An empty magnum of champagne rests on the mantelpiece in the Mathias family’s farmhouse in south Pembrokeshire, drained of its celebratory fizz.
This indulgence is testament to the philosophy Fred Mathias adopted on the racing careers that gripped four generations of his farming family.
“Dad always said that when you get a good day’s racing you should celebrate it because there will be plenty of bad days,” says Philip, a livestock producer who gave up racing when he ruptured a kidney in a fall two decades ago.
Now it is his 19-year-old son, John, who is setting the racing world alight. There have been plenty of opportunities for the ‘right old knees-ups’ that Fred advocated of late, with John chalking up wins on both the point-to-point circuit and while racing under National Hunt rules.
John learned to ride almost before he could walk, but that’s hardly surprising given his family background. His grandfather, Fred, achieved fame as a fearless amateur point-to-point jockey while great-grandfather, Ivor, was also a successful point-to-pointer.
“All I have ever wanted to do was race; eventing and showing never really interested me because it wasn’t fast enough,” says John.
His family’s link to horse racing is evident when you stand in their farmyard near Lydstep and look to the horizon. There in the distance, where their cattle graze, is a point-to-point course.
And there is nothing quite like winning on home turf.
“It’s my favourite venue because it’s home and a home crowd,” John admits.
“If I’m lucky enough to get a result there, it is an amazing experience.”
He is the first generation of the Mathias family who has chosen not to combine farming with racing. Although John keeps a few cattle of his own, he spends six days a week working at the yard of Pembrokeshire trainer, Dai Rees, where he is head lad and an amateur jockey.
As an amateur he races for the love of the sport and not payment, but this status suits him for now because as a professional he would be precluded from competing in point-to-point events. He does however hold a category B licence which permits him to race under National Hunt rules against professional jockeys.
John’s family background has been influential in achieving his ambition.
“It’s like anything, if you are in the right environment for long enough it will stick,” he says.
“Dad and my grandfather were always around horses, talking about horses and looking at them. I learned from them both.”
In the words of his grandmother, Diane, who was herself a successful point-to-point jockey when there were very few females on the circuit: “Horses get into your system and once that happens you never lose it.”
One of the most challenging aspects of racing — apart from the race itself — is achieving weight limits. It’s not easy to be a farmer and to be on a starvation diet in the days leading up to a race, as Philip well recalls. He is 6’2” and when he raced under rules he needed to weigh in at 11 stone, 7lbs.
“There was no secret diet, it was a case of starving myself when there was a race coming up,” he says.
“I used to get very tired because of it, but the buzz of racing kept me going.”
For Philip it was always a borderline battle, but the challenge is not quite so great for John because he is shorter at 5’11”. But he too has to fight to keep his weight down, like the time he had to race at nine stone, ten pounds.
“I can lose ten pounds in two days, you have to train your system to accept less,” he maintains.
Genetics may have a role in breeding successful jockeys, but good horses are essential too.
“Good horses make good jockeys, they instill confidence,” says Philip.
And winning is important in what can be a fickle industry.
“Winners breed winners, if you ride winners everyone wants you. If you ride a few high profile winners you get noticed,” he adds.
Since giving up racing, Philip has built up a horse business with his wife, Jan, training point-to-pointers and breeding brood mares. This probably sits better alongside his farming activities than racing did.
“When I was racing there were a fair few corners cut on the farm on a Saturday morning but it always got done,” Philip recalls.
“You can make anything work if you want it to. I suppose we are not farmers with horses but horse racing farmers.”
The highlight of his racing career was when he was named the UK’s best youth jockey in 1982, then 22 years later it was John’s turn. They are the only father and son ever to have won the award, now known as the Wilkinson Sword Trophy. And Fred too had his fair share of national success, winning the national point-to-point championship in 1956.
John is in his third year of racing for Dai Rees and is aiming to build on the success he achieved last year, when he won two races under rules within 24 hours.
Philip always tries to be in the crowd of spectators when John is racing but emotionally distances himself.
“I tend to watch a race objectively,” he says.
A degree of success is addictive and John admits he could never go back to being a ‘happy hacker’.
“I couldn’t race every week and finish last. When you ride a couple of winners you want more of it,” he says.
Comments: Our rules
We want our comments to be a lively and valuable part of our community - a place where readers can debate and engage with the most important local issues. The ability to comment on our stories is a privilege, not a right, however, and that privilege may be withdrawn if it is abused or misused.
Please report any comments that break our rules.
Read the rules hereComments are closed on this article