Aidan O'Brien and team Ballydoyle are used to statistical milestones, but there were a fair few more to add to the ledger on Sunday in the wake of Camelot's success in the Irish Derby.
Camelot provided O'Brien with a record 28th Irish Classic, one more than namesake Vincent, his predecessor at his Co Tipperary training centre.
It was his 10th Irish Derby and his seventh in a row, a new trainers' mark for consecutive wins in an English or Irish Classic, O'Brien having previously shared it with the 19th-century figure Robert Robson, who brought six up in the 1000 Guineas in 1823.
The five-strong field for Ireland's richest contest - it offers a purse of £1 million ($1.9 million) was the smallest since 1912, when Civility likewise beat four rivals. Camelot was the 15th horse to complete the Epsom-Curragh Derby double; the most recent two before him, Galileo in 2001 and High Chaparral a year later, were also trained by O'Brien.
Only one horse has started at a shorter price in the Classic than Camelot's 1-5, the 1-10 shot Orby, the first of the dual heroes in 1907. And the race gave O'Brien's son, 19-year-old Joseph, his first Irish Derby success.