Nickel Coin Mares' Standard Open NH Flat Race

The Nickel Coin Mares' Standard Open NH Flat Race is a Grade 2 National Hunt flat race in Great Britain which is open to fillies and mares aged four to six years. It is run at Aintree over a distance of about 2 miles and 1 furlong (2 miles and 209 yards, or 3,410 metres), and it is scheduled to take place each year during the Grand National meeting in early April.

Nickel Coin Mares' Standard Open NH Flat Race
Grade 2 race
LocationAintree Racecourse
Merseyside, England
Race typeNational Hunt flat race
SponsorGoffs
WebsiteAintree
Race information
Distance2m 209y (3,410 metres)
SurfaceTurf
TrackLeft-handed
QualificationFour to six years old
fillies & mares
Weight10 st 8 lb (4yo);
11 st 0 lb (5–6yo)
Penalties
4 lb for Grade 1 or Grade 2 winners
Purse£45,000 (2019)
1st: £25,321
Nickel Coin Mares' NH Flat Race
2019
The Glancing Queen Minella Melody Daylight Katie

The race is named after Nickel Coin, the winner of the 1951 Grand National and the most recent mare to win the Grand National. The race was first run in 2005 with Listed status, then was promoted to Grade 2 in 2016.[1]

Winners

Year
Winner
Age Jockey
Trainer
2005 Senorita Rumbalita 4 Robert Thornton Alan King
2006 Rhacophorus 5 Ruby Walsh C J Down
2007 Turbo Linn 4 Tony Dobbin Alan Swinbank
2008 Carole's Legacy 4 Andrew Tinkler Nicky Henderson
2009 Candy Creek 5 Ruby Walsh John Kiely
2010 Big Time Billy 4 M Byrne[lower-alpha 1] Peter Bowen
2011 Tempest River 5 Daryl Jacob Ben Case
2012 Eleven Fifty Nine 6 Rachael Green Anthony Honeyball
2013 Legacy Gold 5 Stephen Crawford[lower-alpha 1] Stuart Crawford
2014 Avispa 5 Robert Thornton Alan King
2015 Hollies Pearl 5 Sean Bowen Peter Bowen
2016 Kayf Grace 6 Nico de Boinville Nicky Henderson
2017 Dame Rose 4 Alain Cawley Richard Hobson
2018 Getaway Katie Mai 5 Jamie Codd[lower-alpha 1] John Queally
2019 The Glancing Queen 5 Wayne Hutchinson Alan King
no race 2020 [lower-alpha 2]
  1. amateur jockey
  2. The 2020 running was cancelled because of the COVID-19 pandemic in the United Kingdom[2]

See also

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.