Trained at age three by
James G. Rowe, Jr. and ridden by jockey
Charley Kurtsinger, Twenty Grand raced against very strong opponents in 1930 and 1931 when he was part of what the
Chicago Tribune newspaper called the "big four" in racing, which included
Jamestown,
Mate, and
Equipoise. Twenty Grand won the
Wood Memorial Stakes,
Kentucky Derby,
Belmont Stakes,
Dwyer Stakes,
Travers Stakes,
Saratoga Cup, and the
Jockey Club Gold Cup. In his only blemish of the year, Twenty Grand just missed the
Triple Crown, finishing second to
Mate in the
Preakness. He went off as the post time favorite at 3:2. Mate, his stablemate, was sent to the front early, followed by Clock Tower. As Twenty Grand tried to pass the leaders on the clubhouse turn, he was bumped badly by Clock Tower. Twenty Grand was knocked off his stride but recovered. Down the back stretch and around the final turn, he made up ground on Ladder and Mate. His jockey,
Charlie Kurtsinger, chose the rail and went inside, but the tiring Mate blocked Twenty Grand and held on to win by a half length. Twenty Grand's performances in 1931 earned him retrospective
American Horse of the Year honors. After twenty five races, of which he won fourteen, finished second four times and third three times, Twenty Grand was retired to stud but proved to be sterile. In 1957, he was elected to the
National Museum of Racing and Hall of Fame. In the
Blood-Horse ranking of the
top 100 U.S. thoroughbred champions of the 20th Century, Twenty Grand ranked number 52. ==Twenty Grand Cigarette Brand==