Nijinsky

The English Triple Crown – that is, the 2,000 Guineas, Derby and St. Leger – may not be the sought-after prize it once was, but the fact remains that Nijinksy, who won all three races, among others, during his three-year-old campaign in 1970 was the last horse to win it. Ninjinsky was owned by American businessman Charles Engelhard Jr., whose wife, Jane, was responsible for naming him after Russian-born ballet dancer Vaslav Nijinsky, and trained by Vincent O’Brien Ballydoyle, Co. Tipperary. He was ridden, in Ireland, by Liam Ward and elsewhere by Lester Piggott.

Nijinksy tasted defeat just twice, on the last two starts of his career. He was beaten a head, under controversial cirucmstances, by Sassafras, ridden by Yves Saint-Martin, in the Prix de l’Arc de Triomphe at Longchamp in October 1970 and, shortly afterwards, three-quarters of a length by the unfancied five-year-old Lorenzaccio, ridden by Geoff Lewis, in the Champion Stakes at Newmarket. On the first occasion, Nijinsky suffered an interrupted passage when attempting to challenge and shied away from the whip in the closing stages, but Piggott bore the brunt of the criticism for riding an ill-judged race.

Despite winning his first 11 races, including the Triple Crown, over distances between six furlongs and a mile and three-quarters, Nijinsky was awarded a Timeform Annual Rating of just 138. Such a rating places him in the ‘top class’ category, but is 2lb shy of the 140 required to make him one of ‘greats’ of the Timeform era, which began shortly after World War II.

Nijinsky was subsequently syndicated for a hefty $5.44 million for stud duties and stood at Clairborne Farm in Paris, Kentucky for the whole of his career as a stallion. He became leading sire in Great Britain and Ireland, with progeny including the Derby winners Golden Fleece, Shahrastani and Lammtarra and the 2,000 Guineas winner Shadeed.

Aldaniti

As famous horses go, Aldaniti became so well known that his story, and that of his jockey, Bob Champion, was immortalised in the 1984 film ‘Champions’, starring John Hurt as Champion. The story revolves around the 1981 Grand National, which Aldaniti, the 10/1 second favourite, beat Spartan Missile, the 8/1 favourite, by four lengths. However, that bare result was merely the closing chapter in what Champion later described as a “fairytale come true”.

Placed in both the Cheltenham Gold Cup and the Scottish Grand National in 1979, Aldaniti, not for the first time in his career, sustained a serious leg injury at Sandown Park later that year and was sidelined for over a year. Meanwhile, Champion, 31, stable jockey to Josh Gifford at Findon, West Sussex and at the height of his career, was diagnosed with testicular cancer in July 1979. He required an orchidectomy, followed by a combination chemotherapy regimen, but eventually recovered sufficiently to return to racing, as did Aldaniti. Following a remarkable course of events, Aldaniti emerged as a bona fide contender for the Grand National when winning the Whitbread Trial Chase, run over three miles at Ascot, under Champion in February 1981.

Of course, the best was yet to come. Their tear-jerking victory at Aintree on April 4, 1981 made Aldaniti and Champion household names and thousands of well-wishers turned out to welcome the horse home to Downs Stables in Findon. Champion rode Aldaniti, by then a 12-year-old, again in the 1982 Grand National, but the partnership made it no further than the very first fence.

Subsequently retired to the farm belonging to his owner, Nick Embiricos, in Kirdford, West Sussex, Aldaniti “worked tirelessly”, as Champion put it, to help raise money for the Bob Champion Cancer Fund. He died peacefully, aged 27, and was buried in the paddock where he spent his dotage.