Movatterモバイル変換


[0]ホーム

URL:


Jump to content
WikipediaThe Free Encyclopedia
Search

Spion Kop (horse)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Irish-bred Thoroughbred racehorse

Spion Kop
SireSpearmint
GrandsireCarbine
DamHammerkop
DamsireGallinule
SexStallion
Foaled1917
CountryIreland[1]
ColourBay
BreederGiles Loder
OwnerGiles Loder
TrainerPeter Gilpin
Record14: 2-6-2
Earnings£
Major wins
Epsom Derby (1920)

Spion Kop (1917–1941) was an Irish-bred, British-trainedThoroughbred racehorse andsire. In a career that lasted from 1919 until 1921, Spion Kop ran fourteen times winning two races. After an undistinguished early career in which he lost his first six races, he improved as a three-year-old to winThe Derby in record time in 1920. After his retirement from racing he had some success as a stallion.

Background

[edit]

Spion Kop, a "strong, handsome"[2] bay horse with a whiteblaze and four whitesocks, was bred by his owner Major Giles Loder who had inherited the Eyrefield Stud nearCaragh inCounty Kildare from his uncle Eustace "Lucky" Loder[3] in 1914.[4] He was named after theBattle of Spion Kop (1900).

Spion Kop's sireSpearmint had been Eustace Loder's most successful horse winning the Derby and theGrand Prix de Paris in 1906. At stud, he was fairly successful, siring Royal Lancer (St Leger), Zionist (Irish Derby) andPlucky Liege. Hammerkop, Spion Kop's dam was a top-class staying racehorse who won theYorkshire Oaks in 1903 and theCesarewitch Handicap in 1905, but produced no other winners in a long stud career.

Spion Kop was sent into training with Peter Gilpin at his Clarehaven Stables atNewmarket, Suffolk.[5]

Racing career

[edit]

1919: two-year-old season

[edit]

As the offspring of two slow-maturing stayers, Spion Kop was not expected to excel as a two-year-old in 1919. He failed to win in six starts, but showed some consistency by reaching the frame in all his races, finishing second five times and third once. At the end of the year, in the Free Handicap, a rating list of the leading juveniles, Spion Kop was given a weight of 102pounds, suggesting that he was at least twenty pounds below top class.[4]

1920: three-year-old season

[edit]

In the spring of 1920 there were rumours that Spion Kop had made exceptional improvement and was likely to be a major contender for the Derby. On his debut in May he went some way towards substantiating the stories when he won a race atKempton impressively, and his odds for the Derby were cut to9/1. He did not run again in public but was instead tried in a private trial race against the best of his trainer's other three-year-olds. He was well beaten by his stable companions, finishing last of the four runners behind Sarchedon,Comrade and Paragon,[6] and a result his odds for the Derby lengthened again. The stable jockey Arthur Smith, who had rejected the eventual winnerGrand Parade in the 1919 Derby, was instructed to ride Sarchedon at Epsom,[7] with the mount on Spion Kop being given to the AmericanFrank O'Neill.

Spion Kop (foreground) wins the Epsom Derby.

The Derby was run on an unusually hot day in front of an estimated crowd of 250,000 including theKing andQueen.[8] Spion Kop started at odd of 100/6 (approximately 16/1) in a field of 19 runners. The favourite was the 2000 Guineas winnerTetratema a colt noted for his exceptional early speed but with dubious stamina.[9] Tetratema went into an early lead and set an extremely fast pace as he was challenged by Abbot's Trace (ridden by Steve Donoghue),[10] while O'Neill settled Spion Kop well back in the field. Tetratema dropped back soon after half way and Abbot's Trace led into the straight as Spion Kop made rapid progress from the rear. Spion Kop took the lead threefurlongs from the finish and ran on strongly up the straight to win by two lengths from Archaic and Orpheus in a new race record time of 2:34.8. The most dramatic incident of the race occurred in the closing stages when Abbot's Trace was brought down in a collision with Sarchedon, who finished fourth.[10]

Spion Kop then attempted to emulate his sire by travelling to France for the Grand Prix de Paris atLongchamp, a much anticipated event, which, with a first prize of £12,000, was the most valuable race in the world at the time.[11] Having narrowly escaped a fire which destroyed his horse-box,[12] Spion Kop started joint-favourite, but finished unplaced behind Comrade.[13] There were excuses however, as the race was extremely rough, with one report claiming that Spion Kop had been "treated like a shuttlecock".[14] Spion Kop failed to recover his form in autumn. He prepared for the St Leger by taking on Abbott's Trace in a two-runner race for the Derbyshire Three-Year-Old Plate atDerby and was beaten a short head in a "desperate" finish.[15] He nevertheless started favourite[16] for the St Leger but finished unplaced behindCaligula. On his final start he was unplaced again behind Orpheus in theChampion Stakes .

1921: four-year-old season

[edit]

Spion Kop failed to re-establish his reputation in two starts as a four-year-old. He returned to Epsom's Derby meeting for theCoronation Cup but finished well beaten behind Silvern. AtRoyal Ascot he was moved up in distance to two and a half miles for theAscot Gold Cup and produced his best performance in over a year by finishing third (promoted from fourth) to Periosteum.[17] There were hopes that he would appear later in the year in the Cesarewitch or theCambridgeshire Handicap,[18] but he never ran again.

Assessment

[edit]

In their bookA Century of Champions, John Randall and Tony Morris rated Spion Kop a "poor" Derby winner. More specifically, they rated him equal withAboyeur as one of the two worst colts to have won the race in the 20th Century. Spion Kop was not even the best middle distance colt in his own stable, that honour clearly belonging to Comrade.[19]

Stud career

[edit]

Spion Kop was retired to his owner's Old Connell Stud, nearNewbridge, County Kildare, where he became a "respectable" sire[2] with a clear tendency to produce runners with stamina. His most notable progeny includedFelstead, Kopi (Irish Derby) and Bongrace (Doncaster Cup). His son The Bastard won theYorkshire Cup and, after being renamed The Buzzard was twice theleading stallion in Australia,[20] siring theMelbourne Cup winnerRainbird.

Spion Kop died in 1941 and was buried at the Eyrefield Stud.

Pedigree

[edit]
Pedigree of Spion Kop (IRE), bay stallion, 1917
Sire
Spearmint (GB)
1903
Carbine
1885
MusketToxophilite
West Australian mare
MerseyKnowsley
Clemence
Maid of the Mint
1897
MintingLord Lyon
Mint Sauce
WarbleSkylark
Coturnix
Dam
Hammerkop (GB)
1900
Gallinule
1884 
IsonomySterling
Isola Bella
MoorhenHermit
sister to Ryshworth
Concussion
1885 
ReverberationThunderbolt
The Golden Horn
AstwithWenlock
Skirmisher mare (Family: 19)

References

[edit]
  1. ^"Spion Kop's Derby".Melbourne Argus. Retrieved10 November 2011.
  2. ^abLiz Martiniak (24 June 1924)."Spearmint". Tbheritage.com. Retrieved10 November 2011.
  3. ^"Major Eustace Loder". Horseracinghistory.co.uk. Retrieved10 November 2011.
  4. ^abMortimer, Roger; Onslow, Richard; Willett, Peter (1978).Biographical Encyclopedia of British Flat Racing. Macdonald and Jane's.ISBN 0-354-08536-0.
  5. ^"Peter Gilpin". Horseracinghistory.co.uk. Retrieved10 November 2011.
  6. ^"NEWS AND NOTES". 30 July 1921. Retrieved10 November 2011 – via Papers Past.
  7. ^"NEWS AND NOTES". 21 August 1920. Retrieved10 November 2011 – via Papers Past.
  8. ^"DERBY DAY". 4 June 1920. Retrieved10 November 2011 – via Papers Past.
  9. ^"NEWS AND NOTES". 14 August 1920. Retrieved10 November 2011 – via Papers Past.
  10. ^ab"Newspaper Article". 29 July 1920. Retrieved10 November 2011 – via Trove.
  11. ^"25-GUINEA HORSE WINS £12,000 PRIZE". 9 September 1920. Retrieved10 November 2011 – via Papers Past.
  12. ^"RACEHORSES RESCUED FROM BURNING BOXES". 26 June 1920. Retrieved10 November 2011 – via Papers Past.
  13. ^"SPORTING". 29 June 1920. Retrieved10 November 2011 – via Papers Past.
  14. ^"NEWS AND NOTES". 18 September 1920. Retrieved10 November 2011 – via Papers Past.
  15. ^"ENGLISH RACING". 3 September 1920. Retrieved10 November 2011 – via Papers Past.
  16. ^"NOTES AND COMMENTS". 18 October 1921. Retrieved10 November 2011 – via Papers Past.
  17. ^"ENGLISH RACING". 17 June 1921. Retrieved10 November 2011 – via Papers Past.
  18. ^"NOTES FROM ENGLAND". 8 August 1921. Retrieved10 November 2011 – via Papers Past.
  19. ^Morris, Tony; Randall, John (1999).A Century of Champions. Portway Press.ISBN 1-901570-15-0.
  20. ^Morris, Tony; Randall, John (1990).Horse Racing: Records, Facts, Champions (Third ed.). Guinness Publishing.ISBN 0-85112-902-1.
Epsom Derby winners
Legend - ₩ = Triple Crown Winners, ♥ = Filly
Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Spion_Kop_(horse)&oldid=1268968704"
Categories:
Hidden categories:

[8]ページ先頭

©2009-2025 Movatter.jp