Hurryoff

Hurryoff
SireHaste
GrandsireMaintenant
DamBlue Glass
DamsirePrince Palatine
SexStallion
Foaled1930
CountryUnited States
ColourBlack
BreederJoseph E. Widener
OwnerJoseph E. Widener
TrainerHenry McDaniel
Record7: 3-0-3
EarningsUS$
Major wins
American Classic Race wins:
Belmont Stakes (1933)

Hurryoff (foaled 1930 in Kentucky) was an American Thoroughbred racehorse best known for winning the third leg of the 1933 U.S. Triple Crown series. He was bred and raced by Joseph Widener, owner of the prestigious Elmendorf Farm in Lexington, Kentucky and president of Belmont Park and Hialeah Park racetracks. Hurryoff was sired by Withers Stakes winner, Haste. He was out of the mare Blue Glass, who was also the dam of Unbreakable who sired Polynesian. Hurryoff's damsire was the outstanding British runner, Prince Palatine who had stood at Edward F. Simms' Xalapa Farm in Kentucky.

Racing at age three, Hurryoff was entered in the Belmont Stakes, the third leg of the U.S. Triple Crown series. Lightly regarded, in his last race Hurryoff had gone unclaimed for $4,000. Although neither Kentucky Derby winner Brokers Tip, nor the Preakness Stakes victor, Head Play, was entered in the mile and a half Belmont Stakes, Hurryoff was still a 12:1 longshot when he won the richest race of the year for three-year-olds.[1]

The Belmont would be Hurryoff's only significant race win of his limited career and his last start. For more than a decade owner Joseph Widener had been donating stallions to the Breeding Bureau of the Jockey Club including Hurryoff's grandsire, Maintenant. The Great Depression affected all aspects of horse racing and in 1933 yearling prices fell to record lows,[2] and in August 1934 Widener gifted Hurryoff to the Remount Association and the Breeding Bureau.[3]

  1. ^ "Eugene Register-Guard - Google News Archive Search".
  2. ^ "YEARLING PRICES REACH LOW FIGURE; Slump Caused by Repressive Legislation, According to Gerry and Field. 1933 TOTAL IS $525,630 Sum for State Far Below Previous Two Years -- Breeding Bureau to Continue". The New York Times. 24 December 1933.
  3. ^ "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2012-10-24. Retrieved 2017-07-06.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)