1840: two-year-old season Coronation ran twice as a two-year-old in the summer of 1840. On his first appearance on 18 August he easily won a four-runner
Sweepstakes for two- and three-year-old at Oxford Racecourse from a
filly named Pelerine. He followed up by beating two opponents in a Sweepstakes at
Warwick, winning by a neck from St Cloud, at odds of 1/4. After the race he was described as "the finest two-year-old" of the season and
bookmakers offered him at odds of
18/1 for the following year's Derby.
1841: three-year-old season On his three-year-old debut, Coronation won the Trial Stakes Warwick in impressive style in a large, but undistinguished field. On 15 April, Coronation's odds for the Derby were cut from 10/1to 9/1. In the final build-up to the Derby, Rawlinson entrusted the horse to a professional trainer, Isaac Day, At
Epsom on 26 May, Coronation started 5/2 favourite for the Derby, having been backed down from 4/1 in the hours before the race, in a record field of twenty-nine runners. He was ridden by
Patrick Conolly (or Connolly), a jockey who had won the 1834 Derby on
Plenipotentiary. The weather was warm and sunny and the customary huge crowd – described by the
Sunday Times as an "immense mob" combining every "rank, wealth, talent and beauty in the country" – was in attendance. After a long delay caused by six or seven false starts the race got under way and Conolly positioned Coronation just behind the leaders. The favourite was always traveling easily, and when the leading horses began to tire in the straight, Conolly sent him to the front. Coronation quickly went clear and was never challenged, winning easily by three lengths from Van Amburgh. Following the race, the winner was surrounded by celebrating crowds and panicked, kicking out and killing one spectator. In addition to the prize money of £4,275, Rawlinson took an estimated £8,000 in winning bets. At
Royal Ascot on 8 June, in front of a crowd including the
Queen Victoria, Coronation walked over in the Ascot Derby (a race now known as the
King Edward VII Stakes) when the other entrants were withdrawn. He started the 1/2 favourite against ten opponents, of whom only the
Marquess of Westminster's colt Satirist (5/1) was given any chance against him. Coronation took the lead at half way and entered the straight traveling well and looking the likely winner. But Satirist, ridden by
Bill Scott, produced a strong challenge, and the two colts raced side by side throughout the last
furlong. In the closing strides Satirist gained a slight advantage, and Coronation was beaten by "half a neck". According to his jockey, John Day, Coronation had been "treated like a spoiled child" in the build-up to the St Leger and went to Doncaster some way below peak fitness. ==Stud career==