Journalists Wandering Eyes Posted April 1, 2019 Journalists Share Posted April 1, 2019 Flat jockey Fran Berry has retired from the saddle with immediate effect. The 38-year-old suffered spinal injuries in a fall at Wolverhampton on Jan. 29–and, after consultation with his surgeon, he has been advised to quit race-riding. “For the past 23 years, I have got to live out my childhood dream of being a jockey,” Berry told www.sportinglife.com, for who he will continue to write his regular blog. “But following recent scans and discussions with my medical team headed by my surgeon Dr. Mike Foy, as well as Dr. Jerry Hill, I have to accept that the dream is now over and that due to the injuries sustained in Wolverhampton on Jan. 29, I will not be able to make a return to race-riding. “While this news is heartbreaking on one level, I am fully aware how lucky I am. Riding has been a fantastic adventure for me, and I am very grateful for the way it allowed my family and me to experience the world and gain many friends over that time.” Berry will also pursue other ventures–including media work, and is poised to join the Racing TV team of pundits, that media outlet reported on Monday. All told, Berry booted home 1,387 winners, including four in the National Hunt sphere, with the remainder on the Flat primarily in Ireland. He rode a winner during the Cheltenham Festival at the age of only 18-the Christy Roche-trained Khayrawani (Ire) (Caerleon) in the Coral Cup for JP McManus. Berry’s father Frank is McManus’s racing manager. The understudy to Mick Kinane in the John Oxx yard following a switch to the Flat, Berry won the 2010 G1 National S. with Pathfork (Distorted Humor) for Jessica Harrington and also rode in Japan. Beginning in 2016, Berry moved his tack and family to Britain to ride for Ralph Beckett and later on went freelance. In 2018 the Irishman teamed up with David Menuisier’s Thundering Blue (Exchange Rate) and the duo won both the G2 York S. and G3 Stockholm Cup International and was runner-up in the GI Pattison Canadian International S. and third in the G1 Juddmonte International S. View the full article Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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