Rachael Blackmore became the first woman to ride the winner of the Grand National when guiding Minella Times home on this day in 2021.
The Henry De Bromhead-trained Minella Times helped Blackmore back up her Cheltenham exploits weeks earlier with more history at Aintree.
Despite the race taking place behind closed doors due to the coronavirus pandemic, it was a day to remember for Blackmore on the 11-1 shot after 32 previous female jockeys had tried and failed to win the Grand National.
While Blackmore had finished runner-up in the Gold Cup at Cheltenham the month before, she had claimed top jockey at the meeting to propel herself onto not only the back pages but the front.
Coupled with the well-fancied Minella Times, expectations were high for the 31-year-old and she did not disappoint with a well-timed run on good to soft ground.
Minella Times and Blackmore stormed past outsider Jett over the last fence and held off Balko Des Flos, also De Bromhead-trained, to earn a historic success.
I feel so incredibly lucky. It is unbelievable, I’m just so thrilled.— Rachael Blackmore on her Grand National win
“I don’t feel male or female. I don’t even feel human, I feel unbelievable,” Blackmore exclaimed after her run with Katie Walsh’s third-place finish on Seabass in 2012 the previous best by a female jockey at the Grand National.
“You need so much luck to get around with no-one else interfering first of all. You need so much to go right and things went right for me today.
“I feel so incredibly lucky. It is unbelievable, I’m just so thrilled.”