Horses are then put in descending order from the highest to the lowest weighted and that also determines their race number. Each runner’s weight will be largely determined by their OR (Official Rating) and the higher the rating, the higher the weight.Īlthough the Grand National is the only race in Britain in which the Handicapper can ignoring the official ratings if he wishes, often to the consternation of owners and trainers. The minimum weight for the Grand National will now be 10st 2lbs. The BHA has confirmed an across-the-board 2lbs rise in published weights as part of a safety allowance for jockeys as of May 2022. The maximum weight any horse can carry in the Grand National will be 11st 12lbs. The handicap system is designed to give every horse a fair chance of winning the race, good horses will carry more weight than those perceived to have less ability. In other words, he decides which runners will carry the heaviest weights and which will carry the least. The BHA Head Of Handicapping then takes the list of entries and frames the weights. The names and numbers are announced by the BHA (British Horseracing Authority) the following day. The entry date for the race is always at the end of January or the beginning of February depending on the date of the race in April. The race is open to horses aged seven and upwards that have been placed first, second, third or fourth in a chase of three miles or more and who are allotted a rating of at least 125 by the BHA Handicapper. Even if a horse gets entered, that doesn’t guarantee a place at the starting line as frequently over 100 get entered but there is a maximum field of just 40 for the race. Not all horses are suited to the long Aintree course or have the necessary jumping ability. But how do those particular runners and riders make it to Grand National day?Ī horse will be entered into the Grand National 2023 if it meets the minimum criteria for qualification and the owner and trainer feel that their horse is capable of handling the race. Every year a maximum of 40 runners line up at the start of the Aintree Grand National and 600 million people worldwide tune in to watch them tackle the 30 notoriously difficult fences in a bid to put themselves into the history books.
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