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Harness Racing - The Facts!

 

Pacing

Pacing is a lateral gait in which the horse moves the legs on the same side back and forward together.  Most pacers wear hopples - straps on the connecting the fore and hind legs on the same side.  Pacing, or ambling is a natural gate for some breeds of horse (as well as giraffes!) and is faster that trotting by roughly 3 seconds per mile.

Trotting

Trotting is a diagonal gait in which the left front and the right rear legs move forward almost simultaneously, followed by the right front and the rear left.  Trotting is the natural gait for most horses and it is the only gait allowed by harness racing authorities in many European countries.

Sulky

The Sulky is the carriage on which the driver (jockey) sits.  The driver balances on the sulky with legs along the shafts to maintain perfect equilibrium.  The design of the sulky combined with the way the driver sits on it ensures optimum performance from the horse with surprisingly little handicap to the horse's performance.

The Start

At Tir Prince all races are mobile starts.  Competitors slowly pick up speed behind a motorized vehicle that has 'wings' attached at the rear to form a barrier.  The horses are released at full speed (approximately 30 mph) at the start point and the vehicle accelerates away

How it started.............

"The most famous harness racing horse Hambletonian"

The sport began when the horses that delivered the post in America in the 1800s were made to race against each other. But it really took off properly with the coming of the first and most famous harness racing horse, Hambletonian, in the 1850s.

In those days, the horses were trained to do a mile in two and a half minutes - that is the standard speed for a standard bred horse. Most of the horses in harness racing today come from the bloodline of the stallion Hambletonian. They are known as standard bred, as opposed to thoroughbred like flat or steeplechase race horses.

More popular than thoroughbred racing.

The sport has become more popular throughout the world than thoroughbred racing, except in the UK. We don't have riders, but drivers, as they have a 'sulky' - an old name for the cart.