Overskate

Overskate
Sire Nodouble
Grandsire Noholme
Dam Overstate
Damsire Speak John
Sex Stallion
Foaled 1975
Country Canada
Colour Chestnut
Breeder Stafford Farms
Owner Jack Stafford
Trainer Gil Rowntree
Record 42: 24-5-4
Earnings $791,634
Major wins
Coronation Futurity Stakes (1977)
Plate Trial Stakes (1978)
Prince of Wales Stakes (1978)
Breeders' Stakes (1978)
Manitoba Derby (1978)
Stars and Stripes Handicap (1979)
Bernard Baruch Handicap (1979)
Canadian Maturity Stakes (1979)
Ultimus Stakes (1979)
Bowling Green Handicap (1979)
Jacques Cartier Stakes (1979 & 1980)
Jockey Club Cup Handicap (1980)
Eclipse Handicap (1980)
Awards
Canadian Champion 2-year-old Colt (1977)
Canadian Champion 3-year-old Colt (1978)
Canadian Horse of the Year (1978 & 1979)
Canadian Champion Older Male Horse (1979 & 1980)
Canadian Champion Turf Horse (1978, 1979, 1980)
Honours
Canadian Horse Racing Hall of Fame (1993)
Overskate Stakes at Woodbine Racetrack

Overskate (19751992) was a Canadian Thoroughbred Champion Hall of Fame racehorse. Sired by Nodouble out of the dam Overstate who was a descendant of the great sire Princequillo as well as Man o' War, Overskate was foaled at his owner's farm in Port Elgin, Ontario.

A small but versatile horse, Overskate raced successfully on grass and dirt racecourses and won major races on rain-soaked sloppy tracks. During his career, he was voted an unprecedented nine Sovereign Awards while racing in Canada and at various tracks in the United States. The colt set track records for 9 furlongs (1 1/8 miles) at Assiniboia Downs in Winnipeg, Manitoba and for 11 furlongs (1 3/8 miles) on turf at Belmont Park in Elmont, New York.

Ridden by jockey Robin Platts, Overskate came off his 1977 two-year-old championship season with a win in the Plate Trial Stakes but then finished second in the 1978 Queen's Plate, Canada's most prestigious race and the first leg of the Canadian Triple Crown. However, the colt came back to win the next two Triple Crown races, the Prince of Wales and Breeders' Stakes. Successful at age four and five, the two-time Canadian Horse of the Year was retired in 1980 as the all-time leading money winner among Canadian-bred horses.

References

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