1957: two-year-old season Hard Ridden finished second in his only race as a two-year-old in 1957.
1958: three-year-old season On his three-year-old debut, Hard Ridden ran second in a race at the
Curragh. He was then returned to the same course for the Irish 2000 Guineas and won impressively by four lengths from the future
Irish Derby winner,
Sindon, with Paddy's Point third. The favourite for the Derby,
Alcide, was withdrawn from the race after being “got at” (deliberately injured) in his stable, leaving the race looking very open. Hard Ridden, however, as the son of a sprinter, was thought unlikely to be effective over one and a half miles and started at
18/1 in a field of twenty in front of a crowd estimated at 200,000 including the
Queen. Ridden by the fifty-one-year-old
Charlie Smirke, Hard Ridden was held up in the early stages as the leaders set a moderate pace. In the straight, Smirke sent Hard Ridden through a gap on the inside to take the lead and go clear. In the closing stages Hard Ridden extended his advantage to win by five lengths from Paddy's Point and Nagami, becoming the first Irish-trained winner of the race since
Orby in 1907. Immediately after the race Smirke announced "That's it, I've ridden my last Derby!" Hard Ridden did not appear again on the racecourse until late July, when he ran in the
King George VI and Queen Elizabeth Stakes at
Ascot. He finished unplaced behind
Ballymoss and was shortly afterwards retired to stud. ==Assessment==