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Brendan Powell

Born on January 26, 1995 in Swindon, Wiltshire, Brendan Powell is the son of the Grand National-winning jockey of the same name. In his early teens, he spent two summers with his godfather, Adrian Maguire, in Lombardstown, County Cork, where he competed in pony racing at weekends. He described pony racing as “great preparation” for his future career and duly rode his first winner, Home, trained by his father, in an amateur riders’ handicap on the Flat at Southwell on February 8, 2011.

Initially apprenticed to Jonjo O’Neill and subsequently to the late John Hills, Powell rode a handful of winners on the Flat but, unwilling to ride out his claim in that sphere, embarked on a National Hunt career, as conditional jockey to Colin Tizzard in Milborne Port, Dorset. His career took off quickly, too; on December 19, 2011, while still only 16, he made headlines when riding a 40/1 treble at Plumpton on Dark And Dangerous, trained by his father, and Ohio Gold and Drawn Free, both trained by Tizzard. Joe Tizzard, who would take over the licence at Venn Farm following the retirement of his father in 2022, described Powell as “the best 7lb claimer around at the moment.”

Powell was still only 17 and claiming 3lb when he rode his first Cheltenham Festival winner, Golden Chieftain, trained by Tizzard, in the JLT Specialty Handicap Chase on March 12, 2013. The following season, 2013/14, he rode a then career-best 44 winners, riding out his claim in the process. As a fully-fledged professional, Powell rode 38 winners in 2014/15, 35 in 2015/16 and 29 in 2016/17, but his seasonal tally continued to fall, down to 14 winners in 2017/18 and just nine in 2018/19. Reflecting on his dry spell, he said later, “…a few things weren’t going right for me and I didn’t win on a few horses who I probably should have done. I probably wasn’t mature enough to deal with those days the way I should have done.”

On March 10, 2020, Powell rode his second Cheltenham Festival winner, The Conditional, trained by David Bridgwater, in the Ultima Handicap Chase. Thereafter, as stable jockey to Colin Tizzard, his career took off again and in 2021/22 he rode 65 winners, his highest seasonal tally so far. Fast forward to July 25, 2025 and Powell reached the milestone of 500 career winners on Eightytwo Team, trained by Clare Ellam, in a handicap chase at Uttoxeter. He said,”I didn’t want to make a big deal out of it, but I knew.”

William Buick

Born on July 22, 1988 in Oslo, Norway, William Buick is the son of Walter Buick, who was Scandinavian Champion Jockey on eight occasions. On leaving school, Buick Jnr. became apprenticed to Andrew Balding at Park House Stables, Kingsclere and rode his first winner, Bank On Benny, trained by Paul D’Arcy, in an apprentice handicap at Salisbury on September 27, 2006.

Five years previously, the late Ian Balding, father of Andrew – and best known as the trainer of Mill Reef – had already recognised Buick’s potential, verbally placing a bet of £50 at 100/1 with Tote chairman Peter Jackson that the youngster would, one day, become champion jockey. After riding 10 winners in his inaugural season, Buick was hailed by Balding Snr. as “the best apprentice we have ever had.” The latter eventually collected on his bet, too, albeit with the proceeds going to the Injured Jockeys’ Fund, when Buick was crowned champion jockey for the first time on October 15, 2022. He said, “I am absolutely thrilled he has fulfilled the potential I always knew he had.”

In 2008, Buick was involved in a ding-dong battle for the apprentices’ title with fellow Balding apprentice David Probert, the pair eventually sharing the accolade with 50 winners apiece. The following season, his first as a fully-fledged professional, he rode his first Grade 1 winner, Lahaleeb, trained by Mick Channon, in the E.P. Taylor Stakes at Woodbine, Ontario on October 17, 2009. Buick opened his Group 1, and Classic, account on British soil on Arctic Cosmos, trained by John Gosden – for whom he would subsequently replace Jimmy Fortune as stable jockey – in the St. Leger Stakes at Doncaster on September 11, 2010.

In 2011, Buick rode over a hundred winners in Britain and Ireland for the first time and won the St. Leger Stakes, again, on Masked Marvel, trained by Gosden. After riding over a hundred winners in 2012, 2013 and 2014, he was appointed retained rider to Goldolphin in 2015 and has continued to flourish ever since. He has been champion jockey twice, in 2022 and 2023 and, on July 10, 2025, reached the landmark of 2,000 career winners on El Cordobes, trained by Charlie Appleby, in the Princess of Wales’s Stakes at Newmarket. Numerically, his first championship-winning season was his most successful, with 201 winners from 750 rides, at a strike rate of 27%, and he currently has an eyewatering 121 Group 1 and Grade 1 victories to his name worldwide.

Sam Twiston-Davies

Born on October 15, 1992 in Naunton, Gloucestershire, Sam Twiston-Davies is the elder son of trainer Nigel Twiston-Davies, who, since the start of the 2025/26 National Hunt season, has held a joint licence with his younger son, William. He took his first ride under Rules on On Spec, trained by his father, in an amateur riders’ handicap at Ludlow on January 15, 2009 and rode his first winner, Baby Run, also trained by Twiston-Davies Snr., in a hunters’ chase at the same course on February 18, 2009. Just over a year later, on March 19, 2010, the same horse provided him with his first high-profile winner when justifying favouritism in the Foxhunter Chase at the Cheltenham Festival.

In his first season as a conditional jockey, 2010/11, Twiston-Davies rode 59 winners to win the conditional jockeys’ championship. He rode over 100 winners in a season for the first time in 2013/14 and towards the end of that season was announced as stable jockey to Paul Nicholls in Ditcheat, Somerset from the start of 2014/15 season, replacing Darryl Jacob. Twiston-Davies spent four years as stable jockey to Nicholls, but at the start of the 2018/19 season announced that he would become a freelance jockey, having been succeeded at Ditcheat by Harry Cobden.

Twiston-Davies enjoyed his most successful season, numerically and financially, in 2014/15, when he rode 145 winners – including Dodging Bullets, trained by Nicholls, in the Queen Mother Champion Chase at the Cheltenham Festival – and amassed nearly £2.5 million in prize money. At the time of writing, all told, he has eight Festival winners and 15 Grade 1 winners to his name, the most recent of which was Potters Charm, trained by his father, in the Formby Novices’ Hurdle at Aintree on Boxing Day 2024.

On June 23, 2019, Twiston-Davies reached the milestone of 1,000 career winners on Nordican Bleue, trained by Richard Newland, in a mares’ novice hurdle at Southwell. At that time, he said, “It seems only yesterday that I was playing starters orders with [younger brother] Willy! It’s a great a achievement and I feel really lucky to have hit the landmark.” On Boxing Day that year, he won the King George VI Chase at Kempton on Nicholls’ apparent second-string, Clan Des Obeaux.

More recently, in January 2026, Cobden was announced as the retained rider for leading owner John ‘J.P.’ McManus, thereby officially vacating his position as Nicholls’ stable jockey at the end of the season. Nicholls has already announced that Twiston-Davies is one of the jockeys who will benefit from the new arrangement.

Jonathan Burke

Born Glengoura, Curraglass, County Cork on December 23, 1995, Jonathan Burke is the son of Mallow trainer Liam Burke. He began his riding career as a 16-year-old amateur, opening his account on Trendy Gift, owned and trained by his father, in a National Hunt Flat Race at Cork on April 9, 2012. Two years later, on April 29, 2014, with a dozen or so winners to his name, he won the valuable Goffs Land Rover Bumper on Very Much So, trained by Willie Mullins.

Shortly afterwards, Burke became a conditional jockey, two winners shy of the 20 required for his 7lb claim to be reduced to 5lb. On June 9, 2014, he rode his first winner as a professional, Golden Kite, trained by Adrian Maguire, in the Connact National Handicap Chase at Roscommon. Remarkably, later that year, Burke – an 18-year-old, still claiming 5lb – was offered the job as retained jockey to leading owners Ann and Alan Potts. He repaid the Potts’ faith in him by riding three high-profile winners before the end of 2014, Sizing Europe in the Champion Chase at Gowran Park, Shanahan’s Turn in the Florida Pearl Novice Chase at Punchestown and his first Grade 1 winner, Sizing John, in the Champions Novice Hurdle at Leopardstown over Christmas.

Burke would ride one more Grade 1 winner in the Potts’ colours, Sizing Granite in the Maghull Novices’ Chase at Aintree on April 11, 2015 but, in November 2016, with an increasing number of their horses based in England, he brought the partnership to an end “to explore other opportunities”. After a spell back in the freelance ranks, he became stable jockey to Charlie Longsdon in Over Norton, Oxfordshire, Tom George in Slad, Gloucestershire and, since April 2024, to Fergal O’Brien

in Withington, Gloucestershire.

Since crossing the Irish Sea, Burke has added three more winners to his Grade 1 tally, namely Not So Sleepy, trained by Hughie Morrison, in the Fighting Fifth Hurdle at Newcastle and Crambo, trained by O’Brien, in the Long Walk Hurdle at Ascot in both 2023 and 2024. He enjoyed his most successful season on British soil, so far, in 2024/25, when he rode 76 winners and collected just shy of £1.2 million in prize money for connections. Looking ahead, Burke once said, “You look at some jockeys and they’re going on until they are 42, 43, 44. Again, you need a bit of luck with injuries, but I want to go as far as I can.”

Jason Hart

Born in Hawick, in the Scottish Borders, on September 28, 1994, Jason Hart began riding out for Mark Johnston in Middleham, North Yorkshire as a 15-year-old, having previously competed in pony racing. He took his first ever ride on Elusive Fame, trained by Johnston, in a handicap at Southwell on February 1, 2011. Elusive Fame finished second, beaten a neck, but that was the closest Hart ever came to riding a winner while apprenticed to Johnston. Over the next three months, he was beaten a further six times on the same horse, including in a selling handicap at Hamilton, before joining Declan Carroll in nearby Malton.

Carroll provided Hart with his first winner under Rules, Spice Bar, in a handicap at Ripon on August 30, 2011. Reflecting on his inugural victory, he said, “I hadn’t been there for long and it was nice for him [Carroll] to put me on something he thought had a really good chance.” Hart rode seven winners in 2011, but increased his seasonal tally to 18 in 2012 and, again, to 51 in 2013, which was sufficient to win the Apprentice Jockeys Championship. Reflecting on his achievement, he said, “I’m really pleased with the way the final week went, because I’ve had four winners, which has pushed me through the half-century, which was a target of mine.”

Hart rode out his claim in 2014 but, on June 26, 2015, his mount, Dark War, fell, fatally, when in the lead in a six-furlong handicap at Doncaster. He ruptured both the anterior cruciate and medial collateral ligaments in his knee and was out of action for seven months. Thus, Hart rode just 23 winners in 2015 and 37 in 2016, although the latter total did include his first Pattern winner, Ridge Ranger, trained by Eric Alston, in the Group 3 Summer Stales at York on July 8, 2016.

Hart rode his first Royal Ascot winner, Highfield Princess, trained by John Quinn, in the Buckingham Palace Stakes on June 17, 2021. That year, he passed the milestone of 100+ winners for the first time. He would subsequently form a profitable association with Highfield Princess, on whom he won the Prix Maurice de Gheest, Nunthorpe Stakes and Flying Five Stakes in 2022 and the Prix de l’Abbaye de Longchamp in 2023.

Hart reached the landmark of 1,000 career winners on Rhapsody, trained by William Haggas, in a fillies’ handicap at York at September 7, 2025. At that point, he said, “Becoming champion jockey is a burning desire, but it’s not easy and everyone else has the same aim. I’ll keep kicking and give it my best shot.”

Hector Crouch

Born on August 3, 1996, Hector Crouch was raised near Pulborough, West Sussex. He started riding out at a local pre-training yard, which looked after horses for Lower Beeding trainer Gary Moore, at weekends and during school holidays, before becoming apprenticed to Moore when he left school. Crouch rode his first winner, Whinging Willie, trained by Moore, in an apprentice handicap at Newbury on June 24, 2014. He later said of Moore, “Gary was phenomenal. He works twice as hard as any member of staff so to get noticed you had to work at least as hard as him. I went aged 14 and left aged 22, a year after I’d ridden out my claim.”

Crouch was also able to draw on the experience of stable jockey George Baker and three-time champion jockey Ryan Moore, son of Gary, when it came to advice on race-riding. In fact, it was Ryan Moore who arranged for him to ride for Satish Seemar in Dubai during the winter of 2015. Crouch said, “Satish Sheemar put me up in some Group races and I was claiming 5lb here at the time.”

Back in Britain, Crouch subsequently became second jockey to Clive Cox in Lambourn, Berkshire, behind Adam Kirby, whom he described as “a great horseman”. It was Cox who provided him with his first Pattern winner, Streamline, in the Group 3 Sirenia Stakes at Kempton on September 7, 2019, but it was not until 18 months or so later, when he formed a closer association with Ralph Beckett, who is based in Kimpton, Hampshire, that his career really began to flourish.

Beckett does not have a stable jockey but, at the time of writing, Crouch has ridden nearly as many winners for him as he has for Gary Moore and Clive Cox put together. Beckett also provided his first Group 1, and Classic, winner, You Got To Me, in the Irish Oaks at the Curragh on July 20, 2024. Of his achievement, he said, “To win a Group 1 and Classic at the same time was great. It’s hard enough to ride a Group One winner; there are plenty of jockeys who won’t ever do that…” That same year, he reached the milestone of 100 winners in a season for the first time on Almosh’her, trained by Charlie Fellowes, in a novice stakes race at Southwell on December 29. In 2025, Crouch increased his annual tally still further, to 157 winners.