Horses

Winx

 

Winx is often cited as one of the best racehorses in history. While such accolades are always based on subjective opinion, the mare’s record is truly incredible: 37 wins and three places in 43 races. That run included 25 Group 1 wins, which is an all-time record. While some racing fans and rating agencies might cite Secretariat, Phar Lap, Frankel or a handful of others as the best of all time, Winx is almost always in the conversation.

Winx was foaled in 2011. Dubai World Cup winner Street Cry was her sire, and Vegas Showgirl was her dam. She was sold as a yearling for $230,000 to Magic Bloodstock Racing and pegged to be trained by Chris Waller. Winx made her debut at Warwick Farm on 4th June 2014, winning a low-key handicap race by just under a length. Later in 2014, she would record her first major race victory, winning the Group 2 Furious Stakes.

After a slow start, Winx became a record-breaker

Winx’s three-year-old season was somewhat erratic, with the mare going on a (relatively) poor run through late 2014 and early 2015, winning just one race in seven starts. By May 2015 when she was set to make her 11th start at Sunshine Coast, her record read 3-3-0. But then, something extraordinary happened: Winx never lost a race again, winning 33 consecutive races across almost four years.

As you might expect, Winx became a hero to the Australian public. Obviously, her success meant she was beloved by punters, and the bane of Australian bookmakers like Tattsbet, Neds and Ladbrokes. Only twice in that 33-race winning streak was she priced above even money, and she was always priced up as favourite for that run. Winx earned over $26 million in career prize money, but the money she generated in winning bets must have been many times that amount.

As mentioned, Winx won 25 Group 1 races, and that included four consecutive Cox Plates, arguably second only to the Melbourne Cup in prestige. She gained international acclaim, too, earning awards for being the best mare or filly in the world, then moving up to being named world racehorse of the year by 2018. In 2018, she also won the Secretariat Vox Populi Award, with fans in 60 countries voting her in as the most popular horse on the planet.

Hard to say who is the greatest

If we can offer the viewpoint of those who claim that Winx shouldn’t be considered among the greatest horses in history, most of the argument lies in two areas: The fact Winx never raced outside of Australia, and the quality of her opposition. The latter can be challenged, as some of the horses Winx beat also went on to win over 20 Group 1 races collectively. As for staying at home, that’s been the case for many of the best horses in history, including most of the American greats, so it seems an unfair stick to beat Winx with.

Nonetheless, Winx will still be considered one of the best in the eyes of modern Australian racing fans. Today, years after her retirement, she still makes the headlines as fans wonder how she will fare as a mother. As with the best horses in history, Winx means more to the public than just winning races. She is a cultural icon.

Burrough Hill Lad

According to Timeform, Burrough Hill Lad was the joint eighth best steeplechaser of the last 50 years or so,
rated just 3lb inferior to
Desert Orchid and 7lb inferior to Kauto Star. Owned by Stan Riley and trained by Jenny Pitman, his main claim to fame was victory in the Cheltenham Gold Cup in 1984, in which he beat Brown Chamberlin, for whom he had been passed over by his regular partner John Francome.

 

However, that year he also won the Hennessy Gold Cup at Newbury and the King George VI Chase at Kempton. John Francome, who was reunited with Burrough Hill Lad in the King George VI Chase, later recalled, “Burrough Hill Lad was one of those horses you’d never get to the bottom of, a great big, strong powerful horse…” All in all, Burrough Hill Lad won 17 of his 27 steeplechases – including the Gainsborough Chase at Sandown three years in a row – and amassed nearly £200,000 in total prize money.

 

He was retired from racing, as a 12-year-old, in 1988 after pulling up lame on the gallops at home. He spent most of his retirement in Frickley, near Doncaster, before being put down in 2004 at the age of 28. That same year he featured at No. 44 in a poll of 100 favourite racehorses conducted by the Racing Post so was a popular fellow.

 

Amassing £200,000 in prize money is no mean feat and punter will have seen the benefits of that too. This was in ‘pre internet’ days so nowadays it may also have been possible to pick up a few nice bonuses of online bookmaker offers along the way. Bettingtop10.com can point yu in the right direction here. Odds also end to be more generous in this day and age due to more competition in this online gambling era. Outsiders especially tend to be available at much bigger odds, which is handy if you enjoy a speculative bet or two, and many are fans of multiple / accumulator bets based on the returns on offer. If you can latch onto a horse as good as Burrough Hill Lad and follow him tthroughout his career, you’ll be quids in!

 

 

 

Nashwan

Nashwan was an American race horse that was shipped to the other side of the world to dazzle fans with his relentless potential and aggressive pursuit for victories at the tracks. This powerful chestnut showed promise early in life while growing up at a farm in Kentucky, and his stature alone was known to set other horses’ tails wiggling with nerves. When he was transported to Britain, owner Hamdan Al Maktoum knew that the tide was about to turn. In England, Nashwan was trained by Major Dick Hern for all his races, with Willie Carson riding the saddles for the entirety of the horse’s career.

Career

In 1988 at the start of his two-year-old season, there was a buzz surrounding the horse’s pedigree. A lot of people expected to see him strut his stuff out there, and he sure did. In the first two races of his fledgling career, Nashwan managed to show power and grace despite his size. His three-year-old spell started off in a tantalizing manner, when he grabbed the General Accident 2000 Guineas. Afterwards, it became evident that he was a top horse that thrived o victories and never needed a whip to hit the ground running. Some of his best moments include the Epsom Derby, which he claimed in 1989 as well as the Eclipse Stakes in the same year. At 3 years old, Nashwan was rated as the best British-trained stallion of 1989. He was always a joy to watch because of the grace he projected and indeed, Joy was his name, only that he was named in Arabic.

Nashwan was retired in 1989, upon where he became a highly successful sire, with winners in his wake. He had participated in 7 races. At the time of retirement, he had accumulated £793,248 in winnings. The stallion passed on in 2002 after undergoing a foot surgery.

Secretariat

Secretariat was an American racehorse who ruled the racing tracks in the first half of the 1970s, with race stats so incredible that at the turn of the century, he was voted second in the honours list of 100 top horses that raced in the United States in the 20th Century. He is most remembered for winning the Belmont Stakes by a record 31 lengths, a races which evokes nostalgia for many as the greatest they ever set eyes on. He was also the Horse of the Year twice, at ages two and three.

Secretariat was foaled in 1970 in the meadow Stable in Virginia, and received his race training at Hialeah from horse trainers’ hall of famer Lucien Laurin. With Lucien, he got to polish his clumsy and lazy tendencies that threatened to derail the career of one of the finest looking thoroughbreds of the time. One thing he never really got over was his tendency to edge towards the rail during races, and had to race with a visor to correct this.

He made his racing debut at The Aqueduct in July 1972, a less-than-satisfactory race that fully exposed the same faults his trainer had been trying to work on and saw him finish fourth. One major positive from this race was his recovery, as he came back from a bump and traffic at the stretch to finish fourth.

The big beast then went on to win all remaining races of his two-year-old season, although he in one instance paid again for his clumsiness as he was disqualified to second for bearing in on eventual winner Stop The music.

There was no stopping in the next season, as he went ahead to seal the Triple Crown with wins at Kentucky, Preakness and Belmont in 1973.

His dethroning came at the Saratoga Race Course, where, at a stage of seeming invincibility, he fell to a horse named Onion. He retired after winning the Canadian International Stakes in 1973, with a record of 16-3-1, at which time he had raked in $1,316,808.

It took Secretariat some time to get into thoroughbred siring after retirement, as his sperm was considered somewhat immature. When he got to it, however, he produced some fine horses whose generations linger to date. He died at the age of 19 in 1989.

L’Escargot

The story of L’Escargot is best told from the perspective of the one event that earned him fame – The 1975 Aintree Grand National. The race earned the 1964 Irish born race horse plaudits for both for whom he beat to win this prestigious race, and the style in which he did it. L’Escargot began the race as an underdog, legend of the sport Red Rum was seeking to make it a hat-trick of Grand National wins in a row, was 7/2 favourite to win the race, and had virtually the entire nation cheering him on. With that in mind, L’escargot went on to carve out his own place in history with a win of 15 lengths over Red Rum. His starting price was 13/2 and he had Tommy Carberry on board.

Remarkable career

L’Escargot’s story is remarkable for a number of other reasons, not least that his name, quite ironically, means ‘The Snail’ in French. His owner Raymond R. Guest had settled on the name asimply because it had a similar sound to his preferred Let’s Go,’ which was a name that had already been taken.

Ridden by Tom Carberry, the Dan Moore trained horse won the Cheltenham Gold Cup two times in succession in 1970 and 1971 before raising expectations yet further by setting sights on the Grand National. This horse and jockey combo was effectively a long term formula for success starting off in 1968, when he won two of the five races he took part in. Then a spell in the United States.

Story of persistence

After returning to the Europe in 1970, the horses career was very much England and Ireland centred. After the aforementioned Cheltenham successes, the Grand National was very much the goal. This proved to be far from a formality in that it took multiple attempts to get it right. First off in the 1972 Grand National, L’Escargot fell at the third fence. In the following year, his fortunes improved and he came third. Buoyed by this success, his team entered him again the following year where to he placed second in the 1974 Grand National . The story of has persistence pays finally came in 1975, when ‘The Snail’ became only the second horse to win both the Gold Cup and The Grand National, after Golden Miller had won the double in 1934.

L’Escargot lived out the remainder of his life being doted on by the wife of his trainer. After such success, he’d certainly earned a taste of the easy life.