Admire Mars

Admire Mars (Japanese: アドマイヤマーズ, foaled 16 March 2016) is a Japanese Thoroughbred racehorse. As a juvenile in 2018 he was undefeated in four races including the Daily Hai Nisai Stakes and the Asahi Hai Futurity Stakes and won the JRA Award for Best Two-Year-Old Colt. In his first two races of 2019 he was beaten in the Tokinominoru Kinen and the Satsuki Sho before returning to winning form to take the NHK Mile Cup. In December he won the Hong Kong Mile.

Admire Mars
Admire Mars in December 2018
SireDaiwa Major
GrandsireSunday Silence
DamVia Medici
DamsireMedicean
SexColt
Foaled16 March 2016[1]
CountryJapan
ColourChestnut
BreederNorthern Farm
OwnerRiichi Kondo
TrainerYasuo Tomomichi
Record9: 6-1-0
Earnings¥273,525,000 + HK$14,250,000
Major wins
Daily Hai Nisai Stakes (2018)
Asahi Hai Futurity Stakes (2019)
NHK Mile Cup (2019)
Hong Kong Mile (2019)
Awards
JRA Award for Best Two-Year-Old Colt (2018)

Background

Admire Mars is a chestnut horse with a white blaze and a long white sock on his left hind leg bred in Hokkaido by Northern Farm. As a yearling in 2017 he was consigned to the Select Sale and was bought for ¥56,160,000 by Riichi Kondo.[2] He was sent into training with Yasuo Tomomichi.

He was from the eighth crop of foals sired by Daiwa Major, an outstanding miler whose wins included the Tenno Sho, Mile Championship and Yasuda Kinen. As a breeding stallion he has also sired Major Emblem, Curren Black Hill (NHK Mile Cup), Reine Minoru (Oka Sho) and Epice Arome (Centaur Stakes).[3] Admire Mars' dam Via Medici showed good racing form in France, winning four races including the Group 3 Prix de Lieurey.[4] She was sold for €480,000 in December 2014[5] and exported to Japan. Via Medici was a female line descendant of Rossellina, a full-sister to Ribot.[6]

Racing career

2018: two-year-old season

Admire Mars was ridden in all of his 2018 starts by Mirco Demuro. The colt made a successful racecourse debut when he recorded a narrow win over Cadence Call in a contest for previously unraced juveniles over 1600 metres at Chukyo Racecourse on 30 June. Three weeks later, over the same course and distance, he followed up with a three length win in the Chukyo Nisai Stakes, beating A Shin Zone and five others.[7]

On his return from a break of over four months Admire Mars was stepped up in class for the Grade 2 Daily Hai Nisai Stakes at Kyoto Racecourse on 10 November and went off the 4/5. He maintained his unbeaten record as he won by half a length from Meisho Shobu.[8] On 16 December the colt was moved up in class again and started 3.6/1 second favourite behind the filly Gran Alegria for the Grade 1 Asahi Hai Futurity Stakes at Hanshin Racecourse. The best fancied of the other thirteen runners were Fantasist (Keio Hai Nisai Stakes), Cadence Call (Niigata Nisai Stakes), Meiner Surpass, De Gaulle (runner up in the (Saudi Arabia Royal Cup), Emeral Flight and Aster Pegasus (Hakodate Nisai Stakes). Demuro settled the colt in third place as It's Cool set the pace from Gran Alegria before making a forward move as the field turned into the straight. Admire Mars gained the advantage 300 metres from the finish and drew away in the closing stages to win by two lengths from the outsider Kurino Gaudi with Gran Alegria half a length back in third.[9] Demuro commented "everything went smoothly. He showed a terrific turn of foot. He's a smart colt and hates to lose so I’m looking forward to seeing how he improves next season".[10]

In the official ratings for Japanese two-year-olds Admire Mars was rated the best juvenile of the year, one pound ahead of the Hopeful Stakes winner Saturnalia.[11] In January 2019 Admire Mars topped the polling for the Best Two-Year-Old Colt at the JRA Awards for 2018, receiving 153 votes against Saturnalia's 123.[12]

2019: three-year-old season

Admire Mars' regular jockey Mirco Demuro

Admire Mars began his second season on 10 February when he contested the Tokinominoru Kinen (a trial race for the Satsuki Sho) over 1800 metres at Tokyo Racecourse. He started the 0.7/1 favourite in a seven-runner field but sustained his first defeat as he was beaten one and a quarter lengths into second place by Yamanin Kingly. On 14 April at Nakayama Racecourse Admire Mars was made second favourite behind Saturnalia for the Satsuki Sho over 2000 metres. After tracking the leaders he was switched to the outside to make his challenge in the straight but despite making some progress he never looked likely to win and came home fourth behind Saturnalia, Velox and Yamanin Kingly beaten just over two lengths by the winner.[13]

The 24th running of the Grade 1 NHK Mile Cup at Tokyo on 5 May saw Admire Mars dropped back in distance and start second favourite behind Gran Alegria, who was attempting to follow up her victory in the Oka Sho. The other sixteen runners included his old rivals Fantasist, Kurino Gaudi and Cadence Call as well as Danon Chaser (Kisaragi Sho), Wide Pharaoh (New Zealand Trophy), Pourville (Fillies' Revue), Iberis (Arlington Cup), Happy Hour (Falcon Stakes) and Val d'Isere (Shinzan Kinen). Admire Mars did not start well and was forced to race on the outside in mid-division as Iberis set the pace from Kurino Gaudi and Pourville. After turning into the straight he launched a sustained run down the centre of the track, took the lead 100 metres from the finish and won by half a length and a nose from Cadence Call and Catedral.[14] After the race Demuro said "his start wasn't so good and we had to race in a lower position than hoped, but he just hates to lose - once another runner came up next to him, he found his second wind. He's truly an amazing miler".[15]

On 19 October Admire Mars returned from a long summer break to contest the Grade 3 Fuji Stakes over 1600 metres at Tokyo in which he was matched against older horses. He was made the 1.1/1 favourite but was never in serious contention and came home ninth of the eighteen runners as victory went to the four-year-old filly Normcore. Riichi Kondo died in November 2019 and the ownership of the horse passed to the executors of his estate. For his final run of the year the colt was one of four Japanese horses sent to Sha Tin Racecourse to contest the Hong Kong Mile on 8 December when he was ridden by Christophe Soumillon and started a 26/1 outsider. Beauty Generation and Indy Champ started joint favourites while the other seven runners included Normcore, Persian Knight (Mile Championship) and Waikuku (Jockey Club Mile). After racing in mid-division Admire Mars began to make progress in last quarter mile, overtook Beauty Generation 150 metres from the finish, and repelled the late challenge of Waikuku to win by half a length.[16] After the race Soumillon said "I knew my horse was very strong... he was the best two-year-old in Japan last year and probably the best three-year-old in Japan this year as well... I told the lad before the race when I saw the odds on the screen that there was something wrong there – I thought he should have been in the first four favourites... But I rode my race like he was the favourite and it paid off".[17]

In January 2020, at the JRA Awards for 2019, Admire Mars finished runner-up to Saturnalia in the poll to determine the Best Three-Year-Old Colt, receiving 107 votes to his rival's 124. He also finished second to Indy Champ in the voting for the JRA Award for Best Sprinter or Miler [18]

2020: four-year-old season

In the early spring of 2020 Admire Mars was sent to the United Arab Emirates with the intention of contesting the Dubai Turf on 28 March but returned to Japan when the race was abandoned owing to the COVID-19 pandemic. He made his first appearance of the year in the Yasuda Kinen over 1600 metres at Tokyo when he started a 19.2/1 outsider and came home sixth behind Gran Alegria after racing in third place for most of the way.

Pedigree

Pedigree of Admire Mars (JPN), chestnut colt 2016[1]
Sire
Daiwa Major (JPN)
2001
Sunday Silence (USA)
1986
Halo Hail to Reason
Cosmah
Wishing Well Understanding
Mountain Flower
Scarlet Bouquet (JPN)
1988
Northern Taste (CAN) Northern Dancer
Lady Victoria
Scarlet Ink (USA) Crimson Satan
Consentida
Dam
Via Medici (IRE)
2007
Medicean (GB)
1997
Machiavellian (USA) Mr Prospector
Coup de Folie
Mystic Goddess (USA) Storm Bird (CAN)
Rose Goddess (IRE)
Via Milano (FR)
2001
Singspiel (IRE) In The Wings (GB)
Glorious Song (CAN)
Salvinaxia Linamix
Salve (Family: 4-l)[6]
gollark: ALL observing members are utterly equal to this.
gollark: OH BEES DO NOT (RETROACTIVELY)
gollark: The database file is *actually quite big*, because the full text search index contains approximately as much text as the books it's indexing.
gollark: Oh. Right. I think I realize the issue now.
gollark: Well, this is quite apioform, my highly efficient™ concurrent™ program cannot actually run concurrently.

References

  1. "Admire Mars pedigree". Equineline.
  2. "Sales Results – Select Sale: Yearlings". JBIS.
  3. "Daiwa Major Stud Record". Bloodstock.racingpost.com. 2012-02-15. Retrieved 2012-12-28.
  4. "Via Medici – Race Record & Form". Racing Post.
  5. "Arqana December Breeding Stock Sale 2014 – Catalogue". Racing Post.
  6. "Golden Grove – Family 4-l". Thoroughbred Bloodlines.
  7. "2018 JRA Awards". Horse Racing in Japan.
  8. "Daily Hai Nisai Stakes result". Racing Post. 10 November 2018.
  9. "Asahi Hai Futurity Stakes result". Racing Post. 16 December 2018.
  10. "Admire Mars Pulls Away Strongly to Capture 70th Asahi Hai Futurity Stakes". Racing in Japan. 16 December 2018.
  11. "JPN Thoroughbred Rankings". Horse Racing in Japan.
  12. "Winners of the 2018 JRA Awards announced". Horse Racing in Japan. 9 January 2019.
  13. "Unbeaten Race Favorite Saturnalia Claims This Year's Satsuki Sho". Horse Racing in Japan. 14 April 2019.
  14. "NHK Mile Cup result". Racing Post. 5 May 2019.
  15. "Admire Mars Beats Top Three-Year-Old Milers in NHK Mile Cup". Horse Racing in Japan. 5 May 2019.
  16. "Hong Kong Mile result". Racing Post. 8 December 2019.
  17. Biddington, Tom. "Tears flow as Admire Mars stuns rivals in Hong Kong Mile". South China Morning Post.
  18. "Winners of the 2019 JRA Awards announced". Horse Racing in Japan. 8 January 2020.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.