Born in County Antrim on May 4, 1974, Sir Anthony McCoy broke virtually every record there was to be broken in National Hunt racing during his time in the saddle.
Here, we take a closer look at his glittering career.
Just Champion - 20 times
In any sport, to be crowned the best is what drives the real champions on and McCoy was top jockey 20 times in a row. To put that into perspective, that is a title for every year he rode as a professional, beginning in the 1994-95 season.
Greatest achievement
In April 2002, McCoy overtook Sir Gordon Richards' record seasonal tally of 269 wins on Valfonic at Warwick, an achievement that helped him gain third place in the BBC Sports Personality of the Year voting. Speaking recently, McCoy - who was knighted in 2016 - said: "Breaking Sir Gordon Richards' record will always be my greatest achievement, nothing is even close." McCoy's total that season was an amazing 289 winners.
National hero
McCoy's Grand National victory aboard Don't Push It in 2010 not only ended his 15-year wait for victory in the world's greatest steeplechase, but also saw him transcend the boundaries of the sport and become the first jockey to win the coveted BBC Sports Personality of the Year. It meant even more that he did it in the green and gold colours of his great friend and supporter, JP McManus.
π Five years ago today, Sir @AP_McCoy's legendary career in the saddle came to an end.
β Sporting Life (@SportingLife) April 25, 2020
π Any excuse to relive the moment he won the Grand National on Don't Push It...pic.twitter.com/qK5n1SouDP

Gold-en times
McCoy landed the rare Cheltenham Gold Cup/Champion Hurdle double on Mr Mulligan and Make A Stand in 1997 and the King George VI Chase on Best Mate in 2002. Binocular, Brave Inca and the ill-fated Synchronised also added championship laurels at the biggest meeting of all. Edredon Bleu's win in the 2000 Queen Mother Champion Chase was hailed as one of the great finishes of all, as McCoy's mount edged the gallant Direct Route.

Mighty fine
Other notable landmarks included the overtaking of Richard Dunwoody's all-time record total of 1,699 winners on Mighty Montefalco at Uttoxeter on August 27, 2002, to become the winning-most jump jockey in British history. He completed a career total of 1,000 winners in December 1999 and it had taken just over five years, which was more than five years quicker than the previous best. His 1,500th came just two years later.
Box Office farewell
Fittingly his farewell came on a horse called Box Office. The only thing the script got wrong that afternoon on April 25, 2015 at Sandown is that the Jonjo O'Neill-trained gelding did not win. Simply put, winning is was what McCoy did best - 4,348 times over jumps in Britain and Ireland to be exact, plus another 10 on the Flat.
A true champ out of the saddle
Sir AP McCoy recently reflected about his life in retirement, saying: "It's very difficult to believe it is five years - some days I think it goes slowly, but on the whole it's good and I'm very lucky. I'm one of those very lucky people who got to do what I loved forever, and in terms of my riding career I got the perfect ending. I'm not really one to look back, so I haven't looked back on it that much, if at all, but I think the way it all worked out is for the best.
"Time moves on, racing moves on and someone else takes your place. If I looked back and thought 'I should have done another year, I should have done another year', I'd still be riding."
However, he still managed to hit the headlines while working as a pundit for ITV during this year's Cheltenham Festival.
Firstly when the horse named after him - Champ - fittingly produced a stunning finish under Barry Geraghty, and then when he left his duties to go and console Jamie Moore after his heartbreaking fall from Goshen in the JCB Triumph Hurdle.
ππ THE CHAMP IS HERE!
β Sporting Life (@SportingLife) March 11, 2020
π²π Barry Geraghty's never-say-die ride on a horse fittingly named after AP McCoy produced one of the most thrilling finishes you'll see at the #CheltenhamFestival...pic.twitter.com/063690jpg0
π Happy birthday Sir @AP_McCoy
β Sporting Life (@SportingLife) May 4, 2020
π₯ 4,358 winners
π 20-time champion jockey
π 31 Cheltenham winners
π Grand National 2010
π½οΈ SPOTY 2010
π And a true champ for others when out of the saddle...pic.twitter.com/NvCAALT1zS
π It may be five years since the legendary @AP_McCoy retired from the saddle...
β Sporting Life (@SportingLife) April 25, 2020
π€£...but as he proved last November, he's still got it!pic.twitter.com/fuRL0euBpQ
ποΈ First winner at 17 in 1992
β Sporting Life (@SportingLife) April 25, 2020
π₯ 4,358 winners (π€―)
π 20-time champion jockey
π 31 Cheltenham winners
π Grand National 2010
π½οΈ SPOTY 2010
π’ Retires April 25th, 2015
βοΈ Knighted 2016
π What a career Sir @AP_McCoy
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