Two women, whose passion for riding and racing was nurtured in the English countryside, are determined to create history in the LONGINES International Jockeys’ Championship (IJC) at Happy Valley on Wednesday (4 December).
Hollie Doyle, 28, who rode her 1,000th career winner at Goodwood, West Sussex, in September, 2024, and Rachel King, 34, Oxford-born but now a ‘true blue’ Aussie after 11 years riding in Sydney, will bid to register a first female win in the series.
“It’s an honour to be selected,” says Doyle, “The HKJC (Hong Kong Jockey Club) pick jockeys from the best around the world that they know will be competitive and serious in their attempt to win the trophy. It creates quite an intense atmosphere.
“We all get on great. We know each other from travelling the world, but everyone is there for only one thing, and that is to win. It is the atmosphere it should be when you are riding at that level, competing for that amount of money. It’s intense, and that’s how I like it really,” she adds.
In 2020, Doyle became the first female to win a leg of the LONGINES IJC and went on to take equal third overall, while the following year she went one better to finish joint second. This is the fifth consecutive year she has been selected.
“I keep praying I will be asked back. It’s such a great competition. I hope I can get my name on that trophy one day. It would mean so much,” she said.
Doyle’s father was a jumps jockey and her mother regularly rode in Arab horse races. Around horses from a very early age, she was a member of a Herefordshire pony club before riding in her first pony race at the age of nine — pony racing is a popular training ground for future jockeys — and after leaving school she took a job at a stable in Wales before a stint riding trackwork at Santa Anita, California, at the age of 16.