Triumph Hurdle Past Winners: Complete Results List from 1939 to 2026
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A complete list of Triumph Hurdle winners is not a museum exhibit. It is raw material for pattern recognition — the kind of data that, when read systematically, reveals trainer cycles, starting-price distributions and form profiles that recur with enough regularity to shape betting decisions. Trends do not emerge from three or four renewals. They emerge from decades, and the Triumph Hurdle has more than eight decades of them. Every winner from 1939 to 2026 appears below, annotated where the data carries particular significance for anyone studying this race with serious intent.
Winners Table: 1939 to 2026
| Year | Horse | Trainer | Jockey | SP |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2026 | Poniros | W. P. Mullins | J. O’Neill Jr | 100/1 |
| 2026 | Majborough | W. P. Mullins | M. Walsh | 6/1 |
| 2023 | Lossiemouth | W. P. Mullins | P. Townend | 3/1 |
| 2022 | Vauban | W. P. Mullins | P. Townend | 6/4 |
| 2021 | Quilixios | H. de Bromhead | R. Blackmore | 3/1 |
| 2020 | Burning Victory | W. P. Mullins | P. Townend | 12/1 |
| 2019 | Pentland Hills | N. Henderson | N. de Boinville | 20/1 |
| 2018 | Farclas | G. Elliott | J. Kennedy | 12/1 |
| 2017 | Defi Du Seuil | P. Hobbs | R. Johnson | 5/2 |
| 2016 | Ivanovich Gorbatov | A. O’Brien | B. Geraghty | 9/2 |
| 2015 | Peace And Co | N. Henderson | B. Geraghty | 2/1 |
| 2014 | Tiger Roll | G. Elliott | D. Russell | 10/1 |
| 2013 | Our Conor | D. O’Brien | B. Cooper | 7/1 |
| 2012 | Countrywide Flame | J. Quinn | J. McGrath | 33/1 |
| 2011 | Zarkandar | P. Nicholls | R. Walsh | 7/2 |
| 2010 | Soldatino | N. Henderson | B. Geraghty | 8/1 |
| 2009 | Zaynar | N. Henderson | B. Geraghty | 7/1 |
| 2008 | Celestial Halo | P. Nicholls | R. Walsh | 10/1 |
| 2007 | Katchit | A. King | R. Thornton | 10/1 |
| 2006 | Detroit City | P. Hobbs | R. Johnson | 7/4 |
| 2005 | Penzance | A. King | R. Thornton | 7/1 |
| 2004 | Made In Japan | P. Hobbs | R. Johnson | 12/1 |
| 2003 | Spectroscope | J. Oxx | B. Geraghty | 9/1 |
| 2002 | Scolardy | W. P. Mullins | R. Walsh | 8/1 |
| 2001 | No race | Foot-and-mouth disease — Cheltenham Festival cancelled | ||
| 2000 | Snow Drop | F. Doumen | T. Doumen | 5/1 |
| 1999 | Katarino | N. Henderson | M. Fitzgerald | 3/1 |
| 1998 | Upgrade | N. Henderson | M. Fitzgerald | 20/1 |
| 1997 | Commanche Court | T. Taaffe | N. Williamson | 6/1 |
| 1996 | Paddy’s Return | F. Murphy | C. Maude | 20/1 |
| 1995 | Rare Holiday | R. Rowe | J. Osborne | 16/1 |
| 1994 | Mysilv | Lady Herries | C. Llewellyn | 2/1 |
| 1993 | Shawiya | A. Fabre | S. Smith Eccles | 5/1 |
The table above covers 1993 to 2026, the period most relevant to modern form analysis. Full results stretching back to the inaugural 1939 running at Hurst Park — including the French-dominated early era and the wartime and post-war gaps — are maintained by britishracecourses.org. For the purposes of betting analysis, the data from the JCB-sponsored era (2002 onwards) carries the most weight, as this period reflects the modern field structure following the introduction of the Fred Winter Handicap Hurdle in 2005.
Patterns Visible in the Full Results
Several recurring patterns emerge when the data is read chronologically. Nicky Henderson’s seven wins span from 1985 to 2019, an extraordinary 34-year range that no other trainer has matched. His ability to source, prepare and deliver juvenile hurdlers at Cheltenham across four decades reflects an adaptability that sets him apart even from Mullins, whose five wins are concentrated in just six years. Henderson’s methods evolved — from flat recruits like First Bout to French-bred purchases like Soldatino — while Mullins has applied a single scalable model with relentless consistency.
The starting-price distribution is equally revealing. Since 2005, sixteen of twenty-one winners started at 10/1 or shorter. The exceptions — Pentland Hills at 20/1, Countrywide Flame at 33/1, Farclas at 12/1, Burning Victory at 12/1 (who benefited from Goshen’s fall) and Poniros at 100/1 — are genuine outliers rather than a regular pattern. For bettors, this means the winner almost always comes from the top half of the market. The Triumph Hurdle is not a lottery. It rewards form, not luck, with narrow exceptions.
Irish-trained winners have dominated the modern era: nine of the last twelve. British trainers won regularly through the 2000s — Hobbs, Nicholls, Henderson and King all prevailed — but the balance has shifted decisively since 2018. Only Pentland Hills for Henderson in 2019 has interrupted the Irish monopoly in the past seven years. That geographical pattern is arguably the strongest single filter available.
The Cheltenham Festival consistently produces twenty-eight of the top thirty-one betting-turnover races in British racing each year, according to William Hill data. The Triumph Hurdle sits within that elite group, meaning the market for this race is deep, liquid and generally efficient. Exploiting inefficiencies requires specific knowledge — trial form, trainer patterns, French-bred analysis — rather than a hunch.
Using This Data for Betting Analysis
Raw results become actionable when filtered through the right questions. Here is a practical method. First, identify the SP band of the past ten winners. If seven of ten fell between 2/1 and 10/1, that range becomes your primary selection window. Horses outside it are not eliminated, but they need a stronger supporting case — a compelling trial performance, a proven trainer at the Festival, or a pace scenario that uniquely favours their running style.
Second, check the trainer column for frequency. If one trainer has won three of the last five, any runner from that yard carries historical weight. This is not about blind loyalty to a name. It is about recognising that certain training operations are structurally better positioned to win this race — through recruitment networks, stable quality and Festival experience — and that structural advantage persists from year to year.
Third, cross-reference the jockey column. Barry Geraghty’s five wins across thirteen years confirm that jockeys who understand the New Course at Cheltenham — its undulations, its hill, the optimal time to commit — produce better Triumph Hurdle results than equally talented riders who rarely compete there. Jockey-course form is an underused filter in juvenile hurdle analysis, and the results table provides the raw data to apply it.
Finally, look for the beaten-favourite pattern. In years where the favourite lost, where did the winner come from in the betting? The answer, more often than not, is the 5/1 to 12/1 range — horses with genuine form credentials who were overlooked in favour of a shorter-priced rival. Total attendance at the Cheltenham Festival reached 218,839 in 2026 — a decline from the 280,627 peak in 2022 but still a massive audience by any standard. Each of those spectators, along with the millions watching on ITV and betting remotely, is consuming the same race. The winners table is the permanent record of what happened after the noise subsided. Studying it methodically is the most reliable preparation this race allows.
