Rahul Sharma (Editor)

Gurner's Lane

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Dam
  
Taiona (NZ)

Country
  
New Zealand

Species
  
Equus caballus

Sex
  
Gelding

Breeder
  
Cambridge Stud

Foaled
  
7 October 1978

Colour
  
Chestnut

Parents
  
Sir Tristram

Earnings
  
558,400 USD

Grandsire
  
Sir Ivor

Gurner's Lane wwwraceratecomGurnersLanejpg

Damsire
  
Sovereign Edition (IRE)

Owner
  
Williams St. Syndicate No. 2

1982 vrc melbourne cup gurner s lane


Gurner's Lane (foaled 1978) was a Thoroughbred racehorse who was the 1983 champion. He is best remembered for winning the Caulfield and Melbourne Cups double in 1982. Gurner's Lane was just the seventh of 11 horses to complete this rare double.

Contents

Foaled in New Zealand, and trained by Geoff Murphy, Gurner's Lane was sired by Sir Tristram out of Taiona, who also produced the Group One winners Sovereign Red and Trichelle (both full siblings), and was named New Zealand Broodmare of the Year in 1981 and 1983. Gurner's Lane was the first of three Melbourne Cup winners by Sir Tristram, preceding Empire Rose (1988) and Brew (2000), and was bred on the same cross as Empire Rose, as both were out of Sovereign Edition mares.

Melbourne cup 1996 saintly


Racing career

Prior to the Caulfield and Melbourne Cups, Gurner's Lane had won the VRC and AJC St Legers, during the autumn of 1982, and had run third in the AJC Derby. Returning at four years, he won the Newcastle Gold Cup and was fourth in The Metropolitan. Ridden in the Caulfield Cup by Brent Thomson, at 53.5 kilograms, Gurner's Lane defeated Gala Mascot and Veloso. He was penalised two-and-a-half kilograms for this victory, which took his Melbourne Cup weight to 56 kilograms. For a four-year-old gelding, this was just one kilogram below weight-for-age, and, relative to the weight-for-age scale, was the same weight as the older Kingston Town, then a winner of 13 Group One races. Turning for home in the Melbourne Cup, Kingston Town sprinted clear for his jockey, Malcolm Johnston, and appeared likely to win until Mick Dittman brought Gurner's Lane through on the rails to bring 'sadness to a million lovers of racing'. In the early part of 1983, Gurner's Lane broke down but had done enough to be named Australia's champion racehorse. After a lengthy break, he returned to the track but failed to recapture his best form and was retired.

References

Gurner's Lane Wikipedia