The nation held its breath as Tom Bellamy suffered a horrific fall while leading the world’s most famous race at odds of 66-1 ‘likely never to race again’.

In the electrifying chaos of the 2025 Grand National at Aintree Racecourse, a moment of sheer triumph twisted into one of unimaginable horror. Tom Bellamy, the unassuming jockey from the Cotswolds, had dared to dream the impossible. Aboard Broadway Boy, a seven-year-old gelding trained by Nigel Twiston-Davies, Bellamy surged into the lead midway through the grueling four-and-a-half-mile spectacle. The pair leaped fences with poetic precision, defying their staggering 66-1 odds and silencing the doubters who pegged them as rank outsiders. For a fleeting eternity, it seemed the underdogs might etch their names into racing immortality. Then, at the 25th fence—with just five obstacles left in the iconic chase—the dream shattered.

Eyewitnesses described the fall as “sickening,” a bone-jarring collision that unfolded in slow motion before the eyes of 70,000 stunned spectators and millions tuned in worldwide. Broadway Boy, his muscles straining against the relentless Merseyside turf, approached the formidable barrier with the fire of a frontrunner. But in a split-second misjudgment—perhaps a slip of footing or a momentary lapse in rhythm—the horse stumbled upon landing. He tumbled forward, legs buckling like a marionette with cut strings, his head slamming into the ground with a thud that echoed through the stands. Bellamy, thrown clear in a desperate bid for survival, somersaulted violently onto the unforgiving earth, his slight frame crumpling amid the flying divots.

The crowd’s roar morphed into a collective gasp, a wave of silence rippling across Aintree like a dark tide. Paramedics and veterinary teams swarmed the scene with practiced urgency, their fluorescent jackets a blur against the emerald grass. Bellamy lay motionless for agonizing seconds, his helmet askew, before stirring faintly. He was stretchered off the course, helmet still strapped on, and rushed to Aintree University Hospital for scans. Broadway Boy, meanwhile, struggled to rise, his noble form heaving as on-track vets assessed the damage. Miraculously, the horse staggered to his feet unaided and was led—limping but defiant—onto a horse ambulance bound for the stables. Initial reports were grim: the young contender, hailed as a dark horse in pre-race buzz, faced a prognosis that chilled the racing world. “Likely never to race again,” whispered insiders, the words hanging like a pall over the festival grounds.
As the race thundered on without them, Bellamy’s fall cast a long shadow over what should have been unbridled celebration. Nick Rockett, another longshot at 33-1, powered home to victory under jockey Harry Skelton, fending off a late charge from last year’s winner, I Am Maximus. The finish line erupted in cheers, but the joy felt hollow. Bellamy’s mount had dominated for over three miles, pinging jumps like Becher’s Brook and The Chair with the grace of champions. At 28 years old, Bellamy was no novice; he’d notched 200 winners in the saddle, including triumphs at Cheltenham and Ascot. Yet this was the Grand National—the pinnacle, the beast that has felled legends and forged folklore since 1839. To lead it, even briefly, was to touch the divine. To lose it so catastrophically was to stare into the abyss.
Hours later, updates trickled in, each one a knife-edge between hope and despair. Bellamy, ever the stoic, confirmed via social media from his hospital bed: a fractured wrist, the kind that demands surgical pins and months of rehab. “Gutted for Broadway Boy and the team,” he posted, his words laced with the quiet resolve of a man who’s stared down worse. “I’ll be back—stronger.” But the horse’s fate loomed larger, a symbol of the sport’s brutal underbelly. Vets reported a suspected severe shoulder injury, compounded by ligament tears and possible neurological damage from the head impact. X-rays and MRIs stretched into the night, with Twiston-Davies, the trainer whose yard has produced National heroes like Earth Summit, refusing to speculate. “He’s a fighter,” the veteran said in a terse evening statement. “We’re praying for a miracle.”
The incident reignited the eternal debate swirling around jump racing’s crown jewel. Animal rights groups, long vocal critics, pounced with fury. Animal Aid’s Nina Copleston-Hawkens decried the “empty rhetoric” of welfare promises, pointing to Broadway Boy as the 67th equine casualty in the National since 2000. “Profit over lives,” she thundered in a press release, vowing protests at next year’s renewal. Animal Rising’s Ben Newman echoed the sentiment, labeling the sport a “death trap dressed in glamour.” Defenders, including the British Horseracing Authority, countered with data: fewer falls than ever, thanks to rule tweaks like smaller fields and mandatory vet checks. Yet numbers couldn’t soothe the raw emotion of seeing a promising young horse—barely into his prime—teeter on the brink of retirement or worse.
For Bellamy, the personal toll cuts deep. Raised in a racing family, he turned pro at 18, grinding through lean years to become a mainstay on the circuit. This National was his shot at glory, a bid funded by syndicate owners who’d backed Broadway Boy since his novice days. Teammates rallied around him; fellow jockeys like Rachael Blackmore and Harry Cobden sent messages of solidarity, while fans flooded his inbox with prayers. “Tom’s the heart of our yard,” Twiston-Davies told reporters outside the hospital. “That fall… it breaks you.” Recovery, if it comes, will be Sisyphean: wrist surgery first, then endless physio to rebuild grip strength for the reins. The 2026 National? A distant mirage, dependent on healing that defies the odds once more.
In the quiet aftermath, as Aintree’s lights dimmed and the echoes of the starter’s gun faded, the racing community grappled with its soul. The Grand National endures because it tests the limits—of horse and rider, of courage and chance. Bellamy’s fall reminds us of the cost: bodies broken, spirits tested, dreams dashed on a whim of fate. Yet amid the heartbreak, there’s resilience. Broadway Boy munched hay in his stable that night, eyes alert. Bellamy cracked jokes to nurses, plotting his comeback. The nation, having held its breath, now exhales—and waits. In a sport where glory and ruin dance so closely, perhaps that’s the true thrill: the unyielding hope that from the depths, another leader will rise.
