PO Box 502058 Office 1905, Aurora Tower, Dubai Media City Dubai U.A.E
+971 (0) 4551 5472

Website version

The Impact of Rachael Blackmore on horseracing

Performance Communications Author Image Performance Communications | أبريل 14, 2022

Ok so she didn’t make it two years in a row at the Grand National but that still doesn’t take away from what has been an amazing 12 months for Rachael Blackmore.

Her Gold Cup win at Cheltenham unsurprisingly made headline news, turning the public’s attention away from recent scandals and allegations of bullying in the world of horseracing and making us focus on the success of a female in a typically male environment. Racing fans must be delighted.

But apart from a bit of positive PR, what impact will Rachael’s wins actually have on attracting more women into the sport?

Public interest

Let’s start with viewing figures. This year’s Grand National attracted a peak audience of 7.5 million people which was down on the 8.8 million who watched Blackmore’s win in 2021. However, the audience share was higher this year, 39% compared to 32% last year.

While it’s a downward trend for the Grand National’s viewing figures, the racing audience for the Cheltenham Festival was the ‘highest for over ten years’. ITV reported 1.6 million people watched Rachael’s win which equated to a 19% audience share. The race was also broadcast in the US for the first time. However there is no breakdown of the demographics of those viewers. With the same number of people watching Tiger Roll’s last race in the Cross Country Chase, it could just be that racing overall has become more popular, rather than it having anything to do with a female jockey.

The good thing is Blackmore’s win was described as making history and got widespread pick-up across the media. Research from the Women’s Sport Trust in 2021 showed that Rachael received a total of 36 mentions on UK TV news outlets in the week following the Cheltenham Gold Cup race (19/03-26/03), 9 more than Jack Kennedy, despite him being the winning Gold Cup jockey. It also shows that after her Grand National win, she got more mentions in the news for that win than Kennedy got for his Gold Cup win (47 mentions vs 27 mentions).

Sponsor activity

If we focus on Cheltenham, this year was the first time Boodles sponsored the Gold Cup. They’re not new to the world of horseracing, having been a sponsor of Cheltenham since 2014. But they must have jumped for joy when she won. However apart from an image from before the event, I haven’t seen anything else from Boodles which feels like a missed opportunity.

(Image courtesy of Boodles)

PaddyPower, another sponsor, referenced Rachael in their pre-Cheltenham video they shared on their social channels and then again after her win, as a response to GB News announcing her as their favourite Briton. It would have been nice to see them do something else as a response to this historic win.

(Image courtesy of Talksport)

The future

According to GB Racing, wins by female jockeys increased by 76% between 2015 and 2019 and women now make up almost a quarter of all riders across flat and jump racing. So we know that more women are competing and winning.

Lucy Turner, who won the Amateur Jockeys’ Handicap Chase on Venetia Williams’ horse Chambard, has said she’s been inspired to turn professional by Rachael’s feats.

It’s not just about the jockeys. Trainer Venetia Williams has, according to reports, had her best season for years. Then there are organisations like Women in Racing which exist to develop the profile of women across the horse racing industry, including media, training yards and associated sectors.

Going forward, I think more brands will be looking at horse racing now as a partnership opportunity, I believe more girls will see being a jockey as a potential professional career option and I hope more women will watch it on TV and engage with those female jockeys to help grow their profiles.

It’s worth remembering that women have only been allowed to ride professionally in the last 50 years. I hope it won’t be another 50 years until we have another female winner at the Grand National or Gold Cup.

Image courtesy of Charlie Boss on LinkedIn

Nicola


Related stories.

The Clock is Ticking For Internal Combustion, But Rolex Shows That Old Tech Can Still Prosper

Cars and watches. Watches and cars. If you’re speaking to a car enthusiast, I’d wager there’s a very good chance they’ll also appreciate the merits of a mechanical watch. Listening to the brilliant Acquired podcast charting the history of Rolex, got me thinking. At various points, the excellent hosts Ben Gilbert and David Rosenthal, liken […]

Formula 1 can’t rely on off-track drama to maintain its stellar rise

When Liberty Media bought F1 in 2017, it promised to grow the sport, enhance the racing experience and add new dimensions. So how has it gone? Well, the 24-race calendar last year was a record, as was the 6.5m live attendees at these races. Drive To Survive, the sport’s behind-the-scenes Netflix docuseries, has become a […]

Should You Still Use Hashtags on Social Media?

This question comes up a lot when discussing social media strategy: Should we include hashtags? The Origins of Hashtags Hashtags were originally designed to group conversations on social platforms, making it easier for people to follow specific topics. If you were into motorcycles, searching for #Motorcycles would bring up relevant discussions. They were a simple […]

MOTD Vs Changing viewing habits

I used to be a Match of the Day devotee, but the appeal is unfortunately waning. Yes, Sunderland AFC have been absent for 7 (seven) seasons, but I can’t remember the last time I tuned in for a full episode and with viewing figures down year-on-year (just 2.7 million earlier in January), this national institution […]

Introducing the antidote for AI generated copy: the smart typewriter

There’s a new piece of kit in the Performance Communications office: a Freewrite smart typewriter. It’s a pretty simple piece of technology: a chunky keyboard bundled with an LCD screen and storage. It doesn’t have a spellchecker, a web browser, or a scrollbar. If you’re old enough to remember, it’s reminiscent of early pre-PC word […]

What DeepSeek tells us about China and innovation

In January, China’s DeepSeek caused market pandemonium when it revealed its open-source AI model could match the performance of western AI providers like OpenAI, Anthropic, or Meta. Why? Because it reportedly did so with 10-20x less energy and hardware requirements. Many people were shocked because, unlike the OpenAIs of this world, DeepSeek was a small […]

Hitting the sweet spot for flexible working

Barclays is the latest big organisation to review its flexible working policy, sending a memo to affected employees informing them that they’d be required in the office on three, rather than two, days per week. Metropolitan Police staff are striking over changes to its flexible working policy and the topic was even the subject of […]

New formats bring fresh focus to a packed sporting calendar

While my return to Long Ditton CC winter nets ahead of the new cricket season is imminent and Sunderland continues to play with my emotions in the top four of the Championship, 2025’s wider sporting schedule shapes up like no other. Olympic and football World Cup years aside, has any other sporting calendar been so […]

Be Bold.

It’s time to come off the fence:


Message us