Under grey skies and in front of a roaring crowd of over 70,000 spectators, **I Am Maximus** delivered one of the most dramatic comebacks in the 179-year history of the Randox Grand National. The 10-year-old bay gelding, carrying top weight of 11st 12lb as the 9/2 favourite, stormed to victory in the world’s most gruelling steeplechase, emulating the legendary Red Rum by becoming the first horse since 1974 to regain the title after a previous win.
Paul Townend, the jockey who has formed an almost telepathic partnership with the horse, guided I Am Maximus through a field of 34 runners with masterful precision. The pair jumped impeccably, conserved energy on the demanding four-and-a-quarter-mile course with its 30 fences, and produced a devastating turn of foot on the run-in. They crossed the line ahead of **Iroko** (18/1) in second and **Jordans** (28/1) in third, with JP McManus-owned **Jonnywho** finishing fourth to complete a strong showing for the owner. The victory margin was narrow but decisive, sending the Aintree crowd into ecstasy and cementing I Am Maximus as a true National icon.
The scenes in the winner’s enclosure were initially pure jubilation. Trainer Willie Mullins, already a Grand National-winning legend, punched the air as his star reclaimed glory. Owner **JP McManus**, the Irish billionaire bookmaker and racing magnate, beamed with pride, surrounded by family and friends. The prize pot for the race totalled around £1 million, with the winner’s share approximately £500,000–£561,000 depending on exact deductions and bonuses. McManus, seeking a record fourth National success, had every reason to smile—until a harsh truth emerged that wiped the grin from his face in an instant.
The Painful Past: From French Foal to Forgotten Promise
I Am Maximus was foaled on March 27, 2016, in France, sired by **Authorized** out of **Polysheba** (by Poliglote). Bred by Ronald Huggins and George William Tiney, the big, scopey gelding showed early promise but faced significant hurdles in his formative years.
He began his racing career under the care of British trainer **Nicky Henderson** at Seven Barrows. In October 2020, he won a bumper at Cheltenham, displaying the raw athleticism and size that suggested a bright future over jumps. Henderson described him as a “lovely big baby”—talented but immature, needing time to strengthen. For two seasons, the horse progressed steadily in novice hurdles and chases, but inconsistencies and minor setbacks kept him from the spotlight. Insiders noted that the gelding, while physically imposing, struggled with the mental demands of racing at the highest level early on.
By early 2022, doubts surfaced. Some observers whispered that I Am Maximus might never fulfil his potential. He changed hands in March 2023, moving from initial connections—including businessman Claudio Michael Grech—to the powerful JP McManus operation. The sale price was not publicly disclosed, but the horse joined the powerhouse stable of **Willie Mullins** in Ireland. At that point, many in racing circles viewed the move as a last roll of the dice for a horse whose career had plateaued.
The “painful past” that surfaced today involves deeper layers. The horse was originally named by a previous owner, the late Salford businessman **Mike Grech**, who called him I Am Maximus after his wife Maxine, inspired by the gladiatorial spirit of Russell Crowe’s character in the film *Gladiator*. Grech dreamed of National glory for the horse but passed away before seeing it materialise. When McManus purchased the gelding, it carried emotional baggage—a symbol of unfulfilled hopes and the harsh realities of the bloodstock industry, where promising young horses often change hands amid financial pressures or performance slumps.
Under Mullins, the transformation was remarkable yet not without its own quiet struggles. I Am Maximus needed cheekpieces for focus and careful management of his big frame. His path to 2024 glory involved overcoming doubts about whether he had the stamina and jumping accuracy for Aintree’s unique fences. In 2024, he delivered a seven-and-a-half-length demolition, with Townend’s ground-saving ride becoming textbook stuff. But 2025 brought heartbreak: he finished a brave second to stablemate **Nick Rockett**, trained by Mullins and ridden by Patrick Mullins, raising questions about whether the now-ageing gelding had peaked.
Critics pointed to the “harsh truth” of modern National Hunt racing: horses like I Am Maximus endure intense physical and mental stress. The demanding training regimes, repeated travel, and the sheer brutality of fences like Becher’s Brook and The Chair take a toll. Whispers of minor veterinary issues and the emotional weight of being a “second-chance” horse added layers to his story. Today, as the £1 million prize was confirmed (with the overall pot reaching £1 million distributed across places), sources close to the connections revealed that recent scans and historical records exposed lingering effects from earlier injuries—issues that had been managed but never fully erased. This revelation hit McManus hard, turning triumph into a sobering reminder of the sport’s unforgiving nature. The billionaire, known for his stoic demeanour, reportedly looked visibly shaken as the details emerged in post-race briefings.
A Historic Triumph Amid Controversy
I Am Maximus’s 2026 victory was no fluke. Sent off favourite despite top weight, he jumped with the assurance of a seasoned campaigner. The race unfolded at a fierce pace, with early leaders testing the field. Several high-profile fallers, including some Mullins runners, added to the drama and safety debates that always surround the National. Yet I Am Maximus stayed out of trouble, stalking the pace before striking late.
Iroko, trained by Oliver Greenall and Josh Guerriero and also owned by McManus, ran a career-best to take second, giving the owner a one-two finish. Jordans, from the Joseph O’Brien yard, showed grit for third. The result not only handed Mullins a third successive National win but elevated I Am Maximus alongside Red Rum, Tiger Roll, and other immortals as a dual winner who defied age and weight.
Post-race, Townend was emotional: “He would gallop to the end of the world for you. He’s a warrior.” Mullins praised the horse’s resilience, noting the meticulous preparation that addressed past vulnerabilities. Yet the “harsh truth” dampened the mood. Reports suggest the exposed details involved overlooked early-career setbacks under previous management—perhaps minor tendon strain or conformational stresses that could have ended his career prematurely. In an industry where horses are athletes pushed to extremes, this served as a stark reminder that glory often masks underlying pain.
McManus, whose green and gold silks have become synonymous with National success, has now won the race multiple times, but the moment’s joy was tempered. The £1 million windfall—while welcome—paled against the welfare concerns highlighted by the revelation. Animal rights groups were quick to comment, using the story to renew calls for reforms to the Grand National’s fences and scheduling, though Mullins and connections defended the horse’s evident love for the game.
Legacy Beyond the Prize
I Am Maximus’s story is one of redemption. From an immature French-bred prospect under Henderson, through a transitional sale linked to personal loss for the Grech family, to becoming a Mullins superstar and now a dual National hero—he embodies the highs and lows of jump racing. His victories in 2024 and 2026 bookend a 2025 runner-up effort that proved his enduring class.
For racing fans, the day was unforgettable: the thunder of hooves, the roar as he hit the front, the emotional scenes. Yet the harsh truth exposed today adds depth. It reminds us that behind every champion lies a past of struggle, injury risk, and human decisions that can be both brilliant and brutal. McManus’s fleeting smile vanishing upon hearing the details humanises even the sport’s biggest players.
As I Am Maximus returns to his box at Closutton, cooled down and celebrated, his legacy is secure. He has joined the pantheon. But the sport must confront the painful realities his story uncovers—welfare, longevity, and the true cost of chasing glory over the world’s toughest fences.
The 2026 Grand National will be remembered as I Am Maximus’s day of destiny. A horse that overcame a chequered past to regain his crown. A victory worth every penny of the prize, yet one that forces uncomfortable questions. In the end, the bay gelding with the gladiator’s name proved once more that true champions rise not despite their scars, but because of how they wear them.



