This list is incomplete; you can help by adding missing items. (June 2018)
Racehorses
A
Adios Butler: famous harness racer
Affirmed: U.S. Triple Crown winner (1978)
Ajax: 18 consecutive race wins, before he was defeated at 1/40
Albatross: harness racer who won 59 of 71 races, and as a sire produced winners of over $130 million, including Niatross
Allez France: French Arc winner and first filly to win a million dollars
Alydar: finished second to Affirmed in all three 1978 Triple Crown races; successful sire
American Pharoah: 2015 winner of the U.S. Triple Crown and Breeders' Cup World Championships in Lexington, Kentucky at Keeneland Race Course
Animal Kingdom: American Thoroughbred racehorse; won 137th Kentucky Derby and 2013 Dubai World Cup
Archer: first and second winner of the Melbourne Cup
Aristides: winner of the first Kentucky Derby
Arrogate: winner of Travers Stakes, Breeders' Cup Classic, Pegasus World Cup, and Dubai World Cup in track record time and the richest U.S.-based racehorse of all time
Arkle: highest Timeform rating for a steeplechase horseracer
Assault: U.S. Triple Crown winner (1946)
B
Barbaro: American Thoroughbred who decisively won the 2006 Kentucky Derby, but shattered his leg two weeks later in the 2006 Preakness Stakes, ending his racing career; underwent several operations; eventually healed, but developed laminitis and could not be saved; euthanized January 29, 2007
Beholder: three-time winner of the Breeders' Cup Distaff, as well as the first filly to win the Pacific Classic
Bernborough: Australian racehorse and winner of 15 consecutive races at big weights; sold to US film producer Louis B. Mayer
Ben Nevis: champion Maryland steeplechaser he won the Maryland Hunt Cup twice and the Grand National
Bend Or, very successful British Thoroughbred racehorse who won the 1880 Epsom Derby
Best Mate: 2002, 2003 and 2004 Cheltenham Gold Cup winner; often given title 'Greatest Steeplechaser' since Arkle, and an equal to him
Big Brown: 2008 Kentucky Derby and Preakness Stakes winner; first horse since Clyde Van Dusen to win the Kentucky Derby from the 20th post position
Black Caviar: undefeated in 25 career starts; fifteen-time Group 1 winner
Bold Forbes: 1976 Kentucky Derby and Belmont Stakes winner
Bold Ruler: leading sire of stakeswinners; born in the same barn the same night as Round Table; sired the outstanding Secretariat
Bret Hanover: one of only nine pacers to win the Triple Crown of Harness Racing for Pacers; had 62 wins from 69 starts; the only horse to be made Harness Horse of the Year three times
Brigadier Gerard: winner of 17 of 18 races in England, including the 2000 Guineas and 11 other Group I races; joint third highest Timeform flat rating of all time
Brooklyn Supreme: a red roan Belgian stallion noted for his extreme size
Bucephalus: Horse of Alexander the Great
Buckpasser: won 15 consecutive races; one of the great broodmare sires
C
California Chrome: won the 140th Kentucky Derby; won the Preakness; won the 2016 Dubai World Cup; two-time American Horse of the Year
Carbine: outstanding racehorse and sire; winner of the Melbourne Cup
Cardigan Bay: New Zealand's "million dollar pacer"; the first to win a million in the US; appeared on The Ed Sullivan Show
Castleshane: winner of eight flat races and two jumps
Cicero: winner of the 1905 Epsom Derby as the shortest-priced successful favourite in the history of the event
Cigar: champion in the 1990s who won 16 consecutive races
Citation: U.S. Triple Crown winner (1948); also won 16 consecutive major stakes races; first horse to earn $1 million\
Country House: Winner of Kentucky Derby 2019 after Maximum Security was demoted from 1st place for interference with other horses
Crisp: remembered for his epic race in the Grand National with Red Rum
Curlin: third richest US-based horse of all time, winner of 2007 Preakness Stakes and Breeders' Cup Classic and 2008 Dubai World Cup
D
Dan Patch: America's greatest pacer
Danehill: American-bred and British-trained sprint champion who went on to become a champion sire in both the northern and southern hemispheres; the first major "shuttle stallion"
Dance Smartly: second Canadian filly ever to win the Canadian Triple Crown, and the first to win a Breeders Cup Race
Dawn Run: only horse ever to complete Champion Hurdle, Cheltenham Gold Cup double
Deep Impact: Japanese Triple Crown winner; also smashed the world record over 3200 metres and seven-time leading sire in Japan
Desert Gold: race mare who won 19 races successive races during World War I; often raced against Gloaming
Desert Orchid: won King George four times and Cheltenham Gold Cup
Dr. Fager: "the Doctor"; set the world record at 1 mile on any surface, 1:32 1/5, and held it for more than 20 years
Doncaster: very successful racehorse, sire of the great Bend Or
E
Easy Goer: Hall of Fame champion who ran the fastest mile of all time on dirt by any three-year-old Thoroughbred in 1:32.2; ran the second fastest Belmont Stakes of all time behind Secretariat; had a great rivalry with Sunday Silence
Eclipse: celebrated 18th-century racehorse that won 18 races in 18 starts; influential sire
Emanas:Fastest Brazilian horse to win Brazilian Cup (1986, 1989 and 1990)
Eight Belles: first filly to win the Martha Washington Stakes, by a record 13½ lengths
Exterminator: exceedingly popular "iron horse" of American racing history
F
Frankel: undefeated in 14 career starts; highest rated flat race horse in history: WTR 140;[1] Timeform 147, Racing Post 143
Funny Cide: first gelding since Clyde Van Dusen to win the Kentucky Derby
Flyingbolt: widely considered as the second best Steeplechaser of all-time; stablemate of Arkle; Timeform rated 210. 2lb inferior to Arkle
Fair Play: successful American Thoroughbred racehorse and very successful sire; sired the great Man o' War
G
Gainsborough: winner of the English Triple Crown; leading sire
Galileo: seven-time Leading sire in Great Britain & Ireland; sire of Frankel; has sired 102 Group 1 winners worldwide as of December 2015
Genuine Risk: second filly to win the Kentucky Derby (1980)
Gloaming: won 19 successive races in New Zealand and Australia; record was 67 starts for 57 wins and 9 seconds
Go Man Go: champion running Quarter Horse
Golden Miller: record five-time winner of the Cheltenham Gold Cup; only horse to win the Cheltenham Gold Cup and Grand National in the same year
Goldsmith Maid: famous harness racing mare of the 19th century[2]
Greyhound: named Trotting Horse of the Century in the US
H
Hambletonian 10: the "father of American trotting"
Hurricane Fly: Irish hurdler, winner of a record 22 Grade I races
Hyperion: winner of The Derby and the St Leger Stakes; top sire for six years in the UK
Hastings: sire of Fair Play, who in turn sired the great Man o' War, successful racehorse
I
Incitatus: horse legend says Roman Emperor Caligula planned to make a senator
Iroquois: first American-bred racehorse to win The Derby
Invasor: winner of the Uruguayan Triple Crown, as well as the Dubai World Cup and Breeders' Cup Classic
I'll Have Another: winner of the 2012 Kentucky Derby and Preakness Stakes
Irish War Cry: Graded-Stakes Winner, noted for his win in the Wood Memorial Stakes and for finishing second in the 2017 Belmont Stakes
Isinglass: sixth winner of the English Triple Crown (1892)
Isonomy: very successful racehorse and sire of The English Triple Crown winner Isinglass
J
Jay Trump: three-time winner of the Maryland Hunt Cup and the Grand National
John Henry: U.S. Champion Turf Horse (1980, 1981, 1983, 1984)
Johnstown: winner of the 1939 Kentucky Derby and Belmont Stakes
Justify: 2018 winner of the U.S. Triple Crown
K
Kelso: only five-time U.S. Horse of the Year, in the list of the top 100 U.S. thoroughbred champions of the 20th Century by The Blood-Horse magazine, Kelso ranks 4th
Kincsem: Hungarian race mare and most successful racehorse ever, winning all 54 starts in five countries
Kindergarten: weighted more than Phar Lap in the Melbourne Cup
Kingston: all-time record holder of the most wins by a horse with 89
Kingston Town: won three Cox Plates; first Australian horse to top $1million in stakes earnings
Kissin George: one of America's premier sprinting Thoroughbred racehorses
L
La Troienne: most important broodmare of the twentieth century
Lexington: America's leading 19th-century sire
Longfellow: 19th-century runner and stallion
Lonesome Glory: only five-time winner of American champion steeplechaser
Lottery: winner of the Grand National steeplechase in 1839
Lookin At Lucky: winner of 2010 Preakness Stakes, sired Lookin at Lee
M
Makybe Diva: won the Melbourne Cup on three occasions
Man o' War: often considered America's greatest racehorse; won 20 of 21 career starts
Marengo Famous war horse of Napoleon
Master Charlie: winner of the 1924 Remsen Stakes, Tijuana Futurity, Hopeful Stakes, Kentucky Jockey Club Stakes; awarded 1924 American Champion Two-Year-Old-Male/Colt
Maximum Security: Winner of Kentucky Derby 2019 before disqualification from 1st place for disturbing other horses
Might and Power: World Champion Stayer (1997); Australian Horse of the Year (1998, 1999)
Mr. Prospector: one of the most successful U.S. sires of the late 20th century
Moifaa: first New Zealand horse to win the Grand National
Mahubah: dam of Man o' War
N
Nasrullah: one of the most successful Thoroughbred sires of the 20th century, grandsire to Secretariat
Native Dancer (also nicknamed the Grey Ghost): won 21 of 22 career races, with only loss in the Kentucky Derby; sire whose descendants have come to dominate modern Triple Crown racing
Nearco Italian bred Thoroughbred racehorse. ''Thoroughbred Heritage'' described him as "one of the greatest racehorses of the Twentieth Century" and "one of the most important sires of the century." He was undefeated and his sire line was dominant.
Needles: the first Florida-bred horse to win the Kentucky Derby (1956), also won the Belmont Stakes
Niatross: pacer who won 37 of his 39 races and broke many records, considered to be one of the greatest harness racers of all time
Night Raid: sire of Phar Lap
Nijinsky II: last horse to win the English Triple Crown (1970)
Northern Dancer: Canada's champion on the racetrack; most successful sire of the 20th century
O
Overdose: champion Hungarian sprinter and winner of 14 straight races
Orfevre: winner of almost 20 million US dollars in earnings and is one of the highest earning racehorses ever
Oedipus: winner of the American Steeplechase triple crown
P
Peter Pan: winner of the Preakness Stakes, and had the Peter Pan Stakes named in his honor
Phar Lap: Australia and New Zealand's most famed Thoroughbred racehorse; won 37 of his 51 career starts
Pleasant Colony: 1981 Kentucky Derby and Preakness Stakes winner
Potoooooooo: 18th-century thoroughbred racehorse who won over 30 races and defeated some of the greatest racehorses of the time.
Pretty Polly Irish Thoroughbred racehorse who won 15 consecutive races, fifth filly to win the British Fillies Triple Crown, record 24: 22-2-0
Q
Quevega: only horse in the history to win at six consecutive Cheltenham Festivals
Queensway: won the Canadian Triple Crown
R
Rachel Alexandra: filly and winner of the 2009 Preakness Stakes
Roy Olcott: harness racehorse
Real Quiet: winner of the 1998 Kentucky Derby and Preakness Stakes; lost the third leg of the U.S. Triple Crown, the Belmont Stakes, by a margin of four inches
Red Rum: only horse in the history of the Aintree Grand National to win the race three times (placed second on two other occasions)
Regret: first filly to win the Kentucky Derby (1915)
Ribot: Thoroughbred undefeated in sixteen races
Rock Sand: English Triple Crown winner (1903); sire of the dam of Man o' War
Round Table: sire of stakes winners; born in the same barn the same night as Bold Ruler, in 1954
Ruffian: filly champion who won every race she started until her final (and fatal) race
Ruthless: first ever winner of the Belmont Stakes, and the first of only three fillies ever to win the Belmont Stakes
S
Sadler's Wells: one of Europe's most successful sires of the late 20th century
Sardar: stallion presented as a gift to First Lady Jacqueline Kennedy by President Ayub Khan on her visit to Pakistan
Sea Bird: second highest Timeform rated horse (rated 145)
Sea the Stars: first horse ever to win the 2,000 Guineas, Epsom Derby, and Arc de Triomphe in the same year (2009)
Seabiscuit: beat War Admiral in a nationally broadcast 1938 match race; like Phar Lap, raced during the Depression
Seattle Slew: U.S. Triple Crown winner (1977)
Secretariat: U.S. Triple Crown winner (1973); one of the most famous horses in Thoroughbred racing
Sham: The main competitor to Secretariat during the 1973 racing season
Shergar: winner of the 1981 Epsom Derby by a record 10 lengths, the longest winning margin in a race run annually since 1781; kidnapped by the IRA in 1983, and was held for ransom, but the owner syndicate refused to pay, fearing that valuable horses would become targets; the stallion was never found
Silky Sullivan: a racehorse
Sir Winston: Winner of 2019 Belmont Stakes
Skewball: immortalized in 18th century poetry as a sku-ball winning against a Thoroughbred
Smarty Jones: became the first unbeaten Kentucky Derby winner since Seattle Slew in 1977
Spectacular Bid: Hall of Fame champion who went undefeated as a four-year-old, and won 26 of 30 career starts
Steel Dust: 19th-century quarter-mile racing horse[3]
Storm Cat: one of the most successful U.S. sires of the late 20th century
Sunday Silence: winner in the US; champion sire in Japan
Sunline: first Southern Hemisphere horse to top $10million in stakes earnings; three-time Australian (2000-2002); four-time New Zealand (1999-2002) horse of the year; 13-time Group 1 winner
Swale: 1984 Kentucky Derby and Belmont Stakes winner, died eight days after the Belmont win
T
Tanya: second filly ever to win the Belmont Stakes
Tapwrit: won the 2017 Belmont Stakes, and set a new stakes record for the Tampa Bay Derby
Ta Wee: two-time American Champion Sprint Horse, and won her second Fall Highweight Handicap, at 10 stone (140 pounds) and her second Interborough Handicap, at 10 stone 2 pounds (142 pounds)
The Duke: first and second winner of the Grand National
Tiznow: two-time winner of the Breeders' Cup Classic
Tonalist: winner of 2014 Belmont Stakes, and two-time winner of the Jockey Club Gold Cup
Tuscalee: steeplechaser and all-time record holder for most wins in a season, and for most steeplechase wins overall
Twenty Grand: winner of the Kentucky Derby, Belmont, and Travers Stakes, also was champion 3-year-old and Horse of the Year of 1931
Two Lea: successful broodmare and filly winner of the Hollywood Gold Cup
U
Unbreakable: grandsire of great Native Dancer
Unbridled: winner of the Kentucky Derby and Breeders' Cup Classic and sire of the champion sire Unbridled's Song
Unbridled's Song: Breeders' Cup Juvenile winner, and sire of the great Arrogate
V
Vain: champion front runner; great, great grandsire of Black Caviar
Varenne: Italy's most famous harness horse
Vo Rouge: fast frontrunner and 3-time winner of the C F Orr Stakes, had the Vo Rogue Plate named in his honor
Voltaire: winner of the 1828 Doncaster Gold Cup
W
War Admiral: fourth U.S. Triple Crown winner (1937)
War Of Will: Winner of 2019 Preakness Stakes
Whistlejacket: Marquess of Rockingham's racehorse; painted by G. Stubbs (1762)
Winning Colors: third filly to win the Kentucky Derby (1988)
Winx: winner of 33 straight races, including the Cox Plate four times
Wise Dan: two-time American Horse of the Year (2012, 2013); won Breeders' Cup Mile twice (same years)
Whirlaway: fifth American Triple Crown winner
Whisk Broom II: first of four horses ever to win the New York Handicap Triple
X
Xaar: winner of Prix de Cabourg (1997), Prix de la Salamandre (1997)
Xtra Heat: champion 3-year-old filly of 2001, and the only filly to win the Endine stakes twice
Y
Yeats: only horse ever to win 4 Ascot Gold Cups, also won 3 other group 1 races
Your Host: winner of 1950 Santa Anita Derby, 1951 Santa Catalina Handicap, sire of the great Kelso
Z
Zabeel: New Zealand sire of Octagonal and Vengeance of Rain
Zaccio: three-time winner of the Outstanding Steeplechase horse award in the 80s
Zenyatta: won 19 of 20 starts; first mare to win the Breeders' Cup Classic (2009); first to win two different Breeders' Cup races (Ladies' Classic in 2008, Classic in 2009)
Zev: winner of the Belmont Stakes and the Kentucky Derby, as well as winner of a match race against Epsom Derby winner Papyrus
Zippy Chippy: infamous for racing 100 times and losing every single time
Competition horses
Big Ben, Canadian international show jumper and Olympian
Hickstead, Canadian international show jumper and Olympic individual show jumping gold medal winner
Huaso (1933 – August 24, 1961), famous Chilean jumping horse that still holds the record in highest jump: 2.47 m (8ft 1+1⁄4 in)
Midnight inducted into five different halls of fame, this bucking horse famously bucked at the best rodeos throughout the West and Canada
Midnight Sun, two-time Grand Champion and leading foundation sire of the Tennessee Walking Horse breed
Noble Flaire, Morgan horse who was the first to win three Park Harness World Championships at the American Morgan Horse World Championship Horse Show
Radium, outstanding campdrafter; influential sire in Australia
Scamper ProRodeo Hall of Fame horse in barrel racing for hall of fame rider Charmayne James. They won the National Finals Rodeo a consecutive 10 times in a row, a record that still stands today.
Seldom Seen, pony who successfully competed in dressage despite being unusually small
Snowman, former plough horse rescued from being butchered by rider Harry de Lyer; won the 1958 National Horse Show Open Jumper championship against professional and Olympic level competition; twice named the American Horse Shows Association Horse of the Year
Totilas, first horse to score above a 90 in dressage
Touch of Class, bay TB mare, ridden by Joe Fargis, won two gold medals in the 1984 Olympics
Valegro, current world record holder in dressage with 94,3% Royal Dutch Sport Horse, ridden by Charlotte Dujardin
Military horses
See also: List of horses of the American Civil War
Babieca, horse of El Cid
Black Jack, the last Quartermaster-issued U.S. Army horse, died February 6, 1976
Blueskin, one of Washington's two primary mounts during the American Revolutionary War
Bucephalus, favorite horse of Alexander the Great; one of the most famous horses of antiquity; following his death after the Battle of Hydaspes in 326 BCE, Alexander promptly founded the city of Bucephala upon the spot in his memory
Chetak, war horse of Rana Pratap of Mewar in India; died defending its master in 1576 during the Battle of Haldighati
Kirsch, George B. (editor) (1995) "Smuggler vs. Goldsmith Maid, 1876" Sports in North America: A Documentary History, Volume 4: Sports in war, revival and expansion, 1860-1880 Academic International Press, Gulf Breeze, Florida, pp. 206-210, ISBN0-87569-135-8
Denhardt, Robert Moorman (1967) Quarter Horses: A Story of Two Centuries University of Oklahoma Press, Norman, Oklahoma, pp. 20-32, OCLC1381366
Другой контент может иметь иную лицензию. Перед использованием материалов сайта WikiSort.org внимательно изучите правила лицензирования конкретных элементов наполнения сайта.
2019-2025 WikiSort.org - проект по пересортировке и дополнению контента Википедии