There is a type of toughness that is never publicly praised. It doesn’t show up at victory laps or press conferences. It manifests itself in the way a man rides a racehorse while wearing a hard plastic splint over his fractured arm and manages to place third in the Champion Hurdle. That’s Brough Scott, a man whose relationship with physical suffering is far more nuanced than his polished on-screen persona ever revealed, and a name that British racing has never had to question.
The public version of Scott’s medical history starts on a stretcher in the snow on the evening of February 20, 1968, as he is wheeled into a Doncaster hospital ward rather than in a broadcasting studio. As Scott himself once recalled, the ward was full of injured miners whose stories started with phrases like “there was a rumble in the pit.” It’s difficult to ignore the irony: a young Oxford jockey was surrounded by men from a completely different England, all of whom were broken in different ways and carrying on with their lives.

His right arm was severely injured. It was so serious that he probably wouldn’t have been allowed to ride at all by today’s medical standards. However, things were different in 1968. With the splint in place, Scott got back into the saddle and won the Imperial Cup on Persian Empire at Sandown. He has called this performance his “finest hour,” without even trying to be humble.
He finished third at the Cheltenham Festival four days later. Then, while riding Sporting Petrel in the final race of that meeting, the arm failed at the first fence. Scott was shot sideways when the horse launched too early, and his right arm just did not react when he reached for the mane out of instinct. The image, which depicts a man realizing in mid-fall that his own body has stopped cooperating, is brutally honest.
Everything that came after was shaped by that first chapter. Scott went on to become one of the most enduring voices in British racing, first on ITV in 1971, then on Channel 4 Racing for three decades before returning to ITV in 2017 when the channel started covering horse racing again. The physical fragility of the jockey years subtly changed into the kind of resilience that enables a man to continue penning astute race reports in his eighties. Scott doesn’t seem to have disclosed whether any particular illness has affected him in his later years, and it seems unlikely that a man who once walked past irate fans after being unseated at the first fence at Cheltenham is particularly prone to self-pity.
It is evident that Scott has continued to be a significant and active figure in racing journalism well into his ninth decade, and this is important. He was asked to accompany the King and Queen in carriage one of the royal procession at Royal Ascot as recently as June 2026; he called this the greatest honor of his life. That kind of platform is not typically given to a man who has been diminished by illness, nor is it carried with such obvious poise.
A career path that takes one from hospital wards and fractured bones to the Ascot straight in a royal carriage is subtly amazing. Beyond the normal wear and tear that any former jump jockey has on his bones and joints, it’s still unclear if Brough Scott has experienced serious health issues recently. If he has, it is evident that he has handled them in the same way as everything else: without much fuss and with the kind of dry resilience that older British racers typically consider to be fundamental good manners.
Even at eighty-three, he continues to write, observe, and be present. That seems perfectly normal for a man who once rode with a fracture that was barely healed because the races wouldn’t wait.
FAQs
Q1. Was Brough Scott ever seriously injured during his jockey career?
Yes — he broke his right arm badly enough to require a hard plastic splint.
Q2. Did Brough Scott ride competitively despite his injury?
He won the 1968 Imperial Cup and finished third at Cheltenham while injured.
Q3. Has Brough Scott spoken publicly about any illness in later life?
No significant health disclosures have been made publicly by Scott in recent years.
Q4. Is Brough Scott still active in racing journalism despite his age?
At 83, he continues writing race reports and appearing in public at major events.
Q5. What happened when Scott’s injured arm failed him during a race?
His arm gave out mid-fall at Cheltenham, leaving him unable to grab the horse’s mane.

