A muddy bay gelding skimmed the
rail at Churchill Downs, skipping over the sloppy surface as he deserted the
eighteen other Thoroughbreds in the 2009 Kentucky Derby (GI). In bewilderment,
spectators glanced at their programs to identify the horse who was easily
galloping to a Derby victory, their jaws dropping and their brows expressing
their surprise.
“Who’s that?” was likely
uttered from the mouths of a large amount of people watching the Run for the
Roses.
The answer to that question was
Mine That Bird, a colt whose racing performances had deteriorated after his
championship juvenile season in Canada. As he carried jockey Calvin Borel to
his second victory in the Kentucky Derby, he became the second longest shot to
ever win the prestigious race.
Three years after Mine That Bird
captured the Derby, his half-brother, Dullahan, will go to post in the same race.
Dullahan Photo: Terri Cage |
Things immediately got off to a
better start for Dullahan than they did for Mine That Bird. The 2009 Kentucky
Derby victor sold for a meager $9,500 at the 2007 Fasig-Tipton Kentucky Fall
Yearling Sale whereas Dullahan sold for $250,000 at the 2010 Keeneland September
Yearling Sale.
Dullahan debuted on June 9,
2011 as a juvenile, facing what would end up being one of the toughest fields
in a two-year-old maiden special weight of the year at Churchill Downs. Racing
wide, the chestnut colt finished third behind the future graded stakes-winning
horses Exfactor and Daddy Nose Best.
Going a sixteenth of a mile
farther next out in another maiden special weight at the Louisville track,
Dullahan faced yet another very talented field. Running an uninspiring fifth,
the half-brother to Mine That Bird was defeated by the eventual graded
stakes-placed horses Big Blue Nation and Lockout and the future graded
stakes-winning Sabercat. Despite finishing fifth, Dullahan still finished in
front of several gifted horses, including Daddy Nose Best and Saturday Launch,
the latter of which recently finished fourth in the Illinois Derby (GIII).
Dullahan made his turf debut
next out in a mile and one-sixteenth maiden special weight at the renowned
Saratoga Racecourse. He turned in his best performance yet, rating off the
eventual winner before gaining ground on him late to miss by a half-length.
Despite the fact that he was
still a maiden, Jerry Crawford’s Donegal Racing and trainer Dale Romans entered
Dullahan in the With Anticipation Stakes (GII) at Saratoga. Over a firm turf
course, Dullahan settled off the pace set by State of Play, allowing the future
stakes-placed runner Sportswriter and the eventual multiple graded
stakes-placed Optimizer to race ahead of him for the majority of the race. Facing
traffic troubles around the far turn, Dullahan found room to run in the
homestretch and though he ran a good third, he could not keep up with State of
Play and Optimizer.
Rather than returning to the
maiden ranks, Dullahan made his following start in the most prominent Keeneland
juvenile stakes of the year, the Dixiana Breeders’ Futurity (GI). Starting over a synthetic
surface for the first time, Dullahan also ran with a new running style, coming
from far off the pace. He was forced to steady on the far turn, but had no
issue recovering. The chestnut colt made a breathtaking closing move, swinging
wide off the far turn to mow down the leaders in the homestretch. Winning by three-quarters
of a length, Dullahan defeated the past or future winners of four graded stakes
races.
Like Mine That Bird, Dullahan
contested in the Breeders’ Cup Juvenile Stakes (GI). The result was much better
for Dullahan, however. While Mine That Bird finished last, Dullahan closed from
the back of the pack to pass nine horses. The chestnut colt maneuvered traffic
and was guided to the outside by jockey Kent Desormeaux, making up much ground
to finish fourth behind the talented horses Hansen, Union Rags, and Creative Cause.
Dullahan’s sophomore debut was
delayed due to a slight illness, but he returned in the Palm Beach
Stakes (GIII) in March, revisiting turf as he made his first start at
Gulfstream Park. Under Desormeaux, he raced in fifth in the six-horse field for
most of the race before closing in the homestretch to finish a length behind Howe
Great.
In his final start before the
Kentucky Derby, Dullahan returned to Keeneland – the home of his only victory. Like
the Dixiana Breeders’ Futurity, this start was one of the most prestigious
races held at the Lexington, Kentucky track: the Blue Grass Stakes (GI). Dullahan’s
race in the Blue Grass was nearly identical to his race in the Dixiana Breeders’
Futurity. Settling near the rear of the field, Dullahan made a dazzling run
around the far turn before mowing down the leaders to score. Rather than the
graded stakes-winning Majestic City being the final horse he passed in the
stretch, Dullahan charged past the champion Hansen to capture the prestigious
Derby prep by 1 ¼ lengths.
Dullahan shipped to Churchill Downs shortly after his Blue Grass triumph to begin training under the Twin Spires for the Kentucky Derby. Trainer Dale Romans has
expressed that Dullahan loves the Churchill surface, which the colt has trained
on countless times. However, though Dullahan may work well over the surface, his
poorest performances have come over that very track. Nonetheless, they were not
terrible performances. He has finished a decent third, a jaded fifth, and a respectable
fourth over the Louisville racetrack. Yet, each time, he has been defeated at
least approximately 6 ¼ lengths. But he does seem to be a more mature colt as a
sophomore and will have much more training time over the Churchill surface than
most Derby contenders.
Clearly, a checkmark can be
placed next to Dullahan’s name when it comes to the matter of a Derby pedigree.
Though a mare has never produced more than one Kentucky Derby winner, the fact
that Mining My Own – the dam of both Mine That Bird and Dullahan – has already
produced two grade one winners and Brother Bird – an earner of over $140,000 – in
her young broodmare career is very encouraging.
Mining My Own is a daughter of
Smart Strike, a son of Mr. Prospector who is the sire of such horses as the two-time
Horse of the Year Curlin who won four ten-furlong grade ones, the turf champion
English Channel who was victorious in five grade ones at eleven furlongs or
longer, and the Preakness Stakes (GI, 9.5F)-winning Lookin’ At Lucky. As a
broodmare sire, Smart Strike has produced the dams of twenty-five stakes
winners, including the group two-winning Strong Return, the champion Queen’s
Plate Stakes (10F)-winning Inglorious, and the Hollywood Gold Cup (GI,
10F)-winning First Dude.
Dullahan is sired by a fairly unrecognized
sire in Even the Score, a graded stakes winner by the significant sire
Unbridled’s Song. Even the Score is also the sire of Take the Points, who won grade
one turf races at nine and ten furlongs. Other offspring of Even the Score
include the graded stakes-winning middle-distance filly Four Gifts, as well as
the stakes-winning distance horse Scorewithcater, who ironically defeated Mine
That Bird in the Borderland and Sunland Derbies. Even the Score has crossed
well with mares like Mining My Own who descend from the Mr. Prospector sire
line, producing such horses as the black-type-winning Enjoy the Score, the
stakes-winning and group stakes-placed Amabo, and a plethora of winners.
Dullahan is inbred 5 X 3 to Mr.
Prospector. Inbreeding to this influential superstar has been enormously efficacious,
appearing in the pedigrees of such horses as the grade one winners Declan’s
Moon, El Corredor, Flower Alley, Pleasant Home, Roman Ruler, Shadow Cast, Strategic
Maneuver, Tapit, Volponi, and Whywhywhy.
Just to add to the grandeur of
Dullahan’s bloodlines, he descends from female family twenty-three, which has
been the root of the pedigrees of many brilliant racehorses, including the most
recent American Triple Crown winner in Affirmed, the Canadian Triple
Crown-winning female Dance Smartly, 2004 Horse of the Year Ghostzapper, the
champion sprinter Big Drama, and a total of nine Kentucky Derby victors.
It is definitely logical to
believe Dullahan can win the Kentucky Derby. Though he has not performed
tremendously well over the Churchill surface, he is getting more training over
it than most Derby contenders and is under the care of a trainer who has conditioned
a top-four finisher in the past two runnings of the prestigious race.
Furthermore, he is the half-brother to a Kentucky Derby winner in Mine That
Bird and has a pedigree that suggests he can accomplish the same task as his
brother. Dullahan certainly seems to have a better chance in the Derby than his
half-brother did and unlike when Mine That Bird bounded through the mud to en route to a Derby victory, it would be no surprise to see Dullahan draped in red roses following the greatest two minutes in sports.
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