Gallant Bloom

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Gallant Bloom
Sire Gallant Man
Grandsire Migoli
Dam Multiflora
Damsire Beau Max
Sex Filly
Foaled May 22, 1966
Country USA Flag of the United States
Colour Brown
Breeder King Ranch (Ky)
Owner Robert J. Kelberg, Jr.
Trainer Max Hirsch
Record 22 Starts: 16-1-1
Earnings $535,739
Major Racing Wins, Awards and Honours
Major Racing Wins
Matron Stakes (1968)
Gardenia Stakes (1968)
National Stallion Stakes (1968) (Filly Division)
Matchmaker Stakes (1969)
Delaware Oaks (1969)
Gazelle Stakes (1969)
Spinster Stakes (1969)
Monmouth Oaks (1969)
Post-Deb Stakes (1969)
Liberty Belle Handicap (1969)
Santa Margarita Invitational Handicap (1970)
Santa Maria Handicap (1970)
Racing Awards
American Champion Two-Year-Old Filly (1968)

American Champion Three-Year-Old Filly (1969)
American Champion Older Female Horse (1969, shared with Gamely)

Honours
U.S. Racing Hall of Fame (1977)
#79 - Top 100 U.S. Racehorses of the 20th Century

The Gallant Bloom Handicap at Belmont Park is raced in her honor.

Infobox last updated on: December 2, 2007.


Gallant Bloom (foaled May 22, 1966 – died 1991) was a plain brown filly sired by the great Gallant Man, also a plain brown horse. She was small and possessed of a gentle temperament. And yet she regularly beat the best fillies and mares in America. Both Shuvee and Gamely saw her heels.

She did not start well. In her two-year-old season, she was fast but inconsistent. She won her first two starts but then lost the next three by large margins. Gallant Bloom seemed to find her footing in an allowance race and followed that by taking the Matron Stakes by a romp. And then she met Shuvee for the first time. In her first meeting with the brilliant filly, Gallant Bloom blew a three length lead and was caught by Shuvee at the wire. Max Hirsch believed Gallant Bloom hadn’t really lost to Shuvee; she beat herself. He put her into rigorous training. After that, Gallant Bloom won twelve stakes races in a row, beginning in 1968 at age two and ending in 1970. She came back and beat Shuvee in the Gardenia, which gave her the two year old filly championship.

In 1969, Shuvee was a great success and seemed a shoo-in for Three-Year-Old-Filly honors. Shuvee had won everything from the Alabama Stakes to the Ladies Handicap, defeating top older mares to achieve her victories. Shuvee became the second winner of the Triple Crown for Fillies. But at the same time, Gallant Bloom won every race she ran, at any distance, on any surface at eight different race tracks, and in the process defeating Shuvee three times (the Gardenia, the Delaware Oaks, and the Gazelle Handicap), and Gamely once in the Matchmaker Stakes. For this, Gallant Bloom was awarded the top Three-Year-Old Filly Eclipse even though Shuvee had seemed the out and out winner early in the season. That year, Shuvee did not receive a single vote; it was a Gallant Bloom rout.

Max Hirsch died in 1969 at the age of 88. His son Buddy Hirsch took over the stable.

Buddy sent Gallant Bloom to California where she won top stakes at the age of four. But returning to the East, she finally lost in the Nassau County Handicap. It was discovered she was developing a chip in her ankle which put an end to her racing career.

As a brood mare, Gallant Bloom puzzled veterinarians. She produced four foals, aborted one, and then became barren no matter what was tried. She had one last foal late in her life but nothing that came close to her.

Gallant Bloom lay down in her paddock at King Ranch, Kentucky, and died in 1991. She was twenty five years old. She is buried at Old Frankfort Place, Kentucky.

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