We use cookies to improve your experience and to provide us with insight into how people use our website.
To find out more, read our cookie policy.
Cookies are tiny pieces of data stored on your device which can enable certain website functionality and collect information about how you use websites To find out more, read our cookie policy. You can manage which types of cookies to accept below.
These cookies are essential to the operation of this website and help provide basic functionality such as navigation and language support.
These cookies help us improve the performance of this website by giving us anonymised information about how you interact with it.
Fixtures & Results
Find upcoming meetings, course info and the latest results – everything you need to follow the season.
The latest point-to-point meetings across the UK.
Recent race results, placings and rider details.
Race venues near you with course and visitor information.
Stats & Media
Explore leaderboards, winners, and race stats, with deeper insights for paid subscribers.
The top horses, riders, and trainers this season.
Track up-and-coming stars and their progress.
Unlock deeper data and performance insights.
Join for access to exclusive stats and features.
Discover Point-to-Point
New here? Get to know the sport, its roots, and how point-to-point fits into the horse racing world.
A quick guide to the sport and how it works.
From hunting fields to race days, a short history.
How pointing connects with professional jump racing.
Learn more about pony racing and how it is connected to point-to-point
Get Involved
Whether you’re riding, training, owning or sponsoring, here’s how to be part of the action.
Participants
Resources and information for everyone in the sport, from jockeys and trainers to owners and officials.
Britain’s longest-serving point-to-point correspondent has filed his final article.
Brian Lee, 87, who lives near Cardiff, has been reporting on Welsh point-to-points since the 1960s, but his review of Saturday’s meeting at Ystradowen is to be his last.
He said: “I am fast approaching my 88th birthday and find I am slowing up. Back in the 1960s I was reporting on the success of Vale of Glamorgan’s Rhys Williams and his wife Mary, and when they hung up their riding boots I had the pleasure of reporting on the success of their son Evan, who is now Wales’s leading National Hunt trainer. These days, it’s Evan’s two daughters, Isabel and Ellie, that I am writing about.”
Lee attended his first point-to-point in 1952, but joined the press pack when sending his first meeting report from a fixture at Cowbridge to Horse & Hound magazine. He became an ever-present feature at meetings across Wales when it had a very busy fixtures’ list and far more courses, and his articles were subsequently published in the Sporting Life and a number of local papers. The Western Mail‘s racing editor, Brian Radford, gave him the job of reporting on the Welsh point-to-point scene, and that gave him the confidence to become so involved in the sport he loves.
He went on to write an acclaimed book charting the history of the Welsh Grand National, several other racing books, and around 25 more on his beloved home town of Cardiff.
In 2016 he was presented with the John Ayres Award for his services to Welsh point-to-point racing and four years later he received Welsh Horse Racing’s Lifetime Achievement Award.
He said: “Over the years I have interviewed royalty, rogues, rascals and on one occasion
a Countess.” No less impressively there was also the occasion when Anne, Princess Royal, visited the Golden Valley meeting at Bredwardine in the Welsh Borders as the owner of a runner.
“I was the only reporter there that had the courage or cheek to approach her,” said Lee. A photograph capturing that moment appears in his book Racing Rogues – The Scams, Scandals and Gambles of Horse Racing In Wales, not that there is any inference that the princess was involved in any underhand dealings.
Brian Lee, who first reported on Welsh point-to-pointing in the 1960s
Lee met many of his racing heroes over the years, none with greater impact than Sir Gordon Richards, who was Britain’s champion Flat jockey a remarkable 26 times. Coming face to face with the great jockey, shortly before his death in 1986, Lee said: “We met at a Chepstow Racecourse press luncheon, and I was delighted when Sir Gordon signed my menu card. When I mentioned Lord Glanely, whom he had ridden for in days long gone by, his face lit up.”
However, his attempts to convince his hero that as he was born in Shropshire on the Welsh border that he was in fact Welsh failed to work.
Lee is not completely mothballing his pen and will continue to write local articles for the fortnightly Glamorgan Advertiser.