Edward O’Grady, one of the giants of Irish jump racing, has died at the age of 75.
Based in Ballynonty in County Tipperary, O’Grady was champion jumps trainer in Ireland for four consecutive seasons between 1977 and 1980 and he staged a revival in the mid 1990s when horses like Sound Man and Ventana Canyon emerged.Â
He was Ireland’s most successful trainer at the Cheltenham Festival before Willie Mullins, Gordon Elliott and Henry de Bromhead arrived on the scene with 18 winners to his name. Mr Midland was his first in the 1974 National Hunt Chase and Sky’s The Limit was his last when running away with the Coral Cup under Barry Geraghty in 2006.Â
O’Grady was synonymous with the emergence of JP McManus as a leading owner and the pair teamed up to win the Galway Plate in 1978 with Shining Flame, among numerous other big-race wins together.Â
O’Grady took over his father’s training licence in 1972 and he quickly celebrated his first winner when Vibrax, ridden by his cousin Timmy Hyde, won at Gowran Park in January.Â
The hugely talented Golden Cygnet shot to stardom for O’Grady later that decade and he scooted away with the Supreme Novices’ Hurdle at Cheltenham in 1978, but his massively exciting career was cruelly cut short the following month when he suffered a fatal fall in the Scottish Champion Hurdle. O’Grady hailed him the “most talented horse he had ever trained”.Â
Sound Man won back-to-back Tingle Creek Chases at Sandown in 1995 and 1996, while Back In Front followed in the footsteps of Golden Cygnet by winning the Supreme in 2003.Â
Pizarro was a controversial winner of the Weatherbys Champion Bumper under Jamie Spencer in 2002 when fending off favourite Rhinestone Cowboy by a neck and then surviving a lengthy stewards’ enquiry afterwards.Â
O’Grady’s final Grade 1 winner was Cash And Go in the Future Champions Novice Hurdle at the 2011 Christmas festival at Leopardstown, while in 2009 Tranquil Sea, in the hands of Andrew McNamara, became the first Irish-trained horse since Bright Highway in 1980 to win the Paddy Power Gold Cup at Cheltenham and no Irish horse has won it since.Â
O’Grady was a colossus at the Galway Races, too. The aforementioned Shining Flame won the Galway Plate in 1978 and the trainer went on to win three Plates in four years, with Hind Hope and Rugged Lucy winning in 1979 and 1981. Hard Tarquin’s victory in the 1979 Galway Hurdle made him only the fifth trainer to win both the Plate and the Hurdle in the same year.
Drumlargan’s victory in the 1983 Whitbread Gold Cup at Sandown always held a special place in O’Grady’s heart, while he won the Irish Grand National in the same year with Bit Of A Skite.Â
Other talented horses O’Grady trained in more recent years were Ned Kelly and Nick Dundee, who both wore the famous navy Magnier silks.Â
Ned Kelly won 12 of his 27 starts, including the Irish Champion Hurdle in 2002, while Nick Dundee was blessed with huge talent and was cantering when coming a cropper at the third-last in 1999 Royal & SunAlliance Novices’ Chase after being sent off 5-4 favourite. The race was won by subsequent Gold Cup winner Looks Like Trouble.Â
Nick Dundee was never the same horse after that fall but, after winning the Grade 2 Dr.P.J.Moriarty Novice Chase at Leopardstown the month before Cheltenham, O’Grady said he was the “most exciting novice chaser I have trained”.
O’Grady’s final runner proved to be Sovereign Banter, who finished down the field in a sprint handicap on the Flat at Cork last Friday night. His last winner was Our Soldier in a handicap hurdle at Bellewstown this month under amateur Harry Swan.Â
O’Grady is predeceased by his second wife, Maria, and is survived by their daughters Mimi and Rosie Mae, as well as his older children Jonathan, Amber and Lucy. Funeral arrangements are yet to be confirmed.
Edward O’Grady CV
Full name Edward Joseph O’Grady
Born September 27, 1949
Father Willie O’Grady (three-time champion jump jockey; trainer of Solfen, Kinloch Brae)
Stables Killeens, Ballynonty, Thurles, County Tipperary 1972-2025
First winner as trainer Vibrax (ridden by Timmy Hyde) handicap hurdle, Gowran Park, January 27, 1972
Highest-rated horse Golden Cygnet (176 in Chasers & Hurdlers 1977/78)
Stayers’ Hurdle winners Flame Gun (1978), Mountrivers (1980)
Irish Champion Hurdle winner (Leopardstown) Ned Kelly (2002)
Irish Grand National winner Bit Of A Skite (1983)
Whitbread Gold Cup winner Drumlargan (1983)
Paddy Power Gold Cup winner Tranquil Sea (2009)
Tingle Creek Chase winner Sound Man (1995, 1996)
Victor Chandler (Clarence House) Chase winner Blitzkreig (1991)
Comet (Ascot) Chase winner Sound Man (1996)
Punchestown Chase winners Jack Of Trumps (1978, 1979), Tranquil Sea (2010)
Galway Plate winners Shining Flame (1978), Hindhope (1979), Rugged Lucy (1981)
Galway Hurdle winner Hard Tarquin (1979)
Aintree Hurdle winner Sacundai (2003)
Arkle Chase winner Ventana Canyon (1996)
Supreme Novices’ Hurdle winners Golden Cygnet (1978), Back In Front (2003)
Sun Alliance Novices’ Hurdle winners Drumlargan (1980), Mister Donovan (1982, JP McManus’s first Cheltenham Festival winner)
Triumph Hurdle winner Northern Game (1984)
Other Cheltenham Festival winners Mr Midland (1974 National Hunt Chase), Prolan (1976 Kim Muir Memorial Chase), Rusty Tears (1977 Cathcart Champion Hunters’ Chase), Staplestown (1981 County Hurdle), Bit Of A Skite (1983 National Hunt Chase), Time For A Run (1994 Coral Cup), Mucklemeg (1994 Festival Bumper), Loving Around (1996 National Hunt Chase), Pizarro (2002 Champion Bumper), Sky’s The Limit (2006 Coral Cup)
Pattern winners on Flat Cooleen Jack (1981 Ballyogan Stakes), Grey Goddess (1986 Matron Stakes, 1987 Gladness Stakes)
Placed horse in Cheltenham Gold Cup Drumlargan (3rd in 1984)
Last winner Our Soldier, handicap hurdle, Bellewstown, July 5, 2025
Cheltenham Festival wins 18
Champion jumps trainer in Ireland 4 times: 1977, 1978, 1979, 1980
Leading trainer in Ireland (most wins, Flat/jumps combined) 1979 (82 wins)
Compiled by John Randall