Staff Writer |
Michelle Payne, the jockey who made history by becoming the first woman to win the Melbourne Cup, has announced her retirement from race-riding.
Payne created history in the 2015 Flemington showpiece when riding Prince Of Penzance to glory, but has relinquished her licence to Racing Victoria just before the new racing season begins.
"That's it for me," she told Racing.com. "It was a tough decision to come to and obviously took a lot of time to decide on, but I've achieved my biggest dream of winning the Melbourne Cup and had my time in the sun.
"I really enjoyed it and obviously loved the competitive side of riding and being out there and being connected with the horse."
Payne retires with 772 victories to her name, with her first winner coming as a 15-year-old for her father Paddy Payne snr. Having previously said it would be her last season riding, she will now concentrate on training.
She added: "I'm really looking forward to the training side of things, you still get as much of a kick out of it just watching it. I probably get a bit more nervous, which is interesting because it gets taken out of your hands a bit.
"At the end of the day it was always going to come to an end, I'm content and looking forward to the next step."
Alongside the Melbourne Cup, Payne's other Group One victories came in the 2009 Toorak Handicap and the Schweppes Thousand Guineas a year later.