Rood Eye
Tuesday 15th October 2019 9:46pm [Edited]
4,103 posts
Jet Ski
I began backing racehorses when I was a teenager at school.
In those days, and for many years thereafter, there were no TV sets in bookies' shops: there weren't even any chairs or any carpets or any anything apart from the punters and the bookie - and a little box mounted high up on the wall known as "the blower". It was, in fact, far more than just a little box: it was a speaker through which the commentaries were delivered and, to the avid punter, it was the most marvellous little box in the world. It was a source of inestimable stimulation in what was otherwise the drabbest and most inhospitable of environments
It was the law of the land that made bookies' offices so inhospitable - and they were inhospitable. From the day that off-course betting became legal, the government was determined to make it as unpleasant a process as possible. I'm sure the frugality of those early bookies' shops succeeded in deterring many people from spending more time than was absolutely necessary in such an establishment but, to the avid racing fan, betting on horses was rather like sex: everything about it was pleasurable and, as the climax was approaching, it mattered not one jot where you were - all that mattered was the moment.
Many years later, bookies' offices became a lot more comfortable and the law even allowed people to see into the shops from the pavements outside. In those days I was happier than ever to spend hours every day chatting to fellow punters, watching horse races, betting when I saw a profitable opportunity and keeping my money in my pocket when I didn't.
During all those years when I was an avid punter, sometimes I'd have a proper job and sometimes I'd rely on my winnings to keep me one step ahead of the shoeshine (as Paul Simon might put it). I've always been a fan of Paul Simon.
When I did have a proper job, it was very common for me to pop into William Hill's on a Saturday morning and stake the equivalent of four months wages on my bets for the day. By 5 o'clock, if I collected the equivalent of five months wages, I'd had a good day. If I'd had a bad day, well . . . there was always tomorrow.
As every avid punter will confirm, the sporting life has its highs and its lows, and, for me, there were two high points one of which I will save for another day and the other of which was the day of the Epsom Oaks in 1991.
On the day, there were only nine runners: the favourite was 5 to 4, the eighth horse in the betting was 16 to 1 and the last horse in the betting was 50 to 1: the name of this "obvious no-hoper" was Jet Ski Lady.
I had a particular fancy for this horse but, when I told my friends at the bookies' that I was going to back her, their laughter could have been (and probably was) heard on the other side of town.
Undaunted, I placed my bet and the bookie took it from me in what he thought was the sure and certain knowledge that it was at that moment his irreclaimable personal property.
Soon after the stalls opened, Jet Ski Lady took a slight lead and 12 furlongs later as the winning post was approaching she hadn't relinquished it for a single solitary moment.
Who says you can't trust females? Certainly not me.
In the following video, she's in the front line - the jockey has blue sleeves and a white cap.
The new list is:
Discotheque
Tortoise
Blouse
Colombia
Monopoly
Black holes
The Year 1995
The one that got away
Bling
London Palladium