by Mark Anthony May is a special month in the life story of Northern Dancer. He was born on
the 27th and achieved his greatest moment on the racetrack on the 2nd. In the
first of a two-part series, we pay tribute to this supreme thoroughbred.
Northern Dancer needs no introduction to South African racing fans. His fame
endures throughout the racing world as the pre-eminent sire of the last 40 years
and his descendants have certainly left their mark on local racing.
However, his breeding achievements have tended to overshadow his actual
racing career and while everyone knows of Northern Dancer the sire, there are
many who are unaware of his status as Canada`s greatest racehorse. With his 45th
birth anniversary looming, it`s worth revisiting his thrilling story and we
start by looking at what happened before he actually went to stud.
Northern Dancer was certainly bred for greatness. His father Nearctic was a
son of the legendary Nearco, Italy`s second-greatest racehorse of all time, who
retired unbeaten after 14 races (1000m-3000m).
The measure of Nearco`s greatness came in his final race. Although famous
throughout Europe for his exploits, he had never run outside Italy, which is not
one of racing`s powerhouses, so his unbeaten record must have looked a bit
suspect to the traditional European power bases of Britain, Ireland and France.
In 1938, he was entered for France`s Grand Prix de Paris, which was run a mere
six days after he had won the Gran Premio di Milano, also over 3000m. To add to
his difficulties, he had to endure a gruelling 36-hour train ride to get to
Paris, so one could have forgiven him had he run below form. Instead, he won
under a hands-and-heels ride, beating among others, winners and placed horses
from the Epsom Derby and French Derby and Oaks.
His point proved, Nearco then retired to stud, becoming an important stallion
influence in his own right, with Northern Dancer destined to become the most
famous of his descendants.
Northern Dancer also boasted blue blood in his female line. His dam, Natalma,
was a daughter of the great Native Dancer, a brilliant and charismatic grey who
electrified American racing in the 1950s. With 21 wins from 22 starts, Native
Dancer`s only defeat came in the Kentucky Derby, a desperately unlucky second
after twice being seriously hampered. Champion of his age group at 2 and 3 and
Horse of the Year as well, Native Dancer made the cover of Time Magazine in
1954!
Natalma was actually not intended to go to stud that season, as she was in
training; but an injury curtailed her racing plans and at the last minute, she
was rushed to be covered by Nearctic and the result was Northern Dancer. On such
small twists of fate do great events turn!
It is ironic that Northern Dancer, whose own progeny would fetch record
prices in due course, failed to reach his reserve of $25,000 at the national
yearling sales. This was all the more surprising considering his high-class
pedigree, but it may be due to the fact that he was a relatively small horse and
simply did not look as impressive or imposing as his rivals. He was therefore
returned to his breeder, E P Taylor and gained a reputation for being a
difficult and temperamental customer, a disruptive influence in the training
yard.
By the end of the next season, however, Taylor must have been thanking his
lucky stars as Northern Dancer established himself as the best juvenile in
Canada (and arguably the whole of North America) winning 7 of his 9 races.
At age 3, he was aimed south of the border at the major US classics and when
he won two important preparation races in the Flamingo Stakes and Florida Derby,
he was considered a serious contender for America`s biggest prize, the Kentucky
Derby. Bill Shoemaker had ridden him in these two events, but he now deserted
the little Canadian colt in favour of Hill Rise, a large, striking Californian
contender, who had won the Santa Anita Derby.
Bill Hartack then came in for the ride and on 2 May 1964, Northern Dancer
lined up at Churchill Downs as second favourite behind Hill Rise for the
Kentucky Derby. Blessed with a high cruising speed and a serious turn of foot,
Northern Dancer stayed in midfield early on and then rushed through to hit the
front turning for home. Although poaching two-length lead, he then came under
severe pressure from Hill Rise who had suffered interference on the back
stretch. In a rousing finish, the two left the rest of the field behind and it
became a question of whether the Canadian raider could hold off the favourite`s
powerful late challenge. Hartack was not a very sympathetic rider and he threw
the kitchen sink at Northern Dancer, who did not flinch and, hard up against the
inside rail, fought on courageously. It looked like Hill Rise might overwhelm
him close to home, but the Dancer held on and at line had won by a neck.
Canada went into raptures over their little star`s brave victory and their
joy increased further when the two colts met again in the second leg of the
American Triple Crown, the 1900m Preakness Stakes. Hill Rise was sent off an
odds-on favourite, as his fans felt he had been unlucky in the Derby and that
given a clear run, he would turn the tables on Northern Dancer. However,
Northern Dancer`s superior speed was even more telling over this shorter trip
and he won decisively by two lengths with Hill Rise fading into third.
Excitement now reached fever pitch as Northern Dancer headed for the 2400m
Belmont Stakes, bidding to become the first horse since Citation (1948) to win
the Triple Crown. He finished a well beaten third, six lengths behind Quadrangle
and was found to have strained a tendon. However, the general consensus is that
he probably failed to stay the distance in any event.
Despite this disappointment, Northern Dancer had firmly established himself
as Canada`s greatest horse and he returned to a hero`s welcome in his native
country where he won the prestigious Queens Plate by 7,50 lengths. Sadly, this
was to be his final race, as his tendon finally gave way in training and he had
to be retired.
In 1965, a year after his Kentucky Derby heroics, he was inducted into
Canada`s Sport`s Hall of Fame- the first non-human to be so honoured.
At the time of his retirement, fans must have mourned the premature end to
such a glittering racing career, which had brought 14 wins and 4 places from 18
starts. Little did they know that the story was only beginning and over the next
twenty years he would set an indelible stamp on the history of the thoroughbred,
causing his actual racing exploits to be forgotten in many quarters.
Northern Dancer is now honoured via his extraordinary dynasty of graded
stakes winners: 146 out of 645 foals (22,6%). Many of them have gone on to
become outstanding sires in their own right and from a breeding point of view,
his son Sadler`s Wells has been most successful in carrying the torch,
especially in Britain and Europe.
Sadler`s Wells (born 1981) was a top class 3-year-old and his Group 1 record
includes wins in the Irish 2,000 Guineas, Irish Champion Stakes and Eclipse
Stakes as well as second in the French Derby and the King George VI and Queen
Elizabeth II Diamond Stakes. At stud, he has scaled even greater heights as
12-times champion sire and producing a string of Group 1 winners such as High
Chaparral (Epsom and Irish Derbies and Breeders Cup Turf), Galileo (Epsom and
Irish Derbies) and the top filly Salsabil who beat the colts in the Irish Derby
after winning the English 1,000 Guineas and Oaks. The best of Sadler`s Wells
progeny, however, must be the brilliant French colt Montjeu, winner of the
French and Irish Derbies and Arc de Triomphe. Montjeu is now Europe`s hottest
young sire, giving us amongst others, current reigning Horse of the Year,
Hurricane Run. For South Africans, Sadler`s Wells` most important son is none
other than champion sire Fort Wood.
Sadler`s Wells may be his best son at stud, but on the racetrack itself,
Northern Dancer`s greatest offspring came early on, from his second crop and it
is his story that we take up next week.
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