Triple Crown, in British horse racing, championship attributed to a colt or filly that in a single season wins the races known as the Two Thousand Guineas, the Derby, and the Saint Leger. In Britain the term Triple Crown is also applied—though far less commonly—to a filly that in a single season wins the Derby, the Saint Leger, and the One Thousand Guineas, the first two races being for both colts and fillies and the last for fillies only.
There are five renowned British races for three-year-old horses: the Saint Leger (first run in 1776), the Oaks Stakes (1779), the Derby (1780), the Two Thousand Guineas (1809), and the One Thousand Guineas (1814). Because only fillies may run in the One Thousand Guineas and the Oaks, the other three races became major tests for all Thoroughbreds in Britain, and, in time, the winner of all three races was classified as the Triple Crown champion. In 1853 West Australian became Britain’s first Triple Crown winner. Other countries involved in Thoroughbred racing then followed suit with their own series of “Triple Crown” races, most notably the United States.
It is generally conceded that capturing the British Triple Crown is more difficult to achieve than winning the American Triple Crown, because, even though the British trio of races takes place over a longer span of time (four months compared with four to five weeks), the large difference in race distances (1 mile for the Two Thousand Guineas, 1.5 miles for the Derby, and 1.75 miles for the Saint Leger) tests the horses’ versatility.
A list of British Triple Crown champions is provided in the table.
year | winner |
---|---|
1853 | West Australian |
1865 | Gladiateur |
1866 | Lord Lyon |
1886 | Ormonde |
1891 | Common |
1893 | Isinglass |
1897 | Galtee More |
1899 | Flying Fox |
1900 | Diamond Jubilee |
1903 | Rock Sand |
1915 | Pommern |
1917 | Gay Crusader |
1918 | Gainsborough |
1935 | Bahram |
1970 | Nijinsky |