Alydar

Sired by Raise A Native, who the New York Times called “the most influential sire of American Thoroughbred stallions over the last 20 years”, and with a pedigree that could be traced back, on both sides, to the Darley Arabian, Alydar was bred to be a champion.  However, despite winning 14 of his 26 starts – including 11 stakes races – and over $950,000 in prize money, Alydar is best remembered as the only horse ever to finish second in all three American Triple Crown races.

 

Bred and owned by Calumet Farm and trained by John Veitch, Alydar was named in honour of Prince Ali Salman Aga Khan, also known as Aly Khan. Lucille Markey, owner of Calumet farmer, always addressed His Highness as “Aly Darling”, so Alydar was a contraction of her playful term of endearment.

A big, muscular chestnut, who stood a little over 16.1 hands high, Alydar was renowned for his generous disposition on, and off, the track. In fact, trainer John Veitch said of him, “From a standpoint of heart, no other horse I ever [trained] had as much.” Alydar would probably have been a champion at two or three years had he not been born in the same generation as Affirmed.

 

In 1977, as a two-year-old, Alydar actually beat Affirmed twice, in the Great American Stakes and the Champagne Stakes, both at Belmont Park. He would have to wait until what turned out to be their tenth, and final, meeting in the Travers Stakes at Saratoga the following season to do so again. Even then, Affirmed beat him by 1¾ lengths, but was disqualified after jockey Laffit Pincay Jr. was deemed to have caused interference on the far turn.

 

In the interim, Affirmed had beaten Alydar into second place, albeit by ever dwindling margins, in all three Triple Crown races. Affirmed won the Kentucky Derby by 1½ lengths, the Preakness Stakes by a neck and the Belmont Stakes by a head – that is, an aggregate of less than 2 lengths – to become the eleventh horse in history to win the Triple Crown Trophy.

 

At the time of his death, in 1990, Alydar was the top North American sire. He was humanely euthanised after being found in his stable with a broken hind leg and fracturing another bone in the same leg 48 hours later.

Towcester

Towcester is a jump-races course located in the market town of Towcester in Northamptonshire County of East Midlands, England. It is owned by the Towcester Racecourses Company, and televised on At The Races.

History

The course hosted its first race meeting in 1928, making it pretty young in the history of racecourses. The formation of its mother company happened at around the same time, and it had a grandstand as an early days’ investment. Its introduction at a point of much development in horse racing coupled with the affluence of its owners allowed it to borrow much from the years of history, allowing it to come up with advanced structures, some of which stand to date.

A second grandstand –The Grace-was completed in 1997 as investment to make the course more popular continued. It was briefly set up for sale in 2004, but the decision was soon rescinded and only a piece of the estate ended up being carved and sold.

In a bid to raise attendance, the course granted free entry to all races between 2002 and 2006. The management re-introduced charges for the Easter Sunday and Boxing Day meetings in 2006, but select meetings remained free.

The course

The course is a trapezium-shaped circuit, with narrow and wide sections within its length. It is right handed over a distance of one-mile six-furlongs, and widely regarded a punishing course with its sharp bends and a steep climb at the finish.

The course is relaxed regarding dress code, but diners at the restaurant are expected to wear a smart casual outfit. Access is possible by road, rail or air. The train station closest to the course is 11-miles off, with a taxi service across the distance. Helicopter landing is allowed with prior arrangement.

Races

The course plays host to around 18 Hunt fixtures in its calendar of events. The Boxing Day and Easter Fixtures remain most popular despite being charged, attracting fans in their number, up to 9,000.

Tony McCoy in 2013 got his 4000th career victory as a jockey here, atop Mountain Tunes in the Weatherbys Novices’ Hurdle.

At the close of 2014, the course introduced greyhound racing, with a track built for the same purpose.

Sea The Stars

According to Timeform, Sea The Stars was the joint-eighth greatest racehorse of all time – or, at least, since Timeform Annual Ratings began in 1948 – rated alongside such luminaries as Shergar and Dancing Brave. Owned by Christopher Tsui and trained by John Oxx in Co. Kildare, Sea The Stars was beaten just once in his nine-race career, on his racecourse debut at the Curragh in July, 2008, when he finished fourth, beaten a head, half a length and a neck.

 

In an extraordinary, unbeaten campaign as a three-year-old, he not only became the first horse since Nashwan, in 1989, to with the 2,000 Guineas, the Derby and the Coral-Eclipse, but also added the Juddmonte International, the Irish Champion Stakes and the Prix de l’Arc de Triomphe, for a total of six Group 1 wins.

 

Sea The Stars was sired by Cape Cross out of Urban Sea, making him a half-brother to 2001 Derby winner Galileo. Despite this fact, doubts about his stamina before the Derby meant that he lined up at Epsom as second favourite behind the stoutly-bred Fame And Glory, trained by Aidan O’Brien. Nevertheless, Sea The Stars moved smoothly through the mile-and-a-half contest, tackled pacemaker Golden Sword entering the final furlong and, thereafter, never looked in any danger. Fame And Glory ran on well to finish second, ahead of stable companions Masterofthehorse and Rip Van Winkle, but none of the O’Brien trio was ever going to reach the winner.

 

A tough, versatile performer, Sea The Stars beat Rip Van Winkle again when dropped back to a mile and a quarter for the Coral-Eclipse at Sandown a month later but, in a tactical affair, had to dig deep to fend off his old rival in the closing stages, winning by just a length. After further victories, at odds-on, in the Juddmonte International and the Irish Champion Stakes, Sea The Stars headed to Longchamp for the final race of his career, the Prix de l’Arc de Triomphe. In a rough race, despite taking a keen hold in the early stages, he quickened clear for an impressive 2-length win over Youmzain, landing odds of 4/6 and taking his career earnings to over £4.4 million.