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Aintree and is
The Grand National ( also known as the National ) is a National Hunt horse race which is held annually at Aintree Racecourse, near Liverpool, England.
The steeplechase is the centrepiece of a three-day meeting, one of only four run at Aintree in the racing season.
The Grand National is run over the National Course at Aintree and consists of two circuits of sixteen fences, the first fourteen of which are jumped twice.
" The National Hunt horse race the Grand National, is held annually at Aintree Racecourse in early April, and three-time winner Red Rum is the most successful racehorse in the events history.
To the north west of Maghull is Lydiate, to the east Melling ; Aintree and Netherton to the south and west of Maghull is the Mersey Forest and Sefton village.
It passes Aintree Racecourse as Warbreck Moor and Ormskirk Road ( forming the boundary between Aintree and Netherton, before reaching the Switch Island junction, which is a large semi roundabout semi traffic light controlled junction, where the A5036, the M57, the M58 and the A59 all meet.
Also the Grand National meeting, which is held at Aintree over three days every April.
The most famous National Hunt race is the Grand National, run at Aintree in April each year.
The race is a different sort of contest to the Gold Cup in that it is run over a distance of more than 4 miles, there are up to 40 runners, the course at Aintree is essentially flat, and the horses are handicapped ( the best horses carry the most weight ).
Perhaps the most fundamental difference is that the Grand National fences at Aintree are far bigger than any fence at Cheltenham, and a number of fences incorporate significant drops.
The Aintree Fox Hunters ' is run as the feature race on the first day of the Grand National meeting over one circuit of the Grand National course.
Aintree is a village and civil parish in the Metropolitan Borough of Sefton, Merseyside.
It is best known as the site of Aintree Racecourse, which since the 19th century has staged the Grand National horserace.
After substantial building work to extend the Oriel Drive school, the Aintree Lane / Altway site was closed as a school at the beginning of the 2008-09 academic year, was taken over by Old Roan Baptist Church and is now called the Hope Centre, providing various services for the local community.
Unusual for racecourses or circuits, the site of Aintree Racecourse is split by Melling Road ; Grand Prix cars ( and Grand National horses ) have to cross the ( closed ) public road twice on each trip.
The main road from Liverpool to Aintree is the A59 ( known as Ormskirk Road as it passes through Aintree ).
The village is closer to Old Roan railway station, although Aintree railway station is convenient for the racecourse, both on the Merseyrail Northern Line's Ormskirk branch, with regular service between Liverpool Central and Ormskirk.

Aintree and also
Tony Brooks and Stirling Moss also won together at Aintree in 1957.
There are also two local newspapers, which are the Aintree & Maghull Champion and the Maghull Star, both Maghull newspapers are free of charge and are delivered every week either on a Wednesday or a Thursday.
In the past, it was also served by Aintree Central railway station on the North Liverpool Extension Line, located behind Aintree railway station.
The North Mersey Branch also runs through, close to the station, and had Aintree Racecourse railway station.
Aintree has also been used as a venue for motor racing.
In addition to the Grand Prix, the circuit also held 11 non-championship Formula 1 races, known as the Aintree 200, first won by Stirling Moss in 1954 with the last winner being Jack Brabham, in April 1964.
In 1944, Overloon almost completely destroyed at the Battle Overloon ( also known as Operation Aintree ), a ten-day tank battle between an American tank division and the German army.
Situated in north Liverpool in the far south of the Sefton borough, and north east of the centre of Bootle, Netherton is also north of Litherland and to the west of Aintree.
Peter Simple was a 9 / 1 shot in his amazing 1853 victory at Aintree and was trained by Tom Oliver who was also the trainer.
She was also part of the BBC presenting team at the 2010 Epsom Derby and Royal Ascot and was due to be part of the 2011 Grand National presenting team but was replaced at the last moment by Dan Walker who happened to be at Aintree presenting Football Focus on the same day.
She presented awards at the ELLE Style awards, Television awards and also presented an award to Best Dressed Female at Aintree in which she handed out the prizes, which included a shopping bag from Coleen's favourite store, Liverpool boutique Cricket.
Several winners of the Irish Grand National have also won its English counterpart at Aintree, but none in the same year.
It was served by local services between Liverpool Central, Warrington and Manchester, and also to Aintree Central on the North Liverpool Extension Line.

Aintree and home
Moss's first Formula One win was in 1955 at his home race, the British Grand Prix at Aintree.
In that sphere its prestige was second only to that of Aintree, home of the Grand National.
This was the home of Dick McCarthy, noted professional jockey of the early 20th century who finished third in the Grand National at Aintree in 1929.
Lord Sefton leased land at Aintree to the Waterloo Hotel to help establish what is now Aintree Racecourse, home of the Grand National Steeplechase, of which he was one of the principal sponsors and a committee member.

Aintree and Grand
More podium places were followed by a win in the British Grand Prix at Aintree after Brabham preserved his tyres to the end of the race, enabling him to finish ahead of Moss who had to pit to replace worn tyres.
* April 2 – Horse Racing – Red Rum wins a record third Grand National at Aintree racecourse.
* March 2 – Gaylad, ridden by Tom Olliver, wins the Grand National at Aintree Racecourse.
The Grand National was founded by William Lynn, a syndicate head and proprietor of the Waterloo Hotel, on land he leased in Aintree from William Molyneux, 2nd Earl of Sefton.
However, some historians have unearthed evidence in recent years that suggest those three races were run over the same course at Aintree and were regarded as having been Grand Nationals up until the mid-1860s.
A new era in the race's modern history began in 2005 when John Smith's took over from Martell as main sponsors of the Grand National and many of the other races at the three-day Aintree meeting for the first time.
In 2006 John Smith's launched the John Smith's People's Race which gave ten members of the public the chance to ride in a flat race at Aintree on Grand National day.
The Big Raspers At Aintree, 1927 painting of an incident at the Grand National
This includes four of the five ' Classics ' of Flat racing: The Oaks and The Derby at Epsom Downs and the 2, 000 Guineas and the 1, 000 Guineas, and major National Hunt meetings include the Cheltenham Festival and the Grand National at Aintree
In one year, the LMS ran 43 special trains to take spectators to the Grand National at Aintree, and a further 55 for the Cup Final at Wembley.
Once a year the S23 operated from Crosby Bus Station to Aintree Old Roan in connection with the Grand National ; this service fell into decline and ceased in the early sixties.
: For the horse named Latitat, which competed in the 1847 Grand National at Aintree, finishing thirteenth of twenty-three to complete the course, see Latitat ( racehorse ).
Count Karel Kinsky rode the Kinsky mare Zoedone to win the Grand National at Aintree England in 1883.
The Huntsman was the winner of the 1862 Grand National steeplechase run on March 12 at Aintree near Liverpool, England.
After riding him in a local gymkhana, she and Mi become serious about entering the Grand National steeplechase at Aintree racecourse and train the Piebald accordingly.
In the 1934 Grand National win he set a new course record of 9 min 20. 4s for Aintree.
* Gala Performance-won Jim Dandy Stakes: sire of steeplechasers, including West Tip, the winner of the 1986 Aintree Grand National.
The biggest events of the year in the UK are generally considered to be the Aintree Grand National and the Cheltenham Gold Cup.
The ' official ' first running of the world's most famous steeplechase, the Grand National, held annually at Aintree in England, took place in 1839.

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