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'Despondent' Milton Bradley calls time on training career at 86

The Tatling, who died last week, with trainer Milton Bradley
Milton Bradley with former stable star The TatlingCredit: Julian Herbert

Veteran trainer Milton Bradley, who made a career out of turning moderately-priced racehorses into serial winners, has decided to call time on a training career spanning more than 50 years with immediate effect.

Associated with a string of prolific winners initially over jumps and then on the Flat, including The Tatling, Brevity, Sooty Tern, Grey Dolphin and Offa's Mead, Bradley's licence expired over the weekend and he has chosen not to renew it after finding it increasingly difficult to place his horses.

The 86-year-old has sent out more than 1,000 winners from his farm at Sedbury on the doorstep of Chepstow racecourse but a few hundred yards on the Gloucestershire side of the Welsh border since taking out a full licence in 1969, but his involvement in racing stretches much further having held a permit and trained point-to-pointers after graduating from pony racing.

"I've called it a day at last," said Bradley on Sunday. "I've had 50 years of it and had over 1,000 winners on the Flat, and a lot of jumps winners as well.

"The top and bottom is they haven't got enough races for lower-rated horses, and the reason they've got so many lower-rated horses is because the handicapper is dropping them down the handicap even if they've had a wide draw in a race or they suffer trouble in running.

"It's never been like this in the 50 years I've been training and it's made me feel really despondent. I called race planning the other day and said I have a horse rated 54 and you haven't got a 55 or 60 [rated] race for four weeks.

"It makes no sense – you can't say to an owner your horse is in form but can't get in a race for four weeks, and you might get balloted out when the four weeks is up."

Fearing the lack of opportunities is driving "middle of the road" owners away, Bradley added: "Nowadays it's so ridiculous. You go to Wolverhampton and you see a horse in there costing £100,000 running for two or three grand. What is the sense in that?

"It's upsetting hundreds of owners and the people who have sold their horses aren't getting another. When you go and win a race at the bottom of the tree you're talking £2,000 – what will that pay? Nothing. I couldn't see any future in asking people to buy horses."

Having trained a team of 90 at his peak, Bradley has been down to around ten horses in recent months and those that remain have gone to his granddaughter Hayley and her husband, trainer Charlie Wallis, in Essex.

The Tatling leads the way in the 2004 King's Stand Stakes
The Tatling leads the way in the 2004 King's Stand StakesCredit: Edward Whitaker

Despite ending on a slightly negative note, Bradley has many fond memories to look back on, and singled out the achievements of The Tatling, Brevity and Offa's Mead as three who gave him abundant pleasure.

"I claimed The Tatling for £15,000 and he won nearly £700,000, including the King's Stand," he said. "I gave £3,500 for Brevity and he won eight races in one year, and I won the Bovis Handicap at Ascot with Offa's Mead who cost me £100!

"I've never bought a horse for more than £25,000, but have won the King's Stand at Royal Ascot and the Bovis with horses who cost buttons."

With three children, ten grandchildren and four great grandchildren, not to mention a working farm to pitch in with, he is unlikely to be stuck for things to do to pass the time.

"At 86 I don't want too much work," he said. "I've got a very good family and we farm probably 450 acres. My wife Ruth has been the backbone of our racing stable all of our lives, and I couldn't wish for anything better."


MILTON BRADLEY CV

Full name John Milton Bradley

Born January 5, 1935

Stables Meads Farm, Sedbury, Gloucestershire 1970-2021

First winner under rules Cwrt Bleddyn, selling hurdle, Taunton, November 26, 1970

First Flat winner Rock Bottom, seller, Bath, July 18, 1973

Group 2 winner The Tatling (2004 King's Stand Stakes)

Group 3 winner The Tatling (2003 King George Stakes, 2004 & 2005 World Trophy)

Listed winner The Tatling (2003 Porcelanosa Sprint Stakes)

Big-handicap winners Offa's Mead (1978 Bovis Handicap), Bali Royal (2002 Scottish Sprint Cup), The Tatling (2002 Coral Sprint Trophy), Salviati (2003 Hong Kong Jockey Club Sprint), Corridor Creeper (2005 Hong Kong Jockey Club Sprint), Regal Parade (2012 Coral Sprint Trophy)

Most prolific winners in a jumps season Grey Dolphin (10 wins in 1983-84), Yangtse-Kiang (8 wins in 1987-88), Mighty Marine (7 wins in 1975-76 & 1976-77)

Most prolific winners in a Flat season Nineacres (9 wins in 2000), Eastern Trumpeter (8 wins in 2000), Brevity (8 wins in 2001)

Group 1 runner-up The Tatling (2003, 2004 & 2005 Nunthorpe Stakes, 2004 Prix de l'Abbaye)

Highest-rated horse The Tatling (RPR 119 six times)

Oldest Flat winner The Tatling (2 wins aged 14, 2011)

Notable 1-2 The Tatling, Bali Royal (2003 Porcelanosa Sprint Stakes)

Last winner Iesha (80-1) Kempton, December 14, 2020

Most wins in a season 70 in 2005 (Flat), 20 in 1983-84 (jumps)

Total wins 1,037 (749 Flat, 288 jumps)

Compiled by John Randall


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Published on 31 January 2021inNews

Last updated 21:10, 31 January 2021

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