Secretariat still owns the conversation around the fastest Kentucky Derby times, and in 2026 the horse known as Big Red is again the name most likely to come up when the gate opens at Churchill Downs. His records from 1973 in the Kentucky Derby and Belmont Stakes remain the standard by which speed in the Triple Crown is measured, and the 2026 Derby is scheduled to start at 2:30 p.m. ET on NBC and stream on Peacock.
That history matters because Secretariat was not just a winner in 1973. He became the first Triple Crown champion in 25 years, and the numbers he put up in Louisville and New York still anchor any discussion of Derby pace. For a race that changes hands every spring, the horse from that year continues to frame the way fans talk about what fast can look like on racing's biggest stage.
The Kentucky connection runs deeper than the records. A majority of Secretariat's life was spent at Claiborne Farm in Paris, Kentucky, just outside Lexington, giving the horse a home base in the state where his legend only grew. A copy of the Meadow Stable racing silks he wore on the way to the Triple Crown is now on display in the University of Kentucky's football compound, a sign of how far his reach extends beyond the track.
The blue and white checkered design inspired by Secretariat also crossed into another corner of campus life when the University of Kentucky basketball program adopted it as an alternate jersey in 2008. That detail shows why Secretariat keeps resurfacing every Derby week: he is not just a line in the record book, but a figure woven into Kentucky sports identity in ways that still show up years later.
The friction in the story is simple. The fastest Kentucky Derby times are still attached to a horse from 1973, which means every new Derby begins with a standard no current field has yet erased. Secretariat's numbers endure, and as the 2026 race approaches, the question is not whether the old mark will be remembered. It will be. The question is whether anyone can make the next chapter feel as permanent.