Northern Dancer

racehorse
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Northern Dancer, (foaled 1961), Canadian racehorse (Thoroughbred) who in 1964 won the Kentucky Derby and the Preakness Stakes but lost at the Belmont Stakes, ending his bid for the coveted Triple Crown of American horse racing.

Northern Dancer was bred on the Oshawa, Ontario, farm of his owner, E.P. Taylor, one of Canada’s wealthiest men and the chairman of the Ontario Jockey Club. As a two-year-old, the colt won seven of nine races and had a winning streak of eight races leading up to the 1964 Kentucky Derby. Taylor hoped his colt would emulate another Canadian-owned horse, Sir Barton, who in 1919 became American horse racing’s first Triple Crown champion. Despite Northern Dancer’s record, the oddsmaker of the Derby had him at 5–2 odds, second to the California-bred Hill Rise, who also was on an eight-victory streak.

Bill Hartack, eventual winner of more than 4,000 races, was Northern Dancer’s jockey, and Bill Shoemaker, who would total over 8,800 wins in his career, was on Hill Rise. The Derby was a duel between the two colts, and Northern Dancer ultimately prevailed—but only by a neck in the record time of two minutes flat. He was the first Canadian-born horse to win the Kentucky Derby. (Sir Barton, although Canadian-owned, had been foaled in Kentucky.)

Field of race horses at the clubhouse turn during the 133rd running of the Kentucky Derby at Churchill Downs in Louisville Kentucky May 5, 2007. Thoroughbred horse racing
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A field of only six were in the paddock for the Preakness Stakes, and once again Hill Rise was the favourite. Northern Dancer was the second choice at 8–5 odds but won easily by two and a quarter lengths over Hill Rise.

The Belmont Stakes was run at the Aqueduct Racetrack in New York because repairs were being made at Belmont Park. With a then-record crowd in attendance (61,215), Northern Dancer was decisively defeated, finishing third, some six lengths behind the winner, Quadrangle, who had won only three of eight races that year. Northern Dancer was inducted into the National Museum of Racing’s Hall of Fame in 1976 and died in 1990.

Marvin Drager