03/06/2021
The Best Ever Winners of the Best Race Ever
Ben Linfoot of the Sporting Life has produced an article which lists his top 40 Epsom Derby winners, I thought you might like to see which were the three he rated as the top 3.
For once I am in full agreement with an assessment not written by me!
Central to this conclusion is my belief that your haven’t succeeded until your successor succeeds. Plenty of horses have won the Derby – 233 since 1787 when the first race was run on Epsoms Downs – but few have proved to be as good as the three Ben lists below – as sires.
My own suspicion is that in the future Galileo will prove to be the best modern day winner of the finest Classic race in the world. Why? Because his immediate and line progeny will outshine those of Nijinsky over time.
What do you think?
3. Galileo – 2001
Right at the start of the 21st century Aidan O’Brien, who hadn’t won the Derby at the time, was preparing a c**t destined for greatness for his racecourse debut. By Sadler’s Wells, out of the Prix de l’Arc de Triomphe winner, Urban Sea, the strapping Galileo was sent off the Evens favourite for a 16-runner Leopardstown maiden on October 28, 2000. In grand introduction style, he won by 14 lengths. Two Derby trials later and this unbeaten c**t, owned by Sue Magnier and Michael Tabor, headed to Epsom as the 11/4 joint-favourite along with the 2000 Guineas winner, Golan. But Galileo laughed at them in the Derby, Golan included, under a steely Mick Kinane who rode him like a sure thing, just behind the pacesetters, on the outside, before pouncing for the lead two furlongs from home. He extended himself like a machine, imperiously defeating his rivals as if he was from a different species. The king had arrived. The winning distance was three and a half lengths, but it could have been more. The first of a record eight Derby winners for O’Brien (so far), Galileo was the catalyst for a period of dominance of the like we haven’t seen before, for both the Ballydoyle trainer and his Coolmore owners. His achievements as a stallion are unprecedented and more records are sure to come his way in the next few years, with Bolshoi Ballet and High Definition going out to bat for him ahead of a possible sixth Derby success in 2021. His impact at stud has been simply remarkable.
2. Sea Bird – 1965
When you don’t come off the bit in winning the Derby you’re going to go down as one of the best winners in the history of the race. You simply don’t win the Derby in that manner. Yet, in 1965, Sea Bird gave Australian jockey Pat Glennon the ride of his life around Epsom, with the man from Melbourne not having to so much as tickle the handbrake as his mount sauntered to a two-lengths-could-have-been-10-lengths Derby victory. He is arguably the greatest ever Derby winner, but, while he sired some highly-talented racehorses, including the Prix de l’Arc de Triomphe winner, Allez France, and the brilliant dual-purpose horse, Sea Pigeon, he didn’t have the impact at stud that our number one did.
1. Nijinsky – 1970
The same old names have cropped up several times in this list of Derby greats. Vincent O’Brien, Lester Piggott and Northern Dancer would be three of the most popular in a document search. In 1970 they combined to win the Derby with Nijinsky, a fabulous winner, who achieved exceptional feats on the racecourse both before and after Epsom. He was unlucky with his afflictions and suffered from a bout of colic two days before the Derby at Epsom. You wouldn’t know watching the video of his Derby win, with Piggott sitting motionless until he asked the son of Northern Dancer to go and win his race in the final quarter mile. Nijinsky soon got to Gyr, a son of Sea Bird, and showed supreme acceleration to win by two and a half lengths in 2m34.88secs, the fastest winning time in the race in 34 years on ground that wouldn’t have been as quick as it was for Mahmoud’s Derby. O’Brien called him the most brilliant horse he ever trained. As a stallion he was supreme, siring 155 stakes/Group winners including three Derby heroes in Golden Fleece, Lammtarra and Shahrastani. -IRC.