'This level of the sport is a scary place at the moment but it's all I've ever known - except working in a chip van, and I blew that up!'
Roger Teal talks to Peter Thomas about the nervous journey to the Lockinge with stable star Dancing Gemini

Signs of ostentatious wealth are thin on the ground at Windsor House Stables. This is a Group 1-winning yard that is looking forward excitedly to Saturday's Lockinge Stakes, hoping to add the Newbury feature to two previous Group 1 successes, but the most copious commodities to be found here are early starts and hard graft. If the trainer has a Bentley, it must be parked elsewhere.
This is no bargain-basement operation, as results have consistently shown, but it is one that relies on the type of commitment born of a lifetime in the sport – rooted somewhere between passion and necessity. Clearing the frost off the Jeep at daft o'clock this morning was just the first of a litany of small but significant jobs that nobody else is going to do.
"Smaller trainers are finding it very tough and this level of the game is a scary place to be at the moment," shrugs Roger Teal, "but it's a way of life, it's all I've ever known, and then you're in too deep to get out of it.
Read the full story
Read award-winning journalism from the best writers in racing, with exclusive news, interviews, columns, investigations, stable tours and subscriber-only emails.
Subscribe to unlock
- Racing Post digital newspaper (worth over £100 per month)
- Award-winning journalism from the best writers in racing
- Expert tips from the likes of Tom Segal and Paul Kealy
- Replays and results analysis from all UK and Irish racecourses
- Form study tools including the Pro Card and Horse Tracker
- Extensive archive of statistics covering horses, trainers, jockeys, owners, pedigree and sales data
Already a subscriber?Log in
Published on inInterviews
Last updated
- 'I was fiery in those days - I told him I'd still be young when he was walking with a stick and I'd gladly kick the stick out of his hand'
- 'Kieren was brilliant in the way he controlled the race from the front' - Aidan O'Brien recalls staying great Yeats
- ‘I ditched my career to travel around the US for years with just one racehorse - now I’m back and in charge of the Derby’
- 'Spoilt brat that I was, my dad said I could have a car or a racehorse' - inside the thriving world of Harry Herbert and Highclere
- 'I am so jealous of David Maxwell - I absolutely loved riding in races and if I could do it now I would'
- 'I was fiery in those days - I told him I'd still be young when he was walking with a stick and I'd gladly kick the stick out of his hand'
- 'Kieren was brilliant in the way he controlled the race from the front' - Aidan O'Brien recalls staying great Yeats
- ‘I ditched my career to travel around the US for years with just one racehorse - now I’m back and in charge of the Derby’
- 'Spoilt brat that I was, my dad said I could have a car or a racehorse' - inside the thriving world of Harry Herbert and Highclere
- 'I am so jealous of David Maxwell - I absolutely loved riding in races and if I could do it now I would'