I am not a sports fan. Like, at all. I don’t understand sportsball in any way. No offense to any fans out there – you do you, friends. But to me, sportsball involves watching grown men in tights chase a ball around, pat each other on the ass, and watching paint dry, while the rest of the world pays to applaud. I just don’t get it. But I do LOVE the horse races. I love ponies. They run fast. I can pretend they’re unicorns. The epitome of the American racing world is the Kentucky Derby, held the first Saturday in May. This year, of course, that means it will run on May 5, 2018.

Since its inception, the Kentucky Derby has grown and changed, but it remains one of America’s favorite sporting events. I’ll be glued to the Derby Day coverage from start to finish. They have ponies! I never know anything about the horses because I don’t follow racing in general, so if there is a jockey I know riding that day, like Pat Day (aww, Pat Day. He retired several years ago) or Gary Stevens (he’s still riding, but his nickname is “Bionic Man” because he’s had so many joint replacements. Riding is hard on the joints, yo), then I cheer on his horse. Then, whichever horse actually wins the Derby is the one I cheer for to win the Preakness and Belmont, because Triple Crown! It’s a really scientific method. Then I’ve hit my critical mass of sports for the year and I don’t bother again until the next first Saturday of May.

I’m sure you all know the usual Derby things – mint juleps, bourbon balls, ladies in fancy hats, most exciting two minutes in sports, and so on. But here are some things you might not have known:

The first Kentucky Derby was run in 1875. It is the longest-running sporting event in the US. It continued even through horrible things like two world wars and the Great Depression, when other major sporting events were put on hold.

The racetrack, Churchill Downs, was founded by a partnership between Meriwether Lewis Clark (his grandad was the Clark in Lewis and Clark) and his uncles, John and Henry Churchill, who gave him land for a racetrack. Meriwether Clark wanted to start a racing club after he had traveled to England and saw the famous Epsom Derby. Once he got the land for the track, he got a jockey club going and named it the Louisville Jockey Club, which fundraised the money for the actual track. The track didn’t get named Churchill Downs until 1883.

The very first Kentucky Derby winner was a 3 year old stallion named Aristides, who ran its original distance of 1.5 miles. The distance was shortened to 1.25 miles in 1896 because experts thought 1.5 miles was too long for a 3 year old to run in early spring.

Meriwether Lewis Clark lost a ton of money in a stock market crash in 1893 and committed suicide in April of 1899, just a couple weeks before the 25th Kentucky Derby.

Regret was the first filly to win the Derby in 1915. You go, girl!

In 1919, Sir Barton was the first winner of what will eventually become the Triple Crown – The Kentucky Derby, the Preakness Stakes, and the Belmont Stakes.

Diane Crump was the first lady jockey to ride in the Derby in 1970. Her mount didn’t win, but she helped put another crack in that glass ceiling.

In 1973, Secretariat won the Derby, and went on to become the first Triple Crown winner in 25 years (since Citation in 1948). He won the Belmont by 31 lengths in 2 minutes 24 seconds, both records that still stand. When he was put down in 1989 because of a debilitating hoof condition, Secretariat was buried at his home farm of Claiborne Farm whole, which is a rare honor. Most winning race horses only have their heads, hearts, and hooves buried.

Seattle Slew won the Derby and went on to win the Triple Crown in 1977. His win is unique because he was the only horse to win the Triple Crown while also undefeated in any of his other races.

The filly Eight Belles came in second place in the 2008 Derby, but was immediately euthanized on the track due to grievous compound fractures of both her front legs. The fractures were the same as those suffered by the 2006 Derby winner Barbaro, who died after getting the same injuries in one front leg after the Preakness in 2006. These injuries have renewed controversy among the racing industry about the conditions of the tracks as well as the care of the horses.

American Pharoah is the most recent winner of the Triple Crown, taking that title in 2015.

If you want more about the Kentucky Derby, or just about horse racing in general, check out some of these books:

Man o’ War never ran in the Derby. His owner didn’t believe in running 3 year olds 10 furlongs. Instead, he won the Preakness and then smoked the competition in the Belmont, winning that race by 20 lengths. But this is a great biography of one of horse racing’s most famous horses.

Seabiscuit by Laura Hillenbrand

It’s hard not to be fond of a horse named Seabiscuit, really. This is the most popular book about Seabiscuit. Also, sea biscuits, AKA sand dollars, are super cute, squishy little things when they’re alive. By all accounts, the horse Seabiscuit also had a super cute and squishy personality as well. He wasn’t named for the sand dollar critters, he was named for the hardtack biscuits sailors eat, because his sire’s name was Hard Tack, but I like the squishy little critters.

Isaac Murphy Burns was a star jockey of the late 1800s. He was the first jockey to win the Kentucky Derby three times. At one point, he was the highest-paid jockey in racing. He has a win record of 44%, which is still unmatched today. He was also African-American and was eventually forced out of racing when black jockeys were excluded from racing. This book details not only Murphy’s life but the social, racial, and political issues black jockeys had to deal with.

The biography of one of racing’s leading female jockeys. She was the first woman to win a Breeder’s Cup race as well as a Triple Crown race, which she won while riding Colonial Affair in the Belmont in 1993.

A National Book Award winner (2010) about a down on its luck racing stable in West Virginia. Told from the perspectives of several different narrators, readers get a picture of what racing was like in a small stable in the 1970s.

Horse Heaven by Jane Smiley

A literary fiction with multiple narratives about the world of racing. The horses know what they are doing and what they want; it’s the humans who are really struggling to figure things out. I love the animals in this book and how Smiley characterizes them without anthropomorphizing them. I hate when authors do that.

by Maggie Steifvater The Scorpio Races by Maggie Steifvater

Because it’s like the Kentucky Derby, but with water horses, which are different than seahorses. This is a reimagining of the Scottish fairy tale of the kelpie, and leads up to a race in which riders might live if they are lucky. The race itself isn’t the main focus of the novel, but I wanted to include it here because it is like a YA fantasy version of the behind the scenes stuff happening at the racetrack.