Miles Henry ‘Peter’ Easterby – not to be confused with his younger brother, Michael William ‘Mick’ Easterby who, at the time of writing, has the distinction of being the oldest racehorse trainer in Britain – retired in 1996, but was, arguably, the greatest dual-purpose trainer in the history of British horse racing. Over two decades after he handed over to his son, Tim, at Habton Grange Stables, near Malton, North Yorkshire, Easterby remains the only trainer in history to saddle more than 1,000 winners under both codes.

 

In the National Hunt sphere, Easterby was Champion Trainer three years running, in 1978/79, 1979/80 and 1980/81. All told, Easterby saddled 13 winners at the Cheltenham Festival, starting with the notoriously hard-pulling, but slick-jumping, Saucy Kit in the Champion Hurdle in 1967 but, between 1976 and 1983, enjoyed a particularly purple patch at the most prestigious meeting in the National Hunt calendar with ten winners in seven years.

 

His favourite horse and, with a Timeform Annual Rating of 182, still the highest rated hurdler since the early-60s, Night Nurse, won the Champion Hurdle in 1976 and 1977. Four years later, having successful switched to steeplechasing, the same horse failed by a length-and-a-half to become the first horse to complete the Champion Hurdle – Cheltenham Gold Cup double, when beaten, ironically, by stable companion Little Owl in the latter contest.

 

Easterby won the Champion Hurdle twice more, with Sea Pigeon, at the age of 10 and 11, respectively, in 1980 and 1981. When the ‘old man’ – as Sir Peter O’Sullevan called Sea Pigeon during his first victory – died, at the age of 30, in 2000, he was buried alongside his former stable companion, Night Nurse, at Habton Grange, beneath a plaque inscribed ‘Legends In Their Lifetime’.

 

During his reign as Champion Trainer, Easterby also saddled the hugely-talented, but ill-fated, Alverton to win the Arkle Challenge Trophy in 1978 and the Cheltenham Gold Cup in 1979. Fresh from his wide-margin win in the Blue Riband event, the 9-year-old was sent off a worthy favourite for the Grand National, but broke his neck during a fall at Becher’s Brook on the second circuit, when cantering in front, and was humanely euthanised.

Veteran trainer David Raymond Cecil Elsworth made his name as assistant trainer to Guy Richardson Aymer  “Ricky” Vallance, a retired Lieutenant-Colonel, at Bishops Cannings, near Devizes, Wiltshire. However, one of the horses in his care, Well Briefed, was referred to the Jockey Club over his marked improvement in form, delaying his application for a training licence in his own right. The authorities relented, in 1978, and Elsworth set up on his own at nearby Whitsbury Manor Stables, near Fordingbridge, where he was to enjoy his most successful years as a trainer.

 

Indeed, Elsworth was Champion National Hunt just once, in 1987/88, just denying Josh Gifford. Ironically, that was the only season between 1986/87 and 1990/91 that his most famous horse, Desert Orchid, failed to win the King George VI Chase at Kempton Park on Boxing Day. Sent off at even-money favourite, the redoubtable grey helped to set a furious pace for the first mile and, having held a narrow lead turning into the straight for the final time, was quickly left behind by French challenger Nupsala, who went on to win by 15 lengths at odds of 25/1.

 

However, Desert Orchid returned to winning ways at end of the 1987/88 season, jumping well to beat Kildimo by 8 lengths in the Chivas Regal Cup Chase at Aintree and running on well to beat the same horse by 2½ lengths in the Whitbread Gold Cup at Sandown Park on the final day of the season. By then, of course, Elsworth had already saddled Rhyme ‘N’ Reason to win the newly rebranded Racing Post Chase and the Grand National at Aintree – in which the horse famously ‘did the splits’ at Becher’s Brook on the first circuit – and Cavvies Clown, who led until blundering at the second last fence, to finish second in the Cheltenham Gold Cup won by Charter Party.

David ‘The Duke’ Nicholson, who died of a heart attack, at the age of 67, in August, 2006 was one of the finest National Hunt trainers of his generation, saddling 1,499 winners in his 31-year career between 1968 and 1999. Nicholson was the son of former Champion Jockey Herbert ‘Frenchie’ Nicholson, who turned to training shortly after World War II. He was christened ‘The Duke’ by one of the grooms employed by his father because of his occasionally cocksure attitude as a young man and the nickname stuck with him throughout his adult life.

 

Nicholson became Champion National Hunt Trainer just twice, in 1993/94 and 1994/95, but was, in fact, the only trainer, other than Martin Pipe, to win the trainers’ title between 1989/90 and 2004/05. By that time, Nicholson had accepted a salaried position at Jackdaws Castle, a state-of-the-art training facility built by property developer Colin Smith in Ford, near Temple Guiting, Gloucestershire.

 

Highlights of his first title-winning season included victories for Barton Bank in the King George VI Chase, Mysilv in the Finale Junior Hurdle, Viking Flagship in the Queen Mother Champion Chase and Mysilv, again, in the Triumph Hurdle. All told, he saddled 79 winners from 324 runners on British soil and won over £720,000 in prize money.

 

The 1994/95 season started well enough, too, with victory for Viking Flagship in the Tingle Creek Chase at Sandown Park in early December, en route to a repeat performance in the Queen Mother Champion Chase and further success at the highest level in the Melling Chase at Aintree. Nicholson also saddled Hebridean to win the Long Walk Hurdle, Brownhall to win the Feltham Novices’ Chase, Silver Wedge to win the Tolworth Hurdle, Putty Road to win the Sun Alliance Novices’ Hurdle and Kadi to win the Mildmay of Flete Challenge Cup. He was leading trainer at the Cheltenham Festival with three winners but, more importantly, the season as whole yielded 95 winners and just short of £887,000 in prize money, to give him his second trainers’ title.

The late Fred Thomas Winter CBE, who died in April, 2004, aged 77, first turned his attention to training at Uplands Stables, in Upper Lambourn, near Newbury, Berkshire in 1964 with just five horses. However, despite a hesitant start to his training career, Winter had the distinction of winning the Grand National with his first two runners in the world-famous steeplechase, Jay Trump in 1965 and Anglo in 1966.

 

In 1970/71, Winter saddled 73 winners and won over £60,000 in prize money to become just the second man since World War II – after Fred Rimell – to be crowned Champion Jockey and Champion Trainer. In fact, Winter would retain the trainers’ championship in all bar one of the next seven seasons, only losing out to Rimell in 1975/76, and would win it again in 1984/85, for what was, at that point, a record eighth time.

 

At the Cheltenham Festival in 1971, Winter saddled Bula to win the Champion Hurdle and Crisp – better remembered as the horse caught in the dying strides by Red Rum in the Grand National two years later – to win the Two-Mile Champion Chase, in the days before it was renamed in honour of the late Elizabeth Bowes-Lyon, a.k.a. The Queen Mother.

 

The following year, Bula won the Champion Hurdle again, Pendil won the Arkle Challenge Trophy and Soloning won the now-defunct Cathcart Challenge Cup, a race Winter would win seven times in total during his training career. Later that year, Pendil won the King George VI Chase at Kempton on Boxing Day but, back at Cheltenham in 1973, suffered an agonising defeat when, having led over the final fence in the Cheltenham Gold Cup, he was caught in the shadow of the post and beaten a short-head by The Dikler.

 

Winter did, however, saddle the brilliant, but ill-fated, Killiney to win the Totalisator Champion Chase – now the RSA Insurance Novices’ Chase – by 25 lengths or so, while Pendil gain some recompense for his Gold Cup defeat when winning the King George VI Chase for the second year running. Other Cheltenham Festival highlights included winning the Champion Hurdle again, with Lanzarote in 1974 and, finally, after several near-misses, the Cheltenham Gold Cup with Midnight Court in 1978.