Girish Mahajan (Editor)

Scottish Champion Hurdle

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Inaugurated
  
1966

Sponsor
  
QTS

Surface
  
Turf

Race type
  
Hurdle race

Website
  
Ayr

Distance
  
3,219 m

Location
  
Ayr Racecourse Ayr, Scotland

Golden cygnet scottish champion hurdle 1978


The Scottish Champion Hurdle is a Grade 2 National Hunt hurdle race in Scotland which is open to horses aged four years or older. It is run at Ayr, South Ayrshire, over a distance of about 2 miles (3,219 metres), and during its running there are nine hurdles to be jumped. It is a limited handicap race, and it is scheduled to take place each year in April.

Contents

The event was established in 1966, and the inaugural winner was Blue Venom. For a period it was classed at Listed level, and it was promoted to Grade 2 status in 1991. The race used to be held on the day before the Scottish Grand National, but both events have taken place on the same day since 1994. Its present sponsor, QTS, has backed the race since 2013.

Several winners of the Scottish Champion Hurdle have also achieved victory in the Champion Hurdle at the Cheltenham Festival. The most recent was Alderbrook, the winner of the latter contest in 1995. Captain Christy won the race in 1973, the year before winning the Cheltenham Gold Cup as a novice. Another Irish-trained horse, Golden Cygnet, suffered fatal injuries when he fell in the 1978 running.

Scottish champion hurdle


Records

Most successful horse (2 wins):

  • Sea Pigeon – 1977, 1978
  • Birds Nest – 1979, 1981
  • Leading jockey (3 wins):

  • Andrew Turnell – Bird's Nest (1979, 1981), Secret Ballot (1980)
  • Peter Scudamore – Royal Vulcan (1983), Rushmoor (1984), Granville Again (1992)
  • Richard Dunwoody – Alderbrook (1996), Blowing Wind (1998), Fadalko (1999)
  • Richard Johnson - In Contrast (2003), Noble Request (2006), Cheltenian (2015)
  • Leading trainer (4 wins):

  • Martin Pipe – Sayparee (1990), Granville Again (1992), Blowing Wind (1998), Copeland (2004)
  • Winners

  • Weights given in stones and pounds; Amateur jockeys indicated by "Mr".
  • References

    Scottish Champion Hurdle Wikipedia