Bryony Frost: 'It's hard to ignore negativity when it comes at you all the time'
Lee Mottershead catches up with a jockey in the spotlight for different reasons
There is a fair chance that by now you have heard we are living in strange times. To appreciate just how strange is to spend an hour with Bryony Frost.
The peculiarity of this particular moment has nothing to do with the virus, although it does seem a tad unusual to be sitting, socially distanced, with one of the sport's highest-profile participants in an empty Tote betting hall on a near-empty racecourse. It is not, however, the where or when of our meeting that feels most surreal, more one of the whys.
For although this is a chance to mark Frost having become the first female jockey ever to win the King George VI Chase, there is an elephant in the room that has to be addressed. There is the good stuff, undoubtedly. There is also, very regrettably, the bad stuff.
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Published on 16 January 2021inInterviews
Last updated 13:00, 16 January 2021
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- When Patrick Mullins met Jack Kennedy: 'You could say I've been lucky - they're just broken bones and they heal'
- Richard Hannon: 'When you're dead and buried the only things you're remembered by are your Classic winners'
- Paul Carberry: 'I jumped up on to the rafters. It tended to be all very strait-laced in those days, but I changed that'
- 'We’re like a Sunday League team running in an FA Cup final - we’re taking on the best with an £800 homebred'
- 'Educating myself has let me live a fuller life - just because you've been diagnosed with dyslexia doesn't mean you can't keep working at it'