Fit to Fight | |
---|---|
Sire | Chieftain |
Grandsire | Bold Ruler |
Dam | Hasty Queen II |
Damsire | One Count |
Sex | Stallion |
Foaled | 1979 |
Country | United States |
Colour | Bay |
Breeder | Bob Courtney & Robert Congleton |
Owner | Rokeby Stables |
Trainer | MacKenzie Miller |
Record | 26: 14-3-3 |
Earnings | $1,042,075 |
Major wins | |
Jerome Handicap (1982) Stuyvesant Handicap (1983) Metropolitan Handicap (1984) Brooklyn Handicap (1984) Suburban Handicap (1984) |
|
Awards | |
4th New York Handicap Triple winner (1984) | |
Last updated on May 30, 2008 |
Fit to Fight (April 5, 1979 in Kentucky – May 30, 2008) was an American Thoroughbred racehorse who won the New York Handicap Triple in 1984.
Sired by Chieftain, a son of Bold Ruler, in turn a grandson of Nearco, Fit to Fight was out of the mare Hasty Queen II, the 1984 Kentucky Broodmare of the Year. His damsire, One Count, won the 1952 Belmont Stakes and shared U.S. Horse of the Year honors. One Count was a son of the 1943 U.S. triple Crown champion, Count Fleet.
Racing at age three, Fit to Fight won his first major graded stakes race, the 1982 Jerome Handicap. The following year he was second to A Phenomenon in the Vosburgh Stakes but ahead of third-place finisher, Deputy Minister. In the Tom Fool Stakes, Fit to Fight took another second but this time to winner Deputy Minister then the two horses reversed their finishes with Fit to Fight capturing the Stuyvesant Handicap.
In 1984, Fit to Fight had his best year. Ridden by Jerry Bailey, the five-year-old became only the fourth horse in history to win the New York Handicap Triple, joining U.S. Racing Hall of Famers, Whisk Broom II (1913), Tom Fool (1953), and Kelso (1961). Fit to Fight finished behind winner Slew o' Gold in the voting for 1984's Eclipse Award for Outstanding Older Male Horse.