Light looks heavyweight National contender

Jessica Harrington, arguably the best dual-purpose trainer in Britain & Ireland, sent out the mare Magic Of Light to finish a superb second to the mighty Tiger Roll in last year’s Randox Health Grand National at Aintree, and the all-girl team will bid to go one better in the April 4, 2020 renewal.

Very few mares take on the daunting challenge of the thirty Aintree fences, and you have to go all the way back to the victory of Nickel Coin in 1951 to find the last female winner of the legendary Merseyside marathon.

Mares have a better record in the Grand National than it appears

But before you discount even the faintest possibility of a mare winning the Grand National for the first time in almost 70 years, you should take into account the fact that very few mares actually run in the race.

Alongside the stunning effort of Magic Of Light in the 2019 renewal, there have been other mares placed in the race in the modern era, including the likes of Eyecatcher and Aunty Dot.

By Flemensfirth, out of a Saumarez mare, Magic Of Light is half-sister to the useful 2m4f chaser Sizing Platinum and the Grade 1-winning two-mile hurdler Pingshou, so it isn’t immediately obvious on pedigree that the eight-year-old would have the requisite stamina to see out the almost four-miles-three-furlongs of the Grand National.

See it out she did though, and in tremendous fashion.

Was she an unlucky loser last year?

Indeed, despite blundering badly at The Chair at the halfway stage of last season’s race, Magic Of Light (an unconsidered 66/1 shot) led from six out until the penultimate fence, and was still upsides Tiger Roll when she made a very bad mistake at the last.
That she stayed on again to close down the eventual winner to just under three lengths at the line was a magnificent effort, and it can be reasonably argued that had she not blundered so badly at the last she may have gone very close to denying Gordon Elliott’s superstar a second successive win the race.

She’s “bigger and stronger” now

Harrington’s mare looks as though she is being specifically trained to try and go one better in 2020 by her maestro of a handler. Last year she arrived at Aintree on the back of a busy campaign. This time it would not surprise if connections choose to race her a little more sparingly.

A 25/1* shot in the ante-post market for the big race, she recently repeated last year’s win in a Listed mares chase at Newbury, after which her regular rider, Robbie Power, observed: “She feels bigger and stronger this year and has been in unbelievable form since she came back in.”

Harrington could add another top prize to her collection

Jessica Harrington is that rare breed of a trainer who seems to find training Grade 1 winners over jumps, and Group 1 Flat winners coming to her with equal ease. Think of the likes of Alpha Centauri, Albigna, and Pathfork on the Flat, then recall great stars such as Moscow Flyer, Macs Joy, Jezki, Sizing John and Supasundae, among others over jumps.

She has a real chance of adding her name to the select list of Grand National-winning female trainers that thus far includes only Jenny Pitman, Venetia Williams, Sue Smith and Lucinda Russell.

It’s not always the case that a horse that puts up a big performance in the Grand National will go back and repeat the feat once again, but Magic Of Light, a strong, robust mare blessed with a surprising amount of stamina, has as good a chance as any of her sex in living memory of lifting the £1million race.

*All odds subject to change.

Latest News

Ted Walsh: Mullins may never top Aintree glory

Ted Walsh is well positioned to judge what winning the Aintree Grand National means for a father-son combination and the legendary figure says even Willie Mullins may struggle to top that achievement in the future. Mullins won back-to-back Grand Nationals in April as Nick Rockett led home a one-two-three for his yard, with last year’s […]

Aintree hero Blackmore ‘blown away’ by response to retirement call

Rachael Blackmore, the only female rider to win the Grand National at Aintree, has announced her retirement from race racing. Blackmore made history in 2021 when steering Minella Times home in front at Aintree for trainer Henry De Bromhead and owner JP McManus. Her Grand National success made headlines around the world and now, aged […]

Russell hoping to raise Scotland’s profile at Aintree and beyond

Dual Grand National-winning trainer Lucinda Russell says her yard must keep ‘having a number of good horses rather than just one flagship’ star in a quest to raise the profile of National Hunt racing in Scotland. Russell trains in the beautiful Kinross countryside half an hour north of Edinburgh with her partner Peter Scudamore MBE, […]
18+ | Commercial Content | T&C's Apply | Play Responsibly | Advertising Disclosure
grandnational.org.uk is an independent professional comparison site supported by referral fees from the sites which are ranked on this site. The sites and information we present are from companies from which grandnational.org.uk receives compensation. This compensation may impact the rankings of the sites. Other factors, including our own opinions, your location, and the likelihood of signing up, may also impact how the ranking of the sites appears to a particular user. grandnational.org.uk cannot and does not present information about every betting/casino site or betting/casino site offer available.