Jumping Hill (foaled 1972 in California) was an American Thoroughbred racehorse bred by George Pope Jr. at his El Peco Ranch in Madera and successfully raced by him in England and the United States.
Jumping Hill was out of the mare Frequently, a daughter of George Pope Jr.'s 1962 Kentucky Derby winner Decidedly. Frequently's dam was Timepiece whose sire was Hall of Fame inductee Eight Thirty.
For 1977 Jumping Hill was brought back to race in the United States where he would be trained firstly by former jockey and future Hall of Famer Johnny Adams. His best results that year came at Santa Anita Park when he ran second in the 1977 Henry P. Russell and Morvich Handicaps. Ridden by Jerry Lambert, Jumping Hill won the 1978 San Francisco Mile Handicap.
Sent to race on the East Coast, Jumping Hill's training was taken over by another future Hall of Fame inductee, Horatio Luro of Northern Dancer fame. In the 1978 Stuyvesant Handicap at New York's Aqueduct Racetrack, Jumping Hill finished second to U.S. Triple Crown winner Seattle Slew.
Competing in Florida, on December 30, 1978 Jumping Hill was carrying top weight when he set a new Calder track record in winning the 1 1/8 mile Grade 3 Saul Silberman Handicap. Again the high-weight, in his next start on February 3, 1979 the now seven-year-old set another track record for the same distance at Gulfstream Park when he won the Grade 2 Donn Handicap. On February 17, 1979 Jumping Hill ran second to Sensitive Prince in the Gulfstream Park Handicap, pushing his opponent to a new mile and one-quarter track record. On April 7, 1979, the same day that 1978 U. S. Triple Crown winning jockey Steve Cauthen made his riding debut in England a winning one at Salisbury Racecourse, Jumping Hill won the most prestigious race of his career. Racing at Florida's Hialeah Park, Jumping Hill went wire-to-wire for his win in the Grade 1 Widener Handicap under Canadian jockey Jeffrey Fell.
Racing career
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