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Even some 70 years after his death, Phar Lap remains an enduring symbol of the Australian turf. A winner of 37 of his 51 starts, he started favorite in three successive Melbourne Cups, the only horse in the long history of Australia’s most famous race accorded that distinction.(except for makybe diva, but pharlap is best)
In a unique feat in 1930, he won a race on each of the four days of the 1930 Flemington spring carnival, including the Melbourne Cup with 15 lb. (6.8 kg.) more than weight-for-age.
Today he resides in the Melbourne Museum, as the most popular exhibit; a life-like monument to his greatness; his mammoth 14 pound heart is in the National Museum in Canberra, while his skeleton is displayed in the Dominion Museum in Wellington. Phar Lap became the most public horse of all time, not entirely because he was so sublime. Drama, controversy, wickedness and savage cruelty rode with the big, gentle chestnut from barrier to box.
Criminals in Melbourne tried to shoot him on the Saturday morning before his 1930 Melbourne Cup win and finally, tragically, he suffered an agonising death in mysterious circumstances in California, USA, on April 5, 1932, when he was only a five-year-old after having defied the odds to win an international race at Agua Caliente, in Mexico only days before.
He beat the best company in two continents with an ease and authority never seen before or since. His achievements live in the hearts, if no longer the memories, of all who love thoroughbred racing.
My Friends
Victoria Derby
Phar Lap easily beats Carradale and Taisho in the Victoria Derby.
W.S. Cox Plate
It was a stroll in the park for Phar Lap to beat Tregilla and Mollison in the 1930 W.S. Cox Plate
Agua Caliente
Phar Lap becomes an international hero with this win over Reveille Boy and Scimitar in the 1932 Agua Caliente Hcp
Melbourne Cup
It's another record-breaking win when Phar Lap beat Second Wind and Shadow
King in the Melbourne Cup of 1930.
Photographs of every win by Phar Lap have been found after laying “hidden” for more than 60 years.
The rare pictures were discovered from the archives of Phar Lap’s owner Mr David Davis, and they have been reproduced for the first time in The Phar Lap Collection.
This superb volume, printed on art-quality paper and complete with a burgundy linen presentation case, is complemented by thoroughly researched statistics and text.
These previously unpublished pictures graphically illustrate the might of Phar Lap. The ease of many of his victories cannot be appreciated until you see the finishes.
This unique collection has already become a collector’s item.
Race Record:
51 starts, 37 wins, three seconds and two 3rds.