Showing posts with label 2000 Guineas. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 2000 Guineas. Show all posts

Friday, May 31, 2013

2013 Epsom Derby: Dawn Approach

Racing fans’ hearts and minds remain thrilled with memories of the great Frankel, the horse who took the world by storm, sweeping to prestigious victories across England as he created a flawless career of fourteen victories in the same amount of starts. Regarded as one of the greatest racehorse of all-time (and the greatest by many racing enthusiasts and experts), his retirement was a sad note in racing, particularly European racing. But fans didn’t have to wait long for another brilliant, undefeated colt to emerge.

Like the sun illuminating the land at daybreak, Dawn Approach arrived on the scene. A powerfully built chestnut with a unique blaze, Dawn Approach marched onto the historic course of the Curragh – the place of the running horse – for the commencement of his career. On a yielding turf course going five furlongs, Dawn Approach tracked the pacesetter, appearing comfortable in second prior to taking the lead within the final quarter of a mile, easily drawing off to win by 1 ¾ lengths. With his victory, Dawn Approach became the first winner for champion New Approach.

Nearly two months elapsed before Dawn Approach went to post again. The scene of his second career start was a good to yielding turf course at Naas Racecourse in Ireland, in which the stunning chestnut would advance to the distance of six furlongs. The race became a breeze for Dawn Approach. After tracking the pace yet again, the Jim Bolger homebred and trainee kicked clear to an effortless 5 ½-length victory.

Advancing to the listed race level, Dawn Approach competed against just five rivals in the Alfred Nobel Rochestown Stakes at Naas. Once more tracking the leader, the Irish-bred colt was ridden vigorously in the final stages of the race, edging clear to score by a comfortable margin that neared 3 lengths.

Fifteen days later emerged the toughest test of Dawn Approach’s career to that point. On opening day of the renowned Royal Ascot meeting, the colt – bred, owned, and trained by Jim Bolger – faced twenty-one opponents in the Coventry Stakes (GII). Was he as talented as he had appeared in his previous starts?

Racing mid-pack in the beginnings of the six-furlong event, Dawn Approach was kept to a position behind the leaders by rider Kevin Manning – the only jockey to ever pilot the colt. Encouraged in the late phase of the race, Dawn Approach became determined to surpass those ahead of him. Relying on sheer talent and ability, the eye-catching chestnut held clear, annexing the race by ¾ of a length over Olympic Glory, who would go on to be a group one winner. Dawn Approach had extended his flawless record to four-for-four and as a result of the prospect of future triumphs and thrills he presented, Godolphin Racing purchased a majority interest in the talent colt, allowing him to remain under the care of Jim Bolger.

Given nearly three months away from the races, Dawn Approach carried the distinguished blue silks of Goldolphin into battle for the first time in the Vincent O’Brien Stakes (GI) (or the National Stakes) – also his first group one challenge. Returning to the Curragh for the event, Dawn Approach settled into third among the small, seven-horse field. As Flying the Flag led the juveniles by a wide margin, Dawn Approach tracked stablemate Leitir Mor.

The tactic of such intense early speed over yielding ground served as Flying the Flag’s hamartia and as said horse struggled home in the final stages of the seven-furlong contest, Dawn Approach unleashed his rally, displaying scintillating acceleration as he drew away to score by 4 ¾ lengths.

Dawn Approach had established himself as one of the best two-year-olds in the land and he was given the chance to confirm this title with a victory in the final start of his juvenile campaign, the Dewhurst Stakes (GI) at Newmarket. Following brief contact with rivals at the beginning of the race, Dawn Approach rated on the outside in third. Over good to soft going, the blaze-faced chestnut gradually improved his position and as each of the six horses in the field commenced their runs, Dawn Approach initially appeared flat. But once he hit his best stride, there would be no denying him. He quickened in a breathtaking manner, his powerful action carrying him to a 2 ¾-length victory.

His flawless record as a juvenile earned him the Cartier Two-Year-Old Colt Award and the title of the winter favorite for the 2,000 Guineas (GI), the first leg of the English Triple Crown. This European classic commenced the colt’s sophomore season and served as redemption for his sire, who finished second in the 2008 installment of the race, beaten a nose by Henrythenavigator.

Sent off as the 11-8 favorite in a field of thirteen, Dawn Approach galloped away from the gate with his usual slight stutter-step and was guided by Manning into mid-pack. Settling behind the leaders, the Jim Bolger trainee galloped contentedly down the straight path of the Rowley Mile Course at Newmarket.

Continuing to gallop along in fourth, Dawn Approach increased his pace with a quarter-mile remaining in the mile-long contest. Gradually, he gained ground on the rivals ahead of him, drawing even with the leaders prior to hesitating to draw clear. However, once he quickened within the final furlong, Dawn Approach exhibited his trademark spectacular turn of foot, extending his advantage on the others with stunning ease as he neared the wire with authoritative strides, capturing the race by an impressive 5 lengths.

Dawn Approach has commemorated his sire in perfect fashion, bearing many similarities to him. Not only is he his first winner, but Dawn Approach is also trained by the same man who conditioned New Approach, Jim Bolger. Like his son, New Approach was honored as the Cartier European Champion Two-Year-Old Colt in 2007, also winning the National and Dewhurst Stakes. Also sent off at 11-8 odds in the 2,000 Guineas, New Approach, however, missed victory by a nose.

This loss was the first blemish on New Approach’s record, but the Jim Bolger trainee continued to shine, winning several high-caliber races, such as the Epsom Derby (GI), the Irish Champion Stakes (GI), and the Champion Stakes (GI). Aside from Dawn Approach, New Approach has sired the likes of the group stakes winners Libertarian, Montsegur, and Newfangled, as well as the stakes winners Talent and Tha’Ir, and the group stakes-placed Bunairgead from his first crop.

New Approach is a son of perhaps the most coveted Thoroughbred stallion in the world, Galileo, who has sired over twenty group one winners, such as Cape Blanco, Frankel, Galikova, Misty for Me, Nathaniel, New Approach, Red Rocks, Rip Van Winkle, Sixties Icon, Together, and Treasure Beach. The multiple group one-winning Galileo was nearly guaranteed to be a spectacular sire, being the result of a mating between two top producers.

The sire of Galileo is none other than the great Sadler's Wells, one of the greatest sires the world has ever seen. The multiple group one-winning son of Northern Dancer was the leading sire by earnings in the United Kingdom for ten years straight and for twelve years total. Sadler's Wells has proven to be an incredible sire of sires, producing not only Galileo, but the outstanding Montjeu, as well as Barathea, El Prado, High Chaparral, In the Wings, and King’s Theatre.

Galileo’s dam is the absolutely tremendous mare Urban Sea, which makes him a half-brother to the great champion Sea the Stars, as well as the grade one-winning My Typhoon, the group stakes-winning Urban Ocean, the stakes-winning and group one-placed horses Born to Sea and Melikah, and the group stakes-placed Cherry Hinton. He is also a full brother to the multiple group one-winning Black Sam Bellamy and the group stakes-winning All Too Beautiful.

Dawn Approach’s dam, Hymn of the Dawn, never amounted to much as a racehorse, losing each of her five starts. Bred in Kentucky, the mare was purchased as a weanling at the 1999 Keeneland November Breeding Stock Sale and was then sent to Ireland. After her unsuccessful racing career, the bay mare began to show little effectiveness as a producer, with her only true success as a broodmare emerging in the form of Dawn Approach.

However, Hymn of the Dawn stems from a superb family. A daughter of the multiple graded stakes-winning sprinter Phone Trick, Hymn of the Dawn shares the same sire as the champions Favorite Trick and Phone Chatter, thus providing Dawn Approach with the same broodmare sire as the grade/group one winners El Inspirado, Exogenous, and Zensational, as well as a multitude of other stakes winners, such as the multiple graded stakes-winning Eye of the Tiger.

Hymn of the Dawn’s dam, Colonial Debut, a daughter of the Kentucky Derby (GI)- and Preakness Stakes (GI)-winning champion Pleasant Colony, also produced the grade one-placed Galantas. The colt’s fourth dam is Kittiwake, a graded stakes winner that foaled a pair of grade one winners. An impeccably bred individual, Kittiwake is a result of the mating between the all-time great Sea-Bird II and the multiple stakes-winning, track record-setting mare Ole Liz, a Reine De Course mare that also produced the multiple graded stakes-winning Oilfield.

Both of Dawn Approach’s parents descend from the Nearctic sire line, with their great-grandsires both being sons of the Canadian Hall of Famer and influential Native Dancer mares. This method of Neartic line-breeding has proved to be tremendously effective, producing the likes of the group one winners Black Caviar, Danedream, Frankel, and Rock of Gibraltar. The blending of pedigrees similar to New Approach and Hymn of the Dawn has proven to be an effectual combination, producing a large percentage of winners, including the stakes-winning Isabell’s Shoes.

And so now this beautifully bred, athletic colt has reached another significant test in his career: the Epsom Derby (GI). The second leg of England’s Triple Crown – a prestigious series that has not been swept until 1970 – is his for the taking. Can he continue to follow in the footsteps of his sire and continue to display the pure brilliance he has exhibited?

Sunday, June 3, 2012

The Chance of Dual Triple Crowns

Nothing rallies racing fans like the prospect of a Triple Crown. For this reason, racing fans across the nation are tremendously eager to see Kentucky Derby (GI) and Preakness Stakes (GI) winner I’ll Have Another compete in the Belmont Stakes (GI) on Saturday in attempt to become America’s twelfth Triple Crown victor and the first one in thirty-four years. But what a plethora of fans throughout the country do not realize is that there is another nation with a chance to end an even longer Triple Crown drought.

That country is none other than England, a nation that has not seen a Triple Crown victor since Nijinksy II captured the 2,000 Guineas Stakes (GI), the Epsom Derby (GI), and the St. Leger Stakes (GI) in 1970. Since then, only three horses have won the first two legs: Nashwan, Sea the Stars, and most recently, Camelot.

Camelot, a horse with the perfect name for an athlete in pursuit of the Triple Crown, or the Holy Grail of horse racing, was a top juvenile in Europe. The colt captured a maiden special weight at Leopardstown Racecourse in Dublin, Ireland last July prior to conquering five rivals in the prestigious Racing Post Trophy (GI) at Doncaster Racecourse in the United Kingdom. With ease, the Aidan O’Brien trainee drew away to win the esteemed race by 2 ¼ lengths, becoming the winter book favorite for England’s premier race and second leg of its Triple Crown, the Epsom Derby (GI).

In just his third start, Camelot went to post in the 2,000 Guineas, the first jewel of the English Triple Crown. As a field of eighteen three-year-old Thoroughbreds began their one-mile journey about Newmarket Racecourse, the highly-touted Camelot found a position near the back of the pack with the young Joseph O’Brien – famous with United States racing fans for winning the Breeders’ Cup Turf (GI) aboard St. Nicholas Abbey in 2011 – aboard. With the finish growing closer, Camelot was maneuvered through traffic by O’Brien, drawing even with the group one-winning French Fifteen. Camelot, despite his brilliance, had plenty of disadvantages going against him. Not only is he bred through and through for stamina rather than the one-mile distance of the 2,000 Guineas, but the colt did not particularly care for the soft going at Newmarket. Nonetheless, he pursued victory, crossing the wire a neck ahead of French Fifteen.

Very highly regarded, Camelot continued on to the prestigious Epsom Derby at Epsom Downs. In the fifth race on the card, the Aidan O’Brien trainee again found a spot near the rear of the field as Joseph O’Brien coolly settled aboard him, appearing absolutely confident in his superb mount. The 2,000 Guineas victor remained several lengths off the lead as the nine horses continued their mile and one-half journey, relaxing beautifully beneath nineteen-year-old O’Brien. As stablemate Astrology set the pace and kicked away from the field, Camelot began to make his move on the outside. With urging from O’Brien, Camelot accelerated impressively, rapidly gaining ground on his stablemate in the long straightaway. In spite of the fact that it appeared Astrology would battle him to the wire, Camelot kicked clear under confident handling from O’Brien, winning by a remarkable 5 lengths.
The scary part about his unbelievably impressive Epsom Derby victory? Joseph O’Brien yet again did not believe the colt relished the going.

A week after Camelot’s Epsom Derby triumph, America’s sweetheart, I’ll Have Another, will attempt to become the twelfth Triple Crown champion in the United States. Should I’ll Have Another win the Belmont Stakes on June 9, he will be the first horse since Affirmed to win the coveted Triple Crown trophy. As long as the thirty-four-year drought is in America’s Triple Crown, England’s Triple Crown drought is even lengthier. A horse has not captured the three-race series since Nijinksy II swept it in 1970, making it forty-two years since a horse has conquered the English Triple Crown.

There are many differences between the American Triple Crown and the English Triple Crown. Both series often commence on the first Saturday in May, though the beginning date of the English Triple Crown is not as set in stone as ours. Whereas the American Triple Crown spans just five weeks, the Triple Crown in the United Kingdom begins in May and ends in September. However, the distances of the English Triple Crown are much more grueling: one mile, a mile and one-half, and a mile and three-quarters.

Due to the demanding distance of the final leg of the English Triple Crown, the two horses that won both the 2,000 Guineas and the Epsom Derby between Nijinksy II and Camelot, Nashwan and Sea the Stars, avoided the St. Leger Stakes. You have to go back to when Nashwan swept the 2,000 Guineas and the Derby in 1989 to find the most recent year in which both an English horse and an American horse had a chance to win their respective Triple Crowns. However, Sunday Silence lost the Belmont in his attempt whereas Nashwan skipped the St. Leger. Rather, it was Dark Mirage that won the Triple Tiara for fillies in New York and With Approval who captured the Canadian Triple Crown that year. An English Triple Crown triumph and an American Triple Crown coronation has not occurred within the same year since 1935, when Bahram and Omaha triumphed in their corresponding race series.

The confidence in Camelot’s chance at winning the Triple Crown is overwhelming. The colt is clearly the top of his class, by far and away. The main worry is the exhausting mile and three-quarter distance of the St. Leger, should he enter the race. However, as a son of the late great Montjeu, Camelot should certainly be able to handle the distance. Montjeu captured several races at a mile and a half and is the sire of last year’s St. Leger victor, Masked Marvel, as well as Scorpion, who won the St. Leger in 2005. Camelot's dam, a group three-winning daughter of the great Kingmambo, should also aid him in the taxing journey.

Camelot has an incredible chance to capture the Triple Crown in England. His chance to do so will be three months after I’ll Have Another’s date with destiny, but one can only imagine the joy among the racing world if both great colts rewrite the history books and end the droughts in their nations. 2012 could truly be one of the greatest years racing has ever seen.



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