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Noel Murless

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(Redirected fromSir Noel Murless)
English Thoroughbred trainer (1910–1987)

Noel Murless
OccupationTrainer
Born24 March 1910
Malpas, Cheshire,United Kingdom
Died9 May 1987 (aged 77)
Major racing wins
British Classic Race wins as trainer:
2000 Guineas (2)
1000 Guineas (6)
Epsom Derby (3)
Epsom Oaks (5)
St Leger (3)[1]
Racing awards
British flat racing Champion Trainer (1948, 1957, 1959, 1960, 1961, 1967, 1968, 1970, 1973)
Honours
Noel Murless Stakes atAscot Racecourse
Significant horses
Ridge Wood,Princely Gift,Crepello,Carrozza,Petite Etoile,St. Paddy,Twilight Alley,
Aunt Edith,Fleet,Royal Palace,Busted,Caergwrle,Lupe,Altesse Royale,Mysterious,J. O. Tobin,Jumping Hill

Sir Charles Francis Noel Murless (24 March 1910 – 9 May 1987) was an English racehorse trainer who one of the most successful of the twentieth century. Murless began his career as a trainer in 1935 at Hambleton Lodge in Yorkshire before moving to Hambleton House after the war, at one time sharing premises withRyan Price.[2] In 1947, he moved south, first toBeckhampton, Wiltshire (where he waschampion trainer in his first season) and then toWarren Place,Newmarket.

Murless had nineteen classic wins in England and two in Ireland. Of these, there were threeEpsom Derby wins, withCrepello (1957),St. Paddy (1960) andRoyal Palace (1967). He also had an outstanding record inThe Oaks, saddling no less than five winners:Carrozza (1957),Petite Etoile (1959),Lupe (1970),Altesse Royale (1971) andMysterious (1973). His greatest horse was arguably Royal Palace, who preceded his Derby success by winning the2,000 Guineas, to which he added theEclipse and theKing George VI and Queen Elizabeth Stakes the following year.

In 1952 he became manager of Eve Stud, owned bySir Victor Sassoon, and was the mastermind behind its racing success. Murless purchased the property from Sir Victor's widow in 1970 and named it Woodditton Stud. He continued the practice of standingstallions there, including the top-class racehorses Connaught and Welsh Pageant. The stallion tradition was maintained when the stud was sold to Yong Nam-Seng of Singapore in 1981.

Training career – Hambleton

[edit]

Noel Murless commenced training in 1935, when his first winner was Rubin Wood in the Lee Plate atLanark Racecourse. He first made his mark as a trainer after the Second World War in 1947 by winning two famous handicaps, theBritannia Stakes at Royal Ascot with Oros and theSteward's Cup at Glorious Goodwood with Closeburn. Oros was a "top class mile handicapper".[3]

Closeburn was just below the very best sprinters of 1947 and was placed in the Cork and Orrery and July Cup before winning the Stewards Cup under a record weight at the time for a 3-year-old of 8–10. He went on to win the Challenge Stakes in October, then run over 6 furlongs. The Bloodstock Breeders Review of 1947 said of Closeburn "The credit of breeding the winner goes to his young trainer who, at the end of the season, followed Fred Darling as the "Master" of the famous Beckhampton stable".[4]

Training career – Beckhampton

[edit]

1948 was Murless' first season at Beckhampton in Wiltshire after taking over fromFred Darling. There was immediate success withQueenpot winning the1,000 Guineas and The Cobbler taking second place in the2,000 Guineas. Three winners at Royal Ascot included a two-year-oldAbernant, who was to become one of the finest sprinters of the second half of the century. Other significant winners of the year included Goblet in theFalmouth Stakes at Newmarket and theNassau Stakes at Goodwood, Gold Mist in Doncaster'sPortland Handicap and Royal Forest in theDewhurst Stakes. The move to Beckhampton also led toKing George VI becoming one of Noel Murless's owners, for whom he trained three winners in 1948. Noel was Champion Trainer for the first time in 1948 and also had three (Abernant, Royal Forest and Faux Tirage) out of the first four in the Two Year Old Free Handicap for the year.[5]

Noel Murless trained another three years at Beckhampton but was not entirely happy, according to his biographer Tim Fitzgeorge-Parker.[6] Those three years did lead to a second classic winner withRidge Wood in the 1949St Leger and the dominance of the sprinting ranks by Abernant, who won the King Stand at Royal Ascot in 1949;July Cup at Newmarket,King George Stakes at Goodwood andNunthorpe Stakes at York in both 1949 and 1950.

Training career – Warren Place

[edit]

Murless moved toWarren Place in Newmarket towards the end of the 1952 Flat season. Although there were no immediate classic winners, the quality of horses was expected to improve as new high-spending owners became patrons of the yard. These owners included theAga Khan, and his sonAly Khan who had offered support prior to the move.[7] Murless said of Prince Aly Khan in his biography that he was "highly intelligent, a first class judge of a horse and of form and breeding". Winners in 1953 included the Cork and Orrery with Blood Test at Royal Ascot, and Buckhound in the Jockey Club Stakes at Newmarket. The Queen's Landau won the Rous Memorial Stakes at Royal Ascot and the Sussex Stakes at the Glorious Goodwood festival in 1954. In the same year, at Royal Ascot Gordon Richards won the King Edward VII Stakes on Rashleigh, trained by Noel. This race lead ultimately to the up-and-coming young new jockey of the time having his licence removed for six months:[8] that jockey wasLester Piggott who in 1955 would take over as stable jockey for Murless, following Sir Gordon Richards' retirement. Piggott and Murless together would be a dynamic combination in British Flat Racing for the next decade.

A major owner of horses at Warren Place wasSir Victor Sassoon, whose Eve Stud Noel managed. In 1955 Sassoon sent the yearlingCrepello to Warren Place. Crepello was to win theDewhurst Stakes in 1956 and theTwo Thousand Guineas plus theDerby in 1957.

1967 was probably Murless' most successful year as a trainer. Victories included three of the home classics, Eclipse and King George. He was Champion Trainer. A win for the Queen's Hopeful Venture in the Wood Ditton at the Craven meeting was followed by victories in the two traditional 1,000 Guineas trials for Cranberry Sauce in the Nell Gwynn, and Royal Saint in the Fred Darling.Busted, who had been drafted into the stable to lead the classic colts, won theCoronation Stakes over 10f at Sandown in April and was deemed too good to continue as a lead horse. The Two Thousand Guineas was won byRoyal Palace, and the following day Fleet was victorious in the One Thousand Guineas. Royal Palace went on to win the Derby whilst Busted won the Eclipse, King George VI Diamond Stakes and Prix Foy before tendon injury prevented an attempt at the Arc. 63 races were won with winning stakes of £279,775.[9]

Murless retired in 1976 as trainer of horses and was knighted the following year. His son-in-law,Henry Cecil, took over Warren Place.

References

[edit]
  1. ^Morris, Tony; Randall, John (1990).Horse Racing: Records, Facts, Champions (Third Edition). Guinness Publishing.ISBN 0-85112-902-1.
  2. ^"Cliff Stud".www.yorkshire-racing.co.uk. Retrieved14 July 2021.
  3. ^The Best Horses of 1947 Timeform Supplement.
  4. ^The Bloodstock Breeders Review 1947
  5. ^The Bloodstock Breeders Review 1948
  6. ^The Guv'nor A Biography of Sir Noel Murless - Tim Fitzgeorge-Parker.
  7. ^The Guv'nor A Biography of Sir Noel Murless - Tim Fitzgeorge-Parker page 65.
  8. ^Lester: The Autobiography of Lester Piggott
  9. ^The Guv'nor A Biography of Sir Noel Murless - Tim Fitzgeorge-Parker.

Fitzgeorge-Parker, Tim (December 1980).Guv'Nor: A Biography of Sir Noel Murless. Wm Collins & Sons & Co.ISBN 978-0-00-216296-8.

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