Skip to content
Surf Wiki
Save to docs
general

From Surf Wiki (app.surf) — the open knowledge base

2025 Grand National


Column 1
Grand National
Aintree
5 April 2025
Nick Rockett
33/1
Patrick Mullins
Willie Mullins
Stewart Andrew
Good to soft

The 2025 Grand National (officially known as the Randox 2025 Grand National for sponsorship reasons) was the 177th annual running of the Grand National horse race. It took place on Saturday 5 April 2025, at Aintree near Liverpool, England. The winner was Nick Rockett, trained by Willie Mullins and ridden by his son, amateur jockey Patrick Mullins.

The 2025 Grand National took place on Saturday 5 April 2025, at Aintree near Liverpool, England. There were an initial 90 entries in January 2025, with 34 runners (the maximum field size) confirmed on 3 April. Eighteen of the runners were trained in Ireland, including six from the yard of trainer Willie Mullins.

The runners raced over about .mw-parser-output .frac{white-space:nowrap}.mw-parser-output .frac .num,.mw-parser-output .frac .den{font-size:80%;line-height:0;vertical-align:super}.mw-parser-output .frac .den{vertical-align:sub}.mw-parser-output .sr-only{border:0;clip:rect(0,0,0,0);clip-path:polygon(0px 0px,0px 0px,0px 0px);height:1px;margin:-1px;overflow:hidden;padding:0;position:absolute;width:1px}4 miles 2+1⁄2 furlongs (4 miles 550 yards; 7 kilometres), completing two circuits of the course and jumping thirty fences. The total prize fund was £1 million, with £500,000 awarded to the winner and progressively smaller sums to placed horses, down to £5,000 for tenth place. Following a spell of dry and sunny weather the course had been watered and the race was run on good to soft ground.

The race was won by 33/1 Nick Rockett, trained by Mullins and ridden by his son, amateur jockey Patrick Mullins. Nick Rockett jumped into the lead at the last and drew away from I Am Maximus, winner in 2024, on the run-in to win by two and a half lengths. Grangeclare West took third place to give Mullins a clean sweep of the first three places. The 13/2 favourite, Iroko, took fourth place. Sixteen runners completed the course; three horses fell; one horse was brought down; one horse unseated the rider; thirteen horses were pulled up.

Two horses were injured and assessed on the course before walking into a horse ambulance. Broadway Boy fell heavily at the 25th fence, Valentine's Brook, having been leading the field. He was able to return to his stables the following day. Celebre d'Allen collapsed on the run-in. Broadway Boy's jockey, Tom Bellamy, sustained a broken wrist in the fall. Nick Scholfield, who pulled up on Monbeg Genius, announced his retirement after the race. The winning jockey was given an eight-day suspension after the Whip Review Committee found he had used his whip eight times after the final fence, when the permitted number was seven times.

PlacementHorseJockeyStarting pricePrize money
Nick RockettPatrick Mullins33/1£500,000
I Am MaximusPaul Townend7/1£200,000
Grangeclare WestBrian Hayes33/1£100,000
IrokoJonjo O'Neill Jr13/2£65,000
MeetingofthewatersDanny Mullins20/1£40,000
Senior ChiefDarragh O'Keeffe40/1£30,000
Minella CocoonerJonathan Burke£20,000
HewickGavin Sheehan£15,000
Minella IndoRachael Blackmore£10,000
TwigBeau Morgan£5,000
Three Card BragSean Bowen
BeauportSam Twiston-Davies
Horantzau D'airyCiaran Gethings
VanillierSean Flanagan
BravemansgameJames Reveley
Chantry HouseJames Bowen
Perceval Legallois – fence 9 (Valentine's Brook)Mark Walsh
Kandoo Kid – fence 21Harry Cobden
Broadway Boy – fence 25 (Valentine's Brook)Tom Bellamy
Royale Pagaille - fence 17Charlie Deutsch
Conflated - fence 29Jordan Gainford
Stumptown - fence 29Keith Donoghue
Hitman - fence 26Freddie Gingell
Threeunderthrufive - fence 22 (Becher's Brook)Harry Skelton
Intense Raffles - fence 17JJ Slevin
Idas Boy - fence 29Harry Bannister
Fil Dor - fence 29Sam Ewing
Stay Away Fay - fence 22 (Becher's Brook)Paul O'Brien
Monbeg Genius - fence 27Danny Gilligan
Hyland - fence 29Nico de Boinville
Celebre D'Allen - after the final fenceMicheal Nolan
Coko Beach - fence 15 (The Chair)Jody McGarvey
Duffle Coat – fence 3Nick Scholfield
Appreciate It – fence 21Sean O'Keeffe

As the Grand National is accorded the status of an event of national interest in the United Kingdom and is listed on the Ofcom Code on Sports and Other Listed and Designated Events, it must be shown on free-to-air terrestrial television in the UK. The race was broadcast live on TV by ITV for the eighth time, and the second year in its new three year deal with the British Horseracing Authority.

The ITV coverage was presented by Ed Chamberlin. Analysis was provided by former jockeys Sir Anthony McCoy, Mick Fitzgerald, and Ruby Walsh. Reports were provided by Alice Plunkett, who spoke to the winning jockeys, Adele Mulrennan, who was in the pre-parade ring, Luke Harvey, who was down at the start and Matt Chapman, who spoke to the owners and trainers in the Parade Ring and Winners Enclosure. Betting updates were provided by Brian Gleeson. Oli Bell and Sam Quek covered viewers' comments on social media, and the commentary team was Mark Johnson, Stewart Machin and Richard Hoiles, who called the finish for the eighth time. Following the race, Bell and Walsh guided viewers on a fence-by-fence re-run of the race.

The race was also broadcast by BBC Radio 5 Live, whose team included Gina Bryce, former jockeys Andrew Thornton and Charlie Poste, John Hunt, Darren Owen, Gary O'Brien and Rob Nothman. Bryce became the first woman to commentate live on the race since course owner Mirabel Topham in 1952.

The collapse of Celebre d'Allen on the run-in prompted a stewards' enquiry. His jockey Micheal Nolan received a 10-day suspension for having failed to pull up before the final fence when the horse was showing signs of tiring. Although Celebre d'Allen initially appeared to be making a recovery, he died three days after the race. The horse was the second fatality at the Grand National festival; the Mullins-trained Willy De Houelle sustained a fatal injury when falling in the Anniversary 4-Y-O Juvenile Hurdle on the first day of the meeting. Following the death of Celebre d'Allen, the BHA issued a statement which emphasised the veterinary checks and care given to Grand National runners and the steps taken to improve the safety of the race.

Animal rights groups responded with statements criticising the BHA and horse racing: Animal Aid blamed the BHA for allowing a thirteen-year-old horse to enter the Grand National; Animal Rising said that horse racing more generally was to blame. Animal welfare groups were more cautious: World Horse Welfare said they hoped lessons would be learned and the RSPCA said that they would await the results of the BHA investigation.

Post-mortem results showed that Celebre d'Allen died of pleuropneumonia, a bacterial lung infection, which developed into sepsis. Blood tests taken on Monday 7 April revealed an infection and a severely compromised immune system, although these indications had not been present in blood tests taken immediately after the race. These results led vets to conclude that Celebre d'Allen's collapse at the end of the race was not directly responsible for his death, although it could not be ruled out as a contributory factor. The BHA said: "The findings of the post-mortem state that the exercise-associated episode experienced by the horse after the race had concluded by the time of death".

Want to explore this topic further?

Ask Mako anything about 2025 Grand National — get instant answers, deeper analysis, and related topics.

Research with Mako

Free with your Surf account

Content sourced from Wikipedia, available under CC BY-SA 4.0.

This content may have been generated or modified by AI. CloudSurf Software LLC is not responsible for the accuracy, completeness, or reliability of AI-generated content. Always verify important information from primary sources.

Report