Tuesday, July 31, 2018

Over the Jumps


  • Self Sense and the Australian Jumps Circuit -- The last ten years has been a tough period for Australian jumps racing with the concerns over the horses welfare to the front. It was even stopped altogether for a period in 2009/10 but this season has proved to be a successful one. There are signs it has regained some fluidity as the formation of the jumps have finally been worked out. The future of jumps racing is still in the balance but there are some good signs with the industry stating it has reduced the rate of horse fatalities in Victorian jumps races by 70 per cent and averages 2.5 fatalities per season over the past seven years, a drop from eight fatalities in the corresponding prior period.  It is so pleasing to see good figures as i must admit i have reservations myself about the jumps racing. It is an exciting spectacle but the fatalities of this beautiful creature is a concern. I like to look realistically at an issue and horses are an animal that are always going to have accidents in any situation because of their sheer size and if they fall even in a paddock can have fatal consequences. The Warrnambool carnival's headline event  the Grand Annual Steeplechase  is the longest jumps race in the southern hemisphere, challenging the stamina of horses and riders over 5,500 metres and 33 obstacles for a share of $350,000 in prize money. It brings in over ten million dollars to the Warrnambool area. Jumps racing has long been the subject of intense scrutiny from members of the media, politicians and the general public. For me the distance is a concern here even if they do run at a leisurely speed throughout. I would love to get the fall figures over the final jumps in races ! This tends to be where alot of spills occur. 
  • Self Sense is Australias new star jumper and in only his second hurdle start romped away with the Australian Hurdle over 3400m at Sandown. After scrambling through the last hurdle he recovered to win by six lengths with jockey Clayton Douglas riding confidently.Then in the  $100,000 Kevin Lafferty Hurdle at Warrnambool took his career prizemoney earnings past $1 million. The seven year old led from the first furlong of the race and, despite awkward leaps at several of the obstacles, had too much class for his rivals. Eased down near the line by jockey Clayton Douglas, the son of Street Sense had more than three lengths to spare on runner-up Two Hats. He is now unbeaten in three hurdle starts.
  • Mum and the Races --I remember as a young boy of nine or ten our family would head off for an afternoon at the races around the Callaghan Park Racetrack in Rockhampton . My sisters were eight and six years old. My dad would love to have a punt on the horses while we all would sit in the grandstand or play on the front lawn and watch the races and have our chips. Sometimes we would wander down to the stables at the back to check out the horses before they went onto the track for the race. My parents had a couple of close friends at that time Eric and Betty Barber who had two children around our age Julie and Des. They traveled from the gemfields of Emerald out west most Saturdays when their horse was racing. It never occurred to me back then why my father was never actually interested in the horse he was only interested in the thrill and adrenalin rush of a bet . He was a gambler ! My eldest sister as she got into her teens would often take off horse riding with her friends, something I regret not doing myself. I have stayed fascinated by the horse and racing but for me nowdays its more the enjoyment of the horse itself rather than a bet. 
  •       Mum would take an interest in the horses probably for dad's sake and often have her own bets picked out. She always had a dream that one day she would find that ultimate system that would win us a fortune. One of those systems was to back the first four most fancied horses on the Melbourne gallops and back in those days around fifty per cent of those first four races were jumps races. Memories flood back and every now then one of those horses names pop into my head. Names like Lots of Time, Scottish John and Royal Arragon but one that always makes an appearance each year at national time on social media here and in the UK is the great Crisp. Until recently he was the only jumps horse in the Australian Racing Hall of Fame and he is one of the most iconic gallopers in the UK. Due to the epic finish of that 1973 Grand National. Just recently Ascot Gold Cup winner, Stradivarious owner, businessman Bjorn Nielson when asked what got him into racing his reply was "That it was the spectacular Australian jumps competitor Crisp that drew him to racing." “Watching the epic 1973 Grand National in which Red Rum caught the gallant Crisp in the dying stages scarred me for life,”. He will be remembered on both hemispheres as one of the greatest jumpers of all time. Its a painful watch over those huge jumps.


  •   I struggle a little with the health and safety issue of jumps racing but i still have a soft spot for it. I am so glad to see the racing industry making big efforts in both flat and jumps racing to look after this beautiful animal. The horses have such unique personalities and I can understand why my eldest sister has always had a strong love for this animal. It is a large industry and the majority are in it for the love of the sport and the horse. I can see positive steps and money being put into looking after the main participant of the sport and it will never be enough for some people but i suppose if the horse profits. Its all good !    
  • Karasi  -- Up until recently Crisp had been the sole Australian Jumper in the Australian Racing Hall of Fame but two years back he was joined by the great Karasi . Karasi is best known for winning the world's richest steeplechase race, the Nakayama Grand Jump in Japan for three consecutive years 2005, 2006, 2007 but he was a top flat performer as a younger horse, with his best performance being a fourth in the 2001 Melbourne Cup and a win in the Geelong Cup. The great jumper banked about $3.75 million dollars for his connections during his career. Karasi won his third Nakayama Jump at the age of twelve for trainer Eric Musgrove and jockey Brett Scott.

Thursday, May 17, 2018

Two Brothers Two Hemispheres


Sadler's Wells  -- Born 11th of April 1981 in the USA at Swettenham Stud and owned by Robert Sangster. The dam Fairy Bridge who was also raced by Vincent O'brien went on to be named Ireland's best two year old filly of 1977 and in 1980 was sent to be serviced by the legendary Northern Dancer in the USA. Sadler's Wells was to be her first foal followed closely in 1982 by Fairy King also from a meeting with Northern Dancer. Sadlers Wells was a good galloper winning the 2000 Irish Guineas followed by the Eclipse Stakes and named Champion Miler in France 1984 but it was at stud he would shine. He would produce some of the best stallion sons of any racing era and even near the end of his stud duties probably produced arguably the greatest stallion of them all, Galileo.

Galileo winning the 2001 Irish Derby

      In an incredible domination he was named leading sire in Britain & Ireland in 1990 and from 1992–2004. He was also leading broodmare sire in Britain from 2005 to 2011and in North America was leading sire 2008 to 2010. He has left an almost endless list of great stallion sons of  the likes of  In The Wings,Carnegie,Montjeu,Scenic,El Prado,King of Kings, High Chaparral and many more. It is hard to believe but he is second to the great Danehill on siring group one winners only because he never left Irish shores where Danehill's progeny occupied both hemispheres. He was a dominant bay who sometimes passed on his prominent blaze and a sock or two, he also became synonymous with soundness and dependability. He retired from stud duties on 13 May 2008 and died peacefully on 26 April 2011 at the age of 30 at Coolmore .

So You Think 
the son of High Chaparral winning the 2010 Cox Plate

Bring on his brother Fairy King who shuttled to Australia for two seasons in 1992 and 94. 

Fairy King -- Born in 1982, the full brother to Sadler's Wells would only have one race start and break down. He was owned by Robert Sangster and was immediately retired to Coolmore Stud in Ireland as a stallion. He was successful from his first crop to race in 1987. He also produced group one winners Turtle Island,Shinko King and Helissio the winner of the Prix de l'Arc de Triomphe and European horse of the year. Then in 1998 he produced Falbrav arguably the cream of his crop except for that little visit to Australia in 1992. It was here that he was sent to a mare by Star Way called Shoal Creek . It is of note that her dam, Rolls was also the dam of another high class Australia stallion Flying Spur who was by the great, Danehill. This meeting would produce an influence on Australian thoroughbred racing that could easily take it to the pinnacle of world racing in the future. His son Encosta De Lago was born in 1993 at Blue Gum Farm. He has sired 73 stakes winners for earnings of $90 million during his 13 years at stud. He is the sire of winners in Australia, Hong Kong, Ireland, New Zealand, Singapore and South Africa. His winners include champion filly Alinghi,the grey flash Chautauqua and Hong Kong's champion Sacred Kingdom. His stallion sons include Manhattan Rain,Northern Meteor and Racing to Win.
Chautauqua 2017 T.J.Smith Stakes 

 
Its good to note that Fairy Bridge's final foal was a colt by Danzig called Perugino who was a successful stallion in Australia and her mum Special produced the great broodmare producing stallion Nureyev.While Her son Saddlers Wells dominates the European racing circuit she has plenty of influence in the southern hemisphere as well. 

Thursday, March 15, 2018

Zabeel Dynasty


      It all started way back in 1976 when Sir Patrick Hogan purchased a stallion from England for his Cambridge Stud. That stallion was the fiery, Sir Tristram and while he was in quarantine, on his way, to the farm . There was a huge fire which killed numerous thoroughbreds but Paddy as he was affectionately known ,survived the fire and eventually made it to the farm, on arriving, his service fee was set at $1200 but by 1997 , it had jumped to $200,000. He would go on to sire 45 group 1 winners but more importantly sire the great Zabeel. Paddy was born on April 7th 1971 and Patrick Hogan tells the story of his passing in the paddock after an accident in 1997 and how he cradled the old horse in his arms with his son Zabeel, watching on, in the next paddock. He had sired three Melbourne Cup winners by then, Gurners Lane, Empire Rose and Brew. He was buried standing up facing the morning sun in the horseshoe garden in front of the stables at Cambridge Stud. 

 The Graves of Sir Tristram and his son Zabeel

   The son, Zabeel was born October 25th 1986 from a mating with the Nureyev mare ,Lady Gizelle. I remember seeing him race and the headaches he used to give barrier attendants. He was a fiery customer, like his dad, he hated those barriers, he just wanted to run and when they opened, he was off. Jockeys had trouble restraining him and in the end they were forced to let him run. He went on to win seven races including the Australian Guineas. He always passed this on to his progeny and a jockey who knew them really well, Jimmy Cassidy. Jim's association with Zabeels son, Might and Power who was from his second crop is a good example of great horsemanship. Jim would let him roll and break their hearts. He would always find extra reserves of energy at the end of his races and the 1997 Melbourne Cup was an awesome, showing of this. Zabeel had a phenomenal record, producing 44 group 1 winners. When Octagonal from Zabeel's first crop won the AJC Sires' Produce Stakes, to Preferment's win in the 2014, Victoria Derby, one of his sons or daughters was winning races at the highest level every year through to 1995. His progeny have won three Melbourne Cups, three Caulfield Cups and four Cox Plates. His champions include Octagonal, Might And Power and the unbeaten Reset. Zabeel dominated stallions awards being twice champion Australian sire, four-time champion New Zealand sire and won the NZ Dewar Trophy for combined NZ and Australian earnings 15 times. He was also Australia and New Zealand's champion broodmare sire three times each.

1997 Melbourne Cup 
Might and Power


                                                         Octagonal Lonrho and Pierro

    Octagonal was another of his sons, the Big O as he was affectionately known, was born on 8th October 1992 . He was out of the champion broodmare Eight Carat, who also produced Group One winners, Mouawad, Kaapstad, Diamond Lover and Our Marquise. Octagonal retired to stud after 28 starts with a record of 14 wins 10 Group 1. He ended his racing career with a stakes tally of $5,892,231, the highest of any galloper in Australasia to that point. Octagonal was euthanized on 15 October 2016 at the age of 24 years at Woodlands Stud near Denman in the NSW Hunter Valley. He was buried next to his fellow stallion and racing mate, Canny Lad.


 The Grandson Lonrho
 A Champion three-year-old, a Champion miler, and Horse of the Year. Lonhro was foaled on December 10, 1998 was named after the London and Rhodesian Mining Company which began operating in Africa in 1909 . Nicknamed "The Black Flash", he was from the first crop of the champion Octagonal out of the Group One-placed Shadea by Straight Strike. Sire of 68 Stakes winners, including G1 Golden Rose hero Exosphere in 2015 and South African star The Conglomerate in 2016. Lonhro raced from two to five years of age and won 26 races, including 25 stakes races, ranging in distance from 1,100 to 2,000 metres. These included 11 Group One wins and 18 wins at weight-for-age. Now a Champion sire with his son Pierro, unbeaten juvenile Triple Crown winner, and was rated the best juvenile colt in Australia since 1977. While recently his son, Kementari was the winner of the Group 1 Randwick Guineas, is now ranked amongst the top ten gallopers, in the world. 

Lonrho winning the Australian Cup

Great Grandson Pierro


Top Victorian trainer , Cindy Alderson -- On the Zabeels and Sky Heights, his son who won the ATC Derby and the Caulfield Cup. "They were incredibly muscular and imposing looking horses. Sky Heights was an unbelievably charismatic horse. He would puff himself up once he got off the horse float at a race meeting. He was a big horse anyway at 16.3 hands but he would inflate himself on race day. I remember there would be people commenting on how huge he was." "We used to go down to the stables to get the horses out of their boxes at around 3am each morning and Sky Heights would have to be let out first. He would be kicking his box in or switching the light switch on and off continuously with his head. We would worry that he may knocked the building down or electrocute himself.

Over the Jumps

Self Sense and the Australian Jumps Circuit -- The last ten years has been a tough period for Australian jumps racing with the concerns o...