Fifty Shades of Hay: The Extraordinary World of Racehorse Names

Fifty Shades of Hay: The Extraordinary World of Racehorse Names

by David Ashforth (Author)

Synopsis

You might feel sure that a horse is not a Flamingo, a Polar Bear, a Tomato, a Teapot, a pair of Bootlaces, a Taxidermist, a Rat Catcher or a Flea but you'd be wrong. Racehorse owners often give their horses bizarre names that would seem to make success impossible. Luckily, thoroughbreds are able to defy such handicaps. A Spaniel has won the Derby (1831), a Crow the St Leger (1976), a Butterfly the Oaks (1860) and, difficult to imagine, Oscar Wilde the Welsh National (1958). It's bonkers. Bonkers won at Southwell in 2002. Over the centuries there have been hundreds of thousands of different names bestowed or inflicted on racehorses and in Fifty Shades Of Hay, David Ashforth has picked out a selection to baffle, surprise and amuse in equal measure.

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More Information

Format: Hardcover
Pages: 288
Edition: None ed.
Publisher: Racing Post
Published: 28 Sep 2018

ISBN 10: 1910497711
ISBN 13: 9781910497715

Media Reviews
The aim of a racing author is to write a book which reaches beyond the parish boundary and appeals to a wider public... one which I have no doubt will clear the boundary ropes is Fifty Shades of Hay. Marcus Armytage, The Telegraph
Author Bio
DAVID ASHFORTH was twice voted Horserace Writer of the Year, he worked for The Sporting Life and Racing Post and, in the USA, was a columnist for the Racing Times and Daily Racing Form. He is also a talented author having written Racing Crazy and The Bluffers Guide to Horseracing.