Langbahn Team – Weltmeisterschaft

Seiun Sky

Seiun Sky
Seiun Sky at the 1998 Kikka Sho
BreedThoroughbred[1]
SireSheriff's Star[1]
GrandsirePosse[1]
DamSister Mill[1]
DamsireMill George[1]
SexStallion[1]
FoaledApril 26, 1995[1]
DiedAugust 16, 2011(2011-08-16) (aged 16)
CountryJapan[1]
BreederNishiyama Stud[1]
OwnerNishiyama Stud
TrainerKazutaka Yasuda
Record13: 7-1-5[1]
Earnings610,282,000 JPY[1]
Major wins
Satsuki Sho (1998)
Kikka Sho (1998)[1]
Last updated on July 14, 2024

Seiun Sky (Japanese: セイウンスカイ; April 26, 1995 - August 16, 2011) was a Japanese thoroughbred racehorse. His major wins include the Satsuki Sho and Kikka Sho of 1998, two of the Triple Crown in Japan.

Racing career

1998: three-year old season

Seiun Sky ran his first race on January 5 at a debut race for four year olds held at Nakayama Racecourse over a distance of 1600 meters, with Koji Tokuyoshi as his jockey. He was the fifth most favored to win but comfortably scored a victory with a 6 length lead.[2] He also then won the Junior Cup, where he held on to the lead for the entire race, finishing the race with a 5 length lead against the 2nd place.[2]

He was then entered in to the Yayoi Sho, which was the first graded race for the horse. He was the third most favored to win behind King Halo and Special Week, who would be considered rqo of the "big three" of their generation alongside Seiun Sky.[2][3] Seiun Sky became the front runner in that race and kept the lead for most of the way, but was caught up by Special Week at the final slope, ultimately finishing at second place.[3] Following the horse's defeat, the horse's main jockey was switched from Tokuyoshi to Norihiro Yokoyama.[3]

Seiun Sky was then entered in to the Satsuki Sho, where the horse kept its second place position among the pack until the fourth corner, where he overtook the frontrunner and took the lead, holding on to it until the finishing line, winning the Satsuki Sho with a half-length lead against King Halo.[2][4]

After the Satsuki Sho, the horse was entered in to the Tokyo Yushun (Japanese Derby). In that race, Seiun Sky followed King Halo, who was the front-runner in that race. However, he only managed to finish at 4th place behind Special Week.[2][3] After this race, Seiun Sky took a summer break.

After the summer break, with the Kikka Sho in mind, the horse started the autumn off with the Kyoto Daishoten, rather than the Kyoto Shimbun Hai which was a step race for that race. As the Kyoto Daishoten was a graded race that allowed older horses to participate in the race, Seiun Sky was only 4th most favored to win, with the horse facing off older horses such as Mejiro Bright [ja], Stay Gold, and Silk Justice [ja]. In that race, Seiun Sky took the lead and became the front-runner, with the horse having a 20-length lead at one point. The rest of the pack closed in on the horse, however, as the horse had slowed down midway, and was caught up around the final 600m point, but held on to the lead before once again widening the gap on the final stretch, holding on to the lead to the end.[3][5]

Following the victory, the horse was entered in to the Kikka Sho, where he was the 2nd most favored to win behind Special Week. Seiun Sky took the lead at the start, and while the horse did not run with as large of a lead as he did in the Kyoto Daishoten, he still held a 7 to 8 length lead, before slowing down briefly midway through. The horse then sped up in the latter part of the race and held on to the lead to the end, beating Special Week by 3-and-a-half length gap and becoming the first Kikka Sho race since Haku Kuruma [ja] won in 1959 where the frontrunner won the race.[6][7]

After clinching two of the Triple Crowns, the horse was entered in to the Arima Kinen to finish the season off, where he finished fourth behind Grass Wonder in spite of being the most favored to win.[8]

1999: four-year old season

Seiun Sky started his 4 year old season off with the Nikkei Sho, where he won the race.[2] After the win, he was entered in to the Tenno Sho (Spring), but finished 3rd behind Special Week.

After a summer break, the horse was entered in to the Sapporo Kinen. In that race, rather than taking the lead as he did in the previous year, the horse was placed in the rear of the pack; before moving up at the 3rd corner and taking the lead on the final stretch, beating Phalaenopsis [ja] by a half-length lead.[2][9] This wound up being Seiun Sky's final victory in his career, with his next race, the Tenno Sho (Autumn), seeing him finishing 5th, and later developing tendonitis which forced him out of the race for over a year.[9]

2001: six-year old season

After a prolonged break to recover, Seiun Sky entered the Tenno Sho (Spring) of that year, but finished the race at last place with more than a 15 second gap between the winner, T M Opera O.[10]

Following the race, there were plans to enter him in to the Takarazuka Kinen, but those plans were scrapped due to health issues, and after the horse hurt its radius in the summer it was decided that the horse would be retired.[11][12]

Stud career

After retiring, Seiun Sky was put to stud at the Arrow Stud [ja] before being moved to the Nishiyama Stud a few years later. To date his best progeny was Mayol, who came in third in the Fuyo Stakes.[13]

On August 16, 2011, Seiun Sky passed away. While the JRA officially announced that the horse died from a heart attack,[14] the horse's owner wrote on his blog that he died from hitting his head in his stable when he stood up.[15] A gravestone was erected within the Nishiyama Stud property several months later.[16]

Racing form

The following racing form is based on information available on netkeiba.com.[4]

Date Track Race Grade Distance
(Condition)
Entry HN Odds
(Favored)
Finish Time Margins Jockey Winner
(Runner-up)
1998 – three-year-old season
Jan 5 Nakayama 4YO Debut 1600m(Good) 16 8 12.0(5) 1st 1:36.7 -1.0 Koji Tokuyoshi (Meine Carol)
Jan 25 Nakayama Junior Cup OP 2000m(Firm) 11 2 06.8(3) 1st 2:03.5 -0.8 Koji Tokuyoshi (Mega Hit)
Mar 8 Nakayama Yayoi Sho GII 2000m(Firm) 13 7 04.4(3) 2nd 2:01.9 -0.1 Koji Tokuyoshi Special Week
Apr 19 Nakayama Satsuki Sho GI 2000m(Firm) 18 2 05.4(2) 1st 2:01.3 -0.1 Norihiro Yokoyama (King Halo)
Jun 7 Tokyo Tokyo Yushun GI 2400m(Good) 18 6 04.9(3) 4th 2:26.8 -1.0 Norihiro Yokoyama Special Week
Oct 11 Kyoto Kyoto Daishoten GII 2400m(Good) 7 1 06.0(4) 1st 2:25.6 -0.1 Norihiro Yokoyama (Mejiro Bright)
Nov 8 Kyoto Kikka Sho GI 3000m(Firm) 17 2 04.3(2) 1st 3:03.2 [a] -0.6 Norihiro Yokoyama (Special Week)
Dec 27 Nakayama Arima Kinen GI 2500m(Firm) 16 6 02.7(1) 4th 2:32.7 -0.6 Norihiro Yokoyama Grass Wonder
1999 – four-year-old season
Mar 28 Nakayama Nikkei Sho GII 2500m(Good) 13 5 01.3(1) 1st 2:35.3 -0.9 Norihiro Yokoyama (Seiun Area)
May 2 Kyoto Tenno Sho (Spring) GI 3200m(Firm) 12 6 02.8(2) 3rd 3:15.8 -0.5 Norihiro Yokoyama Special Week
Aug 22 Sapporo Sapporo Kinen GII 2000m(Firm) 10 3 01.4(1) 1st 2:00.1 -0.1 Norihiro Yokoyama (Phalaenopsis)
Oct 31 Tokyo Tenno Sho (Autumn) GI 2000m(Firm) 17 4 03.8(1) 5th 1:58.3 -0.3 Norihiro Yokoyama Special Week
2001 – six-year-old season
Apr 29 Kyoto Tenno Sho (Spring) GI 3200m(Firm) 12 12 22.2(6) 12th 3:32.0 15.8 Norihiro Yokoyama T M Opera O

Legend:
  Turf

Notes:
  1. ^ Set a stakes record for the event

Pedigree

Pedigree of Seiun Sky[17][18]
Sire
Sheriff's Star
1985 gr.
Posse
1977 ch.
Forli Aristophanes
Trevisa
In Hot Pursuit Bold Ruler
Lady Be Good
Castle Moon
1975 gr.
Kalamoun Zedaan
Khairunissa
Fotheringay Right Royal
La Fresnes
Dam
Sister Mill
1990 d.ch.
Mill George
1975 b.
Mill Reef Never Bend
Milan Mill
Miss Charisma Ragusa
Matatina
Sweet Angelet
1985 b.
Mogami Lyphard
No Luck
Angelet Sweet Colonel Symboli
Sweet France

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l "Seiun Sky(JPN)". JBIS-Search. Retrieved 2024-07-14.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g "セイウンスカイ". JRA-VAN (in Japanese). Retrieved 2024-07-15.
  3. ^ a b c d e "灰色の魔術師 セイウンスカイ". Japan Racing Association. 2006-04-15. Archived from the original on 2016-03-04. Retrieved 2024-07-16.
  4. ^ a b "RECENT FORM". netkeiba.com. Retrieved 2024-07-14.
  5. ^ Shimada, Akihiro (2021-10-09). "サイレンススズカの「伝説の毎日王冠」の同日に…セイウンスカイが京都大賞典で披露した「もうひとつの歴史的逃走劇」". Number Web - ナンバー (in Japanese). Retrieved 2024-07-29.
  6. ^ Ishida, Toshinori (2021-10-26). "《父子制覇》菊花賞の鉄則は「逃げたら勝てない」…セイウンスカイと"伝説の名騎手"の息子が成し遂げた「世代を超えた逃走劇」". Number Web - ナンバー (in Japanese). Retrieved 2024-07-29.
  7. ^ Tsuchiya, Masamitsu (2022-10-19). "ウマ娘でも強い逃げ馬のセイウンスカイ。菊花賞で見せた策士ぶりを振り返る". web Sportiva (in Japanese). Shueisha. Retrieved 2024-07-29.
  8. ^ "ARIMA KINEN (43RD THE GRAND PRIX) (G1) Full Result | 27 DEC 1998 R9 Nakayama Racing Information (JRA)". netkeiba. Retrieved 2024-07-29.
  9. ^ a b "平成11年(1999年) 第35回札幌記念(GII) セイウンスカイ VS ファレノプシス 驚天動地の待機策". Japan Racing Association (in Japanese). Archived from the original on 2008-01-22. Retrieved 2024-07-29.
  10. ^ "TENNO SHO (SPRING) (G1) Full Result | 29 APR 2001 R11 Kyoto Racing Information (JRA)". netkeiba. Retrieved 2024-07-29.
  11. ^ "セイウンスカイ引退". Keiba Book (in Japanese). 2001-07-23. Archived from the original on 2002-08-27. Retrieved 2024-07-29.
  12. ^ "中央競馬を振り返る". 競馬ニホン. 2001-07-10. Archived from the original on 2002-07-10. Retrieved 2024-07-29.
  13. ^ "Seiun Sky(JPN) | JBIS-Search". www.jbis.jp. Retrieved 2024-07-29.
  14. ^ "セイウンスカイ号が死亡" [Seiun Sky has passed away]. Japan Racing Association (in Japanese). 2011-08-16. Archived from the original on 2011-09-10. Retrieved 2024-07-29.
  15. ^ Shigeyuki, Nishiyama (2011-08-16). "セイウンスカイよ、永遠なれ…". 西山茂行オフィシャルブログ 西山牧場オーナーの(笑)気分 (in Japanese). Retrieved 2024-07-29.
  16. ^ "セイウンスカイの墓碑が完成". 競走馬のふるさと案内所 (in Japanese). 2011-11-21. Retrieved 2024-07-29.
  17. ^ "Five-generation Pedigree Table". JBIS-Search. Retrieved 2024-07-14.
  18. ^ "PEDIGREE (5-GEN)". netkeiba.com. Retrieved 2024-07-14.