Racing at age two, Victory Gallop won two
ungraded stakes races and was second in the important
Laurel Futurity. The following year, in the lead-up to the
American Classic Races for three-year-olds, he won the
Rebel Stakes, then beat
Favorite Trick in the
Arkansas Derby. In the
Kentucky Derby, he was running last behind fourteen other horses at the half mile pole, then made a powerful drive near the end of the homestretch to pass
betting favorite
Indian Charlie but ran out of track and finished second to winner
Real Quiet. In the
Preakness Stakes, he finished second again to Real Quiet, then won the longer
Belmont Stakes by a few inches. From there, Victory Gallop finished second behind
Coronado's Quest in the
Haskell Invitational Handicap and the
Travers Stakes. Racing in 1999 at age four, Victory Gallop recorded his best year. In the spring, he traveled to
Nad Al Sheba Racecourse in
Dubai, where he finished third to
Shadwell Racing 's Almutawakel in the 1999
Dubai World Cup. Back in the United States, he won the
Stephen Foster and
Whitney Handicaps. In August 1999, Victory Gallop "retired at the pinnacle of his career with a torn ligament in his left foreleg...[Victory Gallop] probably tore the suspensory ligament in his left foreleg near the finish line of his stirring duel with Behrens in the Whitney Handicap at Saratoga." ==Stud career==