Background
O'Grady left veterinary college in Dublin to take over at Killen Stables following his father's death in 1973. His father, Willie, was a top jump jockey and twice Irish Champion Jockey in 1934 and 1935.
O'Grady left veterinary college in Dublin to take over at Killen Stables following his father's death in 1973. His father, Willie, was a top jump jockey and twice Irish Champion Jockey in 1934 and 1935.
He has had many winners in both Ireland and the UK and is the third most successful Irish trainer at Cheltenham training 18 winners. Following this success a virus struck all of his 18 horses causing many owners to leave him. In 1974 , a horse trained by O'Grady, was involved in an attempted coup by an Irish betting syndicate in 1974.
O'Grady was one of four people arrested during the police investigation but the charges against him were dropped. O'Grady soon became established as the leading national hunt trainer in Ireland, and became the stable star. O'Grady named as the most naturally talented horse he had trained.
The following month he died after a fall in the Scottish Champion Hurdle at Ayr. Further tragedy struck the stable when the J.P. McManus owned Shining Flame broke a leg at Tramore Racecourse less than two weeks after capturing the Galway Plate. Nevertheless, O'Grady went on to become leading trainer in 1979.
In the same year Bit of a Skite proved victorious in the Irish Grand National. Sacundai, with Ruby Walsh aboard, captured the Martell Cognac Aintree Hurdle in 2003.
O'Grady had his first winner when Timmy Hyde saddled Vibrax in a Handicap Hurdle in Gowran Park. In 1974 O’Grady had his first Cheltenham Festival winner when Mouse Morris rode Mr. Midland to victory. won the Supreme Novice Hurdle in Cheltenham in 1978. Following Shining Flame's victory in 1978 O'Grady went on to win three Galway Plates in four years, with Hind Hope and Rugged Lucy winning in 1979 and 1981 respectively. Hard Tarquin's victory in the 1979 Galway Hurdle made him only the fifth trainer to win both "big races" in the same year. Won the 1983 Whitbread Gold Cup, which O'Grady described as "the most memorable win of my career". Sound Man won two successive Tingle Creek Chases (1995 and 1996), and Blitzkrieg captured the Victor Chandler Chase in 1991. In the same year, Back In Front won the Supreme Novices' Hurdle at Cheltenham and the Evening Herald Novice Hurdle at Punchestown. More recent success came in 2009 when Tranquil Sea ridden by Andrew McNamara became the first Irish Horse since Bright Highway in 1980 to win the Paddy Power Gold Cup at Cheltenham.