The Triple Crown is the most esteemed horse racing trophy in North America. The Triple Crown trophy was introduced in 1930 after a journalist suggested that Gallant Fox’s triumph in America’s three biggest horse races, the Preakness Stakes, the Kentucky Derby and the Belmont Stakes, deserved a trophy of its own. He suggested the name, the Triple Crown, after the British Triple Crown trophy. In Britain, a horse must win the St. Leger Stakes, the Epsom Derby and the Two Thousand Guineas Stakes to collect the Triple Crown. Funnily enough, the first listed winner of the American trophy is not, in fact, Gallant Fox but Sir Barton, who also won the three prestigious races, but in 1919, before the trophy was introduced. Since 1930, only nine horses have achieved this feat. The difficulty of winning the Crown only adds to its prestige, something which has developed over time.