Kalpana Kalpana (Editor)

Triple Bend

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Sire
  
Never Bend

Dam
  
Triple Orbit

Foaled
  
1968

Species
  
Equus caballus

Parents
  
Never Bend

Earnings
  
366,760 USD

Grandsire
  
Nasrullah

Damsire
  
Gunshot

Country
  
United States

Owner
  
Frank McMahon

Sex
  
Stallion

Trainers
  
Vance Longden (West Coast), William J. Hirsch (East Coast)

Triple bend stakes gr i march 11 2017


Triple Bend (1968–1995) was an American Thoroughbred racehorse who set a world record time of 119.80 for seven furlongs on dirt in winning the 1972 Los Angeles Handicap. [1]

Contents

Triple bend stakes gr i saturday june 25 2016


Background

Bred by Leslie Combs II, Triple Bend was sold at the 1969 Keeneland summer yearling sales for $100,000 to Vancouver industrialist Frank McMahon, the owner of Majestic Prince who won that year's Kentucky Derby and Preakness Stakes. Unfortunately, soon after McMahon purchased Triple Bend, while on a farm he became caught in a fence and his struggles left him partially paralyzed and his euthanasia became a possibility. Nursed back to health, Triple Bend raced once as a juvenile in 1970.

Racing career

Under trainer Vance Longden, in 1971 his best results races was a win in the Contra Costa Stakes plus four second-place finishes in other stakes races. A rapidly improving horse at age four, in 1972 Triple Bend ran second to Unconscious in the Strub Stakes then beat him in winning California's richest and most prestigious race, the Santa Anita Handicap. Triple Bend dead heated with Autobiography for first in the San Fernando Stakes and in winning the Los Angeles Handicap at Hollywood Park Racetrack, set a world record time of 119.80 for seven furlongs. In the late fall, Triple Bend won the Vosburgh Stakes at Aqueduct Race Track in the New York City borough of Queens.

Stud record

Retired to stud duty, Triple Bend's progeny met with only modest racing success. He died on January 31, 1995 at the age of twenty-seven. He was standing at stud at Jackson Farm, owned by Gary L. and Christine Jackson, in Yakima, Washington.

Honors

In 1979, Hollywood Park Racetrack renamed the Lakes And Flowers Handicap in honor of Triple Bend. Since 2004, the Triple Bend Handicap has been a Grade 1 event.

References

Triple Bend Wikipedia