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Kentucky Derby Post Positions by the Numbers

America's Best Racing looks at trends; Post 5 has produced the most winners.

Horses break from the starting gate in the 2024 Kentucky Derby.

Horses break from the starting gate in the 2024 Kentucky Derby.

Coady Media/Pam Costin

The Kentucky Derby (G1) is rightfully known as the most exciting two minutes in sports; once the Churchill Downs starting gate springs open anything can (and often does) happen. For the 20 three-year-old Thoroughbreds expected to compete in 2025 it is one of the most important moments of their lives, and racing luck can make or break their Derby run from the start. However, some of that luck comes into play several days beforehand: the luck of the post-position draw.

Kentucky Derby post positions were randomly assigned at the Saturday evening draw April 26, but their influence on the race seems to be far from arbitrary.

The Kentucky Derby has used a starting gate since 1930; and traditionally two of them, actually. One held 14 horses and the other, called the auxiliary gate, was attached to the outside of the main gate to allow for six more horses. That changed in 2020 when Churchill Downs secured a single gate that holds all 20 horses.

Interestingly, the race was won by Authentic  who drew the post farthest to the outside, post position 15. Authentic initially drew post 18 but moved in three spots after three horses were scratched (or withdrawn) from the race.

Common sense might suggest that the inside posts are favorable since racing near rail is the shortest way around a racetrack. This could be true in races with fields of 10 horses or fewer, but in the Kentucky Derby there are as many as 20 racehorses leaping from the gate and rushing to secure position before the field heads into the first turn. This means there's a lot of bumping and jostling as the field compresses to the inside of the racetrack. And that means the horses already on the inside are going to get the worst of it, which can discourage them or negatively affect their positioning.

 Giacomo (left) wins in 2005 from post 10.
Photo: Skip Dickstein
Giacomo (left) wins in 2005 from post 10.

Horses on the outside are usually subject to less bumping, but if they don't make it across the track before the first turn they can be left racing very wide. In the Kentucky Derby, the turns account more than 40% of the 1 1/4-mile race. Assuming the width needed for a racehorse and rider is four feet, for every path off the rail, a horse runs more than 25 feet farther. A horse six paths off the rail on both turns will run 150 feet farther than a horse on the rail, making their race that much more challenging. It's important to find a balance between racing far enough inside to save ground and far enough outside that a horse can easily maneuver to be in the clear when the real running starts: the homestretch.

So what post position is ideal? Conventional wisdom says that somewhere in the middle of the gate, positions 5-15, is best. In recent years, though, there seems to be a trend toward outside posts having more success, due in part to the crowded fields of the last couple of decades. Since and including 2000, 12 of the 25 Kentucky Derby winners have broken from gate 13 or higher. From the 70 races that used a gate before 2000, just 10 winners broke from gate 13 or higher. Some of the recent winners were favorites (Nyquist , American Pharoah , Big Brown, etc.) who might have won from an inside gate anyway, but some weren't—and that definitely includes 80-1 winner Rich Strike , who drew into the 2022 Derby the day before the race and became the second winner (following 2008 favorite Big Brown) to win from post position 20.

Confirmation of this trend toward outside posts comes when you look at inside post success (or lack thereof). No horse has won the Kentucky Derby from gate 1 since Ferdinand in 1986. Only three horses have won from from posts 1, 2, or 3 since Ferdinand's victory, and all broke from post 3: Hall of Famer Alysheba in 1987; Real Quiet in 1998, who came up just a nose shy of winning the Triple Crown; and last year's winner Mystik Dan, who saved ground under a heady ride from jockey Brian Hernandez Jr. and had just enough to hold off two challengers late and win by a nose over Sierra Leone, who left from post position 2. Before 1987, 19 of 174 horses that left those gates won, giving the gates a 10.9% win rate. Since and including 1987, the win rate for posts 1, 2, or 3 is just 2.6% (3-for-114), improved slightly by Mystik Dan's score last year.

 Mystik Dan (top) wins 2024 Derby from post 3.
Photo: Coady Media/James Johnson
Mystik Dan (top) wins 2024 Derby from post 3.

The "dreaded one hole" hex falls on Citizen Bull this year. That colt, voted champion 2-year-old male of 2024 after winning the Breeders' Cup Juvenile (G1) in gate-to-wire fashion, will have to be hustled out of the starting gate to have any chance at gaining a customary forward position.

Other interesting post-position stats include a 10.5% win rate for gate 5, which was the post position of both 2017 winner Always Dreaming and 2014 winner California Chrome  and has produced the most Derby winners in the race's history with 10. Gate 10 has also produced a high rate of winners at 10.2%, with horses finishing in the money (top three) at a remarkable 29.5%. The last Derby victor to come from 10 was Giacomo, who was also that last gray horse to win the Derby.

No horse has ever won from post-position 17 and the last time gate 17 produced a horse that even finished in the top five was 2005. (Sandman, the Arkansas Derby (G1) winner and a growing fan favorite, drew the 17 post this year.) The big Kentucky Derby favorite in the 2020 September run for the roses, Tiz the Law , initially drew post 17. His chances, historically speaking, improved when other defections in the race moved him inside to post 14. But that spot, and its 3% success rate, didn't make much of a difference after Authentic (drawn just to the outside of Tiz the Law) got the early jump and settled on a loose and comfortable lead near the rail. Tiz the Law chased from a wider stalking position and finished second.

The 2021 Derby ended up producing another notable statistic, one that was made official roughly eight months after the race and not reflected in the official Equibase chart until January 2024. It resulted in only the second disqualification of the winner in Derby history due to a medication positive, as 2021 first-place finisher Medina Spirit was stripped of his title and purse money in early 2022 and runner-up Mandaloun  was declared the winner by Kentucky Horse Racing Commission stewards. Medina Spirit and Mandaloun broke from the gate right next to one another in posts 8 and 7, respectively. After Medina Spirit's DQ, both of those posts shared the exact same winning percentage of 8.7% (eight wins in 92 starts) ... for a little over a year. In May 2023, Mage  won the Kentucky Derby from post-position 8, moving that spot back ahead of post position 7 and tying it with post position 10 as the second most productive in Derby history with nine total winners.

Get the stats on all the post positions below.

Post 2025 Derby Starter Most Recent Winner Starts Wins Win  % In-The-Money Finishes ITM % 2024 Result
1 Citizen Bull Ferdinand (1986) 95 8 8.40% 18 18.90% Dornoch, 10th place
2 Neoequos Affirmed (1978) 95 7 7.40% 26 27.40% Sierra Leone, 2nd place
3 Final Gambit Mystik Dan (2024) 95 6 6.30% 21 23.20% Mystik Dan, 1st place
4 Rodriguez Super Saver (2010) 94 5 5.30% 15 15.80% Catching Freedom, 4th place
5 American Promise Always Dreaming (2017) 95 10 10.50% 22 23.20% Catalytic, 19th place
6 Admire Daytona Sea Hero (1993) 95 2 2.10% 13 13.70% Just Steel, 17th place
7 Luxor Café Mandaloun (2021) 94 8 8.50% 20 21.30% Honor Marie, 8th place
8 Journalism Mage (2023) 94 9 9.60% 19 20.20% Just a Touch, 20th place
9 Burnham Square Riva Ridge (1972) 91 4 4.40% 18 19.80% T O Password, 5th place
10 Grande Giacomo (2005) 88 9 10.20% 26 29.50% Forever Young, 3rd place
11 Flying Mohawk Winning Colors (1988) 84 2 2.40% 12 14.30% Track Phantom, 11th place
12 East Avenue Canonero II (1971) 80 3 3.80% 10 12.50% West Saratoga, 12th place
13 Publisher Nyquist (2016) 78 5 6.40% 17 21.80% Endlessly, 9th place
14 Tiztastic Carry Back (1961) 68 2 2.90% 14 20.60% Domestic Product, 13th place
15 Render Judgment Authentic (2020) 63 6 9.50% 9 14.30% Grand Mo the First, 18th place
16 Coal Battle Animal Kingdom (2011) 52 4 7.70% 10 19.20% Fierceness, 15th place
17 Sandman N/A 45 0 0.00% 3 6.70% Stronghold, 7th place
18 Sovereignty Country House (2019) 37 2 5.40% 6 16.20% Resilience, 6th place
19 Chunk of Gold I’ll Have Another (2012) 31 1 3.20% 2 6.50% Society Man, 16th place
20 Owen Almighty Rich Strike (2022) 19 2 10.50% 3 15.80% Epic Ride, 14th place