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Hayley Turner becomes first female jockey to win at Royal Ascot since 1987

<span>Photograph: Mike Egerton/PA</span>
Photograph: Mike Egerton/PA

“It was only a matter of time,” said Hayley Turner as she rode back in, triumphant at Royal Ascot for the first time in her long career and, astonishingly, the first female jockey to win here for 32 years. Only Gay Kelleway, all the way back in the summer of 1987, had done it before and precious few had since been given a real opportunity of emulating her.

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It had to be Turner who finally killed off what had become one of the more notorious statistics in horse racing. Chipper and unpretentious despite a long list of achievements, she long ago established a talent for breaking new ground. The first woman to ride 100 winners in a year in British racing and the first to win a Group One race outright, she was also on the “Girls” team when they first won the Shergar Cup here, an event that has become her favourite day of the year.

Kelleway and others showed that women can win in the saddle but it was Turner who made a habit of it and who did it at the sport’s highest level as well. Now, thanks to the late surge of the 33-1 shot Thanks Be in the Sandringham Stakes, she has a Royal Ascot victory to her name as well. It came at the expense of the Queen, whose Magnetic Charm was beaten by just a neck.

Asked what it meant to her, Turner replied with a cheerful dig at her only predecessor: “Quite a lot because, although we all love Royal Ascot, we have to listen to Gay every year. Well done to her, because it’s a great achievement and it’s nice to have that goal to aim for. Hopefully now the standard of girls is so much, they’ll just keep coming and coming.”

To the casual form student, Thanks Be had little to recommend her, having never previously won so much as a maiden race. Then again, Turner had never ridden her before. “A significant step up is needed,” mused the Racing Post’s analyst in Friday’s paper, but the successful jockey claimed she had known hours earlier that she had a big chance.

“Alfie, who rides her out all the time, said this morning: ‘I can’t believe she’s drifted out to 50-1.’” Charlie Fellowes, the winning trainer, also filled the rider with confidence.

“She just sliced through them easily,” Turner said, slightly bemused that the summit so long admired from afar had suddenly been reached. “At least when I celebrated this time, I didn’t nearly fall off. I’m getting the hang of it.”

Turner has been invited by many a reporter to complain about chauvinism in the sport and, indeed, there must be some reason why the capable female jockeys around these days do not get more rides in this key week. But she has always insisted that the chances are there for any jockey who proves to be deserving.

“I went in the changing room today and there was Josephine Gordon, Hollie Doyle, Nicola Currie, they’re all there all the time now. The standard is just so high and they all deserve to be here with good rides. The media are all: ‘Aw, the girls don’t get a fair chance,’ but the numbers are rising and in 10 years’ time, the girls will be having winners more often and it won’t be a big thing. It’s just gonna snowball but it’ll take time.”

“Well done, Hayley,” said Kelleway, who is a trainer these days and watched the Sandringham from Goodwood, where she was preparing to saddle a runner. “She’s been around for long enough, she deserves it.”

There was, she admitted, a slight piquancy to the fact that she is no longer the only woman to have won at Royal Ascot, but Kelleway has always been a supporter of female jockeys, always been adamant that plenty of them are good enough to win here on the right horse. “I hope it’s not another 32 years until the next one,” she added.

Dettori and Moore will fight to finish for crown

The most successful Royal Ascot jockeys of the last 30 years traded blows throughout the afternoon here on Friday, and Frankie Dettori and Ryan Moore will go head-to-head once again on Saturday on the fifth and final card of the Royal meeting, with the prize for the week’s leading rider still in the balance, writes Greg Wood.

Dettori has not finished Ascot week as the top jockey for 15 years, while Moore has taken the crown eight times in the last nine years. It is Dettori, though, who will head into the last six races with the upper hand, despite Moore riding a double, on Japan in the King Edward VII Stakes and Baghdad in the concluding Duke Of Edinburgh Stakes, in which Dettori finished second on the fast-finishing Ben Vrackie.

Dettori had earlier responded to Moore’s success on Japan with victory in the Group One Commonwealth Cup aboard Advertise. He is the leading current rider at Royal Ascot with 67 winners since breaking his duck at the meeting with Markofdistinction in the Queen Anne Stakes in 1990. Moore, who got off the mark in 2008, is the only other current jockey within sight of Dettori’s total, having compiled his figure of 57 at a much faster rate.

Baghdad ridden by Ryan Moore, left, holds off Ben Vrackie and Franki Dettori in the Duke of Edinburgh Stakes at Royal Ascot.
Baghdad ridden by Ryan Moore, left, holds off Ben Vrackie and Franki Dettori in the Duke of Edinburgh Stakes at Royal Ascot. Photograph: Adam Davy/PA

It is Dettori who has been setting the pace here this week, however, most memorably when recording the first four-timer at the Royal meeting since 1965 when he took the first four races on Thursday. He equalled his best return from a single Royal meeting when Advertise beat a strong field including Moore’s mount Ten Sovereigns, the even-money favourite, in the Commonwealth Cup, and his seventh winner in the four days was registered in emphatic style.

Moore needs to find two winners on Saturday to snatch the riders’ title from Dettori on countback, having held off Dettori’s charge in the concluding race to register what could prove to be a pivotal success by a short head. Dettori is a 1-5 shot with Paddy Power to maintain his lead, while Moore is 3-1 to get his head back in front.