Willie the Kid

Willie the Kid
SireRoselyon
GrandsireSunstar
DamMintwina
DamsireMint Briar
SexStallion
Foaled1937
CountryCanada
ColourBay
BreederWilliam F. Morrissey
OwnerMildred A. Kane
TrainerGordon J. McCann
Record10: 3-4-0
Earnings$9,765
Major wins
Canadian Classic Race wins:
King's Plate (1940)

Willie the Kid (foaled 1937 in Ontario) was a Canadian Thoroughbred racehorse best known for winning the eighty-first running of the King's Plate,[1] Canada's most important race and the oldest continuously run race in North America,[2] having been founded in 1860.[3]

Bred by Willie Morrissey, Willie the Kid got his owner's nickname. He was out of the mare Mintwina, who was also the dam of Morrissey's Canadian Horse Racing Hall of Fame inductee, Bunty Lawless. He was sired by Roselyon who had sired the 1930 King's Plate winner, Aymond. Roselyon was a son of the 1911 Epsom Derby winner and British Horseracing Hall of Fame inductee, Sunstar.

Willie the Kid raced under the name of Willie Morrissey's girlfriend, Miss Mildred A. Kane. Trained by Gordon McCann, the oft-injured colt did not race at age two but as a three-year-old won three times in ten starts. Ridden by Ronnie Nash, in the May 18, 1940 King's Plate Willie the Kid beat a field that included Curwen, the Harry Hatch-owned colt who had been sent off as the betting favorite. The victory marked the first time a female owner won the Plate, and it was the first of six career Plate wins for trainer Gordon McCann.

In the ensuing Prince of Wales Stakes, Willie the Kid again beat third-place finisher Curwen but was second to race winner, Hood. Willie the Kid came out of the race with an injury that ended his racing career. He was retired to stud duty but was not a success.

  1. ^ "2017 Woodbine Media Guide (archived)" (PDF). Woodbine Entertainment Group. Retrieved 19 July 2024.
  2. ^ "Thoroughbred Report > Frequently Asked Questions > Horse Racing History, etc.", www.thoroughbredreport.com, retrieved 14 July 2016
  3. ^ "Condensed History Of The Longest Established Race Of North America". Daily Racing Form at University of Kentucky Archives. 17 May 1912. Retrieved 14 January 2020.