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Greg Fairley

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Greg Fairley
OccupationJockey
BornHawick
Major racing wins
Major races:
Bayerisches Zuchtrennen (2010)
Racing awards
British flat racing Champion Apprentice (2007)
Significant horses
Lady Jane Digby

Greg Fairley (born 1987-88) is a former Group 1-winning Scottish jockey, who was British flat racing Champion Apprentice in 2007.

He grew up in Hawick and began riding on the unlicensed "flapping" circuit in the Scottish Borders, where his father Andrew had ridden more than 600 winners. From there, he joined the Mark Johnston stable in Middleham, Yorkshire in 2004, and his parents moved with him. He had been at school with jockey Keith Dalgleish and it was he who helped him to settle in and establish himself.[1]

He became Champion Apprentice in 2007 with 65 winners, beating Liam Jones and William Buick in the process. In 2009, his yearly tally reached a personal high of 85 winners and the following year he won his first Group 1 success on Lady Jane Digby in the Bayerisches Zuchtrennen.[1]

Soon after, his career began to derail. First, a row between his mother (also his agent) and Johnston led to him leaving the stable. Then in May 2011, he was charged by the British Horseracing Authority (BHA) of being in breach of their corruption rules. In December of that year, he and fellow jockeys Paul Doe, Kirsty Milczarek and Jimmy Quinn were banned after the charges were upheld. He and Doe were found guilty of the most serious offence - not riding a horse to its merits - and were each banned for 12 years for offences relating to 10 races between 17 January and 15 August 2009. Fairley had already handed in his licence in October, having only ridden 4 winners since the charges were brought.[1] Fairley did not attend the hearing.[2]

During the investigation, Fairley had made use of the Jockeys Employment and Training Scheme to retrain in forestry, and was believed to have returned to Scotland to pursue that career.[3] He also returned to flapping riding, which does not come under the BHA's auspices, and won a race in his hometown of Hawick in June 2012.[4]

In December 2021, Fairley was given permission by the BHA to start work in the Duns yard of trainer Sandy Thomson. In May 2025, having successfully applied to regain his jockey's licence, he issued a statement: "Fifteen years ago I chose a path that was wrong and paid a justifiably significant price for my poor decisions. I'm incredibly grateful to the licensing committee of the BHA for giving me a second chance".[5]

Major wins

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Germany Germany

See also

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References

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  1. ^ a b c Owen, Garry (16 December 2011). "Scots jockey Greg Fairley goes from hero to zero with 12-year ban". Daily Record. Retrieved 24 October 2023.
  2. ^ McGrath, Chris (15 December 2011). "Four jockeys banned for corruption". The Independent. Retrieved 24 October 2023.
  3. ^ Cook, Chris (20 December 2011). "Banned Greg Fairley will not be asked to pay back training money". The Guardian. Retrieved 24 October 2023.
  4. ^ Ross, Shan (9 June 2012). "Common riding sees banned jockey Fairley take racing honours". The Scotsman. Retrieved 24 October 2023.
  5. ^ "Greg Fairley set for return to race-riding - almost a decade and a half after he was warned off from sport". Racing Post. 28 May 2025.