Triumph Hurdle
The Triumph Hurdle is a Grade 1 National Hunt hurdle race in Great Britain, restricted to four-year-old thoroughbreds, contested over a distance of two miles and 179 yards (2m 1f) at Cheltenham Racecourse.[1] It forms the opening contest on the final day of the annual Cheltenham Festival, typically held in mid-March, and is currently sponsored by JCB as the JCB Triumph Hurdle (as of 2025).[2][1] Established in 1939 at Hurst Park Racecourse in Surrey, the race was originally run over two miles there until the track's closure in 1962; it was not contested from 1940 to 1949 due to World War II, after which it relocated to Cheltenham in 1965 and quickly became a fixture of the Festival.[3][1] Over the decades, it has evolved into one of the most prestigious juvenile hurdles in the sport, emphasizing speed and potential in young horses transitioning from flat racing or earlier jumps contests.[1] The event carries a winner's prize of £84,405 from a total prize fund of £150,000 (2025), reflecting its status among the Festival's highlight races.[1][4] The Triumph Hurdle is renowned for identifying future stars of National Hunt racing, with several winners progressing to top-level success.[3] Four of its champions—Clair Soleil (1953), Persian War (1967), Kribensis (1989), and Katchit (2008)—later claimed the Champion Hurdle title, while Tiger Roll (2014) went on to win two Grand Nationals in 2018 and 2019.[1][3] Trainer Nicky Henderson holds the record with seven victories, including notable successes with horses like Zarkandar (2011) and Peace And Co (2015).[3] Recent trends highlight winners with strong recent form, often unbeaten or near-unbeaten in hurdles prior to the race, and sourced from high-class flat pedigrees.[1]Race Information
Event Format and Conditions
The Triumph Hurdle is a Grade 1 National Hunt hurdle race restricted to four-year-old horses, serving as the premier championship for juvenile hurdlers in the jumps season.[1] As a novice event, it is open to horses that have not won a hurdle race prior to the current National Hunt season, allowing competitors to have recorded victories over hurdles during the ongoing campaign while maintaining their novice status.[5] From the 2025/26 season, eligibility for Grade 1 juvenile hurdles requires a BHA rating of 110 or higher.[6] The race is contested over a distance of 2 miles and 179 yards (approximately 3,382 meters) on the left-handed New Course at Cheltenham, featuring eight hurdles.[1] Colts and geldings carry 11 stone 2 pounds (156 pounds), while fillies receive a 7-pound sex allowance, reducing their weight to 10 stone 9 pounds (149 pounds).[7] The maximum field size is 22 runners, a limit set for safety on the 2-mile 1-furlong hurdle start on the New Course for novice contests.[8] Prize money totals £150,000, with £84,405 awarded to the winner, £31,800 to the second-place finisher, and decreasing amounts to the subsequent placed horses.[1]Venue, Sponsorship, and Scheduling
The Triumph Hurdle is held at Prestbury Park, the main venue of Cheltenham Racecourse in Gloucestershire, England, where it is contested on the New Course. This left-handed track spans approximately 1 mile 4 furlongs in circumference and features undulating turf that includes a notable uphill finish and a steep downhill run early in the race, demanding both stamina and precise jumping from juvenile hurdlers. The race incorporates eight hurdles over its 2 miles and 179 yards distance, with placements that emphasize acceleration in the straight while testing adaptability to the course's rolling terrain.[1] Scheduled annually as part of the Cheltenham Festival, the Triumph Hurdle takes place on the fourth and final day of the event, typically the Friday in mid-March. The 2025 edition occurred on March 14, serving as the opening race at 13:20 local time, following the festival's traditional four-day format from Tuesday to Friday. This timing aligns with the peak of the National Hunt season, drawing large crowds to the racecourse.[9] Sponsorship for the Triumph Hurdle has evolved since its inception at Cheltenham in 1967, beginning with the Daily Express as title sponsor from 1965 to 1996, followed by the Elite Racing Club from 1997 to 2001. JCB, a construction equipment manufacturer, assumed sponsorship duties in 2002 and has renewed the agreement multiple times, including extensions in 2010 and 2014, securing its role through at least 2025. This long-term partnership has elevated the race's profile within the festival and contributed to increases in the prize fund, which reached £150,000 total value for the 2025 running, with the winner receiving £84,405.[10][11][4]Historical Background
Origins and Establishment
The Triumph Hurdle was established in 1939 as a National Hunt hurdle race restricted to four-year-old juveniles, initially run over approximately two miles at Hurst Park racecourse in Surrey.[3] The inaugural running was won by the French-trained Grey Talk, ridden by Serge Rochet for trainer George Batchelor, marking it as a modest contest in the calendar of jump racing at the time. Organized under the governance of the National Hunt Committee, the body responsible for regulating steeplechases and hurdle races in Britain, the event began as a limited-weight handicap aimed at emerging young talent in the sport.[12] The race was discontinued from 1940 to 1949 due to the disruptions of World War II, which halted many non-essential sporting events across Britain, including much of the National Hunt schedule.[3] It was revived in 1950 at the same venue, reverting to standard conditions as a set-weights juvenile hurdle without the handicap element of its debut.[13] The postwar renewal was captured by another French raider, Abrupto, trained in France and ridden by Roger Mantelin, underscoring the early international appeal of the fixture among European connections. In its formative years at Hurst Park, the Triumph Hurdle served as a key early-season target for juvenile hurdlers, complementing the senior divisions of the discipline such as the Champion Hurdle.[7] With prize money reflecting the era's modest scale—comparable to other mid-tier National Hunt events of the 1930s and 1950s—the race quickly gained traction as a proving ground for young horses, particularly those from French stables that dominated the honor roll in the immediate postwar period.[14] This positioning laid the groundwork for its eventual elevation within the broader structure of British jump racing, including its transfer to the Cheltenham Festival in 1965 following the closure of Hurst Park.[13]Evolution and Key Developments
The Triumph Hurdle has transformed from a niche juvenile contest into a pivotal highlight of the Cheltenham Festival, underscoring the professionalization of National Hunt racing and the growing global appeal of the event. Following its relocation to Cheltenham in 1965, the race benefited from the expansion of supporting juvenile hurdles in the late 1960s and 1970s, including the establishment of key trials like the Finesse Juvenile Hurdle in 1985, which helped refine preparation for four-year-old contenders and elevated the overall standard of juvenile hurdling.[15] This period marked the beginning of increased international interest, particularly from Irish stables, setting the stage for the race's modern prominence as a launchpad for elite talent. A major milestone came with the race's promotion to Grade 1 status in 1980, aligning with the Cheltenham Festival's broader shift toward higher-profile, pattern racing and attracting more overseas entries, which diversified the field and intensified competition. The 21st century has seen Irish dominance take hold, especially since the 2010s, with trainer Willie Mullins claiming multiple victories—including Farclas in 2018, Vauban in 2022, and Lossiemouth in 2023—highlighting the cross-border rivalry and Ireland's superior breeding and training pipelines for juveniles.[1] Mullins extended this run with Majborough in 2024 and Poniros (a 100/1 shock) in 2025. The 2021 edition, won by Quilixios, was run behind closed doors amid the COVID-19 pandemic, depriving the event of its traditional electric atmosphere while underscoring racing's resilience during global disruptions.[16][17][18] Beyond its competitive evolution, the Triumph Hurdle holds broader significance as a proving ground for future stars, having produced four subsequent Champion Hurdle winners: Clair Soleil (1953 Triumph, 1954 Champion), Persian War (1967 Triumph, 1968–1970 Champion), Kribensis (1988 Triumph, 1990 Champion), and Katchit (2007 Triumph, 2008 Champion). This legacy emphasizes its role in nurturing horses capable of the demanding double, contributing to the race's cultural cachet within the sport. Attendance at the Cheltenham Festival has surged in tandem, from modest crowds estimated at around 10,000 per day in the 1950s to over 57,000 daily in recent editions, with a total of approximately 230,000 visitors in 2024 (falling to 218,839 in 2025), reflecting the event's transformation into a major sporting spectacle.[1][19] Sponsorship shifts have further amplified the race's visibility, transitioning from early backers like the Daily Express (1965–1996) and Elite Racing Club (1997–2001) to JCB's long-term partnership starting in 2002, which has been renewed multiple times and integrated with expanded television broadcasts on ITV, reaching millions and enhancing commercial appeal. These developments have cemented the Triumph Hurdle as a cornerstone of the Festival, blending tradition with contemporary racing dynamics.[10]Records and Statistics
Performance and Speed Records
The Triumph Hurdle has seen a range of impressive equine performances over its history, with winning times influenced heavily by ground conditions and field size. The fastest recorded winning time is 3:51.20, achieved by Detroit City in 2006 on good ground, setting a benchmark for speed in the race.[20] This performance highlighted the potential for juveniles to deliver rapid times on firmer surfaces, where the 2-mile-179-yards course allows for sustained pace. In terms of dominance, the largest winning margin stands at 12 lengths, recorded by Oh So Risky in 1991, demonstrating exceptional superiority in a field that underscored the horse's class.[21] Such margins are rare, often occurring when conditions favor a standout contender untroubled by interference. Field sizes have varied significantly, with the largest entry of 24 runners occurring twice—in 2005 and 2007—reflecting peaks in juvenile talent pools during those years.[20] Conversely, heavy ground has led to chaotic renewals with fewer finishers, as seen in earlier editions like 1967, where adverse conditions caused numerous fallers and tested equine stamina over speed. The slowest winning time is 4:04.40, posted by Peace And Co in 2015 on soft ground, illustrating how testing conditions can extend times by over 45 seconds compared to the fastest efforts.[20] In 2025, Poniros won in 4:02.10 on good to soft ground in a field of 17 runners.[22] Overall trends show an average winning time of approximately 4:00, with variations tied to weather; firmer ground often yields sub-4:00 clocks, while recent winners on soft or heavier surfaces have hovered around 3:55 to 4:10, emphasizing adaptability as a key performance metric.[20]Training, Jockey, and Ownership Records
Nicky Henderson holds the record as the most successful trainer in the Triumph Hurdle's history with seven victories: First Bout (1985), Alone Success (1987), Katarino (1999), Zaynar (2009), Soldatino (2010), Peace And Co (2015), and Pentland Hills (2019).[10][23] Willie Mullins has secured six wins overall, including Scolardy (2002), Burning Victory (2020), Vauban (2022), Lossiemouth (2023), Majborough (2024), and Poniros (2025), the latter marking a historic 100-1 upset on the horse's hurdling debut.[7][24][23] Barry Geraghty is the leading jockey with five successes, riding Spectroscope to victory in 2003, Zaynar in 2009, Soldatino in 2010, Peace And Co in 2015, and Ivanovich Gorbatov in 2016, often partnering Henderson's runners during his tenure as stable jockey.[10][25] Recent trends highlight Irish jockey dominance, with Irish riders claiming the last seven consecutive wins from 2020 to 2025 (including Rachael Blackmore on Quilixios in 2021, Paul Townend on Vauban (2022) and Lossiemouth (2023), Mark Walsh on Majborough (2024), and Jonjo O'Neill Jr. on Poniros (2025)).[7][26] J. P. McManus stands as the most successful owner with five triumphs, encompassing Ivanovich Gorbatov (2016), Defi Du Seuil (2017), Vauban (2022), Lossiemouth (2023), and Majborough (2024), frequently through partnerships with Irish trainers like Aidan O'Brien and Willie Mullins.[27] The 2025 winner Poniros was owned by Tony Bloom.[24] Syndicates have also featured prominently, such as the Owners Group with Pentland Hills in 2019 and other collaborative efforts supporting UK-based successes.[28] Since 2000, approximately 70% of Triumph Hurdle winners have been trained in either Ireland or the UK, with a strong emphasis on horses showing prior success in juvenile trials; for instance, nine of the last 12 winners (as of 2025) were Irish-trained, underscoring the cross-border preparation common in modern editions.[7][29]Winners and Achievements
List of Past Winners
The Triumph Hurdle has been run annually since its inception in 1939, with no races held from 1940 to 1949 due to World War II, in 1963–1964 due to track relocation issues, and in 2001 due to the foot-and-mouth disease outbreak. The following table provides a complete chronological list of winners, including jockey, trainer, owner, winning time, margin of victory, number of runners, and ground conditions where available. Data is sourced from official race records and reputable racing archives.[1]| Year | Winner | Jockey | Trainer | Owner | Winning Time | Margin | Number of Runners | Ground Conditions |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1939 | Grey Talk | Serge Rochet | George Batchelor | Not recorded | Not recorded | Not recorded | Not recorded | Good |
| 1940–1949 | No race (World War II) | - | - | - | - | - | - | - |
| 1950 | Abrupto | Roger Mantelin | E. Diggle | Not recorded | Not recorded | Not recorded | Not recorded | Good to Firm |
| 1951 | Blue Song II | Fernand Thirion | Georges Pelat | Not recorded | Not recorded | Not recorded | Not recorded | Good |
| 1952 | Hoggar | Roger Triboit | John Cunnington | Not recorded | Not recorded | Not recorded | Not recorded | Good |
| 1953 | Clair Soleil | Fred Winter | François Mathet | Mme François Dupré | Not recorded | Not recorded | Not recorded | Not recorded |
| 1954 | Prince Charlemagne | Lester Piggott | Tommy Carey | Not recorded | Not recorded | Not recorded | Not recorded | Good |
| 1955 | Kwannin | Pierre Delfarguiel | Alec Head | Not recorded | Not recorded | Not recorded | Not recorded | Good |
| 1956 | Square Dance | Michael Scudamore | Fulke Walwyn | Not recorded | Not recorded | Not recorded | Not recorded | Good to Firm |
| 1957 | Meritorius | Denis Dillon | Peter Thrale | Not recorded | Not recorded | Not recorded | Not recorded | Good |
| 1958 | Pundit | Harry Sprague | Staff Ingham | Not recorded | Not recorded | Not recorded | Not recorded | Good to Firm |
| 1959 | Amazon's Choice | Johnny Gilbert | Peter Thrale | Not recorded | Not recorded | Not recorded | Not recorded | Good |
| 1960 | Turpial | Arthur Freeman | Peter Cazalet | Not recorded | Not recorded | Not recorded | Not recorded | Good |
| 1961 | Cantab | Fred Winter | Ryan Price | Not recorded | Not recorded | Not recorded | Not recorded | Good to Firm |
| 1962 | Beaver II | Josh Gifford | Ryan Price | Not recorded | Not recorded | Not recorded | Not recorded | Good |
| 1963 | No race | - | - | - | - | - | - | - |
| 1964 | No race | - | - | - | - | - | - | - |
| 1965 | Blarney Beacon | Geordie Ramshaw | Ron Smyth | Not recorded | Not recorded | Not recorded | Not recorded | Good |
| 1966 | Black Ice | Bobby Beasley | Arthur Thomas | Not recorded | Not recorded | Not recorded | Not recorded | Good |
| 1967 | Persian War | Jimmy Uttley | Arthur Stephenson | Henry Alper | Not recorded | Not recorded | Not recorded | Not recorded |
| 1968 | England's Glory | Jimmy Uttley | Staff Ingham | Not recorded | Not recorded | Not recorded | Not recorded | Good to Firm |
| 1969 | Coral Diver | Terry Biddlecombe | Fred Rimell | Not recorded | Not recorded | Not recorded | Not recorded | Good |
| 1970 | Varma | Brian Barker | Mick Masson | Not recorded | Not recorded | Not recorded | Not recorded | Soft |
| 1971 | Boxer | Jimmy Uttley | Ron Smyth | Not recorded | Not recorded | Not recorded | Not recorded | Heavy |
| 1972 | Zarib | Bill Smith | Fred Rimell | Not recorded | Not recorded | Not recorded | Not recorded | Good to Soft |
| 1973 | Moonlight Bay | Johnny Haine | Ryan Price | Not recorded | Not recorded | Not recorded | Not recorded | Good |
| 1974 | Attivo | Robert Hughes | Cyril Mitchell | Not recorded | Not recorded | Not recorded | Not recorded | Soft |
| 1975 | Royal Epic | Fred McKenna | Vernon Cross | Not recorded | Not recorded | Not recorded | Not recorded | Good to Soft |
| 1976 | Peterhof | Jonjo O'Neill | Mick Easterby | Not recorded | Not recorded | Not recorded | Not recorded | Good |
| 1977 | Meladon | Tommy Carberry | Adrian Maxwell | Not recorded | Not recorded | Not recorded | Not recorded | Good |
| 1978 | Connaught Ranger | John Burke | Fred Rimell | Not recorded | Not recorded | Not recorded | Not recorded | Good to Firm |
| 1979 | Pollardstown | Philip Blacker | Stan Mellor | Not recorded | Not recorded | Not recorded | Not recorded | Good |
| 1980 | Heighlin | Steve Jobar | David Elsworth | Not recorded | Not recorded | Not recorded | Not recorded | Good |
| 1981 | Baron Blakeney | Paul Leach | Martin Pipe | Not recorded | Not recorded | Not recorded | Not recorded | Good to Soft |
| 1982 | Shiny Copper | Allen Webb | Dina Smith | Not recorded | Not recorded | Not recorded | Not recorded | Soft |
| 1983 | Saxon Farm | Mark Perrett | Stan Mellor | Not recorded | Not recorded | Not recorded | Not recorded | Good |
| 1984 | Northern Game | Tommy Ryan | Edward O'Grady | Not recorded | Not recorded | Not recorded | Not recorded | Good |
| 1985 | First Bout | Steve Smith Eccles | Nicky Henderson | Not recorded | Not recorded | Not recorded | Not recorded | Soft |
| 1986 | Solar Cloud | Peter Scudamore | David Nicholson | Not recorded | Not recorded | Not recorded | Not recorded | Good to Soft |
| 1987 | Alone Success | Steve Smith Eccles | Nicky Henderson | Not recorded | Not recorded | Not recorded | Not recorded | Good |
| 1988 | Kribensis | Richard Dunwoody | Michael Stoute | Sheikh Mohammed | Not recorded | Not recorded | Not recorded | Not recorded |
| 1989 | Ikdam | Nigel Coleman | Richard Holder | Not recorded | Not recorded | Not recorded | Not recorded | Good |
| 1990 | Rare Holiday | Brendan Sheridan | Dermot Weld | Not recorded | Not recorded | Not recorded | Not recorded | Soft |
| 1991 | Oh So Risky | Paul Holley | David Elsworth | Not recorded | Not recorded | Not recorded | Not recorded | Good to Soft |
| 1992 | Duke of Monmouth | Mark Richards | Simon Sherwood | Not recorded | Not recorded | Not recorded | Not recorded | Good |
| 1993 | Shawiya | Charlie Swan | Michael O'Brien | Not recorded | Not recorded | Not recorded | Not recorded | Soft |
| 1994 | Mysilv | Adrian Maguire | David Nicholson | Not recorded | Not recorded | Not recorded | Not recorded | Heavy |
| 1995 | Kissair | Jonothan Lower | Martin Pipe | Not recorded | Not recorded | Not recorded | Not recorded | Soft |
| 1996 | Paddy's Return | Richard Dunwoody | Ferdy Murphy | Not recorded | Not recorded | Not recorded | Not recorded | Good to Soft |
| 1997 | Commanche Court | Norman Williamson | Ted Walsh | Not recorded | Not recorded | Not recorded | Not recorded | Good |
| 1998 | Upgrade | Carl Llewellyn | Nigel Twiston-Davies | Not recorded | Not recorded | Not recorded | Not recorded | Good to Firm |
| 1999 | Katarino | Mick Fitzgerald | Nicky Henderson | Not recorded | Not recorded | Not recorded | Not recorded | Good |
| 2000 | Snow Drop | Thierry Doumen | François Doumen | Not recorded | Not recorded | Not recorded | Not recorded | Good to Soft |
| 2001 | No Race (Foot and Mouth disease) | - | - | - | - | - | - | - |
| 2002 | Scolardy | Charlie Swan | Willie Mullins | Not recorded | Not recorded | Not recorded | Not recorded | Good |
| 2003 | Spectroscope | Barry Geraghty | Jonjo O'Neill | Not recorded | Not recorded | Not recorded | Not recorded | Good to Soft |
| 2004 | Made In Japan | Richard Johnson | Philip Hobbs | Not recorded | 4m 10.6s | 1/2 length | 23 | Good to Soft |
| 2005 | Penzance | Robert Thornton | Alan King | Not recorded | 3m 59.3s | 3 lengths | 22 | Good |
| 2006 | Detroit City | Richard Johnson | Philip Hobbs | Not recorded | 4m 0.7s | 2 1/2 lengths | 24 | Good to Soft |
| 2007 | Katchit | Robert Thornton | Alan King | Not recorded | 3m 57.5s | 2 3/4 lengths | 20 | Good |
| 2008 | Celestial Halo | Ruby Walsh | Paul Nicholls | Not recorded | 4m 5.8s | 3/4 length | 20 | Soft |
| 2009 | Zaynar | Barry Geraghty | Nicky Henderson | Not recorded | 3m 59.2s | 1 3/4 lengths | 18 | Good to Soft |
| 2010 | Soldatino | Barry Geraghty | Nicky Henderson | Not recorded | 4m 4.3s | 1 1/2 lengths | 18 | Soft |
| 2011 | Zarkandar | Daryl Jacob | Paul Nicholls | Not recorded | 3m 59.7s | 1 3/4 lengths | 20 | Good |
| 2012 | Countrywide Flame | Dougie Costello | John Quinn | Not recorded | 4m 0.1s | 4 1/2 lengths | 23 | Good to Soft |
| 2013 | Our Conor | Bryan Cooper | Dessie Hughes | Not recorded | 4m 6.7s | 9 1/2 lengths | 21 | Soft |
| 2014 | Tiger Roll | Davy Russell | Gordon Elliott | Not recorded | 4m 14.4s | 5 lengths | 22 | Soft |
| 2015 | Peace And Co | Barry Geraghty | Nicky Henderson | Not recorded | 3m 58.6s | 8 lengths | 20 | Soft |
| 2016 | Ivanovich Gorbatov | Barry Geraghty | Aidan O'Brien | Not recorded | 4m 0.2s | 2 1/4 lengths | 19 | Soft |
| 2017 | Defi du Seuil | Richard Johnson | Philip Hobbs | Not recorded | 3m 58.8s | 3 lengths | 18 | Good to Soft |
| 2018 | Farclas | Jack Kennedy | Gordon Elliott | Not recorded | 4m 7.5s | 7 lengths | 17 | Soft |
| 2019 | Pentland Hills | Nico de Boinville | Nicky Henderson | Owners Group | 4m 1.2s | 3 1/2 lengths | 18 | Soft |
| 2020 | Burning Victory | Paul Townend | Willie Mullins | Not recorded | 4m 3.6s | 1/2 length | 13 | Soft |
| 2021 | Quilixios | Rachael Blackmore | Henry de Bromhead | Not recorded | 4m 0.8s | 3 1/2 lengths | 9 | Soft |
| 2022 | Vauban | Paul Townend | Willie Mullins | Mrs J Magnier, M Tabor & D Smith | 3m 58.4s | 3 1/2 lengths | 12 | Good to Soft |
| 2023 | Lossiemouth | Paul Townend | Willie Mullins | Mrs J Magnier, M Tabor & D Smith | 3m 58.9s | 1 1/2 lengths | 14 | Soft |
| 2024 | Majborough | Mark Walsh | Willie Mullins | Mrs J Magnier, M Tabor & D Smith | 4m 0.8s | 2 3/4 lengths | 13 | Soft |
| 2025 | Poniros | Jonjo O'Neill jnr | Willie Mullins | Tony Bloom | 3:52.10 | 2½ lengths | 18 | Good to Soft |