Vale, Colin Jillings

Media Release - Friday December 23

Revered thoroughbred trainer Colin Jillings has died in Auckland, aged 91.

Revered trainer Colin Jillings has passed away, aged 91. Photo: Trish Dunell

Jillings, who retired from training in 2005, had a lengthy and hugely successful career in racing, initially as a jockey and then as a trainer.

He never trained on a large scale, which made winning a premiership an unrealistic target, but from the outset displayed a rare ability to successfully target big races.

His ability to set a horse for a feature race and get it to the target in peak form and at the right weight – a key skill during the period when the richest races were mostly handicaps – was almost unmatched.

Underpinning his success was a strong work ethic and keen attention to detail, together with a genuine affection for horses. He believed that “every horse is an individual” and should be fed and worked accordingly.

Jillings was riding trackwork at Ellerslie as a 10-year-old and had his first race ride at 12. A fractured skull, suffered in a trackwork fall, sidelined him for 11 months but he still recorded his first win as a 13-year-old, when a pupil at St Peters College.

He was always going to get too big to remain a jockey for long but was the leading northern apprentice in the 1945-46 season and won the Railway at Ellerslie and finished third in an Auckland Cup before his riding career ended.

He later mentored many capable riders, among them Bob Vance, Mark Sweeney and Sam Spratt.

Jillings spent the bulk of his training career at Takanini and won more than 1300 races as a trainer in New Zealand. His star performers included Uncle Remus, Stipulate, McGinty, Yeman, Sharivari, Tycoon Lil, Sedecrem and top jumper Brockton.

More than half of those wins came when in partnership with Richard Yuill, who became a training partner in 1987.

Advertisement

Jillings was 25 when he trained the first of his four Auckland Cup winners and was particularly proud of his Derby record at Ellerslie. He won the Great Northern Derby with Lawful and Stipulate, and the NZ Derby, which replaced the Great Northern Derby in 1973, with Uncle Remus, I’m Henry and The Phantom Chance. The five wins were spread over 34 years.

There were also two wins in the Wellington Derby and further classic wins in the NZ Oaks (2), Two Thousand Guineas, One Thousand Guineas, Great Northern Oaks, NZ St Leger, and Wellington Oaks.

The four Auckland Cup wins – with Yeman, Stipulate, Perhaps and Irish Chance – were spread over 43 years, and there were victories in the New Zealand and Wellington Cups.

There were few features at either Ellerslie or Trentham which eluded Jillings. His Ellerslie tally also included the George Adams (Rich Hill) (2), Railway (2), New Zealand Stakes (2), Easter Handicap, Great Northern Guineas (2), Queen Elizabeth (2), and Sires’ Produce Stakes.

His trips to Trentham also produced wins in the Thorndon Mile (2), Telegraph Handicap, Wellington Guineas (3), Wellington Stakes (4) and Desert Gold Stakes (2).

Jillings did not take a lot of horses to Australia but one of the high points of his career came in Melbourne, when he won the 1993 Cox Plate with The Phantom Chance. McGinty (3) and Tycoon Lil were also Group One winners across the Tasman.

Jillings deserved a Cox Plate win. He had been unable to spare the time to accompany Yeman on a spring campaign in Australia in 1958 and the horse won the Cox Plate for Larry Wiggins.

Yeman was still a priceless early flagbearer for Jillings, winning the Auckland and Wellington Cups, while Stipulate, who raced in the 1960s, won the equivalent of 10 Group races, including the Auckland Cup, NZ Cup, Great Northern Derby and Canterbury Gold Cup. - NZ Racing Desk  

Advertisment
More Reading...
Sires With Winners - Saturday November 22
Here is the full list of 129 stallions which had winners throughout Australasia today with winners and result details.
Zousain Mare Wins $300,000 The Warra
The Kembla standalone meeting on Saturday was run in relentless mist and light rain, but the gloomy conditions didn’t dampen the turn of foot possessed by talented Zousain mare Catch the Glory, who powered to the line to win the $300,000 The Warra (1000m).
All The Way Win For Jigsaw In $1m Meteorite
Arguably in career best form, the Cindy Alderson trained Jigsaw produced an all-the-way winning performance to capture the $1m Meteorite (1200m) at Cranbourne on Saturday, giving his sire Manhattan Rain both feature race winners at the meeting.
Peters Investments Produce New SW for Maurice
A homebred for Peters Investments, progressive gelding Cosmic Crusader became a new stakes-winner for his sire Maurice (Jpn) when taking out the $125,000 Listed WATC Carbine Club of WA Stakes (1400m) at Ascot on Saturday.
Favourite Salutes in Railway - First G1 Winner for Awesome Rock
The cream rises to the top, so the saying goes - That was never more true than at Ascot yesterday, when WA’s leading jockey, stable and owner all made their presence felt in no uncertain terms - and there was a nice little twist in the tale!
Unbeaten Superstar 3YO Wins G2 WA Guineas
It was the biggest win yet in the career of a budding superstar! - Three year old King Of Light continued his blaze of glory across the West Australian turf and made it five wins from five starts when he easily accounted for his rivals in the G2 WA Guineas at Ascot yesterday.
Australian Impact on Best in Europe
At the annual Cartier European Horse Of The Year Awards ceremony at London's Dorchester Hotel, globetrotting Victorian bred mare Asfoora was awarded the honour of becoming Champion Sprinter for 2025, while Aussie bred sire Starspangledbanner produced both the Champion 2YO Colt and Filly of the year.
G1 Railway Stakes - History, Champions and Why We Should All Be Grateful to the Horse
It's Perth's turn to bask in the national sporting spotlight as The Ashes gets underway and the first G1 of the Pinnacles Carnival is run at Ascot - the famous WATC Railway Stakes!
UK Stakes-Winner for Zoustar
Widden Stud’s reigning champion sire Zoustar featured overnight with a new stakes-winner when progressive four year-old mare Sky Safari landed the Listed Fleur de Lys Stakes (1m) at Lingfield.
Brave Monarch a Timely Reminder
Brave Smash (Jpn) 3YO Brave Monarch posted his third successive win from just four starts at the Sunshine Coast on Saturday for the Chris and Corey Munce stable offering a timely reminder as to the merits of his sire whose first Yarraman Park conceived offspring will be headed to yearling sales in 2026.