lope past you in the park every morning. For those of us lucky enough to make his
acquaintance, the further joy was the discovery that he was every bit as decent,
kind, friendly, modest and humble a human being as one would have hoped him to
be. Sir Mark Prescott often dispenses
the wise advice that one should try not to meet one’s heroes, because it
usually leads to disappointment.
Thankfully, Brian Procter was the glorious exception to this generally
sound rule.
As the
world keeps turning and time keeps passing, so do all good things come to an
end. The loss of John Powney and Brian
Procter, two good men who were lifelong adornments to the sport which they
loved and which they served so well, leaves racing poorer for their
absence. It behoves us to cherish their
memories and to recall the parts which they played in some great chapters of
racing’s rich history.
1 comment:
great piece
totally agree with your comments on apples jade
Post a Comment