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'I came home to get a wage and get a job' - top apprentice returns to Ireland

Sean Davis: has joined Richard Fahey having been with Ger Lyons in Ireland
Sean Davis: will start his season off in Ireland as a freelanceCredit: Lewis Porteous

Jockey Sean Davis, one of the leading apprentices in Britain last year when attached to the Richard Fahey stable, has committed to riding as a freelance in Ireland this season, before a possible return to Britain later in the year.

Davis partnered 56 winners in Britain in 2019, and his total of 640 rides was more than his combined number of mounts in his two previous seasons in Ireland. But while a return home for the Maynooth native might seem a surprise to many, it was not exactly planned.

Davis said: "I actually came home because Richard Fahey had no jockeys in riding out, due to quarantine the only people allowed ride out were the staff living on-site. So I had no work in England when the lockdown started and I came home to get a wage and get a job again.

"As things progressed I was getting on well with the trainers I was riding out for and it looked like I would have a decent season if I stayed here, particularly as we all thought we would be racing in Ireland much sooner than they would be in Britain.

"So I committed myself to Ireland and thought I would take the couple of months here to get going again and then head back to England at the middle to end of the season. Now that Britain are starting back a bit quicker than we thought, I'm naturally questioning that decision, but I have committed to it now.

"I want to have a career in Britain. It's where I want to ride. I'm in regular contact with Richard Fahey and his assistant Robin O'Ryan, and when I do go back to them, hopefully I will be able to fit back in."

Sean Davis wins the 2019 November Handicap on Jukebox Jive
Sean Davis wins the 2019 November Handicap on Jukebox JiveCredit: Patrick McCann

Before moving to Britain to join Fahey, Davis was a lightweight apprentice attached to the Ger Lyons stable, and was finding himself in significant demand, but he has no illusions about how tough it will be to make his way in Ireland as a freelance rider.

He said: "The reason I went to Britain in the first place was due to how competitive it was here, I was maybe struggling to get to the next level in Ireland, and without a stable job it might be similar again. But last year was the first season I was riding at a very competitive level with plenty of fancied rides.

"I wasn't just going racing hoping for a winner, I was going there to ride horses I should have been winning on and making sure that I was good enough to win on them. I think my riding has improved and I want to keep improving."

Asked about his ambitions for the upcoming season, Davis replied: "I would hope firstly that things start to get back to normal. Then I would hope to be riding consistently without spending too much time on the sidelines. Being light will hopefully help me, especially with trainers I have done well for in the past.

"I would certainly hope to ride a big winner at some stage of the year, maybe a Premier Handicap. I came back home briefly last year and won the November Handicap on Jukebox Jive. Hopefully I can get back on the right horse and do something similar again."


Read more:

Sean Davis returns to Ireland in effort to keep the winners flowing

Key dates: the provisional plans for the return of British and Irish racing

Naas to host first meeting back with Irish Guineas to be run on June 12 and 13


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