Nick Rockett has won the Grand National in front of about 70,000 racegoers at Aintree.
The horse was a 33/1 shot that was ridden by amateur jockey Patrick Mullins, the son of trainer Willie Mullins.
It was a 1-2-3 for the Irishman as he also trains I Am Maximus (7/1), which finished second this time after winning the world-famous steeplechase last year.
Another of Willie Mullins’s horses, Grangeclare West (33/1), was third.
After the final fence, Nick Rockett galloped away from I Am Maximus to win by two and a half lengths.
Grangeclare West was a further half-length back, with Iroko taking fourth as the 13-2 favourite.
“It is lovely to be able to give your son a ride in the National,” Willie Mullins said, “but to be able to win it is just unbelievable”.
Patrick Mullins told ITV Racing: “I had too good a start and was having to take him back all the way. I was wondering at Canal Turn had I lost too much ground, but he just jumped fantastic.
“Then I was there too soon and it is a long way from the back of the last with Paul Townend (on I Am Maximus) on my outside.
“It’s everything I’ve dreamed of since I was a kid, I know it’s a cliche but when I was five or six years old, reading books about the National and watching black and white videos of Red Rum. To put my name there is very special.”
The Grand National – a race for 34 horses over 30 fences – has long been regarded as one of the most dangerous horse races in the world because of the size of the fences.
However, a number of new measures were introduced last year in an attempt to make it safer.
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