Of course, O’Keeffe is no stranger to
the winners’ enclosure, having saddled 148 winners on the Flat and
36 winners over Jumps in his career to date but, with a few obvious
exceptions, has lacked the firepower to make much of an impact at the
major meetings. Sam Spinner aside, the highlights of his career, so
far, were the victories of Shared Equity in the Coral Sprint Trophy
at York in 2015, More Mischief in the Betfred Mobile/EBF Hoppings
Stakes at Newcastle in June, 2017 and Lord Yeats in the Betfred Fred
Archer Stakes at Newmarket the following month.
O’Keefe served an eight-year
apprentice, as pupil assistant, travelling head lad and assistant
trainer to Micky Hammond, before applying for a training licence in
his own right. He moved into Highbeck Lodge and Stables, which is
part of the Brecongill Estate, in Coverdale, in the extreme east of
the Yorkshire Dales, North Yorkshire in 2000. At that time he had
just three horses – the minimum number allowed by the British
Horseracing Authority (BHA) – but saddled his first winner, Route
Sixty Six, in a novices’ hurdle at Musselburgh the following
January. From small beginnings, by honest, old-fashioned hard work,
O’Keefe gradually increased his number of horses in training, to an
average of 20 or so over the last decade.
In 2011, O’Keefe underwent an
intensive course of treatment for throat cancer and although he
recovered, his business very nearly did not. He later recalled,
“Though I’d finished the treatment, I was still very ill, and
needed staff to cover. With the cost of all that, and the financial
crisis, we felt we couldn’t go any further, and rang the owners to
say we were giving up.” Thankfully, he did not and now, with Sam
Spinner just one of 45 horses in his yard, can hopefully look forward
to a happy, healthy and profitable future.