A daughter of the Oaks winner Homeward Bound,[3] she was born with a club foot and was reportedly bought by Nelson Bunker Hunt only because his agents visited the farm during a snowstorm and failed to notice the deformity.
[4] On 9 October at Longchamp, Super Concorde started 3.4/1 second favourite for the Grand Critérium against a field which included Bilal, Kenmare, Jaazeiro, John de Coombe, Pyjama Hunt, Little Love and Acamas.
He produced his best effort of the season to finish fourth behind the four-year-olds Carwhite, Trillion and Gairloch, with Kenmare, Roland Gardens and Enstone Spark among the beaten horses.
[2] There was no International Classification of European two-year-olds in 1977: the official handicappers of Britain, Ireland and France compiled separate rankings for horses which competed in those countries.
[2] On his retirement from racing Super Concorde was bought back by Nelson Bunker Hunt[5] and became a breeding stallion at Gainesway Farm in Kentucky, beginning his stud career at a fee of $20,000.
[2] He was not a particularly successful stallion, but sired some good winners including Martha Stevens (Nell Gwyn Stakes), Big Shuffle (Cork and Orrery Stakes, leading sire in Germany),[6] Super May (Mervyn Leroy Handicap), Over the Ocean (Prix Perth), Concorde Bound (Suffolk Downs Sprint Handicap) and Croeso (Florida Derby).