Deep Impact | |
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Deep Impact winning Kikka Sho 2005 on October 23 |
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Sire | Sunday Silence |
Grandsire | Halo |
Dam | Wind in Her Hair |
Damsire | Alzao |
Sex | Stallion |
Foaled | 2002 |
Country | Japan |
Colour | Bay |
Breeder | Northern Farm |
Owner | Kaneko Makoto Holdings Co. |
Trainer | Yasuo Ikee |
Record | 14: 12-1-0 |
Earnings | 1,454,551,000 Yen |
Major wins | |
Tokyo Yushun (2005) Satsuki Sho (2005) Kikuka Sho (2005) Tenno Sho (Spring) (2006) Takarazuka Kinen (2006) Japan Cup (2006) Arima Kinen (2006) |
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Awards | |
Japanese Champion 3-Yr-Old Colt (2005) Japanese Horse of the Year (2005, 2006) Japanese Champion Older Colt or Horse (2006) |
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Honours | |
Japan Racing Association Hall of Fame (2008) | |
Horse (Equus ferus caballus) | |
Last updated on May 9, 2008 |
Deep Impact (Japanese : ディープインパクト, Chinese: 大震撼, March 25, 2002 - ) is a champion Japanese racehorse that won seven Japanese Domestic Grade 1 races, including all races of Japanese Triple Crown (Satsuki Sho, Tokyo Yushun and Kikuka Sho).
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Deep Impact won over Admire Japan by two lengths in Kikuka Sho on 23 October 2005, thereby becoming the first horse since Narita Brian 11 years earlier to complete the Japanese Triple crown. Deep Impact also became the first unbeaten Japanese Triple crown winner since Symboli Rudolf 21 years earlier, but in his next race, Arima Kinen, Deep Impact was defeated by Heart's Cry to suffer his first loss in his racing career.
In 2006 Deep Impact returned to the turf with an easy victory in the Hanshin Daishōten (Jpn-GII). Then he won the Tenno Sho (spring) in spectacular form smashing the world record for a 3200 meter race in the remarkable time of (3'13"4), following this with a victory in the Takarazuka Kinen (G1 - 2200m). In October, he raced in the Prix de l'Arc de Triomphe (Fr - Group 1 - 2400m), but finished third. He was heavy favourite for the race, and 1,587,263 € (about $1,238,000) was bet on him in France (especially by many of the Japanese fans that traveled to the racecourse). But 2 weeks later, news from France Galop revealed Deep Impact was positive tested to Ipratropium. Connections announced the colt would retire to stud after that season in a syndication deal worth 5.1 billion yen. Deep Impact retired after he won Japan Cup and Arima Kinen.
Complementing his spectacular exploits on the racecourse, Deep Impact has a truly splendid pedigree. His late sire Sunday Silence single-handedly reconfigured the Japanese bloodstock industry and propelled it into the global premier league. His dam, Wind In Her Hair, herself a Group One winner, finished second in the Epsom Oaks to super-filly Balanchine and was out of Burghclere, a daughter of dual-Classic winner Highclere, who was owned and bred by Queen Elizabeth II. Burghclere in turn was a three-quarters sister to top filly Height Of Fashion, sold by the Queen to Hamdan bin Rashid Al Maktoum, and subsequently the dam of Epsom Derby winner Nashwan, leading sire Unfuwain and multiple Group One winner Nayef. In other words, a female tail-line packed with superstars who were tough horses that stood their racing well.
Sire Sunday Silence |
Halo | Hail to Reason | Turn-To |
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Nothirdchance | |||
Cosmah | Cosmic Bomb | ||
Almahmoud | |||
Wishing Well | Understanding | Promised Land | |
Pretty Ways | |||
Mountain Flower | Montparnasse | ||
Edel Weiss | |||
Dam Wind in Her Hair |
Alzao | Lyphard | Northern Dancer |
Goofed | |||
Lady Rebecca | Sir Ivor | ||
Pocahontas | |||
Burghclere | Busted | Crepello | |
Sans Le Sou | |||
Highclere | Queen's Hussar | ||
Highlight |
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