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Grand National is family affair as husband and wife compete with brother-in-law

Tom Ellis and his jockey wife Gina Andrews (left) / Harry Skelton and Bridget Andrews (right)
Tom Ellis and his jockey wife Gina Andrews (left) are racing against their brother-in-law Harry Skelton, who is married to Gina's sister Bridget Andrews (right)

The Grand National will become a family affair tomorrow as a husband-and-wife team go head-to-head with their brother-in-law, who is also vying for the title.

Trainer Tom Ellis, 39, and his jockey wife Gina Andrews, 32, have been plotting success at the world’s most famous horse race but will go up against family member Harry Skelton, 34, who is married to Bridget Andrews, 30, Gina’s sister.

The older Andrews sister will aim to become part of the first couple to win the race tomorrow, hoping to ride Latenightpass to victory ahead of 33 other competitors.

The 11-year-old gelding Andrews will ride is owned by her husband’s mother Pippa, who bred the horse, trained at stables in Warwickshire.

Meanwhile, Skelton is riding Galia Des Liteaux, an eight-year-old, and has vowed to race in the 185th Grand National even if his wife goes into labour with the baby due in just two weeks time.

Tom Ellis, 39, and his jockey wife Gina Andrews, 32
Tom Ellis, 39, and his jockey wife Gina Andrews, 32, are hoping Latenightpass will ride to victory in the Grand National... - Debbie Burt/Debbie Burt
Harry Skelton, 34, who is married to Bridget Andrews, 30
... but they will be racing against their brother-in-law Harry Skelton on Galia Des Liteaux. His wife Bridget Andrews, Gina's sister, is also a jockey and will be watching the race - Nigel French/pa

More than 80,000 people will attend tomorrow’s spectacle, which organisers hope will be free from disruption after animal rights activists delayed the four miles and two-and-a-half furlong race last year.

Bridget Andrews is due to give birth to the couple’s first child on April 23, but Skelton, a former champion jockey, has insisted he will partner Galia Des Liteaux trained by his brother Dan, even if he gets the important phone call.

Although the jockey said he would not want to miss the birth of his first child, he said his wife would be first to back his decision to take on the Aintree fences.

“If I get the call telling me Bridget has gone into labour I think I would end up riding in the Grand National as I know what Bridget would say,” Skelton said. “She would say ‘get out there and win the Grand National, then get here as soon as you can’. That is what she would want me to do.

“I know how her brain works pretty well. She is not a selfish person at all and she never has been. She knows that if I have a chance of winning the Grand National she wouldn’t want to take that away from us as a family.”

‘Get us revved up’

He said his wife will be at Aintree with him tomorrow and joked that if she went into labour during the race there would be plenty of medical help around.

“She will want me to be out there having a chance of winning a Grand National. That would be the absolute dream to win the Grand National, then get the call to say ‘I might drop’ and I would be off!

“Bridget is here up at Aintree with me, and her waters could break in the middle of the paddock in front of the winner’s enclosure. At least there would be a doctor on hand if that happened.”

While Skelton has been busy preparing to become a father, his family members have been taking a different approach to get ready for the most important event in the racing calendar.

As other jockeys and trainers rested ahead of this week’s meet, Tom Ellis and Gina Andrews stayed up all night watching replays of Latenightpass’s previous successes during a different race at Aintree in 2022.

“We sat there in bed on Tuesday night at 10.30pm and watched videos of him winning around here to get us revved up,” Ellis said. “It was probably a stupid thing to do as neither of us slept a wink.

“Every time we get in the car together we end up talking about it. We went to London the other week and it was the only topic of conversation on the way there, and on the way back.

“It is a huge thing for us to be doing as a family. I feel very honoured, and privileged, that we are in the position we are in. It is a little bit bonkers to think someone like us has got a runner in the Grand National.”

The pair hope to be the most successful husband-and-wife team at the Grand National since Carrie Ford rode her husband Richard’s Forest Gunner to finish fifth in the race in 2005.

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