How many horses have won the Melbourne Cup more than once?
Known locally as ‘the race that stops a nation’, the Melbourne Cup is run over 3,200 metres, or just shy of two miles in imperial measurements, at Flemington Racecourse, on the banks of the Maribyrnong River in Melbourne, Victoria, on the first Tuesday in November. The race was established in 1861 by the Victorian Turf Club, which, three years later, merged with the competing Victorian Turf Club to form the modern body, the Victoria Racing Club. Nowadays, the Melbourne Cup, which boasts A$8 million in total prize money – of which A$4.4 million goes to the winner – has the distinction of being the most valuable handicap on the whole. It holds wide appeal, with the Australian jokacasino pokies online real money crowd and more.
Generally speaking, multiple winners of the Melboure Cup have been few and far between, although the inaugural winner, Archer, owned and trained by Etienne de Mestre and ridden by John Cutts, went on to become the first dual winner. Indeed, the son of William Tell won by six lengths in 1861 and eight in 1862 and could, conceivably, have become the first triple winner but for being refused entry in 1863, after connections overlooked the deadline for acceptance.
As it was, the next horse to win the Melbourne Cup more than once was Peter Pan, trained by Frank McGrath Snr., who was successful as a three-year-old in 1932 and as a five-year-old in 1934, thereby becoming the first multiple, but non-consecutive, winner. Thereafter, Rain Lover (1968, 1969) and Think Big (1974, 1975) recorded back-to-back victories and Makybe Diva (2003, 2004, 2005) became the first horse to win the Cup three times.
Run annually, over an extended mile and three-quarters on Town Moor, Doncaster in South Yorkshire, in September, the St. Leger is the oldest of the British Classic races. The race was inaugurated, as a two-mile event for three-year-old colts and fillies, on a course incorporatung part of Cantley Common, on September 24, 1776. Two years later, it was transferred to its present location and named after its founder, Colonel (later Major-General) Anthony St. Leger, a former Member of Parliament for the constituency of Great Grimsby, Lincolnshire.
With the Grand National just around the corner now and talk of the favourite potentially romping home, let’s throw caution to the wind and instead go for a ‘no hoper’ or more politely stated ,rank outsider when it comes to our